Read The Year I Almost Drowned Online
Authors: Shannon McCrimmon
down the road. I slowly got up off of the ground. Firetrucks surrounded the diner.
Firefighters sprayed gallons of water from their long hoses, trying to put out the
flames. The entire diner was on fire–all of it. There was no way it could be saved
now.
I trudged through the grass, crossing onto the road, and pushing my way through
the cluster of onlookers gawking at the fiery mess. The ambulance made a dash
for the parking lot. Two paramedics exited, grabbing a gurney, wheeling it toward
someone,
but
I
couldn’t
tell
who.
Was
it
Hank?
Within seconds, they rolled the gurney toward the ambulance with an injured man
laying on top of it. It was Jesse. He was hurt. I ran as fast as I could toward him.
“Jesse!”
I
screamed.
“Miss, you need to stay back,” a firefighter said, but I ignored him.
He lay on that gurney, his left arm swollen and red. I swallowed some bile, my
throat burning. Layers of his skin had been melted away. An oxygen mask
covered his mouth and nose. His sleepy eyes stared at nothing. I touched him
gently,
afraid
my
touch
would
hurt
him.
“Jesse,” I whispered, my throat dry and hoarse. His light blue eyes blinked in
recognition to the sound of my voice. “What were you doing in there?” I cried.
The paramedics began to lift the gurney up into the ambulance before he had the
chance
to
answer
me.
“Let me ride with him,” I said and coughed. My chest ached.
“Miss,
you
need
to
be
examined,”
the
paramedic
told
me.
“No,”
I
argued.
“I
don’t
want
to
leave
him.”
The paramedic looked over my shoulder and moved his eyes to the right, giving
a signal to someone. I turned and saw another paramedic standing right behind
me. “We need to examine you,” this one said to me. Before I could protest, he
gently took me by the arm and led me to the other ambulance.
“No.”
I
tried
to
jerk
away,
but
I
was
too
weak.
He sat me down inside of the ambulance and began to check my vitals. I watched
as Jesse was lifted up into the other ambulance. The doors closed and then the
ambulance
rode
away.
“We need to take you to the hospital. What’s your name, Miss?”
“Finley Hemmings,” I answered. “Will he be okay?” I looked at him desperately.
“Will
he
be
okay?”
“He should be,” he answered. “You’ve inhaled a lot of smoke.” He pointed to the
gurney.
“I’d
like
you
to
lay
down
here.”
I did as he requested and lay down while they poked and prodded me with
needles and other medical equipment. An oxygen mask was placed over my nose
and mouth. The clean, fresh air was an instant relief.
I lay on a hospital bed, in a crowded room, surrounded by nothing but sick people.
The cries of toddlers and babies screaming at the top of their lungs, heart
monitors beeping in constant rhythm, doctors and nurses moving hurriedly to
each patient, and the agonizing sound of people in pain were all that I could hear.
My pulse beat rapidly. It was too difficult to relax with all of that commotion.
My head continued to throb; my chest ached. I was a wreck, a literal wreck. No
one had come to check on me. When the paramedics took me into the emergency
room, one of the nurses’ found me a bed and then forgot about me. I continued
to lay on that stiff, uncomfortable flat mattress for a long time.
A nurse finally came and checked my vitals. “We need to take you up to Radiology
to have a chest X-ray,” she said to me. She didn’t ask me my name. She didn’t
introduce herself. I was just another patient in a row of many.
“Jesse
Quinn.
Can
you
tell
me
how
he
is?”
I
asked.
“Who?” She checked the monitor and then looked at me with a confused
expression.
“Jesse Quinn,” I repeated. “He was in the fire, too. He was burnt.”
“I don’t know. Sorry,” she said in a curt tone. It really bothered me that she
apologized, but was being insincere about it. What’s the point? Why say sorry if
it’s
not
sincere?
A few minutes later, I was wheeled up to Radiology and I still didn’t know anything
about
Jesse.
***
After sitting through a series of X-rays, I was wheeled back down to the
emergency room. They wanted to keep me there for a few more hours to monitor
me and to take more blood tests to check my oxygen levels in my blood–which
they said were low. I’d have to go through another series of chest X-rays, too. I
had inhaled a lot of smoke. Too much smoke, they said. It all seemed so
insignificant when I thought about what happened to Jesse–his skin’s layers
ripped away. The incomprehensible pain he must have experienced. Why did he
go
into
the
diner?
I couldn’t get anyone to pay attention to me. I wanted to talk to my Nana. But in
the sea of chaos, I was just a part of the daily problems they had to deal with, and
as
problems
go,
mine
were
minor.
It could have been an hour or even longer, I’m not sure. I lay there and watched
as nurses and doctors rushed to patients’ bedsides trying to save their fragile
lives.
The minute I saw the look of frenzied worry on both of their forlorn faces, I sobbed
hysterically. The tragic events and the uncertainty of what had happened to
Jesse,
were
too
much
for
me
to
handle.
Nana leaned into me and gently stroked my face. Her warm, soft fingers felt good
against my clammy skin. “Finn,” she whispered. “Thank God you’re okay.”
My dad took my hand and held it. “We didn’t know what happened to you,” he
said and frowned. “We’ve never been so scared in our lives.”
Having my family with me made it better. I wasn’t as afraid.
“Jesse?”
I
asked.
“Is
he
okay?”
“I don’t know. They only mentioned you, and we came as soon as we got the
call,”
she
answered.
“Jesse
was
hurt?”
“He was in the fire,” I started and then the tears began to fall again. “I don’t know
why he went in there, Nana. It doesn’t make sense. I’m so afraid,” I confessed,
peering
into
her
eyes
and
searching
for
comfort.
“I’ll go see what I can find out,” my dad said. He gave me a “don’t you worry”
expression and walked toward the nurses’ station. It was the first time I’d ever
seen
him
take
charge
of
a
situation.
“I’m
so
worried,”
I
fretted.
“I know, honey. I’m sure Jesse’s going to be fine,” she said.
I think deep down she was just as uncertain as I was. I couldn’t get the image out
of my head–his arm burnt beyond repair. Every time I thought about it, my insides
hurt and my heart ached. Jesse was somewhere in that hospital, in pain, and I
couldn’t
help
him.
I
felt
so
helpless.
No one would tell my father anything. They told him that since he wasn’t related
to Jesse, that meant no disclosure. They didn’t realize that Jesse was a part of
our family and that we had the right to know what was happening to him. I was
desperate to know something and considered getting up off of that bed and
pounding my fists on the table and shouting until I got my way. That’s what they
do in the movies. It always seemed to work. But, I knew that wouldn’t get me
anywhere, and I was still a little weak from the fire. The oxygen was helping. My
breath was becoming more even, and the rattle in my chest had all but subsided.
Nana and my dad continued to sit by my side as I lay there slowly going crazy
wondering when I was going to know something about Jesse and when I would
be released from that awful hospital. As I lay there, I questioned why I ever
intended to be a doctor. I hate hospitals. I hate the smell–the horrid disinfectant
that permeates the stifling sterile air. I hate that everyone is either sick or dying–
that people are taking their last breath in an environment that isn’t welcoming,
that isn’t home. But that was the old Finn–the Finn who wanted to be a doctor
because her mother told her that was what she should be. I wasn’t that Finn
anymore.
“Does Matt know about Jesse?” I asked. Matt was one of the few relatives he had
in Graceville. His Uncle, Matt’s father, was a truck driver and wasn’t in town that
often.
I
had
never
met
him.
“I’m
not
sure,”
Nana
said.
“You should call him,” I said. I realized I didn’t have my phone. I didn’t have
anything
in
my
purse.
All
of
its
contents
were
now
ashes.
“I will, honey. I need to call Sidney, too. I left the house in such a hurry and didn’t
leave
a
note
for
her.”
“Call them both,” I ordered and then watched as her face became crestfallen. I
kicked myself internally for being so inconsiderate and impatient. She was in just
as much shock as I was. Her husband’s diner had just burned to the ground and
it was one of the few things left living that was a part of him. Now it was gone–
with
all
of
its
memories.
“I’m
sorry,”
I
said
remorsefully.
“It’s fine. You’ve had a bad night,” she said to me, giving a half smile. “Pete,” she
said to my father, “get Finn and me a Coke, will you please?”
“Nana, I didn’t mean to be so...,” I started. I hated that I had hurt her.
She interrupted, “Finn, don’t. Let’s just try to get through this night.”
***
Finally, after waiting around for several hours, I was cleared to be released from
the hospital. Nana, Dad, and I filled out the numerous stacks of seemingly useless
paperwork and exited the emergency room in search for the front desk, hoping
that a hospital employee would tell us something about Jesse. To my right was
an open waiting room, covered in olive green carpet and maroon chairs.
Wallpaper with fruit baskets bordered the olive green walls. A large flat screen
television played the news. The room was full of stressed people who were
waiting to hear any updates about their loved ones. Hannah, Meg, Matt, and an
older man with salt and pepper hair and light blue eyes, who must have been
Jesse’s uncle given the resemblance, sat in that crowded waiting room with
stressed
expressions.
“Meg.”
We
held
onto
each
other
tight.
“We
were
so
worried,”
she
said
with
a
sigh
of
relief.
“I’m so glad you’re okay. We didn’t know what happened,” Hannah added. They
both huddled around me and held onto me with firm, tight grips, as if this were
the last time we were going to see each other. I flinched, feeling a little smothered.
They both let go of me. “Finn, oh my gosh, we saw the diner and thought the
worst,”
Meg
said
with
a
sad
expression.
“I’m fine,” I lied, giving them a plastic smile. Physically I was better. Mentally, I
was
a
mess.
“What
happened?”
Meg
asked.
“How
did
it
start?”
Hannah
asked.
I felt surrounded. I was being inundated with questions that I wasn’t prepared to
answer. I didn’t want to tell them how the fire started. I didn’t want to relive that
moment.
I
just
wanted
to
know
about
Jesse.
“Has anyone heard anything about Jesse?” I interrupted them.
“They haven’t told us much of anything,” Matt answered in a frustrated tone.
“We’ve only asked them a million times,” he said with annoyance and loud
enough for the hospital employee to hear. He glared at her. Hannah touched him