Read The Year I Almost Drowned Online
Authors: Shannon McCrimmon
The Year I Almost Drowned - By Shannon McCrimmon
The tips of my fingers touched my mouse, dragging it back and forth on the dark
gray mouse pad, scrolling up and down the computer screen as I searched
Harrison College’s spring semester course offerings. The titles were intriguing if
not unique: All About Austen; Yoga for the Inflexible; History’s Dirty Details;
Shakespeare in Layman’s Terms; Economics for the Financially Challenged.
After more than an hour of reading each course description and with a few clicks
on my mouse, I registered for a full load of courses for the spring semester.
I could feel my phone vibrating in my pocket. I took it out and read the text
message from my mom. “Happy Birthday, Finn. Did you get my present? I haven’t
heard from you in a while. Call me. Love, Mom.” My mother had the innate ability
to make me feel guilty with just a few typed words. I placed the phone back in my
pocket and made a mental note to call her later.
A draft of cool air sifted through my Nana’s library, and I clasped the top button
to my navy blue wool sweater. Nana had given it to me; it was my dad’s when he
was younger and it had become my fashion staple for fall. I loved it even if it was
old and tattered. The dangling pieces of thread and pin-sized holes somehow
made me feel closer to him.
“Finn!” Nana called from the kitchen.
“Yes,” I answered with a raised voice. I picked up one of her aged books, flipping
through the well-worn antiqued pages. Nana had a large stock of books–most of
them very old–bought long ago. This was one of my favorite rooms in my
grandparents’ house. I loved it for the wooden book shelves that reached to the
ceiling, the oh–so–comfortable brown leather chair, and the smell. Nana’s library
was a musty, sweet mix of leather and decaying paper.
“Come here,” she hollered again.
I put the book back where it belonged–on the shelf and in alphabetical order and
headed toward the kitchen. The sun shined into the bright, cheery room with its
yellow cabinets and strawberry wallpaper that bordered the ceiling. Nana loved
the color red. Her kitchen screamed this, with red curtains, red placemats and red
rugs. They were all a part of the bold décor.
The smell of peanut butter and melted milk chocolate–a heavenly mix–filled the
air. I watched as Nana sprinkled flakes of milk chocolate on top of fluffy whipped
cream.
“Yum. It smells so good.” I inhaled again, my mouth watering. Her pies made me
hungry even if I did have a full stomach. Just looking at them was enough
enticement.
She picked up the mixing bowl and handed it to me. “Here’s what didn’t make it
in the pie if you want it.”
I took it from her and dipped my finger in the bowl, gathering a heap of peanut
butter and chocolate. I stuck my finger in my mouth and licked the sweet
saltiness. “Delicious,” I said, trying to savor the taste.
Pointing to the peanut buttery, chocolate goodness, she asked, “Can you drop
this pie off at the Rotary Club on your way to get your dad?”
“Sure.” I stuck my finger in the bowl for a third and fourth helping. My sweet tooth
was going to be the death of me one day. I finished off the last of the chocolate
and peanut butter remnants and rinsed the bowl before placing it in the
dishwasher.
She wrapped her arms around me and smiled. Her perfume lingered in the air. It
was a pleasing scent of jasmine and honeysuckle. “I’m so happy we get to
celebrate your nineteenth birthday with you, Finn.”
“Me, too.” It was the first time I would ever celebrate a birthday with my
grandparents and my dad, or at least one I’d remember. We hadn’t spent any of
my birthday’s together since I was two and that was too far back for me to have
any memories.
She tore saran wrap off of the roll and wrapped it securely over the pie before
placing it in one of her baskets. “This is your grandfather’s favorite pie,” she said.
“I know.”
She tilted her head to the side and raised an eyebrow. “He’s not eating pie at the
diner is he?” I avoided making any eye contact with her. My face got warm and
turned a rosy red. It was an instant tell. “Thought so,” she said. “He shouldn’t be
eating sweets. Don’t let him, Finn.”
My grandfather hadn’t fully recovered from the heart attack he had in the summer.
I can recall every single detail the night it occurred. It was the night that my mom
decided to come back to Graceville so that she could take me back to Tampa.
She hadn’t been to Graceville since she left more than sixteen years ago.
Everything happened so quickly. One minute I was having a very heated
argument with my mom, the next thing I knew, my grandfather was fighting to
stay alive. I was scared that I was going to lose him right when I just had him back
in my life. It took several weeks for him to recover. The doctor and my Nana
insisted that he cut his hours at his diner. But being the stubborn person that he
is, he told them in no uncertain terms was he going to stop working. She even
tried to compromise, asking him to let me run things on Saturdays. He only had
to give up one day a week. One day. That lasted all of two weeks.
Nothing could tear him away from his diner. It was his baby and had been for
more than fifty years.
She touched my long red hair and asked, “Is Meg cutting it later today?”
I held the pie in my hands and nodded a distinct yes. Nana was very touchy-feely;
I loved that about her. “Yeah. I don’t know what she’s going to do to it, though.”
My forehead creased. Meg was almost finished with cosmetology school and was
intent on giving me a more distinct style. Her idea of distinct could mean
something very drastic.
“I’m sure whatever she does will look good.”
“Yeah,” I paused and then said, “I hate missing work today.”
“Don’t be silly, Finn. Your grandfather can manage the diner, and he’s got plenty
of help –both Hannah and Meg are working today.” She squeezed my shoulder
and said, “It’s your birthday, you should have it off. Now go on and take that pie.
I’ve got a house to decorate for a special birthday girl.” She shooed me away.
***
yard. I heard a crunching sound as I made each swift step. I placed the top of my
shoe at the base of a hefty pile and kicked the tip of my foot forward. The leaves
flew up like confetti and then slowly fell to the ground, finding another place to lay
in the yard.
A soft breeze from the north caused the trees to dance, their leaves falling by the
second. Autumn had arrived. Leaves in vibrant shades of red, yellow and orange
were seen on every tree in the distant horizon. The air was cooler and crisper.
Front porches were decorated in a cornucopia of harvest themed items: carved
pumpkins, scarecrows, and bales of hay. The long, sunny days of summer were
gone. This was my first time experiencing a true fall season–one where the leaves
changed and the temperature dipped below the 50s at night. There was no such
thing as fall in Florida.
My dad’s 1977 teal green Chevy Nova was parked in my grandparents’ driveway.
By default, I had inherited it. He hadn’t driven it in years and said he’d rather I
drive it than it just rust away sitting in my grandparents’ garage. I preferred driving
it over my grandfather’s old truck–with its unreliable engine that tended to die on
me in the middle of long, rolling hills. After coasting down hills more than once, I
had enough of it and was relieved when Dad told me I could have his car.
I turned the ignition, a low chug, chug, chug noise pervaded. My legs vibrated
against the vinyl seat as the engine purred. Goosebumps formed on my arms
and legs even though I had on jeans and a sweater. The car was cold. I turned
the heat on knowing it’d be a while until it actually blew out warm air. Its air
conditioning was basically a fan, and the heat was a poor imitation of hot air.
The sun’s rays bounced off the satiny white wooden siding and the red shutters
of my grandparents’ beautiful farm house. The swing on the front porch swayed
side to side from the morning breeze. Yellow and orange potted mums sat
purposefully on each porch step. It was picturesque and welcoming, and it was
now my home.
***
beaten path and nowhere near anything. I had my own idea about the club and
concluded it was some secret society where people wore black cloaks and stood
around a blazing fire during a full moon chanting crazy things that didn’t make
any sense. It was just odd to me, that the club’s headquarters were nowhere near
town. Nana had given me directions, but I still found myself lost out in the country.
The roads were unfamiliar, and I had a bad sense of direction anyway. I hadn’t
had enough experience driving on the terrible roads in Graceville. Most of them
were unmarked and those that were marked turned into another road right in the
middle of the road you were driving on.
I held the piece of paper with Nana’s directions. I glimpsed at it again, trying to
decipher exactly where I was and then looked back again at the road. All ahead
of me were acres and acres of peach orchards. There wasn’t a house, a building,
or any other sign of civilization within sight.
The sound of a police siren blared from behind me. I looked in my rear view mirror
and saw flashes of blue and red whirling in a circular motion. My heart thumped
wildly and my sweaty hands gripped tightly onto the steering wheel. I’d never
been pulled over by the police. Not once. Not ever. I glanced in the rear view
mirror again and saw that it was Cookie, one of Graceville’s oldest police officers,
shuffling my way.
Everyone called him “Cookie” because he sputtered things out that sounded like
they had been stolen from a Chinese fortune cookie. Cookie was a Graceville
institution of sorts and probably should have retired years ago, but since
Graceville’s crime rate was dismal, he was able to keep his job on the force. He
and my grandfather had met in elementary school and had been friends ever
since. They played bingo together, and Cookie was a regular in the diner. I liked
Cookie even if he did say strange, philosophical things that didn’t seem relevant
to the discussion. He was a kind, trusting man and probably should have chosen
another
line
of
work.
I felt a sense of relief seeing that it was him coming my way. I knew if he was
pulling me over, once he saw it was me, he’d give me a warning for whatever it
was
that
I
did
and
tell
me
to
go
on
about
my
business.
The relief was short lived. I peered into the rear view mirror one more time and
saw another police officer approaching my car. This one was well-built, tall, and
much, much younger than Cookie. I didn’t recognize him. My heart started to beat
a mile a minute.
Cookie peered down in my window and motioned for me to roll it down. “Hi, Finn,”
he said. He spoke slowly and enunciated every single syllable with a long
southern drawl. A toothpick hung out of the corner of his mouth. Cookie was very
thin and appeared older than he really was. Lines and creases inundated his face,
his skin loose and sagging. His white mustache covered his thin upper lip. There
was very little hair left on his small oval shaped head. “Confucius once said ‘Be
slow in your words and earnest in your conduct,’ Finn.”
Whatever that meant, I’m not sure. I had to keep myself from rolling my eyes at
him. The other police officer lowered his head to the window, his caramel-colored
eyes met mine. A subtle five o’clock shadow showed on his youthful face. He was
a little older than I thought, maybe in his mid-twenties. Golden streaks blended in
his short light brown hair. “License and registration, please,” he said in an