"Hnghaaa!" I happily moaned, bending back at the waist and using my hands intertwined above my head to stretch and engage a multitude of muscles, tendons, and joints.
"Are you done?" a man to my left, one who'd been my best friend since we'd been in literal diapers, mirthfully asked.
"Yeaahhagh!" I half-giddily shrieked in delight, half-yawned out due to the wonderfully-warm morning sun that was bathing my face with tingly pleasantness. "Ohhhhh, what a day, huh!"
Opening happy, partially glazed-over eyes to give him an exuberant grin, something deep within my belly bubbled up as I found a soft, warm smile being directed my way.
"You're not lying," he quietly chortled, his stormy, blue-gray eyes shifting from my frozen form to glance about the wilderness surrounding us. "What a day, indeed."
"GPS?" I quietly inquired, shifting my own gaze to a steep, brush-littered embankment that was a few feet off-trail.
"Backpack," he gruffly grunted, his tone utterly annoyed. "Please, Wallaby, can we just do the hike already? Pleaaaase?"
I sent a faux-frown his way, comfortable once more with looking in his direction, only to immediately allow the earlier-grin I hadn't quite loosed to remake, in full, its exuberant appearance.
"Last one to the top is a rotten egg!" I giddily shrieked, and with a knowing wink being sent his way, I took off at a light jog through the sparse-woods and up the steep mountain, my equipment bouncing about and clattering to and fro in an obscenely-noisy fashion upon my back.
From my heel, I heard a grunt that wouldn't have been out of place on a surly, old grizzly bear, as he jogged up behind me, his own-heavier equipment making an equally-obnoxious raucous as he tried to keep up.
For two minutes we continued our pace, weaving in and out of lush-green foliage and healthy-looking trees, all the whilst jogging up an incline with heavy loads upon our quickly-tiring legs.
"Give up?" I shouted through a sharp inhalation, a victorious, wide smirk already upon my sweaty face.
"Was it ever a question?!" he half-gasped, half-gagged back, and coming to a quick halt upon the steep incline, I turned and hopped in place twice.
Andy, my best friend in the whole world, was not a particularly fit individual. Sure, we went on hikes every other weekend, but he was no fitness freak or gym shark beyond those weekends. He was only 24 years old, or 24 years young, as I liked to more-commonly phrase it, but he was already more skinny-fat than lean-muscle.
"You should really try exercise some time," I breathily teased, giving a swipe to a handful of chaotic curls that were matted to my sweat-covered forehead.
"Ptew!" he spat, nearly choking on his own tongue as he gasped for more oxygen. "W... who... hahhhh... needs exercise when they... ha-hahhh... have friends like... ha... you!"
"I think the phrase is, who needs enemies when they have friends like you," I quipped with a knowing, sweet smile.
"Exercise!" he hissed, sending me a faux-scowl that forced a giggle or two from my grinning lips, which was then directed towards the mountain-side trees as a nearby bird began its morning song.
Allowing another deep inhalation to enter into my lungs from each flaring nostrils, I glanced back down the incline to where Andy was now bent over and panting.
"We'll be at Big Springs in half an hour," I stated, fairly certain he didn't need the encouragement, though fully aware it didn't hurt.
"Half an hour..." he groaned in affirmation, and raising his sight to my own, he gave me a small, roguish grin that made my eyes go searching for that singing bird.
Big Springs, otherwise known by its proper name, The Big Spring Falls, was a wonderful little tidbit of nature. It was one-part majestic waterfall and one-part small pond, with water as clear as day, where it was calm, anyway, and it was as deep as one could hope for. The crystalline cascade was lined by the shrubbiest of redwoods and its rock face consisted of only shimmering quartz, making it a natural, nearly-unheard-of wonder of the world. It was positively divine to gaze upon, and it would've probably been an extremely popular location to traffic if reaching it didn't require a long hike up such a steep incline that was smack dab in the middle of nowhere.
"Well?" I eagerly queried as I dropped my backpack onto dry, white sand, another wonderful feature of the falls.
"Well what?" he grunted out, doing much the same, only to flop down onto his pack with a loud, contented sigh.
"Did you remember to pack your swim trunks this time?" I asked, adopting an irate scowl, which was expertly ignored by him shutting his eyes.
"Forgot again, sorry," he easily replied without an ounce of remorse. "Why don't you go ahead, and I'll have a nap."
"Andrew!" I hissed between gritted teeth, now more angry than irate that he'd done it again, and on purpose, no doubt, which meant I had to swim alone, again, which always ruined it for me. "We're up here together for a reason!"
"I know, but... I don't have your stamina, Wallaby," he argued, quite ineptly, in my opinion, all the whilst keeping his eyes closed to ensure he couldn't visibly view my featurial wrath.
"I don't want to swim alone," I whispered, not quite loud enough to be heard, and not quite as angrily as I truly felt.
With a soft sigh, I began to strip, starting with my hiking boots and socks, followed by my jean shorts and short-sleeved shirt, which had, up until now, hidden my bland one-piece.
"You should learn to exercise," I quietly poked, giving him a long, disappointed look.