And so he does. Well, he tries.
It’s not ideal conditions, recent rains have left a steady mist across the Nevadan landscape, leaving only the grey overhang and depression that comes with winter in the West. Rain to snow, snow to sleet, and when all had stopped, the ground is wet, the snow scarce, and his targets covered in filth. They blend into the muddy grey of the foothills behind the ranch.
He pulls the trigger, the wet SQUELCH of mud the only sound besides the disappointed sigh from himself, the shallow breath of his mentor.
“You say that every single time I miss”
“You jump the gun every single time, McCree” she chides back, her hand firm on his back. “See the target. Feel for the right time, and then you let it go”
The boy settles and shifts, pulls back on the bolt to unload and resets, leveling the rifle to his shoulder. Breathe. She’s taught you this all before, it’s just another test. It’s just another practice. It catches him on the exhale, but his heart THUNDERS in his chest, shakes his hands. It catches him between beats, and he feels it slow.
He pulls, and he feels the bullet shattering the wood behind the fragile paper.
She claps him on the back, rolls his shoulders around under the heavy canvas jacket. “Still a bit early, but you’ll grow out of that soon enough”
“Well---” he pauses, and looks at her, all wide eyes and prancing feet, “ --- what if we got a little closer. I ain’t much for distance but ---”
“You have to be something for distance eventually”
“Ah. No closer, you’ve already proven yourself at short and mid-range, cowboy ---”
“Ten feet. You gimme ten feet and I’ll land ‘em”
Ten feet isn’t a lot. He knows it, he can see the look on her face as she considers it. A skewed mouth, crossed arms. A beat of silence.
He pulls the bolt back again, and takes his four steps. He falls just short, and he raises the rifle to his shoulder. In the mist and the rain, ten feet doesn’t mean a whole lot, doesn’t mean anything. Ten feet though, gives him the mental leeway he needs.
His headspace shifts. The eye locks in, he feels the trigger give way.
Shoot, pull, repeat. Shoot, pull, repeat. The chamber gets hot, the muzzle smokes. Gun oil and gunpowder and fire, that’s what he is, and his heart starts thrumming out the staccato beat of his shots only after the magazine empties.
They take that walk, and her exclamation is kept under her breath.