Perry, Glad you are happy. What works for you, works for you. But trying to sell a short barreled gun is not easy when for 20-30 years every gun writer has written about the virtues of long barrels and how short barrels don't give you a long sighting plain or smooth swing. That's why so many Sporting Clay guns are 32-34"'instead of 26". Heck even most of the Skeet guns I see are 32" nine pound tube sets. Short is out of style and might be so for a long time. I liked a short barrel gun in tight hunting situations but other just use a 30" or worse a semi auto 30" gun which is about six inches longer than a double with 39" barrels.
I still say if that gun had 30" barrels it would sell in a heart beat. Even 28" barrels would be an easier sale. You have to find either a 101 collector which is a rare person or a lover of short barrels which is a somewhat less rare bird.