Like everyone I have some interesting relatives. Family gatherings are best spent listening to the same stories for the umpteenth time. A lot of the tales revolve around how my Dad and his brother and friends tried to give my Grandma a heart attack...there was the time Dad drove his friend's motorcycle off a cliff...or the time Grandma had to pick him up at a party because he had (temporarily) blinded himself. My sister and I can recite these chronicles word-for-word if called upon, but they're better told by the people that lived them. Besides, we'd rather listen anyway.
Of course you've figured my Grandma never waivered. She's a strong, tough woman of her generation. Her experiences prepared her for life as a mother of crazies, and I'm sure my Dad prepared her for a stint as a California parole officer. There was the one time a disgruntled parolee said he was going to come into the office and blow everyone away, so the entire office decided to start packing. Packing heat, that is. Grandma bought a snub-nose .38 special. Thankfully she never had to use it.
Recently, my Grandma gifted me her pistol, and now I own one of the props that we've been hearing about since I can remember. I was amazed when I first saw it. She still had the original box with manual, and inside she kept the check she wrote for $70 back on Oct 1, 1970. It's in near mint condition, and although it's no collector's piece, it's not for sale.
3 comments:
Good story and nice gun. Do you plan on shooting it? It'd make a nice concealed carry gun.
Welcome back to the blogosphere!
Already popped off a couple rounds at an unlucky (empty) jug of windshield wiper fluid. This gun (maybe it's me?) is much more accurate than the last snub-nose I fired. We'll have to talk about taking the CC class, talked to the guys at the Olathe Gun Shop and it runs about $200 all in (class and registration).
Wow, that Undercover is nearly pristine!
Good luck with the CC class.
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