Luke Reimer and Mary Mich were just 20, college sweethearts at Franciscan University of Steubenville, known more for their smiles and shared faith than for any hint of tragedy. On January 19, 2025, a welfare check led officers to a parked vehicle behind St. Agnes Residence Hall. Inside, Luke and Mary were found dead. Toxicology reports later confirmed carbon monoxide poisoning, likely from a malfunctioning exhaust or engine, and the deaths were ruled accidental. There were no signs of drugs, violence, or intent—only a devastating, silent failure of machinery.
The campus froze. Classes continued, but life did not feel the same. The university canceled events, gathering instead in Christ the King Chapel to pray, weep, and cling to one another. Friends remembered Luke’s energy on the lacrosse field and Mary’s quiet warmth. Online, Luke’s father wrote of a collapsed world and a faith shaken by grief. In the days that followed, counselors, friars, and faculty sat with students who could not stop asking how something so random could be allowed to steal two people so full of promise. Their love story, once a source of joy, became a stark reminder of how fragile an ordinary day can be—and how a community, even shattered, can choose to carry one another through the dark.