Read The Year I Almost Drowned Online
Authors: Shannon McCrimmon
“We can go to my room,” I said quietly. A dark feeling came over me, and I felt
like my chest was caving in. There’s that feeling you get when your whole world
is collapsing and everything seems to be closing in on you. That was what I
experienced as I walked each step to the second floor of my dorm building. I knew
whatever they had to tell me, it was bad.
The three of us entered my room. I sat down on my bed; Meg sat next to me.
Jesse sat on Sidney’s bed across from us. Meg wrapped her arm around me.
“Just tell me,” I said. I couldn’t stand it. I needed to know.
“We tried calling you several times,” Meg said. “You must not have your phone
on or something.”
I reached into my pockets. Empty. My phone–I had left it on the desk. I picked it
up and frowned. “I forgot to charge it last night. The battery is dead.”
Jessie knelt on the floor in front of me. He touched my hand, sending shivers
through my body. His finger tips hadn’t touched me in so many months, but just
one quick graze still made me react erratically. He took the phone out of my hands
and
carefully
laid
it
down
on
the
bed.
“Finn, we tried reaching you,” he said and swallowed. I looked directly into his
eyes. He was having a hard time saying what he needed to say.
“What happened?” I asked Meg. My eyes were starting to water. Meg looked at
Jesse and then at me, her expression was pained. “What is it?”
“Charlie had a heart attack last night. He was in the hospital and had some
complications. His heart was still weak from the other heart attack he had last
summer. They did everything they could, but he just didn’t have the strength,”
Jesse
said.
“No.”
I
shook
my
head.
“He’s
strong.”
He was in agony. “I’m so sorry, Finn. He passed away early this morning.”
I fell back on the bed and cried uncontrollably. The room was spinning and things
started to turn black. I don’t remember much after that. Everything seemed like a
blur.
“She’s in shock,” Jesse said, his voice sounding like it was a million miles away.
I felt two fingers on my wrist. “Her pulse is low, but she’s okay. We just need to
let
her
lay
here
for
a
while.
Prop
her
feet
up.”
My feet were raised and a soft pillow found their way beneath them.
“She looks really pale, Jesse. What do we do?” Meg asked.
Even though they were next to me, their voices sounded so distant, so far away.
I could hear and see them, but I felt like I was somewhere else.
“I’ll get a cold rag and put in on her head. We should probably pack up her things,
too. You get started. I’ll call Lilly,” he said to Meg. “Finn, just lie here for a minute,”
he said to me. I heard the water run from my sink. A cold cloth was pressed onto
my
forehead.
I felt Meg get off the bed. I could hear her footsteps moving around the floor,
going back and forth, moving throughout the room. I couldn’t move. It’s like I was
paralyzed. My eyes were open, but they were staring at nothing, absolutely
nothing.
“What’s
going
on
in
here?”
It
was
Sidney.
“I’m Jesse and this is Meg. We’re friends of Finn’s. Her grandfather passed away
and we’re packing up her things to take her home.” His voice was low and serious.
“Oh my gosh, Finn.” She ran over to me. “What’s wrong with her?”
“She’s in shock. Do you know where she keeps the rest of her things?” he asked
her.
“Below her bed. Here.” A warm, soft hand touched mine. “I’m so sorry, Finn.”
***
I don’t remember getting off the bed. I don’t remember leaving my dorm room,
and I don’t remember getting in to my car. All I remember was that my grandfather
was gone from my life forever. Death had invaded my life. Way too soon.
Meg was driving my car. I sat in the passenger’s seat next to her. My head rested
against the window. Had I slept? I didn’t know. Everything seemed to blend
together–the hours, the events that took place before and after they came–all of
it.
“We’re
almost
there,”
she
said
in
a
soothing
voice.
I
didn’t
answer
her.
I
continued
staring
out
the
window.
“I got you a Coke. You should drink some of it. You need something in your
system.” I turned my head and saw the bottle sitting between us. “Here.” She
picked
it
up
and
handed
it
to
me.
I held it in my hand and unscrewed the cap and took a slow sip. It didn’t help. I
put the lid back on and placed it back between us. “How did you get here?” I
murmured.
“Jesse.
Don’t
you
remember?”
“No,”
I
said
quietly.
“He’s driving my car.” She pointed to the car behind her. “He and Lilly agreed that
you shouldn’t try and drive home by yourself after hearing the news. He called
me early this morning and asked me to come with him.”
“Thank
you.”
She put her hand on my arm and said, “Oh, Finn. I’m so sorry.”
“I should’ve had my phone on me. If I had known, I could’ve come home.”
“Finn, you can’t blame yourself.” She made a sympathetic face. “Charlie’s heart
was
weak.
There
was
nothing
anyone
could
do.”
“If I hadn’t gone out. I would’ve had my phone and would’ve gotten the messages.
I
didn’t
get
to
say
goodbye,”
I
cried.
Her
free
hand
grasped
mine.
“Charlie
loved
you,
Finn.”
“I just talked to him tonight,” I sobbed. Feelings of guilt and remorse flooded me.
Why had I been in such a hurry to get off the phone? Why did I have to go
swimming? Maybe if I had been in my room, instead of the pool, I could have
driven home and gotten to him in enough time to see him one last time? I wanted
to turn back the clock, but I didn’t have that kind of power. I was weak with guilt
and didn’t know how I’d ever dig my way back to the surface.
***
The second I saw Nana, I ran to her and hugged her. We stood there holding
each other, trying to give each other comfort, while we cried and cried. Neither of
us
wanted
to
let
go.
She put her hand to my chin and gave me a very faint, tired smile. “You look
tired.”
She looked tired, too. Really tired. “I didn’t sleep. Oh Nana, I loved him so much.”
It
hurt
to
talk
about
him
in
past
tense.
It
made
it
real.
“I know honey, and he loved you to pieces. You were the light of his life.”
“How are you holding up? Is there something I can do?” I wanted to do something.
Being back at home woke me up. I needed to be strong for her. She needed more
support than I did. This was a man she had been married to for fifty years, and
now
he
was
gone.
She shook her head and smiled. “Finn, you just being here is enough for me.
Let’s go inside.” Being back home made me feel better. The faint scent of cherries
still lingered in the living room. Meg and Jesse followed us into the house,
carrying
my
bags.
Jesse placed my bags at the end of the stair case and walked over to Nana. “I
have
to
be
at
the
station
soon.”
How soon? I wondered. The station was over an hour away.
She placed both her hands on his cheeks. “My sweet boy, what would I do without
you?
Thank
you.”
“Let me know what else you need me to do,” he said and hugged her.
“I will,” she said and then looked at Meg. “Thank you, Meg. You’re a good friend
to
Finn
and
to
me.”
Meg placed both her warm hands on my arms. “Finn, you call me if you need
anything. I mean it.” I gave her a grateful nod and then hugged her. “Jesse. You
ready?”
She
moved
toward
the
door
and
opened
it.
“Jesse,” I said and he stopped moving. “Thank you,” I added, my voice was
hoarse and scratchy from all of the crying, from being completely and utterly worn
out.
His expression was solemn and sincere. I could see the traces of water lingering
in his sea blue eyes. Had he cried? I hadn’t noticed. I hadn’t noticed anything in
the last several hours. He didn’t say “you’re welcome” because it would have
been a strange thing to say at a time like that. Instead, he acknowledged, giving
me
the
faintest
smile,
and
then
walked
out
the
door.
***
There was one funeral home in the town of Graceville. McNeely’s Funeral Parlor
was established in the early 1900’s by Robert McNeely, now deceased. His
grandson, Robert, Jr., was its current owner. He was an obese man–so heavy
that it looked like his large, round head was right on top of his shoulders without
a neck in sight. He talked with his hands a lot, which were short, stubby and very
chunky. Sweat trickled down the sides of his face. He kept placing a handkerchief
up
to
it
and
wiped
away
the
droplets
every
so
often.
It’s bad enough to be grieving, but to step foot into a carpeted room with sappy
chamber music playing on the speakers intensifies the grieving process and
catapults you into a further state of depression. Talking about which coffin to
choose–what type of service to have, which music to play, and what to have
written for the memorial–was too much for my Nana or me to handle. But
someone
had
to,
and
that
someone
was
me.
My dad came with us, although he wasn’t much help. Once he stepped foot inside
the funeral home, he retreated to a laconic state and barely muttered two words
during the entire meeting with Mr. McNeely. It frustrated me. I wanted him to step
up, to help us, to do something. It wasn’t fair to Nana to have the burden of
grieving
and
planning
a
funeral.
Mr. McNeely rambled on about one coffin being better than the other. “I can’t
decide, Finn,” Nana said to me. She was always the strong one, and for the first
time
in
my
life,
she
was
beside
herself.
So I chose the coffin, the music, the type of service–all of it. At nineteen years of
age, I was in the midst of planning my grandfather’s funeral–a task I’d never
thought I would have. All of a sudden, I had to grow up and I didn’t want to. I was
still
grieving,
too.
We left McNeely’s Funeral Parlor and drove to the diner. It had been closed since
Grandpa died. Nana unlocked the door; my dad and I followed her inside. She hit
the light switch. The place still smelled like him; his presence was everywhere–
from every nook and cranny–he was the diner. I imagined him coming out of the
kitchen saying something to us, but he didn’t and wouldn’t ever again. And it hit
me hard. On that day, it hurt so much to be inside the diner that I loved so much.
Nana went back to his office while my dad and I sat at the counter. “Coffee?” I
asked
him.
“Sounds
good.”
I placed the coffee grounds into a filter and poured water into the coffee pot. It
percolated while we sat quietly on the bar stools. My dad rested his hands under
his chin, his elbows on the counter; I sat in similar fashion. We were alike, yet so
different in many ways. Nana walked out of Grandpa’s office carrying a stack of
receipts,
bills
and
his
ledger.
“Oh good you made coffee,” she breathed. She sat down next to me and
separated the receipts and bills, scattering them out on the counter. “I have no
idea how he did his book keeping. There’s no rhyme or reason to it.” She frowned.
“Let me see if I can figure it out,” I said and moved the papers closer to me. I
studied them and looked through his ledger. It was like reading hieroglyphics, but