: Chapter 21
It’s Not Summer Without You
The first time it hit me that day was when I was in the bathroom, washing the sugar off my face. There was no towel hanging up, so I opened the linen closet, and on the row below the beach towels, there was Susannahâs big floppy hat. The one she wore every time she sat on the beach. She was careful with her skin. Was.
Not thinking about Susannah, consciously not thinking about her, made it easier. Because then she wasnât really gone. She was just off someplace else. That was what Iâd been doing since she died. Not thinking about her. It was easier to do at home. But here, at the summer house, she was everywhere.
I picked her hat up, held it for a second, and then put it back on the shelf. I closed the door, and my chest hurt so bad I couldnât breathe. It was too hard. Being there, in this house, was too hard.
I ran up the stairs as fast as I could. I took off Conradâs necklace and I changed out of my clothes and into Taylorâs bikini. I didnât care how stupid I looked in it. I just wanted to be in the water. I wanted to be where I didnât have to think about anything, where nothing else existed. I would swim, and float, and breathe in and out, and just be.
My old Ralph Lauren teddy bear towel was in the linen closet just like always. I put it around my shoulders like a blanket and headed outside. Jeremiah was eating an egg sandwich and swigging from a carton of milk. âHey,â he said.
âHey. Iâm going to swim.â I didnât ask where Conrad was, and I didnât invite Jeremiah to join me. I needed a moment just by myself.
I pushed the sliding door open and closed it without waiting for him to answer me. I threw my towel onto a chair and swan-dived in. I didnât come up for air right away. I stayed down under; I held my breath until the very last second.
When I came up, I felt like I could breathe again, like my muscles were relaxing. I swam back and forth, back and forth. Here, nothing else existed. Here, I didnât have to think. Each time I went under, I held my breath for as long as I could.
Under water, I heard Jeremiah call my name. Reluctantly I came up to the surface, and he was crouching by the side of the pool. âIâm gonna go out for a while. Maybe Iâll pick up a pizza at Nelloâs,â he said, standing up.
I pushed my hair out of my eyes. âBut you just ate a sandwich. And you had all those dirt bombs.â
âIâm a growing boy. And that was an hour and a half ago.â
An hour and a half ago? Had I been swimming for an hour and a half? It felt like minutes. âOh,â I said. I examined my fingers. They were totally pruned.
âCarry on,â Jeremiah said, saluting me.
Kicking off the side of the pool, I said, âSee ya.â Then I swam as quick as I could to the other side and flip-turned, just in case he was still watching. Heâd always admired my flip turns.
I stayed in the pool for another hour. When I came up for air after my last lap, I saw that Conrad was sitting in the chair where Iâd left my towel. He held it out to me silently.
I climbed out of the pool. Suddenly I was shivering. I took the towel from him and wrapped it around my body. He did not look at me. âDo you still pretend youâre at the Olympics?â he asked me.
I started, and then I shook my head and sat down next to him. âNo,â I said, and the word hung in the air. I hugged my knees to my chest. âNot anymore.â
âWhen you swim,â he started to say. I thought he wasnât going to continue, but then he said, âYou wouldnât notice if the house was on fire. Youâre so into what youâre doing, itâs like youâre someplace else.â
He said it with grudging respect. Like heâd been watching me for a long time, like heâd been watching me for years. Which I guess he had.
I opened my mouth to respond, but he was already standing up, going back into the house. As he closed the sliding door, I called out, âThatâs why I like it.â