⚙️ @ladybrohawkeye stepped into the lab!
ROYD CATCHES KATE before she makes it all the way to the range doors, big arm coming up sideways across the frame, stepping neatly into her path. a small spectacle, featuring a very large man executing something that looks almost like a dance step.
he holds a case up with both hands like something he made for the potluck and is unreasonably proud of. three weeks. that's how long the fun project has been living under his workbench, getting picked up and put down and picked up again when he had a speck of time. nobody asked him to - but that's not really how Royd works.
"ay, no shoot me yet. get one thing fo' show you."
the case lands on the nearest bench with a solid thunk. Royd flips the latches one by one, and the lid opens on a row of arrows, slim and clean, nestled in foam cutouts with colour coded fletchings and compact heads that don't match each other - and they are not supposed to. they look sleek and elegant because Royd has spent far too many hours making sure every practical thing inside them is well hidden.
a huge hand hovers over the set with quiet pride.
"so. I know you already got plenty trick arrows. and I not sayin' I improve Hawkeye. das not--" he pauses, nose wrinkling as he measures his words carefully; he would hate to give the wrong impression. "das not how I mean it. you already good. ridiculous good."
he taps the foam beside the first arrow.
"but dis project? dis one was fun for me."
Royd looks down at the arrows and sees all the little calculations he lovingly buried there: tension loads, flight paths, blast radius, the stubborn need to make dangerous things safer for the people brave enough to use them; and arrows are a delightfully different challenge: small space, big problem; gotta fit the whole idea in one clean line.
"arrows is funny, yeah? small kine thing, but everything matter."
his hands shape the air, broad palms careful around invisible measurements.
"weight, balance, drag, how and when da head opens, how it flies after. one millimetre off and she pulls wrong. one gram too much and suddenly your shot get sideways. gotta make all dat tidy, make every tiny part agree with da rest before it leave your bow."
there is a beat where his smile turns almost boyish. yeah, maybe he had too much fun. he points to the first one with his thumb.
"dat one, smoke bomb. da housing stay ceramic, no EMF bleed going out before detonation. hard fo' detect."
he tilts his large head, pointing to another one.
"dis one get a strong fiber line inside da shaft, hundred meters, good fo' six hundred pounds. you need fo' swing anywhere, she holds."
the next one is matte black, almost plain, except for the tiny violet marking near the nock. his thumb brushes once over the arrow's fletching, checking a seam that does not really need checking; that is Royd all over: building something until it is perfect, then loving it enough to worry anyway.
she's gonna like that one.
"dis one is my favourite."
he lifts it from the case and turns it gently, showing the tiny selector worked into the shaft; his hand dwarfs the arrow, but he handles it like glass.
"multi-setting. one click, concussive. two, net. three, beacon tag. four--" he pauses, lips curving onspiratorially. "four is fo' outside."
he shifts his enthused gaze on her, brown eyes bright behind glasses and the smudge of fatigue, all that joy sitting plain on his face because Royd has never known how to hide it when something he built might actually help someone come home safer.