And then, after answering, she
“So, is it safe to say you could be ambidextrous when it came to handling weapons?”
“Then let’s start with the left. Let’s get a gun in your hand.”
Balot
Even though she’d never handled a gun before, she could tell that Oeufcoque was
The fabric on her palm
It was heavier than she’d expected—but her body soon adjusted to the extra weight.
Oeufcoque gave her some tips. “Parts of this are made from vulcanized plastic and some electronics, but basically this is just an automatic pistol. You pull the trigger, the gunpowder explodes, and the bullet goes flying out the end at high velocity.”
Balot nodded and leveled the gun. The grip was fused into the palm of her suit.
She tried letting go, twiddling her fingers, and it still didn’t fall. It felt like it was almost a part of her.
“The target’s set up over on that wall.” The Doctor pointed at it. A black cardboard cutout, the shape of a man, about 170 centimeters in height.
“We have pressure sensors set up all around the target, so we’ll be able to tell immediately where your shots land. You watched the video on how to fire a gun? Well, go ahead and try it for yourself.”
The gun was empty of bullets. Balot
Eleven shots total—with an extra one in the chamber for good measure.
She thrust her left arm forward, used her right arm to steady it, and readied her gun.
She leaned in to compensate for the force, maneuvering herself into prime firing position, just as she had seen in the instructional video.
She brought her finger to rest on the trigger.
A little electronic gimmick on the trigger saw to it that all she needed to do was to grip gently rather than pull the trigger hard—she hardly needed to put any strength into it at all.
A bullet flew out of the muzzle, and a spent casing flew sideways out of the chamber. A piercing sound could be heard on the other side of the wall. A metallic clang on the floor followed.
She fired more shots.
She could have pushed the sound of the gunshots inside Oeufcoque, silencing them completely, but that would have dulled the visceral sensations of the whole experience.
Yes, for the real marksmanship experience, you really needed to have noise echoing all around you.
She fired six shots to gain her bearings. The next five she fired with her eyes completely closed. The car park reverberated with the sound of gunfire, and the empty cartridge shells played a merry jangling tune as they clattered across the ground.
She could even feel the sensation that the bullets themselves felt, that of being shot out of the barrel of the gun. Wrenched out of place, jumping out of the barrel, rotating with tremendous speed.
The numbers on the scales that Balot was standing on twitched slightly, but in a moment they settled and became virtually still.
Balot had finished firing her first load. The breechblock slid back and stopped in place.
“Don’t reload it right away—drop the magazine to release some of the heat that’s built up.”
Balot did as Oeufcoque said and
Balot relaxed as the magazine hit the scales. The subtlest of movements. The spent magazine hit the silver platform and rolled across it.
The numbers on the display didn’t change in the slightest.
Balot
A new magazine appeared inside the grip, a perfect fit.
The gun loaded with bullets as she moved herself back into position, and at the same time the breechblock snapped back into place.
She relaxed her shoulders and fired again. Settling into a regular rhythm. From the first to the last shot, like a pulse.
She felt the incandescent bullets piercing the air.
After she had fired all the bullets she ejected the magazine again and turned around to look at the Doctor.
The Doctor was glued to the monitor.
His fingers covered his mouth as if he were in deep thought, and then he suddenly exhaled, letting out the huge breath that he had been holding in.
“Perfect. You’ve really studied the videos closely, haven’t you?”