They thought they were caught red-handed. The river was quiet, the lines were still, and the game warden’s shadow fell over them like a sentence. Licenses. Rules. Fines. It all seemed inevitable. But then came a twist so simple, so unexpected, it turned the whole scene upside do…
The warden squinted at the lines, suspicious but curious. “Magnets?” he repeated, leaning closer. Sure enough, instead of hooks, each pole ended in a shiny magnet clinking softly against bits of metal from the riverbed. Bottle caps, nails, a rusted lure or two—trash, not trout. The first blonde shrugged with a disarming smile. “See? We’re cleaning, not fishing.”
For a moment, he didn’t know whether to laugh or lecture. Technically, they were right. No bait, no hooks, no fish—no violation. Just three women turning a lazy afternoon into an impromptu river cleanup. Finally, the warden shook his head, half defeated, half impressed. “All right,” he sighed, “carry on.” As he walked away, the second blonde whispered to the others, “Told you the magnets would work.” And the third, still staring at her motionless line, muttered, “I just wish the fish liked metal.”
