Again he shut his eyes and drowned out his mind for a few moments. This silenced his active mind and instead brought his tactile instinctual mind to play. It seemed to know what it was doing, even if his active mind did not. His fingers again felt the familiar nock on an arrow. It was brought to the string easily. He felt for the bead only for a second and there it was…right where he knew it would always be. Right where it always had been all those hundreds of arrows. It never moved, the brass strippings clenched to the bead made sure of that. He pulled the arrow back seating it into the string. All this instinctual, he didn’t need to assess it; he had done this countless times before now. Every arrow had met the same place, why worry about it? He knew where that place was. Just like his left arm knew how to hold the bow…and where to hold it.
Resting, his active mind just like his bow was resting. Making itself ready for when it would be needed. When he made the bow active and armed his eyes would again open; making the more active part of his mind alive again working out the last minute details of what he was about to do. To fine tune the final details before the release of that arrow. But until then everything was the same, nothing had changed, just the distance to the target and a few minor other things he could and would worry about when he got there. They were small things; things he could and would manage just fine when the time came. But that time was not now…no that was later. Just a little later than now.
The bow brought up vertical and his mind sat ready to pounce once those eyes opened. Almost like a tiger waiting for prey, all his mind needed was the visual input and his arms would move correctly. That was all that needed to change possibly. But he would get there when he got there. Right now he was still not even armed. The string was still at the ready position not yet pulled. That changed in a moment, quickly the string was pulled back to his cheek and his eyes shot open as he exhaled. His heart rate dropped and his mind went to work. Where he was again had not changed, so he went to focusing outward…downrange where it mattered. Where all his miscounts had been. Still…still no wind. Just as before and before his mind could even tell him what to do he lowered the bow slightly and released.
Was this what instinctual archery felt like? It was almost like there was a disconnect between his mind and his body. Almost like they were warring but yet trying to accomplish the same task. One just went for it while the other wanted to stand back and try and perfect everything. Both were needed but it was like he didn’t have to tell himself anything; his body just adjusted for it…almost like there was nothing to worry about. It felt odd to him, but right in the same moment. He had to trust his muscle memory. Out there if he had to take a life he couldn’t be pondering about it all day; he had to decide, and once he had he needed to commit to it. Fully and then own it. Make it his because he couldn’t let his life be taken because he couldn’t shut up his mind that was weighing all the consequences for him like rice on a scale. Sometimes…sometimes instincts had to make the decisions for him. Or else he would never stop trying to reach for rice to balance one side of the scale against the other.
Again it sailed downrange as he watched with anticipation. IT was almost like he expected something spectacular to happen, something different than just the arrow traveling downrange. It wasn’t going to do anything spectacular besides maybe hitting the target. Nothing else beside confirm or deny him the pleasure of knowing for sure that he had the instincts needed to do this fully. To execute this task and trust himself. No, it went…Ninety feet, this was the threshold that he had past so many other times before this and yet he was still anxious to see where it would go. What it would do like there was something different in this flight than all the others.
And even if there was would he notice it…Yes, yes he would. It was on route, just like the last one only it was dipped slightly more, on a lower course than before. Lower was better because his last arrow had been high…if only lower like this one it would have struck true. The anticipation was palpable as he waited. The moments seemed like an eternity as the arrow dipped and struck the target. It hit…but just barely. Although he felt jubilation well up in him he knew that this was only now the beginning of the exercise. Ildin would not praise him; no there was no parade here for a menial task like this. He was learning, and hitting this target just meant that he had been taking in everything that Ildin had taught him. That he had been listening. So he nodded and a slight smile spread across his face, he had done it, but there was still plenty of room for improvement.
“Now, let us see if you can replicate this result. Luck Serrif means nothing out there. Skill does. What determines the two is consistency. Luck runs out, skill never does.” A contract had to be made, yes that single hit could be luck, but what would help determine if it was skill was consistency. Serrif needed to be able to produce the same results again and again. Otherwise he was just lucky and not skilled.
“Yes mistress.” He nodded and the smile slowly faded from his face. He still felt the buzz from his success, even if it seemed slightly tarnished by Ildin seemingly chiding him telling him it was luck…but was it? Because it sure didn’t feel like it was just luck.
“Now Serrif, show me skill” She challenged motioning to the target that awaited him in the distance.
Just like ever it waited him, ready never flinching, and never moving. It waited…a test of his skill even if he was not completely ready for it. It sat opposed to him in a way. A testament to what he was going to accomplish. One day…one day these skills would mean something. They would help him. But now, now it all seemed foreign to him. Like he couldn’t imagine taking a life with an arrow. But he knew, his instincts knew he would have to one day. There would be no alternative to what he would have to accomplish. And he would have to again draw back that string and lose an arrow. That time the target would be living…but this one for now was not. And he was glad more than words for that truth.