
The woman gave a brief nod, glancing towards the one that had laughed briefly after Kovac had reprimanded him, then took a new arrow and nocked it once more. She did not lift the bow yet, however, only held it as she concentrated on the center of the target.
Check your stance.
She measured herself and found her angle far too tilted. Vira reset her feet to shoulder width and continued down the mental checklist.
Arrow nocked.
Bow hand set.
Raise and draw.
She raised the bow again, but still drew only after she was up, aiming as she steadied the weapon before her. To her, the target was perpetually slightly off to the right. Tried to center it better by turning her head further to the right so that her left eye was more able to look straight than slightly more to the center of her face. In the end, it was constant adjustments in her day to day routine to maintain accuracy.
Finally comfortable enough with the position, she held her breath and calmed her heart to keep her fingers from trembling. The teen blinked once after this, opened her eyes, and released the string.
The arrow flew from its nocked state, arching across the course, and striking the target. Vira let out the breath as the string stopped vibrating, the sound shaky to her thundering ears as she stared at where the shot had hit. One crimson line to the right of the center. It wasn't a bad shot, considering her handicap, but not perfect either. But to the teen, seeing at least that level of accuracy was a shock. She hadn't shot a bow since the accident, her own fear of looking like a fool in front of so many others who could see well and shoot better preventing her from trying again. And that was three years ago.
"W-wow. I...I didn't think I'd actually hit it."
Check your stance.
She measured herself and found her angle far too tilted. Vira reset her feet to shoulder width and continued down the mental checklist.
Arrow nocked.
Bow hand set.
Raise and draw.
She raised the bow again, but still drew only after she was up, aiming as she steadied the weapon before her. To her, the target was perpetually slightly off to the right. Tried to center it better by turning her head further to the right so that her left eye was more able to look straight than slightly more to the center of her face. In the end, it was constant adjustments in her day to day routine to maintain accuracy.
Finally comfortable enough with the position, she held her breath and calmed her heart to keep her fingers from trembling. The teen blinked once after this, opened her eyes, and released the string.
The arrow flew from its nocked state, arching across the course, and striking the target. Vira let out the breath as the string stopped vibrating, the sound shaky to her thundering ears as she stared at where the shot had hit. One crimson line to the right of the center. It wasn't a bad shot, considering her handicap, but not perfect either. But to the teen, seeing at least that level of accuracy was a shock. She hadn't shot a bow since the accident, her own fear of looking like a fool in front of so many others who could see well and shoot better preventing her from trying again. And that was three years ago.
"W-wow. I...I didn't think I'd actually hit it."