Read The Year I Almost Drowned Online
Authors: Shannon McCrimmon
Please tell me you will, because nothing would make me happier than to do this
for you. Helping you take this leap of faith and live out your dream would make
me the happiest man in the world.” He smiled earnestly. “Please.”
“Okay. Okay!” I finally said. I was a blubbering mess. I jumped off of that couch
and leapt over to him, hugging him as tight as I possibly could. What he had just
given me was the most beautiful gift–hope and belief in me.
“Let’s
talk
to
Mom,”
he
said.
***
Nana and I helped Sidney carry her several pieces of luggage to her unwashed
BMW. Squashed bugs lay flat against her car’s windshield. Dried mud had found
its way on her doors, her hood and bumper. “What is with all these bugs and
mud? I’m going to have to have this car detailed when I get it back to New
Hampshire,” she moaned. She picked up the last of the luggage and put it into
her trunk. She slammed the trunk hard and then looked back at Nana and me.
“Sidney, you come back anytime,” Nana said and hugged her. “I sure have
enjoyed
having
you
around.”
“Lilly, I so wish I could stay instead of going back to New Hampshire with ‘the
Bickersons’, my emo sister and crazy grandfather.” She sighed. “Being around
you is like being around sunshine. You make me all warm and fuzzy.”
Nana laughed. “You’re too much, Sidney,” she said. “I got some more peaches
to pull. I’ll see you honey.” Nana picked up a large basket off the ground and
carried
it
with
her
toward
the
peach
tree.
“Not
one
for
goodbyes,
huh,”
Sidney
said.
“No.
She’s
said
it
too
many
times
this
year.”
“We have to go back to school soon.” Sidney grimaced. “I actually have to study
this
year
which
sucks
big
time.”
I laughed. I hadn’t told her yet that I planned to stay. I didn’t plan to until I talked
with Nana. “Yeah. No more late night swimming adventures for you,” I said and
she gave me an arguing look. “Okay, maybe one,” I relented.
“I
have
to
have
at
least
one,
Finn.”
“Thanks for helping out at the diner. I really appreciate it.”
“That’s what friends are for. Besides, I found a decent guy to date while I was
here.” She gave a mischievous smirk and raised her eyebrows up and down.
“And
not
a
bad
kisser,
either,
you
know
what
I
mean?”
“Poor
Tony
and
his
broken
heart.”
I
shook
my
head.
“Please,” she scoffed. “We’re keeping in touch. Actually, I sorta like him,” she
admitted and bit on her lip. She avoided making any eye contact with me and
looked down at the ground, kicking her foot, going back and forth.
“You like him,” I teased and laughed. “Sidney likes Tony,” I kidded again.
“Whatever.” She glared at me and then giggled. “So I like him. Big deal.”
“I’d say it’s a big deal. You like him,” I taunted her again.
She smiled and then gave me a quick hug. “You better tell that dreamy boy of
yours
how
you
how
you
feel
about
him.”
“I will. I promise,” I said. I just didn’t know when that time would come.
“Good, because I know things, you know what I mean?” She sat down in her car
and started the ignition. The low, quiet hum of the engine could barely be heard.
She
rolled
her
window
down.
“See you later, Sidney,” I said to her, even though it felt like a broken promise.
“See
ya
soon,
Finn,”
she
said
and
drove
away.
I met my Nana by the porch steps and took the heavy basket full of peaches out
of her hand. “I’m making a peach pie later, wanna help?”
“Sure,”
I
answered.
“I’m gonna miss that girl. She’s quite the spunky little thing.”
“I bet she’ll come back to visit,” I said as I set the basket on the breakfast table.
“That would be nice.” She turned on the stove and began to boil some water.
“Tea?”
she
offered.
“You
don’t
even
need
to
ask.”
I leaned against the counter, watching as she prepped the tea pot, adding more
than a cup of sugar. “I think we need extra sweet today.” She added a few more
spoonfuls. The morning sun cast a warm glow in the bright kitchen. I could still
smell
strawberries
from
the
pie
Nana
made
a
day
before.
The tea kettle whistled. I watched the steam creep upward while she poured
boiling hot water into her red tea pot and knowingly added honey and evaporated
milk into the already sweet mix. She took the tea pot to the table and laid it down.
“It
needs
to
steep
for
a
minute.
Let’s
sit.”
“Mom!”
My
dad
called
from
the
other
room.
“In here, Pete!” she hollered back to him. “What’s Pete doing here?” she asked
me.
“We
wanted
to
talk
to
you
about
something,”
I
said.
She
arched
an
eyebrow.
“Hmm...
this
is
curious,
isn’t
it?”
My dad entered the kitchen. Even the way he dressed and groomed himself was
different. He was wearing a white polo shirt with a pair of jeans. His red hair was
cut short– the tips were spiked up in a funky, yet trendy fashion–thanks to Meg.
He looked his age and was very handsome. The red beard that had covered his
youthful face earlier in the spring, was now gone. Dad was a new man.
“Hey, Mom.” He walked to the other side of the table and kissed me.
“So, what’s this you two so badly want to talk about with me?” Nana asked. I got
up to get some mugs and brought them to the table. “Thank you,” she said to me.
“Y’all still haven’t said anything,” she said incredulously. Nana was on to us.
“Tea first,” I said and began pouring it into the three cups. I slid a cup to Dad and
then
handed
Nana
hers.
“Now I’m really curious.” She folded her arms, giving us a look.
I took a very deep breath. “Nana, I have a serious business proposition for you,”
I
started.
***
Nana heard me out and was skeptical at first. It had more to do with me leaving
Harrison. But after I told her how passionate I was about this, that this was what
I wanted, she was on board. The diner would be rebuilt with the insurance money
she received after the fire. I was responsible for buying inventory items like tables
and chairs. And after much debate, she finally agreed to take a monthly rent
payment from me. “I’m not living off of you for free. We have to do this fair and
square,”
I
had
told
her.
“Fine.” She had pursed her lips. “You don’t need to pay me rent each month but
if that’s what will make you sleep at night, then so be it.”
And like that, I was a business owner. I was no longer Finley Hemmings college
student, but Finley Hemmings entrepreneur. It had a nice ring to it.
***
Lou pulled up driving his motorcycle onto my Nana’s driveway. It was an early
Saturday morning. My theory about Lou’s Saturday fashion choices had been
right. He was wearing leather chaps over a pair of denim jeans and a black leather
vest over a Jimmy Buffett t-shirt. He got off his bike and plopped his helmet onto
one of his handle bars. I walked down the front porch steps and met him halfway.
“How
you
holding
up,
kid?”
he
asked.
“I’m good,” I said. When Lou learned about the fire, he came over to Nana’s house
immediately and had visited me more than once since that time just to check in
on me. Deep down under, he was an old softy and not the bull dog he presented
himself
to
be.
“So what was this urgent business you had to discuss? You know it’s Saturday
and I ride my bike on Saturdays,” he said and then gave me a half smile. I knew
Lou’s
bark
was
worse
than
his
bite.
“I know,” I answered. “Nice chaps by the way,” I added and tried to stifle a laugh.
He wasn’t amused. “How would you like to stay on as my cook?” I asked.
He folded his arms against his chest and formed an intrigued expression. “Go on.
I’m
listening.
***
I pushed the screen door open and stepped onto the porch. The swing was calling
me, swaying gently back and forth in the tepid breeze. I sat down on it and pulled
my phone out of my pocket. I searched through my contacts and clicked on
“Mom.” The phone rang a few times before she answered.
“Hello?”
She
sounded
a
little
out
of
breath.
“Mom.”
“Finn. I’m glad you called. I was going to call you tomorrow. It’s been a while since
I’ve
heard
from
you,”
she
said.
She could always make me feel guilty. Always. “I’m sorry about that.”
“It’s fine. Let’s just not wait so long next time. It seems like we never talk
anymore.”
“I know. I’ve been really busy.” It sounded like a lame excuse–the type you give
someone when you’re avoiding them or subconsciously telling them they’re not
important
enough.
“Did Lilly get things straightened out with the insurance company?”
“Yes,”
I
said.
“That’s good. Insurance companies can be a pain sometimes. We deal with them
at work and they nitpick everything,” she said. “I can’t talk too long Finn, I’m
actually
going
out.”
“You
are?”
Mom
never
went
out.
Never.
“Yeah. I have a date.” She giggled. “It’s with the son of a client.”
“I
can
let
you
go.”
“No. I’ve got a little time to talk. He won’t be picking me up for another half hour,”
she said. I pictured her looking at her watch and then sitting down on the sofa.
“Are
you
getting
ready
to
go
back
to
school?”
“Not
really.
That’s
why
I’m
calling,”
I
started.
“What
do
you
mean?”
Her
tone
changed
instantly.
“I’ve been doing a lot of thinking about my life lately,” I started.
She interrupted, “Don’t tell me you’re going to major in philosophy,” she moaned.
“No,
it’s
not
that.”
“Well
then,
what
is
it?”
she
asked
impatiently.
I took a deep breath and then said, “I’ve decided to open a cafe bakery.” It was
an
instant
sense
of
relief
getting
that
off
of
my
chest.
“You what?” she said, her voice raised higher and louder. “Did that fire make you
lose
your
mind?”
“That was rough, Mom,” I said, stung from her insensitive comment.
“Too bad,” she said without a hint of remorse. “What kind of nonsense is this
you’re talking about? Running a restaurant,” she scoffed. “You’re not giving up
on that scholarship, Finn! It’s bad enough you deferred admissions. Now you’re
going to blow away a college education to run a restaurant in a tiny backwoods
town.
How
are
you
going
to
pay
for
all
this
anyway?”
I fell back against the swing and took a deep breath, trying to catch the wind that
had been knocked out of me. “First of all, that was hurtful,” I said. I felt defensive.
Graceville wasn’t a backwoods town. It was a beautiful place where people I loved
lived. It was home. “Secondly, I’m getting the money from Dad and am going to
pay
Nana
rent
each
month.
We
have
it
worked
out.”