From Longmont's layered complexity, the estate now unfolds with a different cadence here in the Lufkin passage, where the bourbon country character asserts itself through wide-plank hardwoods and hand-finished millwork that catch afternoon light with the warmth of aged copper. The spatial generosity that defined those earlier rooms remains, but the proportions shift toward something more deliberate, each threshold framed as if the house itself is measuring the weight of what you carry through it. There is a grounding quality to this stretch of the home, where natural stone meets reclaimed timber in combinations that feel less designed than discovered, as though the materials simply agreed to occupy the same wall. It is precisely this sense of inevitability that prepares you for what waits in Macon, where the estate will test whether that quietude can hold against something far more dramatic.