Muddy Water (A Short Story)

*Here’s July’s short story, just a little bit late. Hopefully August will be less chaotic and stressful. Thank you for waiting patiently, and for reading!*

The river was my grandfather’s sanctuary. He was never much interested in church, or in people, but he loved that muddy brown water with every fiber of his being, and in it, I’d say he found the closest thing a human can ever find to God.

The river was his church, preacher, and pulpit, and his Bible was an old tackle box he got when he was just a kid, not much older than I was that very first time he took me fishing.

It had rained that week, big, fat, heavy drops for days. That didn’t matter. To my grandfather, the river was sacred and worthy, whether it was high or low, slow or rough, clear or thick and dark as molasses.

“We might not catch much,” he said.

“S’okay,” I answered.

“Well then, put on something long and light. Mosquitoes out today.”

“Yessir,” I said.

The sun had finally peeked out from the gray cloud cover, and while he didn’t mind to sit by the water’s edge on a damp day, my mother wouldn’t have allowed that behavior from me.

“You know full well that child will catch a cold and we’ll all be sick for two weeks,” she’d lectured, and my grandfather, patient man that he was, had sat there and listened with a calm face and kind eyes.

We set out after breakfast, gear and chairs in the bed of his old red and white Ford, and a cooler full of sandwiches and root beer, courtesy of my grandmother. She’d prepped an empty cooler, too, and filled it with ice.

As the truck rumbled down the holler road, I could feel my heart start to beat faster and faster. I was excited, sure, but I was not exactly an outdoorsy kind of kid. I guess in that way, I took after my mother. My grandfather had always loved wild things. I think he saw something of himself, some fundamental piece of who he was and how he connected to the world, in the chaos and the unpredictability of nature. I just found it frightening. And I think he knew that, because he looked over form the driver’s side and said, quietly, “Nothing out there in that water wants to hurt you.”

“I know,” I told him.

My first real experience with the river had been my big brother’s baptism earlier that year. He’d loved every minute of it, and said he felt washed clean. I’d sat at the water’s edge with my parents and counted the snakes I could see slithering just under its surface. No one else looked even a little bit bothered, but in my head, I could just feel them, scaly bodies twisting around my ankles, and I couldn’t get that fear out of my mind. My grandfather never seemed afraid of anything, especially when I was young.

We pulled up to his favorite spot right around the time when my hands started to shake, and as he got out to unload the car, I sat still in my seat.

“Come on now,” he coaxed.

“I just need a minute,” I said.

“You won’t feel any better in a minute than you do right now. Hop on out,” he answered.

I did as I was told. I’m ashamed now that I was so scared. I was ashamed then, too, though my grandfather always told me there was no shame in being afraid, so long as you did the thing that scared you so bad anyway. And here we were. This was his holy place. I trudged around the truck bed and grabbed a chair, and we plodded down the soggy bank to set up for the day.

“Over there,” he said, “up in that tree, you see it?”

I looked and shook my head.

“That’s an eagle’s nest,” he said. “And further up that way,” he pointed, “I spotted some muskrats the other day.”

I nodded.

“It’s warm,” he added, “so I reckon we’ll see some turtles out. They’ll be sleeping on logs.”

“My friend April has a turtle,” I said. “It lives in a tank.”

“Probably not a very happy animal,” my grandfather said. “Wild things belong outside.”

“She named it Leo,” I said.

“I guarantee you we’ll see a few Leos today,” he told me. “But what we’re really here for is fish.”

He propped up our chairs and set out the polls. He showed me how to add bait, but I couldn’t do it. I couldn’t force my fingers to handle that slimy, writhing worm. He noticed, and did it for me, and then he sat down with his own poll, and signaled me to do the same.

“What now, Grandpa?”

“Now,” he said, “we wait. And we talk. We think. And with any luck, we bring home dinner.”

I thought there would be more involved. Looking back now, I see why my grandfather loved his spot by the water so much. It was quiet. All around, I could hear birds, the breeze, little bugs skimming the surface. I listened for snakes, not quite sure what they might sound like, but eventually, I relaxed. I fell asleep, though I’m not sure for how long, and woke to the sound of my grandfather’s voice.

“You got one,” he yipped.

“What!” I cried.

“Reel in your line,” he said, excited and fast. “You caught one!”

I think instinct took over, and I reeled. I reeled for what felt like forever, and at the end of my line, dangling from the hook, I found a silvery blue fish, not much bigger than my palm.

“Want me to show you how to take it off?”

I nodded, and my grandfather walked me through the process of removing fish from hook. I tried, but as it squirmed around in my hand, I flinched. My grandfather laughed and said, “You already did the hard part.”

He took the line from me and pulled the fish, and dropped it in a cooler by his side.

“Did it hurt?”

“Huh?”

“The fish,” I said. “Did it hurt?”

My grandfather thought for a moment, and he answered, “I’m sure it did. But we’ll have food for the night.”

“Isn’t that mean?”

“We eat fish,” he said. “So do bears. Even other fish eat fish. Nature gives us what we need. It’s not mean to use it, not if you use it well.”

I’d never seen anything die before, and I thought of that poor fish, suffocating in the cooler. Years later, I would decide to forgo meat entirely, but when you’re little, you eat what you’re given. Or, as my grandmother used to say, you don’t eat at all.

We caught a few more over the course of the day, despite the murky water, and we did see several turtles resting in the sun. My grandfather explained the way of the river, the animals that called it home. He included himself in their number, I know now. We drove back late, just as the sun started to set, and pulled our dirty boots off on the carport.

“Good day?” My grandmother opened the screen door and ushered us inside. “You catch anything, June bug?”

I nodded and smiled. Though it hurt me to hurt an animal, I could tell my grandfather was proud.

“She’s a natural,” he said to my grandmother.

My grandmother fried up what we’d caught, not much but enough, especially supplemented with corn bread and green beans. We sat down to dinner that night, and eating something I’d caught did make me feel a kind of way. Not pleased, exactly, and not ashamed. Aware, maybe, is the best way I can think to describe it.

I think my grandfather had planned more fishing trips for us. I know he wanted to share that with me, but that’s not the way it turned out. A few weeks later, my parents told me we were moving, and my only visits to my grandparents after that were always too short. Holidays, weekends – never enough time. I have that one memory of him in his favorite place, and I cherish it. I’m not wild, and at the end of the day, I suppose, neither was he. Not really. But when I think of him, I think of the river, deep and wide and full, and I can feel it flowing in me, too.

************

Thank you for reading! This is the seventh of twelve stories I’ll write for my 2023 Short Story Challenge. The theme this year is: Wild.

Here are the first six, if you’d like to read them: 

Dark, Dark, Dark

Fairy Tale

Spring Mountain Child

Holley’s Flood

The Ledger

Dandelion Days

I hope you join me and write some stories of your own this year! It’s fun, and I hope this will be a happy year full of good stories. But just reading is fine, too, and I’m glad you’re here.

The next story will be posted at the end of August.

17 thoughts on “Muddy Water (A Short Story)

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