The American found the hotel to be a straggling collection of somewhat tumble-down single-storey wooden buildings, some of which dated from the earliest settlement of the state. It was well that they had booked rooms, for the place was crowded with fishermen. More cars were parked outside it than ever in the palmiest days of peacetime; inside, the bar was doing a roaring trade. They found the landlady with some difficulty, her face aglow with excitement. As she showed them their rooms, small and inconvenient and badly furnished, she said, "Isn't this lovely, having all you fishermen here again? You can't think what's it's been like the last two years, with practically no one coming here except on pack horse trips. But this is just like old times. Have you got a towel of your own? Oh well, I'll see if I can find one for you. But we're so full. She dashed off in a flurry of pleasure.
The American looked after her. "Well," he said, "she's having a good time, anyway. Come on, honey, and I'll buy you a drink."
They went to the crowded barroom, with a boarded, sagging ceiling, a huge fire of logs in the grate, a number of chromium-plated chairs and tables, and a seething mass of people.
"What'll I get you, honey?"
"Brandy," she shouted above the din. "There's only one thing to do here tonight, Dwight."
He grinned, and forced his way through the crowd towards the bar. He came back in a few minutes, struggling, with a brandy and a whisky. They looked around for chairs, and found two at a table where two earnest men in shirt sleeves were sorting tackle. They looked up and nodded as Dwight and Moira joined them. "Fish for breakfast," said one.
"Getting up early?" asked Dwight.
The other glanced at him. "Going to bed late. The season opens at midnight."
He was interested. "You're going out then?"
"If it's not actually snowing. Best time to fish." He held up a huge white fly tied on a small hook. "That's what I use. That's what gets them. Put a shot or two on it, and sink it down, and then cast well across. Never fails."
"It does with me," his companion said. "I like a little frog. You get alongside a pool you know about two in the morning with a little frog and put the hook just through the skin on his back and cast him across and let him swim about… That's what I do. You going out tonight?"
Dwight glanced at the girl, and smiled. "I guess not," he said. "We just fish around in daylight-we're not in your class. We don't catch much."
The other nodded. "I used to be like that. Look at the birds and the river and the sun upon the ripples, and not care much what you caught. I do that sometimes. But then I got to this night fishing, and that's really something." He glanced at the American. "There's a ruddy great monster of a fish in a pool down just below the bend that I've been trying to get for the last two years. I had him on a frog the year before last, and he took out most of my line and then broke me. And then I had him on again last year, on a sort of doodlebug in the late evening, and he broke me again-brand-new, o.x. nylon. He's twelve pounds if he's an ounce. I'm going to get him this time if I've got to stay up all of every night until the end."
The American leaned back to talk to Moira. "You want to go out at two in the morning?"
She laughed. "I'll want to go to bed. You go if you'd like to."
He shook his head. "I'm not that kind of fisherman."
"Just the drinking kind," she said. "I'll toss you who goes and battles for the next drink."
"I'll get you another," he said.
She shook her head. "Just stay where you are and learn something about fishing. I'll get you one."
She struggled through the crowd to the bar carrying the glasses, and came back presently to the table by the fireside. Dwight got up to meet her, and as he did so his sports jacket fell open. She handed him the glass and said accusingly, "You've got a button off your pull-over!"
He glanced down. "I know. It came off on the way up here."
"Have you got the button?"
He nodded. "I found it on the floor of the car."
"You'd better give it to me with the pull-over tonight, and I'll sew it on for you."
"It doesn't matter," he said.
"Of course it matters." She smiled softly. "I can't send you back to Sharon looking like that."
"She wouldn't mind, honey…"
"No, but I should. Give it to me tonight, and I'll give it back to you in the morning."
He gave it to her at the door of her bedroom at about eleven o'clock that night. They had spent most of the evening smoking and drinking with the crowd, keenly anticipating the next day's sport, discussing whether to fish the lake or the streams. They had decided to try it on the Jamieson River, having no boat. The girl took the garment from him and said, "Thanks for bringing me up here, Dwight. It's been a lovely evening, and it's going to be a lovely day tomorrow."
He stood uncertain. "You really mean that, honey? You're not going to be hurt?"