About mid morning, I launched my boat and set out along the boat road toward my aunt's house, which sat high above the waters of Caddo Lake. It had been over ten years since I had been on this lake or seen my aunt. That was at my Uncle's funeral. We scattered his ashes on the lake since he had lived his whole life as a commercial fisherman here.
My boat has a steering wheel with a row of seats across the middle of the boat. As I approached the mouth of James Bayou, I stood up and steered with one hand, the throttle set to a slow pace. Once off the boat road, the water got shallow and stumpy. Sitting down it was hard to see the stumps and logs.
A little farther along the bayou narrowed and got deeper. Deep enough for me to feel safe sitting back down but I kept the speed low. I used to spend a lot of time on this lake in my younger days and even worked for my uncle for a while before College. Those had been free and easy, fun times. That brought my mind to my cousin Janet; the reason for my love of redheads. I wondered how she was doing and what she was doing for that matter as I realized it had been over twenty five years since I had last seen her. Where had the time gone?
I tied up at the dock next to the old boat house and stood there looking around. Not much had changed, everything was just a little more shabby and run down. I started up the steps carved into the side of the hill leading up to the house. I smiled as I remembered my cousin John and I cutting every step and laying the cypress boards. They were still in great shape.
As I approached the screened in back porch, I heard a female voice say, "Holy shit, is that you, Charlie?"
"I was when I woke up this morning," I replied and then the door opened and a tall redheaded woman came out on the top stoop of the stairs. "Holy shit, yourself, you're all grown up," I said to my cousin Janet.
She laughed. "That tends to happen. What the heck are you doing here?"
"I came by to see about renting some space in the boathouse from your mom."
"She could use the money. Come on in, she's not here right now but she should be back soon. She works at the market in town four days a week."
I climbed the steps and brushed by Janet to enter the porch. She grinned at me as I did. "You always were shy about things," she said as she closed the screen door.
"And you are still a big flirt and tease, and not nearly as skinny as you once was," I shot back.
"You've kind of filled out yourself. You always were in good shape but now...." She let the sentence trail off as her eyes ran up and down my body. "A better brand of t-shirt and shorts instead of those old cutoffs but not bad at all."
"And that looks like one of your mom's old house dresses you're wearing," I said with a grin.
"Yeah it is and I'm naked under it," she said with a big teasing grin back.
"At least you finally got some boobs from the looks of things."
She rolled her shoulders and the front of the old housedress showed definite movement at the top. "I always had boobs but back then they were all pointy and shaped like cones."
"Upside down ice cream cones is how I referred to them more than once, if I remember correctly."
Janet laughed and looked down at the left leg of my shorts. "I see you wear longer shorts now."
It was my turn to laugh as I remembered on more than one occasion the head of my dick peeking out from under the leg opening of those old cutoffs. "Yeah, I do."
"That's a shame," Janet whispered.
"Yeah, I miss that little yellow sundress of yours also. You never wore anything under that either."
Janet sighed. "Those were the days."
"Yeah, I was thinking that very thing earlier."
There was a lull in the conversation as we both took trips down memory lane. Mine was of Janet sitting on the back seat of a boat as I paddled us across the lake. Her feet were up on the seat to either side of her hips. Her arms and head rested on her knees. The carrot orange hair on her sex was bright between her tan thighs.
"Would you like some iced tea?" Janet asked, jerking me back to the present.
"I'd love some," I replied and followed her into the kitchen. I noted that she was barefooted as usual.
"You still hate shoes, I see."
"Not as much as I used to, they have managed to civilize me just a little," she replied as she got a big pitcher of iced tea out of the refrigerator.
"Are you over helping your mom?" I asked as she put ice in two tall glasses.
"No, I live here now that Gary and I are divorced."
"Oh, I didn't know that you two got a divorce. When did that happen and why, if you don't mind telling me?"
She shrugged. "It's been a couple of months over two years and I got the divorce. I got tired of him coming home smelling like his little secretary."
"Ouch, that had to hurt. Did he go stupid all of a sudden or was it a gradual thing."
"Yeah, it hurt, we had been together since high school," she said as she handed me a glass of tea. "As for the stupid part, I think there was a bunch of that on both sides. I took him too much for granted and he went elsewhere."
"That happens," I said and then sipped my tea. There is nothing like good old southern sweet tea.
Janet leaned back on the kitchen counter and said, "Enough about my sorted past, what brings you back to the lake?"
"I'm thinking about buying Deer Island and building me a cabin there," I told her.
"Deer Island? I haven't thought of that place in I don't know how long," she said and then smiled. "I haven't been there since we used to go." The smile turned to a grin. "Skinny dipping and running around like a couple of wild Indians. We were crazy kids."
"It sure beats the drugs, booze, and drive by shootings kids contend with these days," I told her.
She sighed and replied, "Yeah, I know, I think that is why I never had kids. It's just as bad, if not worse in small towns."
"I had one kid, a boy, but he stayed with his mother after the divorce. I haven't seen him since he was five or six. He's like twenty and in college now. I hear from her occasionally but never him."