Read The Year I Almost Drowned Online
Authors: Shannon McCrimmon
away from Harrison which meant he’d be further away from me.
“Yeah.” He looked at me with a serious expression. “They called me yesterday.
It
all
just
happened.”
I didn’t say anything. I sat there with my arms folded against my chest and sulked.
Nana looked in my direction and said “I think we’re going to bed.” She and my
grandfather stood up. My grandfather took their mugs and placed them in the
dishwasher.
“Goodnight. Jesse, we’re so proud of you.” She hugged him and then kissed me
on
the
cheek.
“Be
nice,”
she
whispered
to
me.
“I’m proud of you, son,” my grandfather said and patted him on the shoulder.
“Thank you for coming today. It means a lot to me.” Jesse gave them a warm,
heartfelt
smile.
“Lock up for us,” Grandpa said, and they left the room heading upstairs to their
bedroom.
I got up and poured more coffee into my cup. I didn’t speak and neither did Jesse.
He just sat there with this look on his face, an unreadable expression. I had no
idea what he was thinking. A million thoughts were running through my mind.
How were we going to make this work if we were going to be so far away from
each
other?
“Coffee?”
I
asked
with
slight
anger
in
my
tone.
“Sure,”
he
said,
his
tone
quick
and
short.
I walked to the table and slid the cup in his direction. I sat down and looked at
him. He picked up his mug and held to his lips and sipped it slowly.
“When
were
you
going
to
tell
me?”
I
asked.
“It just happened.” He put his mug down on the table and rubbed his hand against
his
temple.
“It couldn’t have just happened, Jesse. You had to apply.” I was being terse.
He leaned in closer to me, his hands on the table. “I applied everywhere, Finn.
There aren’t a lot of job openings right now, especially for guys right out of
school.”
“Well,
it
would’ve
been
nice
to
hear
before
tonight.”
He frowned and shook his head. “I can’t believe you’re mad about this.”
“You
can’t
believe
I’m
mad?”
I
said
indignantly.
“Well... yeah. It’s an interview. You should be happy for me.”
“You
should’ve
told
me,
Jesse.”
He ran his fingers through his hair. He shook his head and closed his eyes.
“You’re
being
selfish,
Finn.”
“How?”
I
raised
my
voice.
“I need to get a job, Finn,” his voice was quiet. “What difference does it make if
I’m
working
in
South
Carolina
or
North
Carolina?”
“It matters, Jesse. The further away you are, the bigger the distance between us.”
I meant that in more ways than one and he could tell. Jesse was smart. He could
read
me.
“I don’t see it that way,” he said. “It doesn’t matter where I live, Finn. I could be in
Kansas. I’m committed one hundred percent to you, don’t you see that?”
I shook my head. “How can we have a relationship if we’re hundreds of miles
apart from each other? What are we going to do? See each other on holidays
and breaks if our schedules permit. We’ll be lucky if we get more than a few
weeks
out
of
the
year
together.
That’s
not
dating.”
It was true. I was confessing things I had thought about for a while but had been
too afraid to say out loud. I was scared out of my wits. What was happening to
us?
What
was
I
saying?
Why
was
this
happening?
“What you’re saying makes no sense,” he said in a frustrated voice. “It wouldn’t
have been that different if I got a job near here. It’s still far away from your school.”
“It’s different. If you’re near here, it’s like you’re home. If you’re up there, it’s like
you have another life in another place,” I said. “Without me,” I added quietly. “I
want
things
to
stay
the
same.”
“They’ll be the same between us. Our feelings won’t change.”
“It’ll be different, Jesse. Our relationship won’t be the same, not with you working
and
me
in
school.
It’s
going
to
change.”
“Nothing’s going to change, Finn. Can’t you see that?” he asked.
“It’ll
change,
Jesse,”
I
answered.
He sighed heavily. “Do you even know what you want? I know what I want, but
do
you,
Finn?”
“I want it all to be the same.” That’s what I wanted. I wanted it to be perfect without
the
complications.
He stood up and ran his hand over his tense, stress ridden face. “Now I know
how
you
feel.”
“What’s
that
mean?”
“I mean,” he said, putting both of his hands on my shoulders, “relationships take
commitment and sacrifice. I don’t know that you’re in this one hundred percent. It
shouldn’t matter where either of us lives. If we love each other, we can get through
it as long as we meet each other half way.” He let go of me and rubbed the back
of
his
neck
and
then
squeezed
it.
“I’m in this as much as you are, Jesse. It’s just have you thought about this? How
can we keep this going when our lives are headed in two different directions?” I
was so afraid to ask that question because I knew neither of us knew the answer.
“I
don’t
know
how
it
will
work,”
I
murmured.
“I don’t know but you need to figure it out, Finn. If you can’t handle what’s involved
with separation, then I don’t know if you’re willing to commit.” He moved closer to
me and touched the top of my hand and then pointed to himself. “I am, Finn. I’m
so in love with you, I know what I want. But I don’t know if you do.” The way he
looked at me, so despondent, it killed me to see him like that. “I’m gonna go now,”
he said and walked out the door without even saying goodbye.
I didn’t get up. I didn’t move. I didn’t run after him. I just let him go. I wanted to
run after him, to tell him I was in love with him, but I didn’t. I just let him leave.
I didn’t sleep well for the next few nights. How could I? I kept replaying the
conversation in my head over and over again. Was it over between us? How did
I let it happen? Why didn’t tell him I was wrong, that I could deal with long distance
dating? But it would have been a lie. A bold-faced lie. I didn’t know how to deal–
with
any
of
it.
I checked my phone and re-read the one text message sent to me at three o’clock
in the morning from over three days ago. “Finn, I need time to think. I’ll call you
when I’m ready to talk.” That was all he wrote. I was going crazy. We used to talk
everyday. I knew something was seriously wrong. The look on his face when he
left
the
other
night
said
it
all.
I pathetically looked at my phone again for the billionth time. No matter how many
times I checked it, there wasn’t another text or call from him. I don’t know why I
tortured myself that way. I lay in bed for what felt like the longest time. I’d had a
long day at the diner and with the lack of sleep I’d gotten, standing on my feet all
day wore me out. I thought working would get my mind off things, but it didn’t. It
made it worse. Every time I looked in the kitchen, I thought of Jesse. I didn’t tell
Meg or Hannah what had happened between Jesse and me because I wasn’t
even
sure
what
had
happened.
Their voices carried upstairs to my room, interrupting my meditative state. It was
him. He had come! A surge of energy came over me and I sprang up out of bed
and ran to the bathroom, looking into the mirror, checking my appearance. Ugh.
Hideous.
I combed my hair and pulled it into a pony tail. I splashed cold water on my face
and checked my reflection again. Pale. There wasn’t much I could do to help that.
I pinched my cheeks. They turned red for a second and then went back to their
natural state: whiter than white. I walked into my bedroom and rummaged through
my dresser drawer pulling out a teal green long sleeved shirt and dark denim
jeans. I tore off my spaghetti stained sweat shirt and ugly sweat pants and put
the shirt and jeans on. My dad’s sweater was draped around my chair. I snatched
it and put it on over the shirt. I was all set with one exception - the pink fuzzy
socks that covered my feet. Not a good look. I grabbed my brown furry boots and
put them on over the socks. Just as I was about to walk out of my room, I heard
a
knock
on
my
door.
“Finn,”
Nana
said
from
the
other
side
of
the
door.
“Come
in.”
“Jesse is here to see you.” She looked at me and frowned. “My goodness, you
look as tired as Jesse.” That was her way of saying that I looked awful. Who was
I
fooling?
A
better
outfit
couldn’t
help
me.
“I
haven’t
been
getting
much
sleep.”
“I guess he hasn’t either,” she said. I began to walk past her, but she stopped me.
“I don’t know what’s going on between you two. It’s none of my business. But it’d
be
a
shame
if
things
ended.”
I didn’t give her a response. I walked down the stairs and saw him standing by
the front door. He did look tired. But he still looked good. How could someone so
tired still look so handsome? He was dressed up, too. I had never seen him in
clothes like that before–black pants, a light blue button up shirt and a tie. A tie.
Jesse
never
wore
a
tie.
“Can
we
go
somewhere
to
talk?”
he
asked.
“Okay,”
I
answered.
We walked outside and got into his car. It was warm and smelled musky, like him.
He turned the ignition and moved the vents so they were all facing me. The hot
air blew on me. As he drove up and down the hills, nothing was said. Silence.
Absolute silence. No music, no conversation, nothing. It was excruciating. I could
hear rocks and other things on the road hitting the car and the swoosh of the tires
hitting the concrete pavement and other cars passing us by. I had no idea where
we
were
headed.
“Where
are
we
going?”
I
asked.
“I don’t know.” He sighed and hit the steering wheel with the palm of his hand.
I flinched and then recovered. “Well find a place, Jesse. We can’t drive around
like
this
all
night,”
I
said
curtly.
Why
was
I
so
mad?
“Fine,” he said through clenched teeth. He swerved the car off to the side of the
road, his blinker clicking constantly, the heat was still blowing on me. He rubbed
his hands against his face– the thing he did when he was stressed. “I got the job
in North Carolina. That’s where I was earlier this morning.” He wasn’t looking at
me. He was just staring at the windshield, at the infinite nothing in front of him.
“You...
did?”
I
shifted
so
I
was
facing
him.
“Yeah.” He turned his head in my direction. “I start in two weeks.” His expression
was
serious.
“That was fast,” I said. “I’m glad you got a job, Jesse,” I added quietly.
“I
did
a
lot
of
thinking,”
he
began.
“Me, too,” I interrupted. “I’m thinking of holding off going to Harrison and will go
to South Carolina State next fall instead. It’s close and won’t cost much. We
wouldn’t be that far away from each other. That way, we could still date.” It was
something I had thought about the minute he left the other night. It seemed like
the only way we could stay together, that we could make things be the same. I
didn’t
want
any
of
it
to
change.
He looked down, his lips turned down. “You’re not gonna give up on a school like