“Take that little group over there,” Doc said, gesturing at row of old beer bottles. “If you can hit one, I’ll give you a quarter.”
 
 Wow. There was something so inspiring about being so underestimated.
 
 Right then I decided to do more than just hit the bottles. I was going to hit them with some style.
 
 Fast and easy. Like a badass. And also: from the hip.
 
 “Okay, little lady,” Doc said then. “Just try your best.”
 
 My best?
 
 Okay.
 
 I flipped off the safety, stepped into a comfortable stance, pressed the rifle butt to my hip bone, and pulled the trigger with a BOOM!
 
 The rifle had a hell of a kick, but the first bottle disappeared in a puff of sand.
 
 But I didn’t even stop to enjoy it. As soon as I’d pulled the trigger, I was popping the lever out and back with a satisfying ka-chunk and then pulling the trigger again.
 
 Another BOOM! And another bottle turned to dust.
 
 Then another, then another, then another. BOOM—ka-chunk, BOOM—ka-chunk, BOOM! Right across the row, as the bottles exploded one after the other.
 
 It was over almost as soon as it started.
 
 Then I turned back to Doc with one final shift of the lever—ka-chunk. Nice and ladylike.
 
 I flipped the safety, took the rifle off my hip, and said to Doc’s gaping face, “That was fun.”
 
 I’d just revealed way too much about myself, and I should’ve been halfway back to Houston by now. But it was worth it.
 
 That’s when I noticed something up the ravine.
 
 It was Jack. Watching us. And from the admiring look behind those slightly crooked glasses, he’d seen the whole thing.
 
 He gave me a little salute of respect.
 
 And I gave him a little nod.
 
 And now it was time to get the hell out.