aimed the barrel over the orange saucer and swung to the right, getting ahead of it. She counted to three in her head and squeezed the trigger. The disk exploded into a black cloud.
âNice hit,â said her shooting partner. The crack of other guns and the smell of gunpowder warmed the cold fall air. A busy Saturday at the range.
âYour turn,â she said.
âPull!â he said. His pigeon flew to the left and seemed to hang in midair for a moment, as if caught in an updraft. He pointed the barrel over the target and squeezed. The shot nicked off a sliver of orange and the rest of the disk fell to the ground. âFinally. A hit,â he said.
âBarely,â mumbled the teenage boy behind them. He was sitting in a chair keeping score. He ran the trap by pushing a button on a box he held in his palm. An extension cord connected the box to the concrete bunker that expelled the clays.
The man looked over his shoulder. âWhatâd you say, kid? Working on your tip?â
The boy grinned and started to say something, but it was lost in the rattle and whistle of a train crossing the nearby tracks.
âA chipâs still a hit,â the woman said over the noise. She slipped a shell into the chamber and pumped it forward. âPull,â she said. Another throw to the right. She started the barrel pointing behind the pigeon and swung it smoothly ahead until it was past the disk before squeezing the trigger. It shattered; another square hit.
The man slid a shell into the chamber, pumped and raised his shotgun. âPull.â He followed the target with the barrel. He closed his right eye and squeezed the trigger. A miss.
âLost,â said the scorer.
âWhat am I doing wrong here, Paris?â
She took off her safety glasses and shoved them into the pocket of her shooting vest. âFirst off, are you shutting one of your eyes?â
âYeah. Sometimes.â
âDonât. This is a shotgun, not a rifle.â She pulled out her earplugs.
âOkay,â he said. âWhat else?â
Paris Murphy walked over to the gun rack behind the teenager, leaned her gun against it and went over to her husband. A gust of wind rattled the trees on either side of the range and sent more leaves floating to the ground. Murphy regretted leaving her gloves at home and tucked her numb hands under her armpits.
âYouâre behind the pigeon when you should be in front of it.â She stood behind him. Jack Ramier was tall, but his wife nearly matched his height. She was slender, with a narrow waist and hips, but had large breasts and a runnerâs well-defined legs. She had long black hair, violet eyes framed by thick lashes and olive skinâtraits from her Lebanese mother and Irish father. Her complexion was flawless except for a crescent moon scar on her foreheadâa souvenir from her job as a St. Paul Homicide detective.
âAnd your form is all wrong,â she said. She bumped the back of his legs with her knee. âBend those knees, Jack. Relax. Youâre not performing surgery.â Jack was an emergency room doctor at Regions Hospital downtown. âPut your left foot slightly forward. Keep your feet shoulder-width apart.â She put her hands on his hips. âLean forward a little at the waist.â
âYouâre getting me hot, wife.â
âNot in front of the kid.â
âThis isnât fair. You handle a gun all day long.â
âStays in my purse ninety-nine percent of the time.â
âYouâve had training.â
âIâve given you training.â
âIâll say you have.â He turned and winked at her. He had curly brown hair and brown eyes that never failed to get her attention.
âWatch that muzzle control,â she said lowly. âWouldnât want your gun going off prematurely. Save something for tonight.â
âI got plenty of ammo,â he said, and they both