By Catherine Pierce
We’d gone to the lake to watch. We had the special glasses, and I toggled between gaping at the razor-precise disappearing of the sun and looking down at my children to make sure they both had their glasses properly affixed. Look up and marvel; look down and fret; up; down; up. In our town we were supposed to reach almost complete totality. The clouds had cleared at just precisely the best time. The lake was still the lake, the sky was still the sky, but…different. As if someone had put a blue filter over the whole scene. As if we were in a stylized film, or a dream. I was entranced by it all, by the way that this place I knew so well–this small, man-made lake around which I walked every morning while listening to podcasts–was suddenly otherworldly. Magic.
Then my youngest son called out, breaking through my dream. “Look!” he yelled. “Look at this–it’s amazing!” He was peering through the rails of the fence into the water, where a handful of fish were swimming. They were small-ish fish, the kind of fish unfortunately named crappie. They were always there; I saw them every morning. But my son, three, had never seen them. “It’s amazing,” he said again, his back to the disappearing sun, as the shimmering fish sparked and swam beneath us.
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