Was this a good or bad development? As Rayne guessed, the idea of having an audience somehow made the most comfortable thing in the world a little more intimidating. Suddenly any tiny mistake was no longer something easily brushed off and accepted, but a possible source of judgement and shame. But then the older man had said he wanted to learn, which implied that he couldn't fish himself, so... would he even spot any of the smaller mistakes? Would he care about them? As Duck mulled that thought over, Rayne stood, and his brief pained expression wasn't missed, prompting a new thread of curiosity to unravel. Old and inexperienced and unthreatening... there weren't any good reasons to say no.
"Sh-sh-sure," he said quietly, forcing a weak smile as he padded up to the creek, stopping right in front of his three favourite stones without needing to consciously guide his feet. A cursory glance told him that the fish were swimming light today, they weren't showing in nearly the numbers and variety of yesterday. Maybe it was too cold a morning, and he should have waited for the sun to climb a little higher. Nevermind. A wriggle of colour caught his eye, and he watched the yellow perch follow the flow of the creek until it swam out of sight. A moment later, three more followed, all quite young and small but that was fine. He'd seen a perch almost as long as his forearm in this creek before, and had to wonder if it had taken a wrong turn somewhere. The smaller ones were easier.
With a practised ease, Duck knocked the central rock from its balanced upright position to laying on its side. This had the effect of cutting off about half of the stream, for this spot had been carefully chosen for how the creek grew abruptly narrow in this one section. What was already a loose bottleneck became a strong one as the current redirected itself to flow between his fallen-over rock and the one next to it, leaving a gap of about six inches which was now the path of least resistance. At least, down the centre of the creek; there were still gaps at either side which water flowed past, but he'd tried once to block those off and had just managed to flood everything. He didn't have the qualifications of a beaver. This dam was more than enough for his needs.
"It's n-n-not-" he started, then paused before saying 'hard', partly because he suddenly didn't want to depreciate himself. It wasn't hard because he
made it easy. That wasn't the same as it not being difficult in the first place.
"- I m-mean... let m-me sh-sh-sh-shhh-shhhow you." With the trap set, all he had to do was wait just beyond the gap, stood quite comfortably right in the middle of the shallow creek, and make sure he could spot a fish before it came. A few darted through the bottleneck without any movement from Duck, for he'd fixed his eyes on another perch which was moving slowly down the creek, and then waited a few moments, and it went to slip through the gap and - with almost insulting ease, he dipped his head and snatched it straight out. Tossing the fish about to get a different grip on it, he brought it swiftly down on the third rock, important because of how it presented a neat edge, perfect for smacking a fish's head against. The perch's twitches from there were only death throes, and he threw the yellow fish with blood streaking from its gills towards the bank where Rayne stood.
And that's when he remembered that he had company again. Having slipped so effortlessly into the zone, his mouth opened about to exclaim his surprise - but then, thankfully, he stopped himself. Hoping that Rayne hadn't noticed, he took a step back, feeling proud and self-conscious all at once, and licked his lips of the traces of fish there.
"D-do you wuh, w-w-wuh-want to...?"