Date: Sun, 18 Feb 2007 00:09:38 -0500 From: carl_mason@comcast.net Subject: INDOMITABLE SPIRIT - 1 INDOMITABLE SPIRIT - 1 Copyright 2007 by Carl Mason All rights reserved. Other than downloading one copy for strictly personal enjoyment, no part of this story may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, except for reviews, without the written permission of the author. However based on real events and places, "Indomitable Spirit" is strictly fictional. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental. As in real life, however, the sexual themes unfold gradually. Comments on the story are appreciated and may be addressed to the author at carl_mason@comcast.net If you would like to read additional stories by this author, please turn to the "Authors/Prolific Authors" link at the beginning of the Nifty Archive. This story contains descriptions of sexual contact between males, both adults and teenagers. As such, it is homoerotic fiction designed for the personal enjoyment of legal, hopefully mature, adults. If you are not of legal age to read such material, if those in power and/or those whom you trust treat it as illegal, or if it would create unresolvable moral dilemmas in your life, please leave. Finally, remember that maturity generally demands safe sex. CHAPTER 1 (Dream of a Lifetime) "YEAH!" the two fourteen-year-olds shouted as they leapt high into the air to slap right hands. Coming down, they grabbed onto the back of each other's neck and whirled in a wild dance. "High Sierra, here we come!" yelled Mike Curtis, the blond and slightly more beefy of the pair. "You got that right!" whooped Larry Allison, his brown-haired buddy. Gradually, the boys ran out of steam and slowed to a halt, their foreheads sticking together with the sweat pouring down their muscular bodies. "Damn!" mumbled Larry. "I've never worked so hard in my life as I did last year - sports, studies, activities...everything! Now it all seems worth it." Partially to mark their sons' particularly successful freshman year at the Loma Prieta Academy - partially weary of having heard the same thing for three years - their fathers had finally surrendered to the boys' constant pleas for a backpacking trip in the high country. Naturally, they had warned them of the work needed to get ready, but the two athletic fourteen-year-olds were far beyond worrying about obstacles! They were on their way! Some two weeks later, the two families were relaxing at the home of friends on the shores of Lake Tahoe at a bit more than 6,000 feet. Knowing that they would be going considerably higher, the men had determined that everyone had to get used to the altitude. After all, their valley home on the San Francisco Peninsula was close to sea level! Even their wives and Larry's two younger sisters would be staying at a rustic lakeside lodge located at 7,000 feet, and they knew from experience what that could take out of you. Actually, the short time spent on the eastern shore of Tahoe, not too far north of the California-Nevada state line, was pretty pleasant. The scenery was great. There were all sorts of activities for the little girls - and the family friends had little ones with whom they liked to play. The adults enjoyed the major casinos at State Line. The dads took the boys on several short hikes, including an all-day affair with light packs into the mountainous country in back of Emerald Bay. By the end of the week, they were ready for those trails at eight, nine, and ten thousand feet. In fact, everyone was feeling great and raring to go! The boys actually enjoyed the long trip from Tahoe to Lakeshore on Huntington Lake in the High Sierra. Their father only took I-50-West as far as SR [State Route]49, the road that meanders through the Sierra foothills through the historical "California Gold Rush" country of 1849. There he turned south, following 49 and then SR41 towards Fresno in the Central Valley. Even from the road, there was a lot to see as they passed through the old gold towns! Well before Fresno, he turned west and cut over to SR168 that headed back up into the High Country, deep in the Sierra National Forest between Yosemite and Kings Canyon National Parks. Not too many hours after leaving Tahoe, they found themselves driving along the sparkling lake. Suddenly, Larry took a deep breath of the warm air flowing into the car. "Oh, man," he moaned, "smell those pines! This is the place!" Indeed it was. Located at the very end of SR168, the village of Lakeshore stood at 7,000 feet on the shores of Huntington Lake, surrounded by three Wilderness areas and looking directly towards much higher peaks. Eagerly, the boys stared at the boat launch and beach where young people were already engaged in swimming, sailing, and fishing. Quickly arriving at the general store and the nearby restaurant, saloon, and lodge, they helped the family get settled into a rustic cabin. Their mothers and Larry's sisters would enjoy a mountain vacation while they did some serious backpacking! The adults said that dinner was very good, but, frankly, they were too excited to taste a thing. Eventually, they got permission to explore a bit. They even tried to go swimming, but they didn't get beyond putting one foot into the lake water. Lawdy... Talk about water barely removed from glacial ice! (As a matter of fact, in mid July, the water was still flowing from glaciers high in the back country.) Nevertheless, it was fun to jog along the shore of the lake, occasionally exchange greetings with other teens, and watch the shadows slowly turn into night. Sitting with an arm around the other's shoulders on a spit of land that jutted out into the water, they talked about the school year and their fourteenth birthdays just past, and what they expected to see on the morrow. In truth, they always had much to share with each other, for they had been best friends since elementary school. Years of games and birthday parties, Little League and joint family vacations, had led to their entering the Loma Prieta Academy's middle school in the seventh grade. Coming upon adolescence early, they found that as they entered high school in the ninth grade, their increasing size and coordination allowed them a great deal of success in sports, especially in gymnastics and soccer. Coupled with their good looks and sunny personalities, they were popular kids among both the adults and their peers. Though they didn't make a great deal of it with their parents, both boys felt that having made the junior varsity soccer team (and starring in several of the matches) was probably the highpoint of their schooling thus far. (Actually, their dads also thought it was pretty great, although they felt it was only right that the coach had promoted them to the varsity at the end of the season.) At this point, two well-built, extremely attractive young men faced the future with justifiable confidence. Neither having brought a jacket, they were soon shivering in the chill wind coming off the lake as night fell. Finally realizing that they were just plain cold, that stood and headed towards the family cabin at the lodge where they had been given one of the bedrooms for the night. Stripping and crawling naked into the one bed, it was quickly apparent that they weren't quite ready for sleep. As a matter of fact, when Larry "accidentally" pressed one freezing foot against his buddy's (substantial) equipment, all hell broke loose! A yell from his dad in an adjoining room quieted them down, but for a good half hour they wrestled and generally goofed off like the friends they were. As a matter of fact, it went a bit further than that. For the first time in perhaps a year, Mike found himself strongly aroused by his chum's hard rod that pressed insistently into his abdomen. Gasps and soft moans welcomed his hand as he fingered Larry's low- hanging balls and caressed his rock-hard prong. (As early teenagers, they had engaged in some sexual exploration, eventually going so far as to suck each other off. While this activity had faded over the past couple of years, neither was exactly known within the school as "girl crazy".) Finally, they gave each other a rough hug, put it away, and turned over to fall into a shallow sleep. (Into the High Country) It's probably a good thing that they were a bit sleepy the next morning for the ride over 9000'+ Kaiser Pass to Florence Lake at 8,000'. Fully awake, they might have sensibly turned back! The road, under the jurisdiction of the U.S. Government, began as a well- graded two lane road...as far as the Sierra Summit Ski Resort. At that point, however, it turned into 13 miles of potholed, twisting one lane road with "turn outs". As the Government points out, you need to know the dimensions of your vehicle or, if you will, how far you can pull over without falling off the edge, hitting a rock, or scraping the cliff! Even observing the 10-15 mph maximum speed suggested at Lakeshore, for instance, they quickly came up behind a heavily laden RSV. (It couldn't have been making more than 3-4 mph on the stiff grade!) Like any experienced motorist, the driver pulled over as far as he could and motioned for Mr. Curtis to go around him! With white faces open mouths, and wide eyes, the boys watched Mike's dad smoothly pull around the vehicle. After they had exhaled, Larry stuttered that he had looked over the edge as they had passed the Recreational Vehicle. They could have written a school report in longhand, he said, before they would have hit bottom after tumbling end over end on the way down! (Author's Note: Thank you, U.S. Government!) Finally, they reached the summit and began to drop down the other side of the mountains into the glorious San Joaquin River drainage basin. Soon 13,000 foot peaks were coming into view, as well as a host of lakes. Actually, Florence Lake, Huntington Lake, and several others are part of Southern California Edison's reservoir and hydroelectric system. Since they were built in the 1920s, they have been a starting point for all kinds of glorious outdoor adventures. The company road is not part of the Wilderness areas that surround it; hence, it allows access well into the high country. Gearing down, Mr. Curtis managed the road with obvious experience. About seven miles before Florence Lake, they passed a ranger station and continued on the main road to its end at Florence Lake. "Whew," Mike whistled as his dad finally switched the engine off in the long-term parking area above the small Florence Lake general store. "I'm not driving that monster road again unless I'm inside an Abrams tank!" "Don't forget," his dad warned with a grin, "we have to make it back to Lakeshore. Are you planning to stay up here forever?" "MAY-BE!" his son groaned. "Good going, Mr. Curtis," Larry snickered. "That one pothole you fell into only cracked a couple of vertebrae - so I guess I'll make it!" "Ho, ho!" Mike's dad chortled as Larry's hit his boy over the head with a folded topo map. "Fourteen and he's already ready to get behind the wheel and take on the world!" It didn't take the men long to arrange for Wilderness and campfire permits. On the road down from Kaiser Pass, they had decided to take the ferry from the general store to the end of the lake, as well as the return trip. (Having the requisite hour and a half, they could have hiked it, but they had already been underway for nearly two hours, and they thirsted to get on the main trail.) Once they had purchased their tickets, they only had to wait about twenty minutes. Before they knew it, they and their heavy backpacks were on the boat, heading for the eastern end where the South Fork of the San Joaquin spills into Florence Lake. The crest of the Sierra Nevada lay ahead of them - and an adventure that they would never forget. (To Be Continued)