Read The Year I Almost Drowned Online
Authors: Shannon McCrimmon
used to. The day’s drive had gotten to me and I slowly found my way to the bed–
fully clothed, shoes on and all –I flopped on top of my covers and fell asleep
immediately.
***
Sidney woke me up. Not on purpose. It’s just, she was so incredibly loud. She
walked loud, breathed heavy, smacked her gum, and did this constant sniffing
thing out of her nose. I opened my eyes and saw her hanging clothes up in the
cramped closet. Her curly dark brown hair was pulled back in a tortoise shell hair
clip. She was wearing a black turtle neck sweater and a red wool mini skirt with
black tights and black knee-length boots. I sat up in bed and said, “Hi, Sidney.” I
was
still
groggy
from
the
drive.
She turned to face me, her grin broad. “Hi Finley, I mean Finn.” She came closer
to me and sat down on my bed. We had different ideas about personal space. “I
tried
not
to
wake
you.”
“You didn’t,” I lied. I yawned and asked, “What time is it anyway?”
“After
twelve,”
she
said.
“I
slept
that
long,”
I
said
in
disbelief.
She shrugged. “You haven’t eaten lunch yet, have you?” she asked.
I shook my head no and wiped my eyes, getting out the crusted remnants that
had
grown
overnight.
“Are
you
hungry?”
she
asked.
I
thought about
it
for
a
second.
“Yeah,
I
guess
I
am.”
“Great!” she said enthusiastically. “Let’s get lunch. I know the perfect place.”
“Okay.
I
need
to
shower
and
get
dressed
first.”
“Take
your
time.
I’m
so
glad
you’re
here,”
she
gushed.
I got out of bed and headed to the bathroom. The shower was better suited for a
small child, not a young woman. I couldn’t move - it was about three feet wide all
around. When I stood in it, I had a choice: face the ugly tiled wall or the frosty
glass door. Shaving my legs was next to impossible and the water was luke warm
at best, definitely not hot, not like at my grandparents’ house.
After I took my shower, I got dressed and dried my hair. Sidney was sitting on her
bed texting, waiting patiently for me. “Do you want me to drive?” I asked.
“We’re
just
going
across
the
street.
Ready?”
“Yeah.” I grabbed my purse and followed her out the door.
The walk wasn’t bad. Jenny’s Casual Cafe was literally across the street from the
campus like Sidney had said. It wasn’t anything special, but seemed to attract
enough customers because of its prime location and affordable prices.
Sidney talked non stop and was very perky, exactly how Nana had described her
and how I suspected she might be after we had talked on the phone. I learned
she was from New Hampshire and came from a big, extended family. She had a
younger sister and an older brother. Her father was an attorney; her mom a
doctor. She was majoring in pre-med and had chosen Harrison because it was
far
enough
away
from
home.
We ordered our food at the counter and found a booth to sit in.“What about you,
Finn? What are you majoring in?” She had tiny light brown freckles on her nose
and
cheeks
and
light
brown
eyes.
“I don’t know,” I said. I used to know, but that had changed when I went to
Graceville. I didn’t have any idea what I wanted to study.
“Doesn’t that scare you?” She leaned in closer to me like she was about to find
out
some
deep
dark
secret.
“Surprisingly,
no.”
“Wow. I wish I was like that. But my parents put the pressure on me, you know
what I mean?” she said. Sidney had a habit of ending each of her sentences with
“you know what I mean.” It was a habit I was going to have to learn to get used
to.
The
waiter
brought
us our food. “Hi,” Sidney said flirtatiously.
“Hey,”
he
answered.
“You’re new,” she said and poked at him playfully. She bit on her lower lip and
fluttered
her
eyelashes.
Sidney
was
a
pro.
“Yeah.
How’d
you
know?”
he
asked
her.
“Because I would remember you,” she said and giggled. Sidney was not what I
would call gorgeous. She was attractive but not beautiful. Still, somehow she
knew exactly how to get a guy like our waiter to respond. Her cutesy attitude and
overconfidence
were
probably
what
attracted
men
to
her.
Hook, line and sinker, he was falling for it. He smiled at her. “Well, I guess we’ll
see
each
other
a
lot
then.”
“I hope so,” she answered and then he walked away, but not without doing a
double
take
first.
She looked back at me and whispered, “He was hot.” She glanced at him again
and
then
at
me.
“Do
you
have
a
boyfriend?”
“No,”
I
said
quickly.
“Good. We can pick up guys together.” She bit into her sandwich.
I should’ve lied and told her that I had a boyfriend. Going out to pick up guys did
not sound very appealing to me. I couldn’t imagine going on a date with anyone
for a very long time. I’d just compare them to Jesse and that wouldn’t be fair to
them. I sipped my soup and geared the conversation toward her, hoping it would
keep
the
focus
off
of
me.
***
I had forgotten what it was like to sit in a classroom. I was used to getting up
early, going to work, and being on my feet all day at the diner. It had been my
daily routine, my ritual, for more than half a year. The idea of sitting for so many
hours, listening to long-winded lectures from professors with no inflection in their
voices and then studying the same boring material I had just been subjected to
did
not
appeal
to
me.
I wasn’t focused; I was restless. I couldn’t seem to make myself study. I don’t
know if it was because I missed my grandparents, my dad, Meg and Hannah. I
missed Jesse, too, but it seemed like a moot point to even think about how much
I missed being with him. So many times throughout the first week of school I was
tempted to get on my phone and call him, to tell him about my day. But I couldn’t.
We were through and not having my best friend in my life anymore was a difficult
thing
to
swallow.
My once meticulous studying habits had disappeared. I just didn’t study. I
wandered the campus, read books that I had wanted to for a long time, and found
my own personal havens in the quaint town that Harrison was located. The
downtown was charming and one of my favorite places to hang out. I loved the
bookstore and the adjacent coffee shop. I spent a lot of time alone in both places
but didn’t seem to notice or care that I was all by myself. In fact, I relished in the
solitude.
After receiving a low C on one of my exams, I realized I had to make some
changes and fast. Otherwise, I was going to lose my full scholarship. And I
couldn’t afford to do that because if I lost that scholarship, I’d have to leave
Harrison and then what would I do? It had been what I had worked for all of those
years, what I had wanted, and if I lost it, it would mean I failed. I had failed in a
relationship;
I
couldn’t
fail
in
this
aspect
of
my
life,
too.
I tried to study in my dorm room, but with Sidney there, that was out of the
question. She talked on her phone a lot and played really loud music. Even when
I put earphones on, I could still hear her talking and the booming and thumping
sounds coming from her stereo. After a couple of weeks of that, I had enough,
and
searched
the
campus
for
a
more
peaceful
spot.
The campus library was open twenty four hours a day–seven days a week. I loved
the library. It was my favorite building on campus. On the fourth floor–a floor that
didn’t get visited by many students because it was the records floor–was my
perfect place for solace. Two glass French doors led to a cozy corner room filled
with a plethora of different shape and sized pillows scattered all over the shaggy
carpeted floor. “The pillow room” had become my second home. It was the most
comfortable place to study, to nap, to think, and to get away.
I lay on the floor, with my books sprawled out around me, and sent a text to Meg.
I hadn’t talked to her in a while and wanted to talk to her. She sent me a quick
text telling me she was on a date with Noah and would call me later. Since the
bonfire, the night of my birthday, they had been talking and decided to exclusively
date within the last month. She seemed happy and I was glad she found a nice
guy. Noah had gotten a job in Greenville, so his commute to see her wasn’t a
long
one.
Their voices carried all the way into the pillow room. Since it was so quiet on the
fourth floor of the library, any talking, whether it was a whisper or a normal audible
tone, could be heard. But they weren’t speaking in hushed tones. One of the
voices was easily recognizable – it was Sidney– and I could hear every single
word
she
was
saying.
“Where
is
this
stupid
document
anyway?”
Sidney
whined.
“I don’t know. I never come up here,” the other girl responded. “So are we going
out
tonight?”
“Yeah,
of
course!”
Sidney
said.
“Are you inviting your roommate?” she asked. I hadn’t heard anything about it so
I knew the answer to that question was a big, fat “no.”
“No,” she scoffed. “Finn’s nice and all, but she’s all gloom and doom, know what
I mean? It’s like, lighten up a little, quit being so emo,” she said.
“At least she’s the brooding type. Mine is way too nosy. She’s always butting in
to
my
conversations.
It’s
annoying!”
I didn’t listen to the rest of their conversation. I tuned them out and lay there
thinking about what she said about me. I was shocked. Stunned. Hurt. I’d never
been described as a “gloom and doom” type. I wondered if I had really turned into
a depressing person. I hadn’t really thought about the way I had been acting until
she described me as being the type of person someone avoids. Maybe she had
a point. Since I had gotten on campus, I’d only gone out with her a few times, and
spent the rest of my time downtown or locked up in the library. Was I diverting
back to my old self–the Finn who didn’t experience life? The Finn who did nothing
but study and shut herself out from the rest of the world. Here I was in college,
and all I could do was hide away in a dark, corner room in the library. Something
had
to
change.
I picked up all of my text books off the floor, threw them in my back pack and got
up off that comfy floor. No way was I going to continue wasting away in pillow
land. It was time to make some changes.
Sidney gave me a second chance. It was a quality that I liked about her–that she
was willing to give me the benefit of the doubt. After we got to know each other
better, her opinion of me changed from “Miss Anti-Social” to “Friendly Finn.” She
blatantly told me that she didn’t care too much for me when she first met me.
“You were so emo-like. It was like living with my younger sister all over again.
She’s all into depressing music and just walks around the house sighing all the
time, giving people dirty looks. Know what I mean?” she had said to me one day.
Going out with Sidney and her friends, who had become mine as well, became
part of my normal routine: wake up; go to class; study and do work to maintain
scholarship; nap; go out; sleep. That’s what I did on a regular basis. I still
frequented the Pillow Room, but I didn’t live there anymore. I finally made my
dorm
room
my
home.
I had misjudged Sidney. She was fun to be with and was always upbeat–the