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PROFESSIONAL SHOOTERS Mocked Dean Martin’s Talent — The 0.20 Second ROYAL Move CRUSHED Them All

This should be interesting because in their world, Mastery had a uniform, utility belts, range bags, your protection hanging around your neck, not cufflinks. Dean set his drink down with casual precision and adjusted his bow tie like he was about to step on stage instead of up to a firing line. The contrast was almost theatrical except he wasn’t performing.

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“You do much shooting?” one of them asked, tone dipped in polite doubt. “Some?” Dean replied. just some. The understatement landed like background noise to men who were used to hearing enthusiastic amateurs talk too much about their limited range time. They’d seen executives try to impress celebrities wanting stories to tell at dinner parties.

Wealthy tourists who confused confidence with competence. The assumptions settled in fast entertainer curiosity. And that’s when the smirks appeared. Subtle, controlled, professional. When Bull Morrison suggested a friendly competition, it wasn’t aggression. It was demonstration. A clean way to show the difference between dabbling and discipline.

25 yards. Time draw. Electronic scoring. Nothing flashy. Just measurable truth. They fully expected Dean to hesitate. Maybe laugh it off. Maybe ask for pointers. Maybe admit he was rusty. Instead, he nodded. No speech, no swagger, just calm agreement. That should have been the first warning because men who need validation usually talk before they shoot. Dean didn’t.

He walked over to the table of firearms and began inspecting them. Not admiring, not fumbling. Inspecting, checking the action, feeling the balance, testing the weight in his hand with quiet familiarity. The smirks faded slightly. Not gone, but thinner. Something about the way he handled that colt wasn’t theatrical.

It wasn’t the stiff, careful grip of someone afraid to make a mistake. It was relaxed, efficient, almost bored. And that’s when the professionals realized they might have misread one small detail. He didn’t look like a man trying to prove something. He looked like a man who had done this before many times. But pride has momentum.

And once a challenge is offered in a room full of experts, it doesn’t get withdrawn. So they loaded the targets, activated the timers, took their positions. still confident, still composed, still certain that in the next few minutes, a tuxedoed singer was about to receive a very polite lesson. They had no idea they were about to get one instead.

The first crack didn’t come from the shot. It came from the silence. Dean stepped into position and something about the way he settled at the line made the room feel different. No exaggerated stance, no overcorrection, no visible tension. He didn’t square up like a man recalling instructions from a weekend course.

He stood like someone who had already burned the mechanics into muscle memory. Natural, balanced, loose, too loose. Most competitive shooters carry a kind of visible intensity. You can see the calculations happening. Breath control, sight alignment, grip pressure. Dean didn’t look like he was calculating anything. He looked like he was waiting for a song queue. The cigarette stayed in place.

That alone bothered them. Serious shooters eliminate distractions. They remove variables. They optimize every condition. Dean hadn’t removed a single one. Formal shoes, tailored jacket, smoke drifting lazily near his eyes. And yet, his hands were steady. When he picked up the cold, there was no hesitation in the motion.

No subtle readjusting to get comfortable. His fingers found their positions automatically like they’d been there a thousand times before. He didn’t test the weight twice. didn’t dry fire for reassurance. He just held it. That’s when Castellano leaned slightly forward. Because there’s a difference between someone holding a firearm and someone who owns the space around it.

Dean’s grip wasn’t textbook competition style. It wasn’t exaggerated or rigid. It was economical, efficient, the kind of grip built for speed under pressure, not for perfect photographs. Thompson noticed something else. Dean wasn’t focusing on the target the way most shooters do. locking in with intense tunnel vision.

He seemed almost relaxed in his gaze, peripheral awareness intact, shoulders low, breathing normal, like he wasn’t preparing for an event, like he was simply continuing something he already knew how to do. That was the moment the air shifted. The smirks were gone now, replaced by quiet evaluation. Because professionals recognize one thing above all else, familiarity.

And what they were seeing wasn’t beginner’s luck waiting to happen. It was familiarity under layers of calm. Parker tried to reassert control of the situation. “Take your time,” he offered. Tone neutral, but edged with caution. “Now Dean gave a small nod, but he didn’t take extra time. He didn’t roll his shoulders. Didn’t shake out tension, didn’t remove the cigarette.

He simply stood there, tuxedo crisp, bow tie straight, looking like a man, mildly inconvenienced by the delay.” That’s when Morrison felt it. a tiny unwelcome thought pressing at the edge of confidence. What if we’re not about to teach him anything? The timer operator lifted his hand. The range grew still, and for the first time that afternoon, none of the four professionals were thinking about proving a point.

They were watching closely because something told them the next few seconds weren’t going to go the way they’d planned. And that realization was just beginning to sink in. The challenge had been framed as friendly, but now it felt personal. 25 yards. Precision target. Electronic timer calibrated down to hundredths of a second.

No tricks, no theatrics, just measurable performance. The kind of setup that stripped away personality and left nothing but skill exposed. Thompson went first. Clean draw, controlled breath, smooth extension. The shot cracked through the range with authority. Tight grouping 0.80 seconds. Solid, respectable, the kind of time that wins quiet nods from serious men. Morrison stepped up next.

He shaved it down. 0.70 slightly tighter center mass. A confident holster. A faint smirk returning to his face. Castellano followed. Near perfect alignment. Mechanical precision you could almost hear in the click of the action. 0.75 seconds. Almost surgical. Then Parker. No wasted movement. No tension, a hunter’s rhythm, fluid and instinctive.

0.72 seconds. Center hit for strong performances. Not world record numbers, but elite level consistency. In most rooms, those times would have ended the conversation. They stepped back satisfied. This was how it was supposed to go. Dean had watched all of it without commentary. No applause, no visible intimidation.

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