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He’d bought it for two reasons. First, his grandson, Leo, was turning seven—the age of boundless, curious fingers. Second, the old wooden rack in the closet had belonged to his father, a beautiful, irresponsible thing with glass doors and a key that any paperclip could defeat. That rack was a museum. This cabinet was a promise.

Then came the October night of the early freeze. The pipes in the mudroom cracked. Frank was away visiting his sister. When he returned three days later, the room was a swamp. The washing machine had wept rusty tears. The coats were stiff with mold. And the Field & Stream cabinet sat in two inches of brackish water.

The Field & Stream cabinet didn't have a dehumidifier or a silent alarm. It wasn't a thing of beauty. But as Leo closed the door and spun the lock, Frank saw him square his shoulders. The boy wasn’t just securing guns. He was standing guard over a small, shining piece of their shared world.

And that, Frank figured, was the whole point.

Assembling it in the garage, Frank felt a hollow satisfaction. The steel was thin enough to dent with a hard shove, the lock a spinning disc of cheap chrome. But the box’s manual spoke of “security” and “peace of mind,” and Frank decided to believe it. He bolted it to the concrete floor of his mudroom, a tight fit between the washing machine and the rack of winter coats. Then, he transferred his legacy inside.

Field And Stream Gun Cabinet -

He’d bought it for two reasons. First, his grandson, Leo, was turning seven—the age of boundless, curious fingers. Second, the old wooden rack in the closet had belonged to his father, a beautiful, irresponsible thing with glass doors and a key that any paperclip could defeat. That rack was a museum. This cabinet was a promise.

Then came the October night of the early freeze. The pipes in the mudroom cracked. Frank was away visiting his sister. When he returned three days later, the room was a swamp. The washing machine had wept rusty tears. The coats were stiff with mold. And the Field & Stream cabinet sat in two inches of brackish water.

The Field & Stream cabinet didn't have a dehumidifier or a silent alarm. It wasn't a thing of beauty. But as Leo closed the door and spun the lock, Frank saw him square his shoulders. The boy wasn’t just securing guns. He was standing guard over a small, shining piece of their shared world.

And that, Frank figured, was the whole point.

Assembling it in the garage, Frank felt a hollow satisfaction. The steel was thin enough to dent with a hard shove, the lock a spinning disc of cheap chrome. But the box’s manual spoke of “security” and “peace of mind,” and Frank decided to believe it. He bolted it to the concrete floor of his mudroom, a tight fit between the washing machine and the rack of winter coats. Then, he transferred his legacy inside.

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