The Morning on the Dock
The sun was still a thin ribbon over Lake Monroe when I heard the clatter of Ryan’s boots on the wooden pier. He was humming something off‑key, the way he always did when he was about to leave for a day on the water. I could smell the faint oil from the boat motor mingling with the crisp morning air, and the lake’s surface was a mirror that reflected the pale sky.
He knelt down to tie his shoes, his fingers deft and practiced. “Anna,” he said, his voice low enough that the gulls didn’t startle, “the boys are already in the cabin, waiting for us.” He lifted the lid of the small wooden cabin on the boat, and two heads popped up, grinning with teeth still wet from a night of brushing.
Jack, the older twin by a minute, gave a half‑laugh and held up a tiny plastic fish he’d caught the night before. “Look, Dad! I got a… uh… a mud‑skipper!” He squinted at it, proud.
Caleb, who always tried to copy his brother, mirrored the gesture, his cheeks puffed out as if he’d swallowed a watermelon. “I got a big one too! It was… it was a… a rock!” He giggled, and the sound bounced off the water like a small bell.
Our daughter Lily, six and already taller than the bench we’d built for her to sit on, stood at the edge of the dock, hands clasped behind her back. “Can I come this time?” she asked, eyes wide, the way she always asked when the boys got to do something special.
Ryan crouched down to her level, his elbows on his knees, his smile softening. “Not today, sweetheart. You’re still a little sprout. But next year—” He paused, the smile lingering, “—you’ll be right here with us, I promise.”
He lifted Lily’s hand, brushed a stray lock of hair from her forehead, and said, “You can watch us from the shore. I’ll bring you a fish later, maybe a big one.” Lily nodded, the disappointment barely hidden behind a brave grin.
We said our goodbyes, the boat’s engine humming to life, the water rippling as it pulled away. I stood on the dock, the wind tugging at my scarf, watching the silhouette of the boat shrink into the mist. The lake smelled of pine and cold metal, and for a moment, everything felt ordinary.
Ryan’s voice crackled over the phone later that morning, calm as ever. “I’ll have the boys home before dinner, Anna. Jack will probably catch nothing but weeds again, like last year.” He laughed, a short, bright sound that made my chest tighten a little, but I brushed it aside. He always joked about Jack’s luck. It was his way of keeping the day light.