Dealer Said My Combine Needed A Week, Dad’s Tractor Needed Three Days-myhoa

The service office smelled like burnt coffee, floor cleaner, and panic hidden under work boots.

Cole Henderson stood at the counter with his cap in both hands while the dealership manager read the diagnostic paperwork like it belonged to somebody else.

Behind the glass, Cole’s green combine sat with its side panels open and cables hanging from it.

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It had cost him more than he liked to say out loud.

It still had payments on it.

It was supposed to be the machine that made his four hundred acres outside a small Illinois town feel possible.

Now it would not start.

The manager tapped the paper and said, “One week minimum.”

Cole waited for the rest, because bad news on a farm almost always comes with a second sentence.

“Could be two if the part does not ship when they say,” the manager added.

Cole looked at the line that mattered.

Computer module failed.

Replacement back-ordered.

Machine inoperable.

Three hundred acres of soybeans were standing at perfect moisture, and the sky had already started building weather in the west.

Cole said, “I need that machine now.”

The manager finally looked up.

His face did not change.

“Everybody needs their machine now.”

Cole felt the words land in his chest.

He tried to keep his voice steady because begging a man with a clipboard never helped anybody.

“Rush the part,” Cole said.

“I am looking at a crop loss if this sits.”

The manager glanced past him at the other farmers waiting.

“Don’t waste my time with your hobby farm,” he said.

“You’re number seventeen.”

Then he pushed the paperwork across the counter.

Cole stared at it for a long second, because that paper had a claim on it and the claim was simple.

His expensive machine needed a computer part no one had.

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