Annie: Floating Along
My sister's life-changing good-bye to High School
Author's note:
This is my entry for the 2022 Summer Lovin' contest. It could easily fit in First Time, Exhibitionist and Voyeur, Humor and Satire or Erotic Couplings, but it is in Incest and Taboo because the main protagonists are sister and brother. It's meant as a light look at certain Rites of Passage and I hope you enjoy it. Regardless of any contest, voting and constructive criticisms are how I learn how better to please you, the Reader.
*~*~*~*~*
"Aw, nuts!"
"What's the matter?" I called to her. I had heard Annie's exclamation all the way from the front of the house. And I was near the back door.
"First Kerry can't make it, because of some stupid, last minute work crisis, and now Joel can't!" she called back. I heard her walking my direction, so I just waited. She started in again as she cleared the corner. "Some stupid Navy thing... looks like we're going to have to scrub the trip."
I shared her disappointment, but I don't think I was as emotionally invested as she was.
"It's been a year for bummers," I agreed. "Mom's stroke and Dad's cancer messed up a lot of things."
"Yeah, but at least Mom's doing well with rehab. They're saying it'll take a while, but she should get most of the use of her right side back."
"She's doing pretty good as it is," I agreed. "And Dad's surgery appears successful. No sign of a recurrence. So maybe not so bad. And they both told you to go ahead with whatever graduation present you wanted. I'm surprised you picked canoeing the river instead of, like, a trip to Europe or something."
"Europe would be strange without family around," she pointed out. "And there's no way any of you guys could take a few weeks to go traipsing around England, Ireland, Scotland and Wales with me, which is what I would have picked. But a week on the river with the four of us would have been comfortable and familiar and happy... and now that's in the shitter, too."
Like I said, I shared her disappointment. Every year, since before I was born, our family took a summer camping trip for about a week. There ended up being six of us, total -- my Mom and Dad, my older sister Kerry, me, my younger brother Joel and my younger sister Annie. We did a bunch of different kinds of camping, but the one everyone liked the most was a lazy river float, and our favorite river was a section of the Agate, upriver from the more popular touristy stretches. We'd take two cars with two canoes, three people and gear in each.
We'd drive to the put-in point, drop the canoes and gear, then we kids would set up camp while Mom and Dad took the cars to the pull-out point, leaving one, and coming back in the other. If their timing was good, they'd get back to a campsite already set up and dinner in the making.
This year, for her high school graduation present, Annie had chosen to do the float with the four of us kids, but without our parents because of their medical issues. All four of us kids had agreed that it would be really nice to spend a week with each other. It was getting iffy as to when we might be able to do it again.
Kerry, my older sister, was 27 and was working at an architectural firm. I was 24, half a year and a thesis away from finishing my Master's in Computer Science. Joel, my younger brother was 21 and in the NROTC program and heading into his Senior year. Annie, of course, was youngest at 18 and had just finished high school. With Mom and Dad's health problems, and with us kids getting busy with our lives, opportunities to vacation together were diminishing.
"Brian..." Annie had dropped into a thoughtful look.
"Yeah?" I had learned to be a bit wary of that look.
"What do you think about going anyway? Just the two of us?"
I thought about it for a moment. I loved Annie, sure. She was my sister. But more importantly, I liked her. She was fun to be around, and I definitely liked seeing her happy. Living at home, she'd been more directly affected by our parents' health problems than the rest of us. Kind of a heavy load for a Senior in high school. And going on this trip, even if it was just the two of us, would make her happy. That was about all it took.
"Sure," I told her. "We can do that. Take one canoe for the two of us. And instead of taking two cars, I'll borrow the van and put my bike in it. We can use that to run between put-in and pull-out."
"I'm not driving that deathtrap," she told me. "You want to die in some kind of motorcycle accident? Fine. I'm not." The deathtrap she was referring to was my YZ125 dirt bike.
"You won't have to," I reassured her. "When we get there, we go to pull-out first, chain the bike to a tree and take the van up to put-in. When we pull out, I'll take the bike back up to get the van and bring it down while you stay with the canoe. Problem solved."
"Okay," she faux-groused, then broke into a big smile. "So we're on for a week from now."
"Yep," I agreed. "A week and two days."
* * * * *
[Day 1 - Friday]
Technically, I wasn't home for the summer. I was living and working at school year-round. But knowing about Annie's planned graduation present, I'd take my three weeks of vacation to bracket her intended dates and was now spending my time at my parents' house. Which made it easy to coordinate efforts with Annie.
The time went by fairly quickly, but Annie and I were old hands at planning and packing for a canoe trip. We figured we'd stay overnight at the put-in the first night, then strike camp, lock the van and get on the river in the morning. We'd make camp every afternoon and leave again in the morning. We planned on four days on the river, then an extra two at the pull-out. Each of the places we planned to camp was primitive, but did have a potable water well with a pump, except for the Peters' place, which actually had a cistern and showers. Normal dehydrated trail rations would do, and we'd keep the creature comforts to a minimum. On the other hand, inflatable mattresses were considered a necessity. We had one of the family's 3-person pop-up dome tents and an extra tarp for a dining fly if we needed it.
There wouldn't be any portages, so we didn't have to be overly concerned about weight, but we did want to be reasonable, regardless. Previous experience recommended a full first aid kit, plus sunblock and all the usual accoutrements. Annie and I were both caffeine junkies, so Resume Human Form Potion, a.k.a. instant coffee, was mandatory. Those kinds of considerations drove our planning and by Friday noon of the day of the trip, we were set.
Our parents had come out to see us off and wish us well. We'd already gotten texts from Kerry and Joel sending their regrets and giving us best wishes for a relaxing float. One last check that we had everything and we were off. It was about a four hour drive to get to the river, with a pit stop along the way, and Annie filled it with an eclectic mix of music, from rock to jazz to classical -- all courtesy of her phone and the van's Bluetooth stereo system.
We chitchatted about trivia -- mostly how the last year had gone, and what we remembered of the river from previous trips, and what we were looking forward to, especially with her starting college in the Fall. At one point, she took advantage of the fact that I was the one driving to snooze a bit. At the pit stop, she broke out some junk food for snacking, claiming it was the last of Civilization we'd be seeing for a whole week!
The drive went smoothly with no nasty surprises and by around 4pm, we were pulling into the State Park whose beach we'd be launching from in the morning. The park and the river didn't require use permits, but it was customary to contribute to the upkeep of the campsites, so we stopped at the Ranger Station, let them know our plans for the trip, and left a hefty donation. We also picked up a bundle of dry firewood, which we then put in a waterproof duffel secured to the canoe. It was for backup emergency use only.
We got the canoe unloaded and camp set up, then I parked the van in the Ranger Station lot, rejoining Annie in time to help do dinner. Like we'd done it hundreds of times before, it went off like clockwork. Fed and refreshed, we sat in front of our tent, looking out on the river and drinking in the tranquility.
"There doesn't seem to be very many people out this time," Annie observed, looking around.
"There aren't," I agreed. "But I'm not going to bitch. Dad figured this float out a long time ago precisely to avoid the annoying crowds. I don't think much has changed."
"Just us," Annie murmured. I thought about that for a minute.
"Yeah, we've changed," I had to conceded. "It just doesn't seem like it. I'm sitting here enjoying a peaceful night with one of my best friends... as she's always been. Only thing I have to remember is, you're leaving for school soon."
"So are you," she pointed out. "The first time you left, I was massively depressed. Like someone had cut my heart out or something. I don't think I felt it as strongly when Kerrie left, before you. I was only, like, nine. With you, I was a lot more aware of what was going on."
"To point out the obvious," I told her, "growing up is a bitch." She just gave me a
Well, duh!
look. "You couldn't pay me enough to go through puberty and adolescence again," I added. "But you seem to have come out alright."
"Gee, thanks!" she chided me with a shoulder bump. "Such a ringing endorsement!"
"C'mon, Annie... you're smart and you're pretty... beautiful, actually... really sexy, if I'm being honest," I told her. "Some guy you meet at school is going to be a very lucky man."