“That’s
my fish, Ernie,” cries Robbie
Reed as I back away from the dark pool dragging
in something big.
He had tripped running for the pole and his bloody
nose convinced me to grab the reel before it was pulled into the freshet of the Middlebrook running off of
First Watchung Mountain.
“It’s yours,” I say with relief,
handing over the rod as whatever
is on the other end writhes
in wild figure eights in the darkening waters of dusk.
__________
We had decided
to go fishing that spring when Robbie had gotten a rod and reel for his tenth birthday. On our next family shopping trip across the Talmadge Avenue bridge to Target I had shown my father a Zebco spincast set I was eying over in sporting goods. He inspected the sealed plastic pack and then led me over to a bargain rack.
“Tu quieres
esto,” he commanded, picking out a saltwater rig and a little jar stuffed with salmon eggs.
The next day Bobby and I met up at the bridge after fourth grade at LaFollette
School.
“What kind of
rope do you have on that thing?”
he laughed.
“It’s for big fish,”
I lied, embarrassed by the thick tan line and extra-large hook.
“My dad says the big ones are down by the trestle,” he advised.
Sure enough, we spotted a long green fish sitting
in a pool beneath the railroad tracks. Bobby
cast his plastic worm as I threaded my huge hook with bright pink eggs that went flying off with the first cast. I ended up dropping
the baited line into the pool from up on the tracks in between Bobby’s casts under the bridge.
That big fish just sat there with an occasional wiggle
of side fins.
“Try a bread ball on a baby pin,” advised
my older sister Elena that night in the upstairs apartment bedroom we
shared with four young cousins.
I
did the next day and snagged one from a silver-sided school shimmering around the pin.
“That’s just a shiner,” laughed a teenager from up
on the bridge. “A worm will get you a real fish.”
A few nights later bare-footed Ellie came charging into the apartment from a spring shower with a big grin.
“Yuck, I squished something
slimy out on the sidewalk,” she laughed.
We scrounged up a flashlight and found hundreds
of night crawlers wriggling in the puddles.
They were fast and slick but we managed
to fill a milk carton before the flashlight died.
__________
“Dios mio, a water moccasin,” I shout
as a dark green thing thrashes over the rocks tangling
itself in the line.
“Nah, it’s an electric
eel,” proclaims Bobby, leaping
back as it squirms up a white-barked sapling.
“It’s an eel
alright,” calls Bobby’s father from up on the newly completed levy where he’s
walking his yellow lab. “Just cut the line close to the mouth and it will
slither back into the brook.”
“Thanks Mr. Reed,” I smile after the snake-like
fish disappears into the deep pool under the bridge. “I was afraid to touch
it.”
“Those eels
come all the way up from the Caribbean,” he marvels, “but they say there used
to be a real monster at the point.”