Read The Year I Almost Drowned Online
Authors: Shannon McCrimmon
perfect remedy for getting over a break-up. I missed Hannah and Meg, though,
especially Meg. They were just closer friends. They got me. But I wasn’t in
Graceville anymore and knew the only way I could adjust was to open myself up
to
making
new
friends.
We made plans to go to a party our friend Aaron was having. Aaron was a student
at Georgia State–the nearby co-ed college. He and I had met at Jenny’s Casual
Cafe. He worked there, and since I ate there at least four to five times a week,
we had gotten to know each other pretty well. Most of our conversations were
surface, focusing on movies, books, or any other basic stuff. Aaron was a nice
guy, and I enjoyed his company, but there was no spark. He was just a friend.
During my senior year of high school on my campus tour, I remember one of the
girls asking the tour guide if it was hard to meet guys being at an all girls’ school
like Harrison, and the tour guide actually laughed at her. She told the girl that with
the other college nearby there were plenty of guys to go around. Sidney was
evidence of that. She always had a date and seemed to have a knack for meeting
a
different
guy
each
week.
I wasn’t really looking. That was the furthest thing from my mind. Breaking up with
Jesse was like a five-step grieving process. I had gotten past anger and denial,
as well as bargaining. Where I was now was somewhere between depression
and acceptance. Within a few months, I hoped to be at acceptance.
Sidney wasn’t a fashion queen like Meg was, but she was all about wearing labels
and dressing in expensive, well-made clothes. Her parents had money growing
out of their ears and had no qualms about giving Sidney her very own credit card
so she could be a spending fiend. She got dressed up for the party and decided
to wear a light blue dress. I looked plain next to her in my jeans and lime green
short-sleeved t-shirt. The weather was becoming warmer. It was spring, and my
coat
had
been
packed
away
in
the
closet.
“You can borrow a dress of mine if you want,” she offered. “I’m sure Aaron would
like
you
dressed
up.”
She
gave
me
a
mischievous
grin.
“That’s
okay.
I’m
good
in
my
jeans.
Thanks.”
She rummaged through her purse. “Ugh! I’m out of condoms,” she said. She
looked in my direction. “Do you have any?” I blushed, which told her my answer
in so many words. “Wait. You mean you and that ex of yours never did it?”
“That’s personal,” I answered. My arms folded against my chest in a defensive
position. Hearing “ex” out loud still stung a little. In a late sleepless night, Sidney
and I had shared some secrets–her more than me–a lot more than me. But I did
open up about Jesse, about how we had dated most of the summer up to the
holidays
and
then
how
it
ended.
“It’s
okay,
Finn.
I
just
assumed...”
“Well,
we
didn’t
okay?”
She shrugged. “Don’t get mad. You take things slow. I get that. I wish I had waited
a
little
longer
my
first
time.”
“You
do?”
I
unfolded
my
arms.
“Yeah, of course. It was awful. Imagine your senior prom, a night that is supposed
to be epic, and you’re in the parking lot losing your virginity in the backseat of
some piece of crap car with a guy that smells like weed.” She sighed and made
a disgusted face. “He dumped me like two weeks later and found some other
sucker.”
“I’m
sorry.”
“Don’t be. It made me stronger. I was hurt for a little bit and then found there are
a lot better guys out there.” She curled her lips to a smirk. “Guys are a dime a
dozen.”
I didn’t agree with everything she said. There were other guys out there, but that
didn’t mean I was willing to just go out with them for the sake of going out with
them, or lose my virginity just for the sake of losing it. I needed to feel a
connection,
or
at
least
something
that
resembled
love.
“Just make sure when you do finally do it, that you’re ready to handle all the
consequences.”
“Consequences?”
“I can tell you’re the type that gets attached. I don’t, but someone like you does.
Just make sure that you’re one hundred percent sure you’re ready to give yourself
completely,” she said. She grabbed her purse and pulled my arm. “Let’s stop at
CVS before we go to the party. I need me some condoms.”
Aaron’s apartment was in an old complex that was a little run down and very
dated. It was within minutes of Georgia State’s campus, which meant most of the
people living there were college students who didn’t care about its shoddy
appearance. There were probably twenty to thirty people squeezed into the small
two-bedroom apartment that he shared with his roommate, Doug. Doug was
Sidney’s latest conquest. Poor Doug didn’t stand a chance. I don’t know what
Sidney’s secret was, but she could wrap any guy around her finger. And they fel
hard for her instantly. She was always the one to break their hearts. She broke it
off before too many strings were attached. I didn’t envy her for any of it.
It wasn’t a huge party; it was more of a gathering. A group of people sat around
a large round table playing poker, others lingered in the kitchen drinking. The rest
were spread out throughout the apartment talking and hanging out.
“Finn,” Aaron said to me as Sidney and I entered. “Glad you came.” He smiled.
Aaron
was
cute
even
if
I
wasn’t
into
him.
“Thanks
for
inviting
me,”
I
said.
“See you guys later. There’s Doug,” Sidney said and left us there alone.
“Do
you
want
something
to
drink?”
he
asked
me.
“Do
you
have
Coke?”
“Uh yeah.” He ran his fingers through his unkempt hair and gave me a perplexed
expression.
“Look,
if
you
want
a
beer,
I’ve
got
beer.”
“I’m the designated driver tonight,” I said, jingling my keys. I placed them in my
purse. I had volunteered to be the DD. There was no way I was going to have a
repeat of the awful party I had gone to almost a year before where I was too drunk
to drive home and almost got assaulted by slimy Dylan. If Jesse hadn’t come to
rescue Meg and me, things would’ve turned for the worse.
“Oh.” He nodded. “Coke it is.” He handed me a cold can of Coke.
“Thanks.”
“Do
you
want
to
go
outside?”
“Sure.” I followed him through his living room and to the glass sliding doors that
led to the outside. He slid them open. His back yard was basically a concrete slab
with a few lawn chairs and one tiny, beat-up grill. The view–was an ugly chain
link fence that faced a retention pond and nothing else. His apartment complex
was within the direct flight path of the airport. Planes flew in the sky constantly. It
was hard to hear anything except the roaring jet engines overhead.
It was just him and me outside. We both sat down on the lawn chairs, sinking low
to
the
ground.
He
drank
his
beer;
I
sipped
my
Coke.
“You
look
nice
tonight,”
he
said.
I looked down at my blah outfit and then said, “Thanks.” I pictured Aaron’s dad
telling him when he was growing up, “Compliment girls, son, because they like
it.” I enjoyed getting compliments, but generic ones like that meant nothing to me.
“Are
you
going
anywhere
for
spring
break?”
he
asked.
An airplane flew over head. “To Florida,” I answered after it passed. Spending
another activity-filled week in Florida didn’t sound appealing to me. I hoped my
mom didn’t get the same bug to go out all the time, like she had before when I
visited.
“That’s cool. I’m going back home, too,” he said. Then he did something I did not
expect or ask for. He ran his fingers through my hair. “You’re hair is so soft. I love
red hair,” he murmured. I shifted and moved my head away from his fingers trying
to give him a subtle yet polite hint but he didn’t seem to be getting it. “I like you,
Finn.”
Oh no. That was not what I wanted to hear. I didn’t want him to like me. I didn’t
want anyone to like me. I tried to give a sympathetic expression before I turned
him down, but he took it the wrong way. He read me all wrong. He leaned in and
placed his lips on mine and began to kiss me. It was so unexpected, I didn’t have
time to react, to move my face so his lips would smack my cheek or the air instead
of my tightly closed lips. I could feel his tongue touching my lips. I quickly pulled
away. “Aaron, no,” I said in the most gentle tone I could muster. He wasn’t a bag
guy; he just didn’t know the first thing about me or women for that matter.
“Why?”
he
asked.
“I
thought
you
liked
me,
too.”
“My boyfriend and I broke up a few months ago. I’m still not over him.”
“I can help you get over him,” he said. I glared at him. “Sorry.”
“Can
we
just
be
friends?”
I
asked.
He
twisted
his
lips
and
pouted.
“Yeah.
I
guess.”
“You’re a nice guy, Aaron. I’m just not ready to date anyone yet,” I said. I didn’t
tell him that I’d never want to date him. Rejecting him once was enough for the
night.
“Kissing is not dating, Finn,” he teased. I rolled my eyes at him and then laughed
because I knew he was joking. “Yes, we can be friends,” he said and smiled.
***
I went back to Florida for spring break. Thankfully, my mom didn’t take any days
off of work, so my days were relatively peaceful and free of strenuous activity. I
slept in, watched TV and worked on some projects that my professors had
assigned to do over the break. That was what I wanted, an uneventful week.
The weeks passed so quickly. Before I knew it, finals week had arrived. The
semester had flown by. Everyone was stressed out and studying–even Sidney.
My grades were good, so the pressure of doing well on my finals wasn’t hanging
over my head. Sidney’s preference for partying had gotten the best of her and
put her in her present position–studying for hours on end and hoping to pass each
exam with a decent grade or else she would end up on academic probation and
have
to
attend
summer
school.
We had decided to share a dorm again the following year. She wasn’t difficult to
live with and had become a good friend. I didn’t want to deal with the painful
process of trying to acclimate to a new roommate’s habits and peculiarities. We
had finally meshed.
I lay on my bed with my headphones on listening to music. I still couldn’t bring
myself to listen to jazz, but other music had found its way back in my life again.
Sidney was sitting at the desk, typing like a maniac. She was on her sixth cup of
coffee and was completely wired.
“Once I’m done with this paper, I’m through,” she said to me, speaking at a record
rate. The caffeine had kicked in.
I pulled my ear phones off. “That’s your last exam?” I wish I were lucky enough
to have a paper as an exam.
She nodded. “English Literature.”
“Oh. I still have a project presentation in my business class,” I said. “Which
reminds me; I need to call my grandfather.” I had called him more than once in
the last few weeks. He knew more than my professor did about running a
business, and his advice for my business plan was really helpful. Plus, I just liked
talking with him. I missed seeing him everyday.
“Have you practiced for it?” she asked.
“I don’t need to. We had to create a business. So I chose a diner. I just have to
stand up in class and talk about it. It’ll be easy.” I shrugged.
“Better you than me.” The click, click, click sound of her fingers pressing against
each key pervaded.
I picked up my phone and called him. “Grandpa,” I said, as I walked out the door.
Even though I had to suffer through Sidney’s constant phone jabber, she couldn’t