spawning now.”
Noah took the rod, thinking, You could be dying, but still you’re baiting my line? I know how to bait a line, I remember . He stared at his father, who cast his own line up the shore. It hissed in the otherwise silent morning and then splashed as the jig hit the water. The old man rubbed his nose and combed his beard with his fingers again, looking past Noah and out over the still black water.
“We’re poachers now. Trout season ended more than a month ago. And you with no license on top of it all,” Olaf said softly, working the jig with quick jerks of his rod. “I hope the DNR is busy with the bow hunters.”
Noah could not take his eyes off him. For the first time since he had arrived that morning he really looked at the old man. The gaze must have made Olaf uncomfortable because he glanced away, hurried his line in, and cast again.
“Well, it won’t be long,” Olaf said.
“What’s that?”
Olaf shifted his weight, picked something from his teeth, and shrugged. “The fish. We’ve got to be quiet if we want to catch fish.” He looked at Noah. “They aren’t stupid. They can hear us.”
Hear us , Noah thought, suddenly overcome by the significance of being there, by the sickness practically radiating from the old man. He leaned toward his father and whispered, “Who cares about the fish?”
“No fish, no dinner.”
“Dinner is easy enough to come by. I can get in the car and be back in half an hour with dinner.”
“Chrissakes, you want potato chips and bologna sandwiches, why’d you come all the way up here?”
“I came because you’re sick. I came to figure out what we’re going to do. I came to give you a hand.”
“Well, right now the best thing you could do for me would be to shush. I want to catch some of the fish swimming around down there. Maybe spare me your bologna sandwich. What do you say? How about you bring us back in a little closer?”
Okay , Noah thought, we can fish today. He put the oars in the water for two pulls toward the palisade. He cast his jig onto the placid water, ripples widening in perfect circles as he waited for the lure to reach its depth. As he made the first crank on his reel he heard the hiss of his father’s drag. He looked over, saw the old man’s rod arcing from his hand. His face looked serene.
Olaf caught three lake trout—the first was as long as Olaf’s forearm—enough fish for dinner that night and three meals stored in the freezer. Noah didn’t catch a thing.
“That’s just rotten luck,” Olaf said as they rowed back toward the cabin.
Noah pulled harder on the oars and felt the skin on his hands toughen.
A FTER THEIR FOUR o’clock dinner of cracker-crusted trout, instant mashed potatoes, and creamed corn, they sat at the table and talked for an hour about the things Noah could help with around the house. Olaf was most concerned about his woodpile, a concern Noah could not comprehend given the bounty of split boles stacked, seemingly, everywhere. Olaf mentioned that the hearth needed some mortar work, that the eaves trough spanning the roofline on the front ofthe house required repair, that there were shingles missing on the shed. He also said he wanted to get the dock out of the water this winter. Noah insisted, despite his misgivings and certainty that he would be unable to repair any of it, that anything Olaf needed, he would do.
Noah got up and cleared the table. Standing at the kitchen counter he said, “We’ve got our chores lined up, now what about you?”
“What about me?”
“You said you were sick.”
Plainly, Olaf said, “I’m dying.”
Noah felt the word— dying —like a punch in the gut. He returned to the table and sat down. “What? How do you know? What have the doctors told you?”
“I haven’t been to the doctor.”
A guarded hope entered Noah’s mind: How could his father know he was dying ? “How do you know what’s wrong?”
“I’ve done my research.”
Noah looked at
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