The Old Lion
Everybody talks about friendship like it has to be built between equals — two people the same age, same struggles, same inside jokes about a shared moment in time. Nobody really talks about the friendship that can grow, slowly and unexpectedly, between a father and a son who spent most of their early years barely speaking the same language. Jake and his dad, Frank, were not close growing up. Not distant in any dramatic way — no big fight, no scandal, nothing you could point to and explain in a single sentence. Just two people who loved each other in the quiet, undemonstrative way a lot of fathers and sons in small-town Ohio seemed to manage, where "I love you" got said maybe twice a year and everything else got communicated through fixing a leaky faucet together in silence, or driving somewhere without turning on the radio. Jake left for college at eighteen mostly to get away from that silence, though he wouldn't have put it that way at the time. He wanted noise, conve...