The Beginning — leaving England for the Sahara
The new business, the new chapter, the chosen risk. He has decided. The doubts arrive afterwards. The flask is what he carries on the first morning.
The sand shifted as Edward's camel swayed through the dunes. London was three days ago. Timbuktu tomorrow night, his guide had said — with rotten teeth and a sly grin.
He had carried the flask out of habit. His father's flask, leather-mounted, with the silver cup he had drunk from at fourteen behind the stables. He had not opened it on the boat-train. He had not opened it on the steamer. He had thought, several times in the first hours out of Marseille, that he might never open it again.
The decision had been made in lamplight, alone, three months earlier. The kind of decision that is not announced until it is irrevocable. He had told his mother the night before he sailed. She had looked at him for a long time and said, finally, "Your father would have gone."
That morning, with the sun still grey behind the dunes and the camels grumbling and the guide already gone ahead, Edward took the flask out of his coat. He held it in both hands for a moment. Then he unscrewed the silver cup, poured a small measure, and drank to the man he was about to become.
Every man we make a piece for has had this morning. The morning the decision is irrevocable. The morning he wakes up and the new thing is already underway and the old life is, quietly, behind him. The flask is what he carries on that morning.
The Harrington Flask
English leather, hand-blown glass, plated silver cup. Engraved on the silver collar with up to four lines — a name, a date, the line his mother said.
See this piece →We don't claim the flask makes the morning easier. The morning is the morning. The flask is only what he carries — a quiet object, weighted, in his coat pocket — that reminds him, when the doubt comes, that someone who loves him already believed he could do this thing.
That is, in the end, what we sell. Not the brass. Not the leather. Not the silver. The reminder.
Down the Nile — into the emptiness of Sudan
Read the next chapter →If this sounds like him.
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