The Tractor Loan That Nearly Cost A Brother His Paid-Off Farm-myhoa

The tractor looked better than it had any right to look.

It sat in the gravel lot of the Crenshaw estate auction on April 14, 1972, red paint shining under Kansas sun, front loader raised like it had been waiting for the right man to prove himself.

Ray Hollister stood twenty feet away and knew exactly what it could do.

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He also knew what it could take.

Ray was forty-one, careful by habit and by scar.

His father had bought their southern Kansas farm in 1938 after years of hired work, and every acre of it had been paid for with sore backs, patched machinery, and a refusal to owe a bank more than a man could sleep beside.

When his father died in 1964, Ray inherited three hundred twenty acres, a small farmhouse, two aging tractors, and a rule that had never been written down.

Keep the land clear.

Carl, his younger brother, had inherited less and wanted more.

At thirty-six, Carl farmed a smaller place four miles west, rented extra ground when he could, and talked about scale as if saying the word often enough would make the future cooperate.

He believed debt was a tool.

Ray believed debt was a weather system with paperwork.

They did not fight often, but silence had been building between them for years.

That morning, the Massey Ferguson 1100 gave the silence a shape.

It had a six-cylinder diesel engine, power enough to pull implements neither brother owned, and the kind of size that made old equipment look like toys.

Carl walked around it twice, touching the loader frame, the rear tires, the new hydraulic lines.

Ray walked around it once and saw fuel, repairs, insurance, payments, and land that would have to perform perfectly to justify the gamble.

The auctioneer started at eighteen hundred dollars.

Carl raised his hand.

Ray did not.

The bids climbed in sharp little jumps while neighbors watched from the hoods of pickups and the shade of hats.

Carl’s face brightened every time another man dropped out.

Ray folded his arms and kept his eyes on the tractor.

At forty-two hundred dollars, the hammer came down.

Carl had bought the biggest machine either brother had ever owned.

Men slapped his shoulder.

Somebody joked that Ray had finally been beaten to a deal.

Carl smiled at that longer than he should have.

Then he opened a brown folder on the tractor fender.

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