1st of Summer, 523
One week. Lance was going to dedicate an entire week to the learning of the short bow. It wasn’t going to be cheap, but he needed to learn something he can use out in the wild. Something that he could kill rabbits or deer with from a distance. Not to mention protecting himself from the unspeakable. Creatures of the forest. He had heard stories of monsters, things that could kill a man with a grasp. Large wolves and bears would be the least of the things he would have to worry about.
Lance had bought his own bow prior to the practice along with 20 arrows. That way he could learn his way around it with guidance. But the whole thing didn’t start like he thought it would. He was expecting them to show him the parts of the weapon, maybe practice drawing it back, but instead the instructor shouted at them, him and the people in the class, to run around the training area ten times.
Lance’s lungs burned. Sweat dripped down his brow and his clothes were starting to get damp. He had only ran for a few moments, but the fight summer sun beamed heat onto them all. It didn’t help he wasn’t in the greatest shape. His work let him sit there and play his music all he wanted. It wasn’t very demanding on his body. Now he was paying for it. The wind he inhaled was warm, but the constant in and out made it cool, burning the inside of his throat, at least that is what it felt like.
“Lets go, lets go!” The instructor yelled across the area.
The training area was almost a rectangle. On one side there was a line of dummies, on the other was the wall of the building. They ran that small area, creating a small oval on its inside.
Lance was the fifth person to finish. The ones ahead of him were pretty fit, and the other behind him where simply taking their time. Lance was trying hard to be there. Once they had finished the instructor told them to get on line, towards the targets. She didn’t instruct them to grab the bows, which laid in front of each of the targets.
“Bend down. Touch your toes.” The instructor barked. “It is important to stay limber, be warmed up before any exercise.”
Lance bent down to touch his toes. He could feel the stretch travel up his legs, through his butt. He had to bend his knees a bit to touch them strait on.
“Ok. I’m going to show you beginners the bow and it’s parts. Then we are going to practice drawing them. It is important not to release the bow if there is no arrows in it, you can fracture its limbs and make it unusable.” The instructor spoke as the class stopped stretching. “This is the bow string.” She ran her hand down the string of the bow, “attached is a bead. Above that is where you want to knock your arrow. The bow string connects to the string notch, those are on both limbs of the bow. You have your upper and lower limbs, and this is where you grip the bow.” She showed them how to hold it. “Just above your hand is where the arrow is going to sit. It’s called the arrow rest.” She knocked and arrow and showed the class how the arrow sat. “As you are looking towards your target, the part of the bow facing you is called the bow face, the other side, which is facing the target, is the back of the bow.” Her and guided the class as if she was teaching young-lings. “When you draw the bow, it should be one swift motion, then release. There is now sitting there and aiming. Trust yourself.”
The instructor stood in front of one of the targets. Her gaze was calm and expressionless. She pulled back and released an arrow that landed close to center on the dummy.
“When you grip the bow string, you use three fingers. One above the arrow, the other two below the arrow. Pull with the crooks of your fingers. Don’t grip with your whole hand, or with just your fingertips.” She said, knocked another arrow that she pulled from her quiver, showed the students how to place their fingers. Then with a quick draw she paused. “Pull the arrow back to the edge of your mouth, next to your cheek.” Then she released the arrow. It landed almost dead center. “Your turn. Turn to.”
Everyone picked up their bow. Lance picked up his and pulled an arrow from his quiver. He knocked it like she showed them. He pulled it back and aimed it towards the target. His arm strained, he paused.
“When you aim, you want the target about two inches above your arrow.” The instructor said.
Lance tried to put the target where she said then loosed the arrow. It landed short of the target.
“Good. Most of you are holding it before you fire it. I want you to pull and lose. That cord is much too heavy to hold it for too long.” The instructor said as she paced the line back and forth.
WC: 879