Morning on the Lake
The lake lay still at dawn, its surface as smooth as glass under a ghostly veil of mist. George stood at the bow, muscles remembering every movement as he reeled the line in. A bass burst through the water in a gleaming arc, thumping into the boat with a wet slap and flailing against the wood. George gripped it firmly, lifting it up with a small, satisfied smirk. “Nice catch,” Mark called from the stern. He was still half-leaning over his phone, but when he looked up, his gaze lingered on George a moment too long. George felt his pulse spike—was it from the fish’s fight or from that look? Retirement had been too quiet, the house too empty, his wife gone these five years. Mark—with his easy grin and habit of standing just inside George’s comfort zone—was the first person in ages to stir anything inside him. He dropped the bass into the live well and turned. Mark had stowed his phone and was watching him now, leaning casually against the rail. “You ever notice how silent it gets out her...