-2003-: ...ing

It started with a flicker. Not a light bulb—something deeper. A flicker in the space between cable channels, in the static hiss after 2 AM. My friends called it boredom. I called it a waiting. We’d lie on the roof of Mark’s parents’ garage, passing a single stolen cigarette back and forth, and watch the sky do nothing. Absolutely nothing. No stars. No planes. Just a thick, bruise-colored silence pressing down on our subdivision.

The summer of 2003 was not supposed to be the one where I learned to drown. It was supposed to be the summer of learning to drive, of grazed knees from skateboards we were too old for, of the stale taste of pool chlorine and cheap cherry cola. Instead, it was the summer the air turned to glass. ...ing -2003-

In late July, we went to the reservoir. Six of us, crammed into a Ford Taurus with a busted AC. The water was the color of weak tea, but we didn't care. We dove in anyway. And for ten minutes, I felt nothing but the cold. The blessed, mindless cold. Then I opened my eyes underwater. It started with a flicker

“You okay?” Jenny asked. She was treading water two feet away, perfectly fine. The Frisbee arced overhead. Normal. The year 2003, normal. My friends called it boredom