I drag the file into a folder called “Archive.” Not deleted. Not opened. Just… there.
I try the usual suspects: summer2018, campcounselor, pinecrest, my dog’s name from sixth grade. Nothing. I try friendship — no. I try goodbye — no.
What was Camp Buddy? A blur of bug spray, burnt marshmallows, and a lake that smelled like moss and diesel. A cabin with twelve cots and one flickering bulb. A boy named Alex who taught me how to skip stones. A girl named Sam who cried the last night because she didn't want to go home. I don't remember taking photos. I don't remember making a zip file. Camp-Buddy.zip
Here’s a text that captures a reflective, slightly eerie, or nostalgic look at a file named : File Name: Camp-Buddy.zip Size: 1.2 GB Date Modified: August 14, 2019 — 11:43 PM
The icon sits at the bottom of my old external hard drive, sandwiched between a half-finished novel from college and a folder called “Misc_Backup_Old.” No thumbnail. Just the generic zipper-and-folder image that means something compressed, something hidden, something waiting. I drag the file into a folder called “Archive
Camp-Buddy.zip — proof that something happened, even if I no longer have the key.
Maybe that’s the point. Some summers aren’t meant to be unpacked. Some buddies stay compressed forever — safe, unreadable, preserved exactly as they were in 2019. The laughter. The fight by the canoe rack. The polaroid we took on the last day, all of us squinting into the sun. I try goodbye — no
I double-click. Password prompt.