Read The Year I Almost Drowned Online
Authors: Shannon McCrimmon
directly on his red hair. I flashed my car’s headlights on him. He put his hand in
front
of
his
face
and
moved
toward
the
car.
He opened the door and sat down. The thermos was in his lap. He smelled like
chicory and cloves. “It’s too early for you to be shining those things on me,” he
mumbled
in
a
low,
hoarse
voice.
I had never seen him that early in the morning and quickly realized he was not a
morning person. “Sorry,” I said and did a three-sixty turning the car completely
around.
He sipped on his coffee and as I drove on his bumpy gravel road, some of his
coffee spilled onto his lap. “Damn’t,” he muttered and wiped his pants.
Okay. So he really wasn’t a morning person; he was petulant.
“Sorry,” I said again. Was that going to be the extent of our conversation this
morning?
Me
saying
sorry?
I decided to keep quiet and just allow him to wake up. Hopefully, once he did,
he’d
be
back
to
his
normal
self.
Hopefully.
***
I turned on the lights. It was just how we left it. The smell of maple syrup and
bacon still permeated the air. It still felt like my grandfather, like he was right there
with us on our mad quest to try and step into his shoes. No one could ever fill
them.
My
dad
stood
around
helplessly.
“Dad, you can get started in the kitchen. I’ll make the coffee.”
I stared at the empty pie cases. Nana hadn’t made one in over a week. I hoped
that no one would want a slice on this day. Things couldn’t stay like that. It would
kill business. Her pies were a major reason people ate at the diner.
I put coffee grounds into the filter, added water to the coffee pot and flipped the
switch to “on.” It was dark inside the diner, even with the lights on. I opened the
blinds, turned on the juke box, and then walked back to the kitchen. He was just
standing there, looking around at everything and still doing nothing.
“Dad,” I startled him. “What are you doing? You need to prep the kitchen.” I was
being terse, but I was annoyed by the fact that he hadn’t done anything since
we’d
gotten
there.
“It’s been a while since I’ve been in this kitchen.” He touched the shiny stainless
steel
grill.
“We’ve got biscuits to make.” I grabbed the flour off of the shelf and put it on the
work
station.
“Dad,”
I
said
again,
this
time
forcefully.
“Got it,” he said, suddenly waking up from his meditative state. He rummaged
through the refrigerator and took out the eggs, milk and butter. I stared at him
doubtfully, waiting to see what his next move was. “Finn, you can go on,” he said
and started to mix the ingredients together in one large bowl. “I’m good now.”
I left the kitchen and unlocked the front door. Hannah pulled into the parking lot.
Meg had gotten a full-time job at a beauty salon and didn’t work at the diner
anymore. My grandfather had hired her replacement, an older woman named
Thelma. But when he passed away, she said it was her excuse to retire early.
That left just Hannah and me to serve, which wasn’t going to be enough people.
I hadn’t been open a day, and already I was in trouble.
“Hey, Finn,” Hannah said, as she came into the diner. She had gotten there early,
like
I
had
asked
her
to.
Hannah
was
dependable.
“Hi,
Hannah,”
I
said,
my
breath
short.
“You
okay?”
“Just
freaking
out
a
little.”
She patted me on the shoulder. “You’ll be fine. I’ll be right back.” She walked to
the
office.
Time passed, and the three of us were able to get the diner ready to open for
business. I put the open sign on the door and waited for customers to start
arriving. The first customer of the day came in, and I immediately sat him at a
table. After I took his order, I called it out to my dad, “One Adam and Eve on a
log.”
“English,
Finn,”
he
said
irritably.
“Two poached eggs on a sausage link,” I corrected myself.
He put the two eggs in a poacher and a sausage on the grill. He moved slower
than my grandfather but was doing okay despite my previous misgivings.
As the sun began to rise, more and more customers started to pile in. Almost
every table was taken. I was excited to see the place full. People wanted Lilly’s
to be open as much as I did. But as more people trickled in and more orders were
called, my dad started to panic in the kitchen. Tickets got backed up causing
customers to wait longer than usual for their breakfast. And they weren’t happy
about it, either. I was getting complaint after complaint after dreadful complaint.
I tried to remain calm. I couldn’t falter under pressure, no matter how much I
wanted to. With a pile of tickets stacked high in the kitchen and angry scowls
forming across the faces of the customers, I began to doubt why I had decided to
run
the
diner
without
my
grandfather
there
to
help.
To make matters worse, Jesse unexpectedly came into the diner. He was
dressed in black cargo pants and a navy blue City of Greenville Fire Station t-
shirt. He looked like he had just gotten off of work or was on his way to work– I
wasn’t sure and didn’t have time to think about it or to ask. He sat down on one
of
the
bar
stools.
“What
can
I
get
you?”
I
asked
in
a
hurry.
“Coffee.
But
I
can
get
if
you
want.”
“I’ll get it,” I said, as I turned around to pour the coffee into a cup, I saw flames
burst in the kitchen and my dad shouting every single curse word imaginable.
“What the...?” I dashed to the kitchen. I didn’t realize Jesse was right behind me
until I got there and watched him calmly pour baking soda on the stove to put the
fire
out.
“I
quit!”
my
dad
shouted.
“You
can’t
quit,”
I
said.
“I’m not cut out for this, Finn. Sorry,” he said and threw his apron down on the
counter
and
stormed
out.
I didn’t move. I was in shock and too stunned to say anything. I had depended on
him,
and
he
had
let
me
down.
Again.
Without a moment’s hesitation, Jesse grabbed the apron, put it on and said to
me,
“Call
out
the
next
order,
Finn,
I’ll
get
it.”
“No, Jesse. You don’t have to do this.” And he didn’t. We were through, weren’t
we?
He
didn’t
owe
me
anything.
“Just
call
it
out.”
I
pulled
the
ticket.
“One
flop
two
over
a
raft.”
He nodded and put the egg on the grill. I put the rest of the tickets up on the
window,
so
he
could
see
them.
“Have
you
got
this?”
I
asked.
“Go
find
your
dad.”
“I’ll
be
right
back,”
I
said
to
Hannah.
“Hurry,”
she
said
as
I
jetted
out
the
door.
I ran outside searching for my dad. He wasn’t anywhere in sight. I knew he
couldn’t have gone far. Downtown Graceville was essentially a square
surrounded by brick store fronts with a park (really more of a field of Bermuda
grass with a few old benches and a white gazebo) in the middle, and that’s it. I
placed my hand up above my eyes, to block the sun’s rays from blinding me, and
there he was, sitting on one of the park benches, sulking. I marched over to that
bench,
my
feet
stomping
on
the
ground.
I glowered at him. “Dad!” I shouted. “What are you doing?” I stood in front of him.
I clenched my teeth. My arms were tightly folded against my chest.
He shook his head and quietly sighed. “Finn, I’m sorry, I just can’t do it. It’s not
who I am anymore.” He peered down at the ground. A tiny part of me felt remorse
for being so abrasive with him. The other part of me was seething with anger.
“Mom is picking me up. You don’t need to worry about me.”
“Worry about you?” I scoffed. “Dad, there’s a bunch of people in there hoping to
get
fed
and
if
they
don’t,
they
won’t
come
back.”
He looked back up at me helplessly. “I haven’t done this in a long time. It was just
too
much,
Finn,”
he
said
with
a
distraught
expression.
“You didn’t even try. You just gave up–like that.” I snapped my fingers. “How long
are you going to live your life this way? I know you were sick, Dad. But you’re
managing now. You can’t keep using it as an excuse. There are lots of people
who have bipolar disorder and have full-time jobs, and they’re doing fine.” I had
done my research the moment I discovered he was alive and learned he had
bipolar disorder. He put his head down again and didn’t look at me. He was
ashamed.
“I’m
sorry,”
he
responded.
“So this is the way it’s going to be? You’re going to walk through your life allowing
everyone else to take care of you. Well, I can’t, Dad. What are you going to do
when
Nana
dies?”
“Finn,”
he
said
quietly,
desperately.
“It’s true. When she dies, you’ll be on your own because I won’t take care of you
like she has. I need you to be my dad. I’ve tried to form a father-daughter
relationship with you. It’s what I needed, what I wanted. But it’s been me taking
care of you, like I’m your parent. I won’t do that anymore.” I paused for a moment.
“Grandpa was more of a father to me than you are. I wish he were still alive,” I
spit out. Instantly, I felt a pang of guilt, but I was so angry and so hurt. He was
leaving me again, like it was no big deal, like I didn’t matter, just like before.
He gave a pained expression and stayed silent. How could he respond to that?
There was an underlying meaning–I wished Grandpa was alive instead of him.
He knew what I was saying without saying it. I felt terrible for having that feeling,
but I needed a father and Grandpa was all that I had ever had.
“You let me down, Dad,” I said, trying to hold back the tears, to not taste the bitter
disappointment. “I have to go. I have work to do. You can sit here all day for all I
care.”
I
stormed
off
back
toward
the
diner.
I wiped my eyes before I opened the door. I needed to get myself together for the
rest of the day. I tried to find some normalcy, some equal footing, after that chaotic
episode. I called out the rest of the orders to Jesse, to help him get caught up.
Plate by plate was delivered to each and every customer. Not one customer was
without food. And that was how things went from breakfast to lunch. Jesse stayed
in the kitchen taking each ticket, cooking each meal, and making sure every
customer
was
fully
satisfied.
It was finally closing time. I had never been so happy to put that closed sign on
the door. Hannah refilled ketchup bottles; I counted out the cash register; Jesse
was cleaning up in the kitchen; a soft, old melody played on the juke box. The
last of the customers had trailed out of the diner, leaving just the three of us to
finish
things
up
for
the
day.
Hannah finished with the ketchup bottles and started to mop the dirty, scuffed
floor. After I placed the cash and credit card receipts in the safe, I went into the
kitchen to talk to Jesse. My heart beat frantically. I don’t know why I was so
nervous,
but
I
was.
“Thank
you,”
I
said
to