Read The Year I Almost Drowned Online
Authors: Shannon McCrimmon
him.
He stopped scouring the grill and smiled at me. I think my heart dropped to my
stomach when he did. His smile always made me feel that way, but on a day like
this, it was a double whammy. “You’re welcome. I’m off tomorrow. I could come
in
again,”
he
said.
“No.
You’ve
done
enough.”
He shrugged. “It’s not a big deal. It was fun today,” he said. “Like old times.”
Like “old times” with my grandfather, or “old times” with me, I wondered? Yearning
for the past is an unhealthy way to live, but I really wanted to rekindle that part of
my
life–for
plenty
of
reasons.
“I’m hoping I can get my dad to come around.” I had no idea when that would be:
months,
years,
decades.
“I don’t mind, Finn,” he said and began to scrub the grill again. I could see the
definition in his muscles as he moved his arms back and forth. Being a firefighter
had
made
him
ripped.
“Okay,” I agreed. If he wanted to come in, then I would let him. “But you get paid
for
this,”
I
added.
He quit scrubbing and said while looking into my eyes, “Whatever you want, Finn.”
“That’s what I want,” I said and so much more, but I didn’t say that. I blew my
bangs out of my face, a few strands still fell in front of my eyes.
He pushed the loose strands behind my ear. Right there and then it felt like we
were a couple, like the break up never happened. It was the way he looked at
me, the shortness in both of our breaths, the sheer magnitude–all of it. But then,
his expression changed, like he realized what he was doing and the moment
disappeared within a blink of an eye. I almost wondered if I had imagined it.
“Agreed.”
He
smiled
and
started
to
scrub
again.
I left him to finish cleaning and went to the front to close the blinds and help
Hannah finish up. A police car pulled up, and Everett stepped out. “Hannah.
Everett’s
here.”
He knocked on the door. I opened it and he came inside. “Hey, Finn.” I had only
seen him once since I had been back in Graceville and that was at the funeral.
He
was
the
police
officer
that
escorted
us
to
the
cemetery.
“Hi,
Everett.
Can
I
get
you
something?”
“Coffee would be good. I’ve got a long shift tonight,” he said.
“Hey
cuz.”
Hannah
swatted
him
with
her
wet
wash
cloth.
He
brushed
his
shoulder
and
said,
“Not
the
uniform.”
“Such
a
baby,”
she
teased.
He sat down at the counter. I poured the hot liquid into a large Styrofoam cup and
put a lid on it. “Here you go,” I said. He fumbled through his pocket searching for
some
change.
“It’s
on
the
house.”
“At least let me give you a tip,” he said, handing me several one dollar bills.
“That’s
too
much.”
I
handed
some
of them back
to
him.
His
hand
touched
mine.
“Just
keep
the
bills,
Finn.”
“I’ll
take
them
if
she
won’t,”
Hannah
interrupted.
We both laughed and then got quiet. “So, are you holding up okay?” he asked
me.
“Yeah.”
I
breathed.
“I’m
good.
Thanks
for
asking.”
“Is the diner doing something for the Movie in the Park night?” he asked.
“What
‘Movie
in
the
Park’?”
I
asked.
“They’re showing one of those old 80’s summer flicks. People sprawl out on the
lawn, watch a movie, drink, eat, hang out. It’ll be fun. I’m on duty for it.”
“When
is
it?”
“In a couple of weeks.” He sipped his coffee. “Black.” He smiled. “You
remembered.”
“I
remembered
your
bad
taste,”
I
teased.
“Oh come on. My taste isn’t so bad. I can recognize beauty when I see it.”
Okay, he was definitely flirting with me. Sidney would probably say he was
coming on to me. My radar for this type of things was usually poor, but not this
time.
My face turned a slight shade of red. “I need to get my Nana to make some of her
pies. There’s no way we can lose out on a chance to make all that extra money,”
I said more to myself, but it was loud enough for him to hear.
He
laughed.
“You’re
quite
the
entrepreneur,
aren’t
you?”
“Huh, no. Just trying to think of ways to make a profit.”
“Like I said... entrepreneur,” he said and smiled. “Thanks for the coffee.” He laid
down two one dollar bills. “Here’s the rest of the tip money you wouldn’t take from
me.” He got up and walked toward the door. “Bye, Hannah.”
“See
ya
later,
Ev,”
she
said.
“I
guess
I’ll
see
you
at
the
movies,”
I
said
to
him.
“It’s
a
date.”
He
smiled
and
walked
out
the
door.
I placed the rest of the tip money in my pocket and turned around, bumping into
Jesse.
“Sorry,”
I
said.
“Everything is done in the kitchen. I’m gonna go,” he said.
“Thank you, Jesse. I would’ve drowned today if it weren’t for you,” I said.
His brows were furrowed. His lips were semi-pursed. “I’ll be here tomorrow,” he
said with a tinge of agitation. “Bye, Hannah.” He shoved the door open and left.
“He
seemed
upset,”
I
said.
“Probably because he witnessed the whole swoon fest between you and Ev.”
“Swoon
fest?”
I
repeated.
She rolled her eyes. “The flirting, Finn. It was obvious to Jesse and me that you
guys
were
flirting.”
“I
wasn’t
flirting,”
I
said
defensively.
“Um, yeah, you were,” she said tersely. “Next time, do it when he’s not around.
The guy worked a twenty-four hour shift and just worked another eight hours for
you. And how do you thank him? You flirt with my cousin.”
I had no idea that Jesse had worked such a long shift and then topped another
eight hours onto his day. But I didn’t ask him. I just let him work without question.
I selfishly allowed him to save me because I was too afraid of failure. I folded my
arms against my chest and said in a defensive tone, “I don’t think Jesse cares
who
I
flirt
with.”
“For someone with your smarts, you sure are a dummy sometimes.” She huffed.
I
frowned.
“Ouch,”
I
replied.
“That
hurt.”
“Wake up, Finn.” She grabbed her purse and stalked out the door. We had never
had words like that; Hannah was rarely angry. But this had made her mad, in fact,
she
was
fuming.
I didn’t understand why she was reacting the way that she was. Jesse and I had
broken up. He let me go, not the other way around. He said it was because I had
doubts, but what that meant to me was “we’re through.” And now, here he was,
sending me mixed signals. Was it to honor my grandfather? Because I was sure
it
had
nothing
to
do
with
me.
***
Nana sat on the front porch, her red Keds touching the top step. She was waiting
for me and didn’t look happy. More unhappy people, more people mad at me. I
slowly approached the steps, standing on the grass. Go ahead and yell at me, I
thought.
“Finn,”
she
said.
“We
need
to
talk.”
This was not going to be good. “Okay,” I said, standing a few feet away from her.
“I had to take your father home today. He was a wreck. It was too much for him.
I
knew
this
wasn’t
going
to
work.”
What she said really angered me. When did she become so pessimistic and why
was she the only one allowed to grieve? That’s what we were all doing, weren’t
we, just in different ways? She stopped baking. I was trying to run the diner
without an idea of what I was doing. Dad had become even more of a recluse.
We
were
all
missing
my
grandfather,
all
of
us.
“I’m going to sell it to Mike Wyatt. He’s made a decent offer,” she said.
Whoa. That threw me for a loop. I felt like I had been punched in the gut.
“Nana, you can’t sell the diner to him! What are you thinking?” I shouted.
“Excuse
me,
young
lady,
but
this
is
my
decision.”
“Well, you’re wrong, completely wrong, and Grandpa is turning over in his grave
right
now!”
I
yelled.
A look of pain shot across her face. “That’s not fair, Finn.”
“It’s the truth and you know it. You gave me one day and just gave up on me.
When did you stop believing in me? I know you’re hurting, but Nana, I am, too.”
Tears
were
starting
to
fill
in
my
eyes.
“I’m doing the best I can,” she recoiled. “I miss him so much.”
I sat down next to her. “I know you do, Nana. I do, too. Each and every second
of each and every single day. He was too young to die.”
“He was, Finn. But his heart was just too weak. I knew it. He knew it.”
“It’s
not
fair.
I
wanted
more
time
with
him.”
“I hate to use the cliché that life isn’t fair, but it isn’t honey.” She wiped a tear from
her eye and continued, “You can’t have life without loss. You can’t have love
without sorrow. You have to take the bad with the good, otherwise the good won’t
feel as special.” She wrapped her arm around me and brought me closer to her.
“But why?” I asked, even though I knew she didn’t have all of life’s answers.
“I don’t know, honey. I wish I did. All I know is that he loved you and he knew you
loved him. That can’t be taken away. You’ll always have that love to cherish.”
“He wouldn’t want you to sell it to Mike Wyatt, and you know it,” I said quietly. I
wiped the tears away from my eyes with my arm. It smelled like bacon grease
and for some reason, that brought me comfort on this horrible day.
She scratched her head and puckered her lips. A few tears trickled down her
face. “You’re right,” she finally said and then took a deep, long breath.
I didn’t respond. I let her dictate where the conversation went next.
“He couldn’t stand Mike, neither can I for that matter.” She twisted her lips into a
frown. “He wears too much cologne and always chews gum like a horse.”
I
tried
to
stifle
my
laugh.
“I guess we can hold out a little while longer and see if we get a better offer.” She
patted my hand, her hand was warm and soft. Being close to her, touching her,
always brought me comfort. “Did you end up doing the cooking once your dad
left?”
she
asked.
“No.
Jesse
did.”
“Sweet boy.” She smiled to herself. “That was awfully nice of him.”
“Yeah,” I answered, and she looked at me. “What?” I said to her.
“Nothing. It was nice of him to help out. That’s all.” But there was more to it, and
I wasn’t about to have that conversation with her. I knew she was dying to ask
but wouldn’t. She hadn’t trespassed into that forbidden discussion. “So, what are
we going to do about your dad?” she asked, killing the silence.
“I don’t know. He can’t keep hiding, Nana. That’s what he’s been doing and we’ve
allowed it, all of us–you, me, Grandpa. We just let him pass through life.”
“Well... we can’t make him come around. I know he felt bad about what happened
today,” she said with a frowned expression. “Give it time, honey. We’ll get it
figured out.”
Jesse still had a key to the diner. I guess he never got rid of it, and Grandpa had