Authors note: the idea for this story came from the name of a reader, SequoiaSempervirens, who commented on another of my stories. This reminded me of a trip that I took as a young man and here we are.
As usual, all protagonists in this story are over the age of eighteen years old.
What follows is a work of fiction based on real-life events. None of the characters depicted are real and any similarity to real people living or dead is purely coincidental.
As always any grammatical errors are mine alone.
Please score and comment. Constructive comments are valuable and help authors to both write better and to write more.
Helens' Story.
On a narrow strip of land situated on the West coast of the United States grow the giant redwood trees. They are amongst the oldest and largest living things on earth. The oldest of these are more than three thousand two hundred years old and were living at the end of the Bronze Age when three great civilisations of the Mediterranean Basin, the Hittite, Minoan, and Mycenaean disappeared from history. Many of them were over a thousand years old when Jesus Christ lived and was crucified.
I first saw them when I was a young man. J was traveling by car from Vancouver in British Columbia to San Francisco. My route had taken me down US Route 101 into Northern California and then onto the "Avenue of the Giants," where these massive trees line the road.
I was too young for these to be on my bucket list, but I had nonetheless decided to take the coastal route to San Francisco rather than the faster inland route via Highway Five. I knew I wanted to see these trees. I did not yet know how they would influence my life.
The first redwood I saw did not have a name. it was not the Immortal Tree, the Drive-Thru Tree, the Chandelier Tree, General Sherman, the Dyerville Giant, or Hyperion. It was an anonymous, unremarkable, giant sequoia standing with several others by the roadside and was maybe two hundred feet high and ten feet in diameter.
I was awestruck.... transfixed. It is not an exaggeration to say that, at that moment, I felt the presence of something that I did not understand. I felt tiny and humble. To my shame, the only words I could find to express what I was feeling were,
"Oh Fuck!"
I didn't know it at the time but over half a century earlier, Joseph Strauss, the designer of the Golden Gate Suspension Bridge, had written a poem called "The Redwoods." The final two lines of his verse reflect perfectly what I was feeling.
"Sink down, Oh traveler on your knees,
God stands before you in these trees."
***
I drove slowly down the road. Although it was mid-August, the sun could not fully break through the canopy of the trees lining the road and only dapped light shone through.
"Here, sown by the Creator's hand.
In serried ranks, the Redwoods stand."
Twelve miles after passing Stafford, I came upon a sign directing me right to the Rockefeller Redwood Forest, and I followed the road for three miles until I arrived. I parked my car in the parking lot and looked around. Many of the larger redwoods were close to the car park but I decided to walk along the loop trail in the forest. Away from the car park, the trees grew close together and it was dark, the gloom pierced here and there by shafts of sunlight. It was very quiet and restful, and the dark trunks surrounded me like the stone pillars of a cathedral. Although there were several other cars besides mine in the car park, at first, I saw nobody else on the trail. Then, about thirty yards ahead, I saw a figure. I did not pay much attention to them other than to notice how insignificantly tiny they appeared against the dark trunk of the tree. It was only when I got closer that I could see that my companion was a tall young lady around my age. She was wearing blue jeans and a white blouse, had short black hair, and was very pretty. She was peering intently into the forest canopy, and I do not think she noticed me as I walked by.
As I walked up the trail, I turned and looked behind me, and caught sight of her walking away from me in the direction from which I had come. She was in the company of two other people that I had not seen before. I arrived back at the car park twenty minutes later, unlocked the car, and got behind the wheel. As I did, another car pulled out of a space adjacent to me and drove away. I could not see the occupants clearly but was surprised to see the white and blue number plate with "Beautiful British Columbia" embossed onto it, receding into the distance.
***
I drove back the way I'd come and back onto the main road. A short distance away I turned left towards the Founders Grove, the site of the Founders Tree and the Dyerville Giant. The car park there was busy, but I found a space next to a white Buick Electra with BC plates. This was the car I had seen earlier.
The trees I had come to see were huge. The Founders Tree was at the front of the loop whilst the Giant was halfway around the trail. It was there that I saw the threesome again. It seemed that they were a family; mum, dad, and daughter. I watched as the young lady took a photograph of her parents standing at the base of the tree.
"Would you like me to take a picture of all three of you," I asked.
"Yes, please. Do you know how to use this camera?"
"I've got one a lot like it," I said, pointing to my camera case slung over my shoulder.
I took the camera and then the shot and handed the camera back.
"Do you mind taking one of me," I asked.
"No problem," and she waited as I took my camera from its case.
"You're Canadian," she said.
"Vancouverite, born and bred."
"That's where we're from."
I handed her the camera and stood by the tree. Her parents had moved away and were watching us. She took the camera from me.
As she peered through the lens, she spoke.
"I hope this comes out OK. I take rubbish photos. They normally come out at an angle."
At that moment I couldn't have cared less how the photograph turned out. If she thought I was looking at the camera, she would have been wrong. I was looking at the girl holding the camera.
She was tall, her short black hair framed a round slightly freckled, and pale face with big brown doe-eyes, a perfectly formed nose, and soft red lips. Her denim jeans accentuated her big bum and her thigh gap, and hinted at her sexuality, and under her white blouse the twin mounds of her breasts were visible. I was smitten, and wondering how I could turn this chance encounter into something else. I needn't have worried. She did it for me.
She gave me the camera.
"Are you alone?" she asked. "Have you driven from Vancouver on your own?"
"Yes, but it's not so far. I was meant to be with my brother, but he cried off. I'm driving to San Jose to meet my parents. I'm in no hurry. and only driving around three hundred miles a day. This is my third day."
"You must have left the day after we did. We're driving to L. A. I'm on holiday with my mum and dad. What's your name?"
"Chris."
"I'm Helen, I'm pleased to meet you, Chris."
By now, her parents had walked a short way up the trail. Helen called after them.
"Mum. Dad. Come back here. This is Chris. He's from Vancouver too."
Helen's parents stopped and turned towards us. He was tall, casually but expensively dressed, and in his forties. She was also casually but practically dressed in an expensive-looking summer dress and very pretty. It was difficult to judge her age and it was apparent she took great pride in her appearance.
"Chris is driving to San Jose alone," said Helen.
"Your parents must trust you," said her mum.
"They do. Although my younger brother was meant to come too. I keep to the speed limits, drive sensibly, don't drive more than three hundred miles a day, and don't drive in the dark. My dad has a saying, ' Better to be ten minutes late in this world than fifty years early in the next'. "
"Sensible man your father," said her dad. "Anyway, it was nice meeting you, young man. Come along Helen. We need to get moving."
As he turned to walk away, Helen turned to me.
"Which way are you driving? Are you going to Hopland?"
"I plan to try to find a motel in Lakeport."
"That's after Hopland, I think."
She ran after her parents and urgently spoke to them. I heard snippets of conversation.