Read The Year I Almost Drowned Online
Authors: Shannon McCrimmon
firefighters,
the
rest
marry
cops?”
“That is absurd.” I wondered if it was a jab toward me. Not that I was marrying
Everett, but I was on a date with a cop, so what did that make me in Jesse’s
eyes? I folded my arms and pursed my lips. The more I thought about it, the
angrier
I
became.
“What?”
“So I’m not a real woman?” I snapped. I tapped my foot on the floor but not to the
beat
of
the
music.
He scratched his head and tilted it to the side, giving me a confused look. “Are
you
guys
getting
married?
That
was
fast,”
he
said.
“No. But you made it sound, oh forget it!” I clenched my fists and pursed my lips.
I
almost
stomped
my
foot
like
a
toddler
having
a
tantrum.
He stifled a laugh and then gave me a serious expression. “Still have the bad
temper,
too.”
I
glared
at
him.
“Your
face
is
red,
Finn.”
“Why
are
you
being
this
way?”
“What way? Start dating a cop and you lose your sense of humor.” He nodded
confidently and then said seriously, “I’m just kidding with you, Finn.” He playfully
poked
me
in
the
arm.
“I
don’t
think
you’re
funny.”
He
shrugged.
“I
guess
I
can’t
make
everyone
laugh.”
I was about to say something else, but Everett interrupted us. “Everything okay?”
he
asked,
sensing
my
anger,
reading
my
body
language.
“I
was
just
keeping
your
date
company,”
Jesse
said.
Everett placed his hand on the small of my back. It felt like a territorial move, and
I didn’t like that. I moved a little, giving him the subtle hint to take his hand off of
me. Jesse noticed it all and raised his eyebrows at me in the process.
The upbeat tempo changed to a slow, softer tune. Couples took hold of each
other’s
hands
and
found
their
way
onto
the
dance
floor.
“Excuse me, I promised a special lady a dance,” Jesse said, leaving us as he
approached my Nana. He placed his arm in hers and escorted her to the dance
floor.
“Do
you
want
to
dance
again?”
Everett
asked.
“Sure,” I answered, and I followed him amidst the crowds of couples dancing
slowly.
He placed his hands around my waist; I wrapped my arms around his neck. We
swayed back and forth to the slow melody. Out of the corner of my eye, I watched
as Nana and Jesse moved to the music. She looked happy, her grin broad. She
was laughing uncontrollably at something he had said to her. Everett and I
continued to move to the music. He tried to make polite small talk, but my eyes
were
focused
on
Jesse
and
Nana.
The song came to an end. “I want to say hi to my Nana,” I said.
She fanned herself with her hands and laughed at something Jesse had said.
“I’ve
been
looking
all
over
for
you,”
I
said
to
her.
“Well, hello to you, too,” she replied. “I’ve been on that dance floor most of the
night. Let’s see, Cookie and I danced, then Ronald–Charlie’s old buddy, and then
Jesse.” She counted on her fingers. “Lord it’s hot in here,” she said, still fanning
herself.
“Would
you
like
something
to
drink,
Lilly?”
Jesse
asked.
“Sure.” She smiled. “Not that punch, though. I hate sherbert.” She crinkled her
nose.
He got up off of the chair and pointed to it. “You can sit if you’d like, Finn,” he
said.
“Finn, I’ll be right back. I see some old friends of mine,” Everett said to me and
then said to Nana, “It’s good to see you again, Mrs. Hemmings.”
She
continued
to
fan
herself.
“You,
too,”
she
replied.
“You
look
like
you’re
having
fun,”
I
said
to
her.
“Can’t
say
the
same
for
you,”
she
said.
“I’m
having
fun,”
I
said
defensively.
“Whatever you say honey. You just seem to have a sour puss face. That girl
Jesse’s been dancing with isn’t his date. He came alone,” she said.
My eyes averted hers. “I wasn’t even thinking about that,” I lied.
“Sure
you
weren’t.
Y’all
are
fools,”
she
said.
“Thanks
a
lot.”
“Just
calling
it
like
I
see
it,”
she
retorted.
“Here’s your drink, Lilly.” Jesse handed her a red plastic cup. She took it from him
and
gulped
the
liquid
down
in
one
long
swallow.
“Lord, I was parched. You wore me out with that dance, Jesse.”
“Would
you
like
to
dance
again?”
he
asked
her.
“I think I’ll sit this one out. Why don’t you dance with Finn? She’s young. She can
handle
you.”
Before I had time to give her a dirty look, he looked at me waiting to see my
reaction. I stood up and gave him a half-smile. He took my hand and led me to
the dance floor. The tempo was slow. We stood there awkwardly at first, trying to
figure out what to do with our hands. He wrapped my arms around his damp neck
and then placed his hands securely around my waist. His grip was firm and sent
a tingling sensation throughout my entire body– like that feeling you get when a
limb
falls
asleep.
I couldn’t look at him. It was unnerving and too familiar. “Lilly’s having fun,” he
said.
“She is.” I garnered a smile. I laid my head against his warm chest. It seemed like
the thing to do even though it was intimate, too intimate. He smelled like fabric
softener and the earth. Jesse always smelled like the earth–musky and sweet.
His chin rested on my head. I could feel his warm breath blowing onto my hair.
“I’m
glad.
I
was
worried,”
he
started.
“Me, too,” I answered before he could finish. “You’re so good to her.”
“She’s family,” he said matter of fact. We continued to sway back and forth to the
soft
melody.
“This
is
nice,”
he
murmured.
“Uh
hmm.”
I
wanted
to
stay
there
forever.
Infinitely.
He loosed his grip from my waist and gently unwrapped my arms from around his
neck. “Thanks for the dance,” he said. I hadn’t heard the music stop but could tell
from the couples departing from the dance floor that it must have.
And
just
like
that,
our
dance
was
over.
***
I could hear the hum of the air conditioning and the sound of the tires swishing
against the wet pavement. It was raining. Water continued to pound the
windshield. I watched as the wipers moved back and forth, the rubber hitting the
glass,
squeaking
against
it.
Everett put the car in park, the engine still running, a romantic country tune played
on his radio. “I had fun dancing with you tonight, Finn,” he said. He shifted his
body
so
that
we
were
facing
each
other.
“Thanks. Me, too.” I smiled at him. I did have fun with him. The only problem was,
he wasn’t Jesse. He’d never be Jesse. I told myself to quit comparing, but I
couldn’t help it. Jesse was all I knew about dating...and love.
“You’re a good dancer.” He stretched his arm out to touch my shoulder.
“Thanks,” I said. I couldn’t say “you, too,” because that would have been untrue.
His hand found its way to the back of my neck. The tips of his fingers grazed my
neck. Even though it felt good, in the back of my mind, I knew it was wrong.
“You’re
really
pretty,
Finn,”
he
said.
“Thanks, you, too,” I said and then upon realizing what I had said, became
embarrassed.
Sometimes
I
could
be
so
ridiculous.
He let out a soft chuckle. “I’ve never been called pretty, but I like it.” He continued
to massage the back of my neck. A part of me wanted him to continue, the other
part, the one that knew my heart belonged to someone else, knew he needed to
stop.
He leaned forward and placed his lips on mine. Even though he was handsome,
nice and had all the qualities in a guy that most girls would love (and he could
kiss really well), I didn’t feel anything. Not one thing. No chemical reaction. No
goosebumps. No butterflies in my stomach. Nothing. Not like I did when I kissed
Jesse.
He must have sensed my feelings, the one-sided chemistry. Was there something
wrong with me? Most girls would welcome his soft lips on theirs. But not me; my
heart
belonged
to
someone
else.
Kissing
him
felt
wrong.
His lips parted from mine. He gave me a half-hearted smile like he was about to
say something but decided against it. Any girl would want to kiss Everett, any girl
but
me.
“Guess
I
shouldn’t
have
done
that,”
he
said
apologetically.
“It was nice,” I said to him, which sounded cliché and insulting. It’s what you say
to someone when you’re talking about a wedding you went to or some event, but
not when they’ve kissed you. Describing a kiss as “nice” is one of the worst things
you can say. It’s almost as bad as saying the kiss itself was awful.
“I knew better.” He shook his head and sighed. “It was written all over your faces
tonight, and I still kissed you. I guess I was just hoping that maybe a small part of
you was attracted to me.” He looked at me earnestly. “But I can’t compete with
someone you’re in love with and really, I don’t want to.” He touched the top of my
hand and ran his fingers back and forth, then removed them. “Y’all are in love
with each other. I don’t know what broke you up, but I’d try to fix it if I were you.”
My relationship with Jesse had been split at the seams. I just wondered if there
was
a
way
to
sew
it
back
together.
“I’m in love with him and always have been,” I admitted more to myself than to
him. It was the first time I’d said it out loud to anyone since Jesse and I had broken
up. Everett had that affect on me. For some reason, he had become my sounding
board.
“Then go for what you want. I’ve seen too much death in my life, Finn. You gotta
live
while
you
can.”
Unabashed, I admitted my innermost feeling to him. “I’m afraid.”
“Then find the strength. Because you’ll regret it if you don’t do anything about it.”
“You’re a good friend to me,” I said. “Thank you.” I smiled.
“I would’ve liked to have been more, but I’ll settle for being friends,” he said.
“If I wasn’t in love with him, I know there’s no way I’d let a guy like you go,” I said.
I had admitted to my feelings about Jesse; I just didn’t know what I was going to
do about it.
Another week passed. Why do the long summer days move faster than the rest
of the days in all the other seasons? When you want time to stand still, to slow
down, it plays one of its twisted jokes on you and speeds up. The hands of time
move
faster
and
faster.
Within a few weeks, I’d be back on campus, taking classes, studying, living the
life of a college student–the antithesis of all that I had grown to know this summer.
I’d have to acclimate again. I just didn’t know if I was up for it. I didn’t know if it
was
what
I
wanted.
To
acclimate.
I sat in front of my grandfather’s computer tallying the books from the day’s sales.