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American Perverted
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American Perverted is an anthology series that follows characters from each American state. Each state is assigned a story, characters, and a specific theme. This theme may include a fetish, fantasy, or other premise that the story will revolve around. The state is merely used as a backdrop, and does not reflect the theme in place.
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Today's Story
Location: Camp Little Creek, Wyoming
Theme: Gay Discovery (Male on Male)
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Camp Little Creek
Chapter One: A Wet Landing
Chapter Content:
Platonic, Smelling
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"It's one week, Henry."
I continued to ignore my mom's voice. My eyes lazily scanned my phone, reeling in the last little bit of service. Mom had been trying, fruitlessly, for weeks to get me excited for some stupid summer camp. After a rather brutal grounding for skipping class, I caved into this summer camp idea in an effort to get her off my back for awhile. Well, now 'awhile' had passed, and before I knew it, the summer had crept up on me.
My little brother let out a hushed yawn. He was resting his head on the window pane, groggily shifting his weight beside me. He had no idea how good he got it. Why did I have to do this stupid camp? My brother is the right age for it, not me. I should be out with my friends, not singing lame campfire songs and rolling around in the mud. Still, it was my father's idea. He had been a boy scout or some shit. He read some fuckhead article about how technology was corrupting the youth, and in a panic, convinced my otherwise mellow mom to sign me up. I guess the idea of having a son who had no outdoor ambition frightened him. Whatever. It's not like anyone in this family does anything besides sit on their phones and gasp at clickbait Facebook articles. Yet, it was I, the forsaken slacker who must be punished for our family's crimes.
"You know, this was your father's idea, yet where's he? Not here, I'll tell you that much. He should be the one driving you all this way, not me." My mother sounded a little frustrated. I suppose an hour on the road will do that to you.
"Look, Mom, I know you're trying to cheer me up, but we don't have to talk the entire way." I didn't mean to hiss, but I continued. "I just want to get this over with, come back home, and rot in my room in peace. Okay?" She glanced in the rear-view, and scratched tentatively at the side of her neck.
"I know, it's just-" Her eyes darted around, trying to formulate her words. "I just want this to be a good experience for you. I know it will be. Your father spent a lot of money on this, and I wanted him to be here to tell you all the reasons why summer camp is so much fun. Besides, I still have to drive back, and you know how I get driving in the dark."
I scoffed. "What, you don't have the reasons?"
"Henry, I never had this kind of opportunity when I was a girl."
"But you would've hated it, right?"
She hesitated for a moment. "I would've at least liked the chance to try it."
I rolled my eyes, resting my head back against the window. Awesome. Everyone loves a hypocrite, Mom. We took one camping trip when I was seven, and she spent the entirety of it whining and bitching about getting mauled by mosquitos. She would've loathed summer camp, and we both knew it.
"Oh! I see it! Look, there!" Mom's finger pointed towards some tall object towering over the trees. Sure enough, there was the sign for my new gulag. Its words were barely visible, thanks to a combination of depreciation and the low visibility of the dusk. I squinted my eyes to focus in: "Camp Little Creek". The second 'L' was coming loose off of a nail, which made my heart pound. Please don't tell me my dad picked the cheapest, grimiest, and most tetanus filled claptrap he could've possible scouted out for.
My mother's excitement stirred my brother from his sleep, who rubbed his eyes, looking confusingly around. I felt the tug of our car, as we turned off North Fork Highway and unto the shittiest gravel road I've ever seen. No joke, we must have hit a pothole every two seconds. I tucked my tongue in to avoid accidentally chewing it off. I braced for impact as we continued down this path for what felt like eternity. I shut my eyes and prayed for this bad dream to end. Let me wake up. Let me awake in my own bed.
My prayers went unanswered, and I heard my little brother's voice.
"Whoa."
I dropped my shoulders. If he survived that trip, then so did I.
Opening my eyes, I found us nestled at the bottom of a hill. At the top of the hill stood three enormous buildings. The one on the left was rustic, with large wooden pillars holding up two floors. The sides were paneled roughly with wood, and dim lights highlighted every window, door, and bench that scattered the exterior. The building on the very right, directly across from the first building was completely identical. Sure enough, wood pillars, wood paneling, two floors, double sided. However, the true winner was the enormous central building. Two floors, but twice as wide as the surrounding buildings. A porch hugged the center, with a balcony leering over top. Giant windows, double-doors, and a green tin roof adorned this middle structure. Once again, "Camp Little Creek" was written out in wooden letters affixed to the balcony railing. "Mess Hell" was all that was left of what seemed to be a very old sign barely clinging unto the porch, which shocked me as to how it was visible from this far.
"Well, would you look at that!" Mom erupted.
To be fair, even I was a little impressed. Despite the general feeling of a rundown establishment, this camp felt very cozy. Nestled on this quaint hill, surrounded by pine trees, the backdrop of the clouded sky ... and the smell. I could just barely smell it. I rolled down my window. Sure enough, the overwhelming fumes of fresh air blasted my nose. I forgot what this had smelled like. Fresh pines, sprouting grass, and the fresh rain sent me into some weird euphoria. The window blew into our car, breezing through my brown curls.
"Okay, Henry, I know you're excited, but you have to wait until we park before we jump out of the car." Chortled my mom, sarcastically referring to my window dropping endeavors.