*Author's note: This story is a work of fiction, and should be read as such. Any characters bearing similarity to any real persons, be they living or dead, is purely coincidental. This work is the property of the author, and no permission is given for this work to be posted anywhere but www.literotica.com*
***
Real quick: I don't like talkin' about myself too much, but this story really needs tellin'. My name's Dan. Dan Simonds. I'm thirty-one, and I'm an IT consultant in Brisbane. I take contracts mostly to help new companies get setup, or to help older companies restructure their networks and whatnot.
Conversely, I love the wilderness, and I love getting away from it all on my own. I know what you're thinkin'; a computer nerd that loves roughing it? Yep, it's true, largely due to the fact that me and my brother and sister were raised on property out west of Geelong, and we spent most of our young lives outdoors.
I have no girlfriend, though there's a string of failed relationships behind me, mostly because the idea of settling down never interested me too much. Nothing wrong with the girls, mind you. I liked 'em all, maybe even loved one or two, but I liked being me own man too much, you know?
Anyway, that's enough from me. What happened during this story changed my life, and I hope you get a good read out of it.
Cheers,
Dan.
***Early Spring, 2011, on the way to Yarramalong, New South Wales***
Ah, the mountain air. Nothing ever tastes or smells as sweet after you get out of the city. I'd decided this morning to chuck my shit in the Landcruiser and get gone.
My I.T. contract just finished with this mob that were setting up a new office in the CBD, and they paid me an arm and a leg for the work, which means that I won't have to put my name out there again for a while, as long as I'm careful with my coin.
Which means one thing: Camping, fishing, and four-wheel driving!
I never really needed much to be happy, as long as I had what I needed to get away when I wanted to. Pretty much everything I care about fits into the back of my Landcruiser. To be honest, it's mostly camping gear. I live in Brisbane, but the best thing about Australia is you can drive for two hours and feel like you're well away from civilisation.
Sometimes the city -- or more accurately, its people -- gets a bit much for me, so every so-often I bugger off over the Range and into the Granite Belt, or southwest into the New South Wales hinterland where I can get lost for days or even weeks and not see another human soul. It's magic.
I've got family around the place -- parents in rural Victoria, a brother and a sister in Melbourne -- but I don't see them much. It's not that we don't get along, it's just everyone's busy with their own lives, you know? Plus, if I'm being honest, they're a bit boring. I love them, but it's true. They see me as the 'Wild Child,' the 'different' one that won't settle down and have a horde of kids and work for forty years in a job you hate. I know what you're thinking: how appealing that lifestyle sounds.
I dunno 'bout you, but to me they're as crazy as cut snakes, and I'm the sane one. No lifelong commitments for me, thanks. I can do what I like, when I like, and that's the way I like it. Sometimes I look at Dad and I see a glimmer in his eyes when I talk about my last trip. He always wants to know where I went, who I met -- particularly women -- and a thousand other details. I think he's living through me a bit, but there's also a light of remembrance in his eyes, as if he's been there before. Funny, but every time I've asked him what he used to get up to before he met Mum, he dodges a direct answer and says shit like: "I just sat around not knowing my elbow from my arsehole till your mum came and saved me."
Of course, that shit gets him a kiss and a cuddle from Mum, but she never sees the ghost of a wink that accompanies his words. All that aside, gotta hand it to the old man; he taught me everything I needed to know about the bush, and without that I wouldn't be able to do what I'm doing right now.
The Landcruiser roared as I shifted down to take the next hill. The place I'm headed to is bang in the guts of the New South Wales Hinterland, which seems to attract plenty of tourists, though I doubt any of 'em have ever seen as much of it as I have. The real beautiful spots are the hardest to get to, but if you know your way around...
That's why I picked Yarramalong, or at least, that's the closest inhabited place to where I was going, which was Mangrove Creek. It's a top spot right on a wide river that somehow actually has sandy shores, almost like an inland beach. I've camped there for weeks on end and seen not a soul. Rest assured I wore very little the entire time, being on my own as I was. I've gotta admit; I'm a bit of a nudist at heart. It's one of the reasons I like getting away.
There's not much to do in Yarramalong, but I pulled in to the café on the main road to stretch my legs, grab a bite to eat and stock up on bait 'n tackle. The café is a humble little place with half-a-dozen chairs and tables with the eatery at one end and the shop at the other. There's a thousand places just like it all over the country.
As I pushed through the hanging beads in the doorway, a familiar voice hailed me. "Hey, Dan! Been a while!"
I smiled at Dolly, the rotund woman behind the counter with her graying hair up in a bun. "Good to see you, Dolly!" I said warmly. "Thought I'd stop in for one of those pies. You still make 'em?"
"Sure do," Dolly said. "Just one? Travellin' alone again?"
"Yep," I replied. "Just me, just the way I like it."
Dolly grinned and shook her head, then boldly eyed me up and down. She was never a shy woman, was old Dolly. "When are you gonna find a nice young woman, Dan? Handsome bloke like you shouldn't be having trouble in the love department."
"Trust me, Dolly," I told her with a grin of my own. "I've had enough trouble in the love department for the time being."
"No one special, then?"
I shook my head firmly. "Nope. And not lookin' either." I walked off a few steps to the bait freezer and slid the door open to select a few packets of worms. I stacked them on the glass top of the chest.
"You might've changed your tune if you'd been here a minute ago." Dolly's voice had a tinge of amusement to it, as if she knew a joke that she was keeping to herself.
I kept my eyes on what I was doing, though my interest was piqued. "And why's that, Dolly?" I asked, trying not to sound too curious.
"The woman that was in here earlier. If she wasn't the sort to get a bloke thinkin' about love, then nobody could." I picked out a packet of prawns, which weren't ideal for river fishing, but you never knew your luck. Dolly kept talking. "She had the sort of body that makes men turn 'round, if you know what I mean. Long, blonde hair and nice big tits, the way you men like 'em."
I couldn't hold back a chuckle at Dolly's frankness. "Thanks for the detailed description, Dolly." I said as I closed the freezer and gathered my bait. "Just another backpacker or tourist I imagine?" There was no shortage of them, but they rarely came this far out. Still, I'd had my share of flings with liberally-minded European or American tourists over the years.
"Nope," Dolly said firmly. "This one's a local, or says she's going to be, anyway. She bought some land near here, she says."
I shrugged. "Best of luck to her, I reckon. It's paradise out here. I only wish there was enough work in places like this for me to live here too."
Dolly nodded as she reached for a paper bag and the tongs to pull a pie from the cabinet window. "Too right, Dan. So where you headed this time?"
I waggled an admonishing finger at the older woman. "Uh-uh Dolly. You know I never tell anyone where I'll be exactly. Next thing I know, my whole campsite will be full of tourists invading my serenity."
Dolly slid the pie into the bag with a little more force than was perhaps necessary. "You know it's stupid, Dan, not telling anyone where you're gonna be. What if a snake gets you? Or you break your leg or something? How's anyone supposed to help?"
She was right. It was a dumb thing to do, but for me, that was all part of the adventure. No lifelines or fail safes. Just me and the wild. But Dolly had a point, and I was feeling a little guilty. "Okay, look," I began, spreading my hands placatingly. "I'll give you this one. But only because you remind me of one of my aunties who used to give me a hard time."
I grabbed a map from the rack near the counter and quickly found Mangrove Creek. Dolly handed me a marker and I circled my best guess at where exactly I'd end up; right on the water. Mangrove Creek looks a bit like a giant 'E' from above, and I was going right in there, as far from the road as you could get and not be physically in the water.
Dolly grunted. "So that's your little hideaway, ey?" She started stuffing the bait into a plastic bag.