The shooting range was not at all how Castle had pictured it. In his mind, hardened beat cops with bristle mustaches stood around in pairs, comparing their pieces with one another while watching other members of their tribe blast the crap out of tin cans on a fence. He had a whole scene hashed out in his head before he even got to the range: Nikki
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He peeled the scarf and coat from his body and dumped them into a chair in the corner of the room. Some of the other off-duty cops gave him cautious looks; Castle had heard that they could smell their own and he was certainly not carrying blue pheromones. They seemed a lot more tolerable of the pretty female detective, though, and Castle saw one or two exploratory glances between squeeze-offs.
"I'm not opposed to a little biting," he said, linking his hands behind his back while he watched her unholster an impressive handgun. Like most men with adequacy issues, Castle was struck dumb by the pretty silver hardware. He'd never considered himself to be a gun nut (he'd had to do some research for his books, of course, but that had been pretty much point-and-material) and, if polled in the next election, he would have said he was totally for gun legislation. But there was something about a pretty woman holding a controlled weapon that just, well, made a guy's heart do a somersault.
-- Or his lower stomach.
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The sounds were muffled, but she managed to catch the tail end of Castle's comment - enough of it to provoke her into fixing him with another pointed stare. It was the kind he seemed to be on the receiving end of more often than not these days, and she was more than ready to continue doling them out as she saw fit.
"I'm sure," she muttered, and as she turned to set up the first target, hanging the paper from its hook, the badge at her hip reflected the semi-harsh lighting above their hands. She hit the button to send the target moving backward, back to a far enough point where she felt confident making a shot. Taking her gun out of her holster, she bent down to unstrap another, smaller model from her ankle, placing both on the countertop in front of them.
"Watch me first," she instructed. "These things have a backlash, and you can slice your hand open if you're not careful."
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He watched the target go skittering to the end of the row and shoved his hands into the pockets of his trousers, leaning forward on the balls of his feet. Even if he didn't get a chance to shoot today he'd get something for his novel. There was a very intimate, personal way someone handled a gun that bespoke volumes about their personality. Some cops strangled the grip and kept their finger on the trigger from the get-go; others, like Beckett, he assumed, never wasted a shot until their were sure they could hit the target.
He fit the eye protection over the bridge of his nose and scrubbed his index finger over one of the lenses. Scratchy. Just like the goggles at the ME's a couple of days before. You'd think that with a budget surplus, the city government could at least afford new glasses for the NYPD.
A nod when she said the gun could recoil. Well, obviously. He'd seen plenty of TV shows and movies where some green agent goes in ahead of a skittery column and discharges his weapon without warning -- what a surprise that was. Like a Marx Brothers caricature waiting to happen. He was antsy and eager; he kept turning his toes in toward one another as he waited for her to crack off the first round.
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It was that gun that she went for now, and since it was a little smaller, she only needed one finger on the trigger as opposed to two on the bigger Glock. Maybe that was another reason why she favored this gun above the other - she was able to get a better grip on it. She'd always preferred having a bigger grip on things, from suspects to leads, and guns were no exception to the rule.
With the pad of one finger, she turned off the safety, lifting the gun out in front of her and squinting one eye in order to better focus on the target. There was a moment, an instant of anticipation where her finger barely squeezed the trigger and it almost felt as if the entire room went silent. All she could hear was the blood rushing in her ears, and her shoulders tensed slightly as she fired off the first round of bullets. Bang. Bang. Bang. With every shot, the gun barely snapped upward - she kept her hold firm on it until the first clip was empty.
Then she set the gun down and turned to face Castle. He'd notice there was a different kind of light in her eyes, a flush across her face. Her breath was coming a little quicker, and she bit her lip to disguise it as she motioned for him to pick up the other.
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Stepping up to the line beside her, Castle nudged one of the muffs off her ear so she could hear him. "Not bad. Gonna' have to rethink having you over for the Halo tournament with me and the kid."
There was a little mustache of smoke curling from the barrel of the smaller piece. He reached for the other gun, gingerly, but trying to make it look like he handled guns all the time; he and Heston had had lunch a couple of years ago. Heston had been a big fan of his books. Castle had told him that he was a big fan of his films (well, some of them). No shots fired that day, though. No buddy-buddy marksmanship. In fact, the only time that Castle had actually handled a gun before now had been in the alley while they were in pursuit of the suited perp who'd killed his own sister.
But hell if he was going to let Beckett know that.
He put his glasses back on and fixed his earmuffs over his ears, squaring his stance on the line. The gun was cold where he had his hand wrapped around the grip; it smelled oily. Castle raised his arms, one long finger nudged over the trigger, sighting the target along the barrel. He felt her smirk beside him. A pause. Off with the safety. A nod, a smile, thank you for noticing. This wasn't so bad. Not as intimidating as a launch party. It was all a matter of finding your focus, sizing up the target, and --
BANG!
Castle's shoulders whipped back with the force. He nearly dropped the gun. "God damn --" he said, aghast, quickly loosening his finger from around the trigger. "Where'd it go?" He looked at Beckett for assistance, then back down the chute to the paper target. There was Beckett's blossom, but no shots from Castle. "Seriously," he spun in a small circle, "where'd it go?"
"Right here." From the box beside him, a crewcut in a Marines t-shirt was pointing down the lane to his own target. There, right on the edge, was a smoking bullet hole. Castle beamed and turned to Beckett. "I'm a deadeye. Now if we're following a perp with a peripheral vision problem. we'll be all set." He held up the gun. "Can I go again?"
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She hid her amusement again when he actually picked up the gun, holding it as though it was made of delicate ceramic or fragile glass. Her mind travelled back to an earlier case they'd had where a suspect had, as it turned out, been murdered by a ceramic knife, which left a distinct marking and was just as sharp as one made of steel.
Kate snapped out of the memory when Castle raised the gun, and it was almost as if he sensed her about to offer the suggestion, because he paused and turned off the safety with an obvious smile. She took a step back, leaning against the barrier that separated them from the other shooters, and studied his frame. There was something not quite right about the way he was handling the gun, but she couldn't place her finger on it --
BANG.
-- and then he fired, and Kate nearly ducked as Castle's upper half shot back and he juggled the gun in his grip. Her gaze immediately went to the target to see if he had actually managed to hit something, and then realized that he had, in fact, hit something. At least it hadn't been someone. He turned toward her with the eagerness of a retriever, and she could've glared at him through the yellow lenses of her glasses.
"Okay, first off? There were about a million things wrong with that," she began, pushing away from the wall of their box and stepping behind him, glancing over his shoulder at the target down the lane. "You need to relax your shoulders but keep your grip firm." Speaking loud enough for him to hear her, her hands rose to press them down from where he'd hunched them before. Too tense and you could throw your back out from the kickback. She'd seen it happen, even with the smaller models.
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"I told you," he turned over his shoulder, "this is my first time. Take it easy with the criticism, huh? I'm a writer. I've got a very delicate ego." He flexed his fingers a couple more times and wound them under the butt of the gun while she positioned herself behind him. Her hands were small weights on his shoulders. Castle's interest went up like antennae. He did as she said, dropping his shoulders a couple of inches.
"Does this lesson have a happy ending?" he couldn't resist asking, turning one quarter of that rakish profile to get her reaction. She was tight-lipped and unamused and so Castle pulled his masculinity up from the bottom of his stomach and transferred it into the gun.
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"Your definition of a happy ending is very different than mine, Castle," she retorted, keeping her lips tight and unaffected and watched as he drew in a breath. "Mine? Will be this ending without anyone getting shot, wounded or maimed." Just to be safe, she took another step away from him, making sure to stay out of the line of fire should his firing hand go askew again.
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He turned back to the target and squared his shoulders, drawing his aim on the target at the end of the chute. "If I make this shot, you go to the Governor's Ball with me. And you wear red."
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