This reminds of of another episode in my ongoing series of run ins with guns that could just about make you cry...
Some years back, the classified section of another forum had a listing for a Marlin Centennial Matched Pair. These were sets of both a Model 336 and Model 39, factory engraved by one or the other of two engravers who were brought in for the project, given a special serial number indicating which set they were out of the run of 1,000 pairs and included a bunch of paperwork proclaiming what and how special they were supposed to be. And a fancy luggage style carrying/display case. Which last, some of the people on this other forum blamed for the situation, saying rust from leaving the guns in that case was a known issue, but further correspondence with the seller indicated that they had been recovered from what had been his uncle's beachfront place that was wrecked in superstorm Sandy and that the case literally fell apart when pulled out of a bedroom closet, which suggests that a soaking is at least as likely to be the culprit. Although, on the other hand, the paperwork didn't have evidence of having been soaked, so it's a bit of a mystery, but in the end it doesn't really matter how things got to this point.
Anyways, as they say, "Without provenance, buy the gun, not the story" and leaves the stage set for our little tragedy:
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Got the pair for $800, plus an exorbitant amount his New York FFL wanted for shipping, but still came in appreciably under a grand. The levers in particular are best described as having been chewed up by rust, but the bores and internals were pristine. My thinking was that at the time, for that money, you couldn't get a beat up JM 336 and 39 in standard dress, so why not grab these and actually use them?
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