Anybody doing anything below the belt is over eighteen, so we should be good there. And this main character is an Arkansas good ole boy from his head to his shoes, so he's gonna talk that way to some degree.
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If a magician told you his secret, it wouldn't be magic, now would it?
That's how us Arkansawyers feel about our best fishing spots. If we told too many people where they are and how good the fishing is, they'd believe us when we say those spots are that good, and then they'd wanna try 'em out. Pretty soon, everybody'd come that way, and they'd overrun us so bad the fishing would go to crap, and that'd happen real quick. That's why, until I told you here today, only four people knew our best spot -- high on the Buffalo National River. We're pretty proud of that here in Arkansas, being as we were the first state with a National River.
Now down to brass tacks, down to where I'm coming from -- my name's Kristopher Jordan. I don't actually live up on the river; I live about a hundred miles south of there, in the countryside of Warwick County. That's about two hours east of Fort Smith, and an hour or so northwest of Little Rock. Like most everybody in the county, I went to Warwick High School -- and, like most everybody in the county, I wasn't a super jock or a super brain, so college wasn't gonna happen for me. This means that after I graduated, I worked wherever I could around Warwick and other places close by -- construction, painting houses, quite a lotta farm work. You name it, I've done it -- and I was between some of these jobs in the summer I'm fixing to tell you about.
I'd been doing what I'd been doing for about five years at this point, which would make me -- yeah, twenty-three, I think. I spent all my weekdays, and most of my weekends, puttering around Warwick doing these jobs, but every now and again, I'd go fishing up on the Buffalo with my best friend -- Jeffrey Wayne Jordan.. Yeah, he's my cousin, and nine years older than me, but we've gotten pretty close over the years. Then again, that's what comes from him having three younger sisters and me having one older one -- sometimes guys just need to get together and do Guy things, like going fishing or working on cars. Sometimes my daddy'd come along fishing closer to Warwick, or Uncle Doug -- that's Jeffrey Wayne's daddy -- would, or maybe they both would, being as Daddy and Uncle are brothers and all. But the Buffalo belonged to me and Jeffrey Wayne.
That was back when we were younger, though; about five years before this story happened, Jeffrey Wayne got married, and so he didn't have as much time to come with anybody. I'd go around Warwick County with Daddy and Uncle Doug, and don't get me wrong, that was fun -- but it just wasn't the same as road tripping up to the Buffalo. That's how it went for a while, till the first Wednesday of June one year.
I was still doing these odd jobs here and there, and paying Mama and Daddy what I could for my upkeep, when I got a phone call from Jeffrey Wayne's wife, Karla Jean. She told me that her and Jeffrey Wayne was going fishing up on the Buffalo that weekend, and did I wanna come along with the two of them. What with this being the first time since Jeffrey Wayne got married, she was wondering if me and him wanted to go up to the Buffalo? You bet your ass I jumped at that chance; I told her I'd be over as close to right after supper on Friday, and she said they'd be waiting on me.
Lemme get this off my chest right now: if it had been just the two of them wanting some real alone time like married couples take (especially now that they had two little ones under the age of three), Karla Jean wouldn't've asked me to come -- and hell yeah she's pretty, but not pretty enough for me to come on to. She's another man's wife to begin with, and my cousin's wife on top of that -- so yeah, I can look till the cows come home, but touching her ain't happenin'. Besides, I didn't care so much about getting any as much as I cared about being back up there.
Work couldn't go by fast enough those next two days. When I got home on Thursday, I started packing my weekend bag: right clothes, ball cap, rod and reel, bug spray, sunblock (I'm Scotch-Irish, so I burn, and burn bad), and fish knife. On top of that, I also made sure I had my tent ready and in my truck; it could sleep two, but never did -- I was the only one ever in there.
At supper on Friday, Mama had to tell me not to eat too fast or I might choke; I slowed down to make her happy, but I didn't dawdle, just the same. As soon as I was done, I put my plate in the sink, hugged Mama, shook Daddy's hand, promised them I'd be safe, and took off in a flash for Jeffrey Wayne's place.
Soon as I got there, I noticed that Karla Jean's mama had come over to take care of the kids, so I minded my manners and passed the time of day with her while helping Jeffrey Wayne and Karla Jean get ready. We just about had his truck packed up and ready, when I heard tires on their gravel and saw this little blue Ford Escort pulling up; once it parked, the driver got out and yelled, "Somebody gimme a hand here?"
My heart -- and another part of me, too -- started beating a little faster when I saw who'd pulled up. It was Jacinda Trimble -- four years younger than me, and the prettiest girl in five counties. She was five-seven, with brown curly chestnut hair down to her bra strap, and the deepest, darkest brown eyes you ever did see. I swear to God, Jacinda's eyes could make a freight train stop on a dime. (Not that it matters, but I'm five-ten, with brown and blue.)
She was also one of the smartest kids to graduate from Warwick High in about the last thirty years; fact is, being nineteen (with her birthday in May), she'd just finished her freshman year up in Fayetteville. Now in case you're wondering what some college girl would be doing, coming fishing with two good ole boys and a good ole girl... you see, the four of us are all related in some way.
Now before you start getting any wrong ideas -- I mean, come on, there's some lines we don't cross, even in Arkansas -- lemme break this down for you.
Me and Jeffrey Wayne are first cousins because our daddies are brothers.
Jacinda and Jeffrey Wayne are first cousins because his mama and Jacinda's daddy are sister and brother.
Jacinda and Karla Jean are second cousins because their mamas are first cousins.
Me and Jacinda aren't any kin at all -- unless you go back to Adam and Eve, or maybe the Flood. Nothing any closer than that, though.
Clear enough for you?
And it's because of her family's connections that the Trimbles wound up in Warwick County. Her mama and daddy met in graduate school out West, but once they finished, they had doctors degrees, the two of 'em, and they were looking for teaching jobs at some of the colleges close by -- there's one just up the road in Russellville, and three just down the road in Conway. Being as both Mr and Mrs Trimble had relatives in and around Warwick County, they thought it might be nice coming back home, so to speak; both applied for jobs, and each one got one. These days, they could afford to buy Jacinda a car for a graduation present -- yeah, it was seven years old at the time, but it didn't have to be worked on every weekend, with parts being sent for all the time. Having a car like that might be middle class someplace else, but in Warwick, we thought that was rich.
Now where was I?... oh yeah, Jacinda pulled up and asked for help. See, once she got her invite to come, she volunteered for grocery detail for a trip like this -- cornbread mix, bacon, eggs, salt, pepper, and bottled water. (We wouldn't be buying ice or -- ahem -- other drinks, till we got to this little town about fifteen miles or thereabouts, out from where we'd be camping.) Jacinda had packed a nice-size cardboard box full of these groceries, but needed somebody to help lift it out of her back seat while she got her own tent and fishing gear out of her trunk. I offered to put that box in the camper shell of Jeffrey Wayne's truck, and it wasn't lost on me to see her smile to me and tell me "thanks!" as she grabbed her purse and keys, then locked her car. Once we had our tents ready and our gear loaded (that's counting two ice chests), we said our goodbyes and got on the road, about seven o'clock.