Old Veteran Mocked At Shooting Expo Leaves An Army Instructor Frozen-mdue - Chainityai

Old Veteran Mocked At Shooting Expo Leaves An Army Instructor Frozen-mdue

The last call came over the loudspeaker when the heat had already emptied half the expo.

Three plates.

Four hundred yards.

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Iron sights.

One shot per plate.

Sixty seconds.

The announcer said it like he had said it all afternoon, but by then even his voice sounded tired.

Most of the serious shooters had already taken their turn at the Mesquite Valley Shooting Expo, and most of them had learned the same hard truth.

Four hundred yards does not care about your shirt logo.

It does not care about your sponsor table.

It does not care how expensive your trigger feels when your front sight wobbles against a little piece of steel in the heat.

Thirty-one shooters had sat behind that bench across two days.

Thirty-one had walked away without the prize.

The closest had been Bryce Callaway, a sponsored competitor with a polished smile and a rifle case worth more than some people’s trucks.

Bryce had hit the first plate quickly.

He had hit the second after a breath that looked practiced.

Then he had chased the third plate until the buzzer ended the attempt, and he stood up with a curse quiet enough to pretend it was discipline.

After that, the challenge had started to feel less like entertainment and more like a trap.

People still looked toward the bench, but not many wanted to sit down.

Near the back of the crowd, Walter Driscoll sat in the thin shade of a folding chair he had dragged under a vendor awning.

He was seventy-eight years old.

His jacket was a faded Carhartt, his cap had no logo, and his hands carried the slight tremor that makes strangers decide a man’s whole story before he opens his mouth.

He had come with Caleb Morrow, the young neighbor who lived two properties over and walked with a limp he tried to hide.

Caleb had been a Marine.

He had come home from Helmand quieter than he left, and Walter was one of the few people who never asked him to explain the quiet.

Caleb had invited him because he knew Walter liked rifles.

That was all Caleb knew.

Walter had told him once, almost by accident, that he had served in Vietnam.

He had never said what unit.

He had never said what he did.

He had never said why some sounds made him pause for half a breath longer than other men.

On the drive to the expo, Walter had asked if anybody still shot iron sights.

Caleb had laughed gently and told him not seriously.

Walter had only nodded and looked out the window of his old Ford F-150.

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