Read The Year I Almost Drowned Online
Authors: Shannon McCrimmon
your
family
through.”
“You’ve got to forgive him. Remember when you told me I had to forgive my mom
and let the anger I had toward her go or it’d eat me alive?”
“Yeah.” He rolled his eyes. “I didn’t know what I was saying.”
“Jesse, you knew exactly what you were saying,” I said and placed my hand on
top of his clenched fist. “I listened to you then, please listen to me now,” I pleaded,
looking
directly
into
his
eyes.
“I don’t know if I’ll ever forgive him for what he’s done. He can mess up my life as
much
as
he
wants,
but
you,
you’re
different.”
“I’m no different than you. I’ve forgiven him. If you can’t forgive him, at least let
the
anger
go,
Jesse.
Otherwise
it’ll
change
you.”
Jesse looked down at his hands and sighed. “For you, Finn, I’ll try, but I can’t
make any promises. It’s going to take a long time for me to forgive him for what
he did,” he said. I couldn’t criticize him for the way he felt. He was being honest.
And, even if those feelings weren’t perfect, they were his, and I had to respect
that. “So, tell me, why’d you bring me a pie so late at night?” He looked at me and
waited
for
me
to
answer.
I gulped and took a short deep breath. “I wanted to see you,” I said. “To talk.”
He leaned forward, resting his elbows on the table. “Okay,” he said with
uncertainty.
I took another deep breath. “I know why you broke up with me.”
He
frowned.
“Finn,”
he
breathed.
I held my hand up. “Let me finish, okay?” I had to say what I wanted to say right
then and there or else I would never muster enough courage to get it off of my
chest. “All that time, Jesse, I thought you broke up with me because you didn’t
love me anymore. I thought I had lost you for good. But I was wrong, so incredibly
wrong. I was just too blind to see it. Everyone tried to tell me–Nana, Hannah,
Sidney–but I wouldn’t listen. I didn’t listen to anyone. I just kept on believing the
bad stuff because sometimes the bad things are easier to believe than the good,”
I said, staring directly into his light blue eyes. “Jesse, at the time, I didn’t know
what I wanted or where I was headed. You were trying to give me space, so I
could
figure
those
things
out.”
“Yes,” he agreed quietly. “I couldn’t keep dating you knowing in the back of my
mind that you were questioning it all, that you weren’t sure. It killed me, Finn,” he
said, his lips turned down. “It was one of the most difficult decisions I’ve ever had
to make. I knew if we stayed together, I would only hold you back and I couldn’t
do
that
to
you.”
“It took me a while to figure things out, but I finally see things clearly.” I took a
deep breath. “Jesse Quinn, I love you and I know what I want, and what I want is
you. And I never, ever want to be apart from you ever again,” I said as tears fell
from my eyes. I looked at him and waited for a response. It was killing me. Was I
wrong?
Were
his
feelings
for
me
gone?
“I think.” He stood up and came to me, leaning over me. I looked up at him,
searching his light blue eyes. He took my hand, helping me up. He pulled me
close to him–the scent of fresh soap coming from his warm skin. He placed his
fingers under my chin and tilted my head up so we were looking into each other’s
eyes. The smell of apples and cinnamon came from his moist breath as he said,
“I think that’s exactly what I have been hoping to hear from you, Finn, for the
longest time. Finley Hemmings, I am so in love with you. You’ve had my heart
since
the
day
we
met.”
He leaned down and placed his lips on mine and gave me the most delicious kiss
of my entire life. I saw fireworks light up the night sky. My heart beat like a drum.
I knew without a shadow of a doubt that I loved him, and that made this kiss the
best
kiss
of
my
entire
life.
This
kiss
was
the
real
thing.
His lips parted from mine and he looked down at me. My face was flushed and
warm, his just as much, if not more. “I’ll always look back on this day as one of
my
favorites,”
I
said.
“Me, too,” he said. I stood there so close to him, holding both of his hands, never
ever again wanting to let go. He had tied a rope around my heart and now it was
his.
Forever.
“Don’t
go
home,
yet,”
he
said.
“I
wasn’t
planning
to,”
I
said
with
a
devilish
grin.
He made a tisk, tisk sound with his lips. “Save the best for last,” he teased. “No,
what I meant ‘Miss Dirty Mind,’ was that I wanted you to stay and enjoy this night
with me. Let’s hang out. Like old times.” He grabbed my hand, leading me to his
back
yard.
We sat down, side-by-side, on his back porch step. It was completely dark
outside. Not one streetlight shined in the distance. I couldn’t see Jesse clearly
but could make out his shadow and hear him breathing. “This isn’t what I had in
mind,” I said in a teasing manner, but deep down under, I wasn’t joking.
He whispered in my ear and kissed the nape of my neck, “Get your mind out of
the gutter, Finn. It’s still early.”He laughed loudly and drew me closer to him.
Fireflies lit up the night sky, blinking light every other second. “I used to catch
these with my mom when I was a kid. We’d put them in jars.”
“I love fireflies. I never saw any until I moved here. They don’t live in Florida,” I
said in a quiet voice, afraid I was going to wake his neighbors. “I guess there’s a
lot
I
didn’t
see
or
experience
until
I
moved
here.”
“I’m
so
glad
you
got
on
that
bus
last
year.”
“Me, too, Jesse. I guess I should thank my mom.” I laughed at the irony.
“We can call her first thing tomorrow morning and thank her.”
We both laughed and then things grew quiet for a moment. “This is nice,” I told
him, breaking the silence. “Being here with you. I’ve missed you so much.”
“Me, too, Finn. I’ve missed us.” He kissed me softly on the lips, his fingers ran
through my hair. “I could kiss you forever,” he said unabashed.
On that night, our special night, nothing was omitted; everything was out in the
open. There was nothing to be ashamed of or too afraid to admit. We both knew
what we wanted. Having that kind of certainty made confiding so easy and
effortless. It was pure trust and true love. Neither one of us was ever going to let
the
other
go
ever
again.
I leaned my head on his shoulder and watched the special light show the fireflies
were performing for the two of us. “Seeing fireflies is one of my favorite parts
about
summer.”
He stroked my arm with the tips of his fingers. Goosebumps instantly formed.
“That
and
diving
with
me,
right?”
he
said.
“Diving
with
you
is
my
absolute
favorite.”
He kissed me longingly, with yearning, different than before, much more intense
and layered with deeper meaning. His lips parted mine. I could hear his shallow
breaths. He laced his fingers into mine and said, “Anything I get to do with you is
my
absolute
favorite,
Finn.”
“As long as I’m with you, Jesse, I’m happy,” I said and smiled. I nuzzled as close
as I could get to him and watched as the flickering lights brightened the dark night
sky.
“Wanna
go
to
the
pool
and
dive?”
He
nudged
me.
“You
read
my
mind,”
I
said
and
giggled.
We both got up and swiftly walked through his house, shutting the front door
behind us. I held onto his hand as we ran down the street toward the community
pool, ready to dive back in.
All eyes are on me. An anxious crowd of people stand before me, but I’m not
nervous, instead I’m filled with confidence. A long red ribbon stretches in front of
me: my dad is holding one end; my Nana, the other end. Both of them have the
proudest
expressions
I’ve
ever
seen.
I search the crowd. Almost the entire town of Graceville is here to support me.
Jesse, Meg, Hannah, Matt, Sidney, Lou and my mother are in the front, cheering
me on. My mother came after all. It took half a year, but she has finally come
around. We didn’t speak for months, but in time she realized that what she wanted
for me wasn’t what I wanted for myself; that I had to live my own life. She grew to
support me in my decisions because I was happy. I was finally doing what I really
wanted.
I was such a different person a year and a half ago. The old Finn would’ve never
had the guts to open a business. I would have kept living for my mom, doing the
things she wanted me to do. I would have passed through life without
experiencing anything. If I had never gone to Graceville, I would’ve never known
the joy of family who shared the same spirit as me, or discovered what it means
to have true friends, or found out what it means to love and to be loved.
“Speech!” several of them shout in unison.
My face doesn’t turn red like it usually does in an instance like this. Instead, my
alabaster skin remains unfazed by the adventure I am about to embark on. I am
ready. I could’ve drowned this year, but I didn’t. I stayed afloat and learned what
it
meant
to
survive,
to
take
a
leap
of
faith.
I start talking, freely and with ease. “Thank you for coming today. I am humbled
by your support and hope you will love Charlie’s Cafe and Bakery as much as I
do. If my grandfather were here right now, he’d say, ‘Quit yapping, Finn, so we
can eat.’ So to honor Charlie Hemmings, I will shut my mouth so that you can all
eat.” I place the blades of the scissors around the ribbon and cut it into two pieces.
A
round
of
applause
erupts.
I push the front door and hold it open and watch as everyone eagerly fills my
restaurant. It is mine. All mine. I have done it. And at the young age of twenty. I
have
managed
to
make
my
dream
come
true.
Jesse waits until the last person trickles in. He lifts me off of the ground and kisses
me.
“You
did
it,
Finn!”
He
grins
broadly.
I beam. “I did, didn’t I?” I say with pride. I take his hand and walk inside my
restaurant,
ready
to
begin
the
next
my
life.
Chris, thank you for your advice, support, and feedback. I love you!
Mom, thank you for being so enthusiastic about my books. You should get a
commission
for
as
much
“pimping”
as
you’ve
done.
Audrey Perrott, my dear friend, thank you so much for editing this book. “You is
kind.
You
is
smart.
You
is
important.”
I
appreciate
you.
Laurin Baker, you are the world’s best beta reader! Thank you for reading this
book and editing it in the process, too. You offered honest, constructive criticism
that
helped
make
this
story
better.
Leighton Frazier, a.k.a. Heat, thank you so much for spending countless hours of
your time telling me all about firefighting school. You are awesome!
Charles Jerry Weisner, thank you for talking with me about your experience as a
firefighter.
You
are
my
hero.
Brandon, Joy, and Adam (Nugget) McNeill, thank you for providing me with police
infraction information and for telling me how much Finn’s ticket would cost.
Rodney Rogers, thank you for the information about Graceland. I now feel like