INTRODUCTION & DISCLAIMER - When Darren boards his plane in Brisbane to fly home to Melbourne after a two week holiday in Queensland, he feels a bit flat about returning to reality after so much fun. This is until a pretty flight attendant stands in front of him to do the safety demonstration, and he realizes that she is his long lost cousin Kaitlyn, having not seen her since they were teenagers some 15 years ago, and her parents moved interstate with the families losing contact. Always each other's favourite cousins when they were kids, what will Darren and Kaitlyn do now they are reunited as adults? Read 'Cousin Kaitlyn the Flight Attendant' to find out and rate and comment.
Only characters aged 18 and older in this story engage in any sexual activity, and all characters and events are fictional, with any similarity to real persons living or dead coincidental and unintentional. For North American readers unfamiliar with Australian slang, the word fanny is used for vagina on a number of occasions.
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Packing my bags and finishing cleaning up the beautiful high rise Surfers Paradise apartment in Five Oceans Luxury Apartments where I had been staying, I could not believe that my two week Queensland holiday had come to an end and this Friday afternoon I would be flying back home to Melbourne. It seemed like only two hours had passed since I had boarded a Friday morning plane at Melbourne's Tullamarine Airport and flown to Brisbane full of excitement at my holiday in the Sunshine State, but it had been a fortnight.
A whole two weeks of fun and excitement. It started with five nights in Brisbane in a great hotel in the city, and exploring the wonderful sights of the Queensland capital. The bustling streets and malls in the city, the historic Story Bridge, the restful parks and gardens, a cruise on the Brisbane River, South Bank, scenic Mount Coot-ha, a wildlife park and a trip out to stunning Redlands Bay and the beautiful beaches of Wynnum and Manly.
Then it was onto a train and down to the Gold Coast for nine nights where I had stayed in a high rise apartment with a balcony and stunning views of the Pacific Ocean, the relaxing roll of the waves heard constantly. The Gold Coast was all fun, fun, fun, and then more fun. Theme parks, the beautiful beaches, the fun beachside suburbs of Surfers Paradise, Southport, Broadbeach, Mermaid Beach and Burleigh with numerous attractions. I went to a wildlife sanctuary, markets and shopping precincts, and a trip further down the Gold Coast through Palm Beach and Currumbin and down to the New South Wales border and the twin towns of Coolangatta and Tweed Heads. Another day's outing was to the Gold Coast Hinterland and Mount Tambourine, and I also went on a cruise on the Nerang River and jetboating, parasailing and a slingshot. I scarcely could believe I had packed all this into two weeks.
Plus exercise, lots and lots of running, cycling and swimming, both on the Gold Coast and in Brisbane to enjoy the wonderful Queensland weather and work off all the fine food and maybe a few beverages too many in the pubs and clubs that formed the nightlife at Surfers Paradise. Despite my indulgences, I would be returning home to Victoria fit and tanned, that was for sure.
I couldn't resist a last look at the wonderful view of the Pacific Ocean from the balcony where I had enjoyed breakfast every morning with the sun rising over the Coral Sea, and the songs of the many birds like currawongs and magpies in the area. My place in Melbourne, well it was nice but it didn't have such a great view, nor the roll of the ocean in the background. Loading up my stuff, I left my apartment and went to the lift, alighting at the lobby to check out.
Belinda, a pretty blonde receptionist who I had seen quite a few times during my stay greeted me with a friendly smile. "Hi, are you checking out today?"
"That's right thanks, Darren Smith from apartment 1209," I said.
"Did you have a pleasant stay?" Belinda asked as she checked me out.
"Oh yes, I had a great time, thanks Belinda," I said. "I wish I lived here. It would be great waking up to those views every day. It's a great place to stay, I'll recommend it to friends and family that's for sure."
"Thank you so much, I'm glad you enjoyed staying with us so much," said Belinda, as I paid some small expenses and I departed, me wishing Belinda a pleasant day, and she wishing me a pleasant flight home.
Along the way from the apartment tower was the bus stop where I would wait for the bus to Nerang Station, where I would catch the train to the Brisbane Airport and then my flight home to Melbourne. Lots of people - tourists and locals alike - passed me on their way to enjoy the beach or the many of the attractions of Surfers Paradise in the Cavill Mall area. I had taken a long last look at some of these places when I went for a jog early this morning, and had also taken in the beach views where thanks to a clear day I could see all the way down to Tweed Heads.
Of course, I did not have to walk to see the Q1 tower, the magnificent building and one of Australia's tallest was just up the road. The other day I had gone up to the observation deck on a clear day and seen the tall buildings of Brisbane in the north and the Byron Bay lighthouse to the south, and all of the Gold Coast and Hinterland in between. I admired the building as well as the other high rises around the Gold Coast as I waited for my bus, a flock of seagulls flying overhead and a group of ibises squabbling as they scavenged in a bin a short way away. When the bus pulled in, I got aboard and was on my way home, looking at the bustling Gold Coast streets as it went south to Broadbeach, inland to Carrara and then Nerang where I caught the Brisbane bound train.
I could see the skyscrapers of the Gold Coast in the distance and I looked wistfully at them as the train went through the stations, wishing my holiday wasn't over. I also caught a glimpse of some of the taller theme park attractions as we passed through Helensvale and Coomera, reflecting on my fun times there.
Soon the train was out of the Gold Coast and going through the Logan Region, before entering Brisbane itself. I saw the light towers of the Brisbane Cricket Ground as we went through the southern suburbs, and soon the skyscrapers of Brisbane were in sight. I looked at the taller buildings of Riparian Plaza, Waterfront Place, Aurora and Central Plaza 1; and at ground level the Brisbane River, South Bank, Roma Street Parklands and Story Bridge as the train went through the city stops, and then continued on its path to the Brisbane Domestic Airport in Eagle Farm, where I disembarked after the hour and a half journey from Nerang. I saw lots of lucky arriving visitors getting on the departing train for the city and Gold Coast and wished I could join them to do my vacation all over again, but reality dictated.
Checking in for my flight which was set to leave at 1 pm I had well over an hour to wait so browsed around the shops at the airport, having a coffee and buying a paperback book from a news agency reflecting on my holiday. It was unusual for me to travel alone, for instance in 2007 I went to Sydney with three mates but now it was 2009 and things were changing.
My group of friends with whom I had grown up were now getting into or already in serious relationships, and I was still single turning 30 next month, so the opportunities to go away on a vacation with them were limited. The same was true of my family. My sister Sheree, older than me by three years, was married with a 3-year-old daughter and a baby son born last year. Our brother Trent, younger than me by two years, was engaged to a long-term girlfriend.