The figure at the back of the room moved imperceptibly, crouching down in a fluid movement. His outline was murky, aided by the shadows and his black clothing, and the fact that he was now half hidden by one of the partitions as he flicked the mount open at the top of the barrel of the sniper rifle, perching it on a box. He didn't like moving around during a fight, but he hadn't had a clear line of sight in his previous position. His right arm came up to support the barrel of the gun, with light reflecting off of the titanium surface of the robotic appendage. It was relatively plain, black with dark grey accents, the only point of real interest being a metallic ridge over his knuckles that functioned as a knuckle duster.
This was Lars Jespersen, eagle-eyed sharpshooter.
Raising his left eye to the sight of the rifle, the Danish man lined up his shot. He wasn't a zoologist, a biologist - whatever - but he figured that he understood a little something about the sensitive areas of a snake-insect-hybrid, mainly from the five seconds of intense thinking that he had just experienced whilst setting up his gun. Eyes, nose, mouth. Those three words repeated in his head as he aimed and fired towards the eye of the creature, not daring to break his eye away from the sight as he watched the shot hit. Jespersen barely moved during this time as he tapped the pressure trigger once more, this time aiming for the nose. After this, the Dane conducted a mental review of his efficacy.
Wow, he thought to himself, I've really missed this.
Lena hadn't been too fond of sending him off, back to war, but Lars had been raring to go. He still felt guilty - his job had been the reason for the split between him and Lena's mother, and why he hadn't been present during her formative years, but that had changed. He'd helped Lena at university, had bought a flat with an extra room for her, been a better father. It would only be a short mission, and Lars was certain of that.
He frowned, snapping out of his thoughts - distraction was not good. He could tell that he had been out of the military for a while - three years, to be exact - as before, when he was in the special forces, distraction was not something he had to worry about. Lars had been so focused on his job that he had gained quite a reputation - he was known to stalk and follow his targets for days if required, unflinching in his positioning.
The man lined up another shot, firing at the eye-area once more. His gun hissed slightly, and Lars shifted his position so that he was further behind the partition.