Sabre Srw Direct
He’d named it Greyhound —not for speed, but for the way it would lock onto a target and refuse to look away.
That night, he went out. The SRW’s magnesium riser was cold against his palm. He moved through the collapsed overpasses, past a flipped food truck that still smelled of cinnamon, to the edge of a canal where wild dogs had started hunting in packs. He didn’t shoot the dogs. He shot a single rat—clean, humane, through the skull at twenty meters. The arrow made a soft thwack , then silence. sabre srw
After they left, Kaelen woke from her fever. She asked if he’d found food. He hadn’t. He’d found something harder: the knowledge that precision without mercy is just machinery. The SRW had given him the power to be cruel. He’d chosen kindness. That was the draw no one talks about—not the physical one, but the moral one. He’d named it Greyhound —not for speed, but
The next morning, he took the bow and walked east. Not to find Mira. He knew she was gone. He walked east because that was the direction she’d chosen, and he wanted to understand why. The SRW hung across his back, its cams clicking softly with each step. He moved through the collapsed overpasses, past a
Elias had lost his daughter, Mira, in the evacuation. Not to the bombs or the raiders—but to the silence between them. She was sixteen, fierce, with a mathematician’s mind and a poet’s rage. She’d called his archery “a rich man’s meditation.” He’d called her online activism “performative screaming.” The last thing he said to her, before the grid failed and the highways became graveyards, was: “You don’t know what survival costs.”
The Sabre SRW-113 was never meant to be a weapon of war. It was a tool of precision, a marriage of carbon foam and high-modulus carbon, designed to send an arrow through the eye of a storm at seventy meters. Elias had bought it secondhand from a retired Olympian, its limbs scarred but its soul intact. He’d saved for two years, working the night shift at a depackaging plant, breathing in the ghost-scent of recycled plastics, dreaming of stillness.
