I watch him for a second before asking, “All set up?”
 
 “Almost done. What do you mostly catch out here?”
 
 “Lobsters, crab,” I say, adjusting the rig. “Fish.”
 
 “Sounds like fun.”
 
 I pause, glancing at him. “You ever fished before?”
 
 He shakes his head. “Not once.”
 
 That makes me blink. “Never?”
 
 “Nope.”
 
 I scoff. “You work in marine research, but you’ve never fished?”
 
 He shrugs like it’s not a big deal. “Not my area of expertise.”
 
 I don’t know what possesses me, but I shove a rod into his hands. “Bullshit. You’re learning now.”
 
 He hesitates but eventually takes it, gripping it awkwardly. “What do I?—?”
 
 “Hold it like this,” I say, adjusting his fingers around the handle. “Thumb on the spool. Flick the bail up. Now, cast.”
 
 He exhales, focuses, then flings the line out. It lands with a clean plop in the water, and his whole face lights up.
 
 “Shit,” he says, grinning. “That was kinda fun.”
 
 I smirk. “Told you.”
 
 Ash keeps staring at the water like he’s waiting for something to explode out of it. “So, you just sit and wait?”
 
 “Pretty much. Beer helps.” I grab two, cracking one open before handing the other to him. I’m not one to keep a conversation going, but it’s far more awkward not to. “How’d you get into marine work if you’ve never even fished?”
 
 He takes a sip, thinking. “Always liked the ocean. Not in a ‘fisherman’ way, though. More... I don’t know. Just wanted to understand it.”
 
 I nod. “Makes sense.”
 
 He glances at me. “What about you? Where’d you learn?”
 
 “Comes with the territory,” I say. “Long line of fishermen. My old man, his old man before him.”
 
 Ash leans back against the side of the boat. “Outdoorsy type, then.”
 
 I shrug. “Guess so.”
 
 “So your family, are they here?” he asks. “They all into fishing, or just you?”
 
 That question lands heavier than he probably means it to. I take a slow drink, then shake my head. “No family.”
 
 Ash doesn’t push. He just watches me for a second before looking back at the water. “Mine’s into real estate,” he says. “They think what I do is a waste of time.”
 
 I glance at him. “They told you that?”
 
 “Yeah,” he says, then lets out a dry laugh. “A lot.”
 
 “Shit.”