We get out of the canoe for lunch, and I gingerly walk Dad (“Look, some moose tracks there…”) over to the folding chair that has been set up for him. Out of the riffle in front of us spills a long, deep run that Dominik assures us contains a heap of salmon. Another leaper (“remember, not a taker”) almost immediately proves him right.
I finish my sandwich and, throwing superstition to the wind, take a glug of the whiskey that was intended for celebration. (Then again, maybe holding Lagavulin in reserve for celebrating is the jinx. Typical salmon-fishing thoughts.) Dominik ties on a chartreuse-and-black fly that I’ve never heard of called a Watch Out!
Polite and soft-spoken, Dominik has proven to be an ideal audience for Dad’s tales, and I hear him begin to unspool an old one (“Have you heard of Richard Adams? He was guiding Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter on the Matapedia this one time….”) as I step into the river.
A few casts in, everything suddenly changes. There’s a distinct weight at the end of the line, which has now tightened. I raise the rod, and the weight races downriver. Dominik is within earshot now — “Keep the rod up!” — and Dad echoes him.
The salmon takes me into my backing — the emergency line wound onto a fly reel for moments like this — and eases off, allowing me to reclaim yardage while steering the fish out of some boulders. It’s about 100 feet away when it leaps for the first time. Five minutes later, the line springs loose and I see my fly lofting toward me. My salmon has come unhooked.
I feel despair creeping up on me — or is it just Dominik? He’s come to inspect the fly and leader. Both are in fine shape, and I realize that I did nothing boneheaded during this lost battle. Sometimes breaking off is just what fish do. I glance back at Dad, hunched in his parka and looking neither too happy nor too sad. “Go catch another one!” he urges, attempting to raise my spirits. I’m not quite ready to do that, but nor do I feel crushed. A lot of what I came up here to feel happened in those 10 crazy minutes. Look on the bright side, I tell myself. You’ve got two-and-a-half, maybe three days of guided fishing ahead of you.
I should have known better. That ended up being the only salmon that either one of us hooked all week. “Well, too bad you didn’t catch one,” Dad said at the end of the last day, which he spent recuperating at the rental chalet and which I, with his enthusiastic blessing, spent on a pair of main-stem Cascapedia pools that neither of us had ever dreamed of fishing. Even on those legendary beats that are full of fish you can get skunked, I philosophized. “Blanked,” Dad said, using the classier English term.
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