On late summer nights, stretching long into the forbidden
September doldrums, Lake Somerville removes itself from time. The black skyline
outlined by a yellowing moon sits like a prop on a cosmic stage, and the creak
of the marina slips out sound like the tuning of an orchestra. Once set, the
curtains part, and the play begins:
An Ode to Fishing in the Dark.
We walked down the steep plank-way leading to the marina
store, rods and reels in hand, along with a six pack of Shiner Blonde. The
woman at the front of the park, sitting under yellow light swating bugs away
from her purple mascara, had told us:
“There’s a ten dollar fee for fishing in the campground,
hun.”
She didn’t look up from her long nails clicking away at a
small phone, her words navigating their way around the gum she had been chewing
for hours. We were instructed by the bored and tired woman to find the marina
store to pay the fee.
The store was a floating structure near the shallow eastern
end of the lake. The lights outside buzzed, partly from the tired chemicals
depleted after years of use inside the bulbs, and partly from the armies of
gnats and moths bravely burning on the hot glass. Signs were plastered on the
outside walls, earnest attempts at fishing puns that fell flat on inexperienced
eyes.
Inside, the store bulged with a dusty inventory that had
waited patiently for years to be touched by the hands of guests. Lures,
artificial worms, candy bars, maps, knives, hats, extra-large t-shirts, and
beef jerky filled the beige metal shelves. The entire family of the operation
sat behind the counter, eager for interaction. Engrossed by the scene, I didn’t
notice my tall pole approach the hanging pole light-bulb, and it hit with a
violent metal clang.
“Oh oh, I’m sorry,”
I said apologetically.
“Eh, don’t worry about it,” the apparent proprietor said. He
was wearing a teal t-shirt that hugged his bulging belly, and a hat with the
brim tilted just slightly off center. His glasses were thick and hung low on
the bridge of his nose, so that part of the frame hid his eyes and highlighted
the top of his cheekbones.
“Well, here.” I leaned the poles up against an adjacent
counter, to continue the conversation sans the light-bulb offender.
“Alright,” I looked back to him, “Hi!”
“Howdy,” he said with a smile.
“So I was told to come to the marina to pay to fish off the
dock. Is that alright?”
“Yup yup, it’ll be five dollars a person,” he said, somehow
squeezing the word ‘eye’ into ‘five’
“Alright.”
His wife was sitting at the register, aged more, but with
deeper wrinkles where smiles lived.
“Do you go to A&M?” she said, looking at the logo on my
shirt.
“Yup, I do. Just started grad school.”
“Oh good!” she
smiled, “Did you get to go to the game today?”
“No, but I might be okay with that. Seemed like a hot day to
be sitting in a stadium.”
“Oh yeah! That’s true, too hot for a game.”
“Oh yeah! That’s true, too hot for a game.”
“So what was the final score? Forty-something to twenty…”
“Yeah it was something like that,” the husband interjected,
“Wasn’t really a game.”
“Well have we really played any games this year?” I said,
conscious of the fact that I had referred to the team as ‘we’ for the first
time.
The husband and wife both chuckled, and the husband slipped
the ten dollars in the register.
“So,” I continued, assuming their concurrence on my last
comment, “we can fish anywhere off the dock?”
“Yeah,” the husband replied, suddenly serious, “You can fish
anywhere on the dock, and over on this end is the crappie house where they’re
really bittin’.”
Nelson and I left the shop, and found a dark side of the dock
near the gas pump. The wood planks under our feet shifted within the rusting
metal frame, and sent occasional cockroaches up to the surface to inspect the
disturbance. The spot we settled on was just outside the ring of light cast in
a cone on the edge of the dock. Here, we were safe from the bugs.
Had it been a year since we had last seen each other, from
the comfort of our little yellow Sabita? Or, had it only been a year? We talked once of the possibility of meeting in
Texas, if I ever made it there, but the thought was as brief as fresh Bandra
air. And yet here we were, talking again of life and its absurdity.
The worms we had purchased at Walmart sensed their oncoming
doom, and when I opened the top of the thin plastic container, they dove into
the clumpy black dirt, desperate to survive. I moved one clump to the side, and
pinched a pulsating body. It flung about as I threaded it onto the needle,
green ooze seeping out of its body. I don’t ever say it out loud, but I feel
bad for the poor worms. Yet the regret is never enough to dissuade me; the
promise of fish is far greater.
The first cast felt perfect. The pole started behind me, and
as I flicked it forward and released the line, the catapult motion of the arch
coupled with the snap of the pole and sent the pink hook soaring into the
blackness of night. For a brief moment, it all disappeared, and I waited for
its return to earth. Finally, with a plop 30 feet in front of me, the worm
began its first free dive.
Across the lake, two headlights were bouncing along a dirt
road. High energy country music bounced across the lake, and my ears strained
to catch the song. The creak of the dock and the lapping of the waves were
determined to keep the song from me, and so it remained a muffled clump of
notes.
Between casts and sips of Shiner, we tried to fill the gaps
left by a year of distance. We cast hooks and words out into the distance, and
reeled in what we hoped would be success.
There’s a calming peace about fishing in the dark. The task
becomes more abstract, and your eyes, desperate for something to look at, point
to the stars. The same stars that fought through Bombay smog were now raining
on our weary shoulders, on the side of a quiet lake in Texas. There were no
rickshaws, no vada pav, and no traffic jams here. Just a couple of guys who
held those memories, and spoke of them into the night. For the first time, Lake
Somerville heard of the far away mystical town of Bandra, and the adventures we
had there.
Maybe the fish were mystified too, because they didn’t bite.
Great descriptions! I can see it, feel it. Fishing in the dark -- what a metaphor! Wishing for catch-up time in or out of the dark, probably sans fish.
ReplyDeleteGreat descriptions! I can see it, feel it. Fishing in the dark -- what a metaphor! Wishing for catch-up time in or out of the dark, probably sans fish.
ReplyDelete