They Laughed At His Cash Tractor, Then The Debt Crash Came For Them-myhoa

Carl Jensen walked into the farm-equipment dealership on a cold March morning with mud on his boots and thirty-two hundred dollars in his jacket.

He had counted the money twice before leaving home, because cash had a weight to him that promises never did.

He was fifty-two, a Korean War veteran, and the kind of farmer who could tell a weather shift by the smell of the wind before supper.

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His 280 acres were not grand, but they were his, and every fence post on that land had been touched by his hands at least once.

He did not want the newest tractor in the county.

He wanted a used one that started, pulled, lifted, and belonged to him the minute he drove it home.

The dealership smelled like rubber tires, waxed floors, hot coffee, and the sharp confidence of men who believed the boom would last forever.

Three salesmen stood near the counter: Rick the senior man, Dave with the gold watch and hard laugh, and Brad, young enough to mistake cruelty for confidence.

Carl stepped closer and said he was looking for a used tractor, something reliable, something around three thousand dollars.

The room did not go silent all at once.

It changed in layers, first Rick’s smile thinning, then Dave’s eyes dropping to Carl’s boots, then Brad glancing at the other two for permission to be amused.

“Used?” Rick asked, as if Carl had asked whether they sold horse collars beside the coffee machine.

Carl nodded and laid the envelope on the counter without opening it.

“Cash,” he said, because that had always been the cleanest word he knew.

Dave laughed.

It was not a chuckle meant to stay private.

It was a showroom laugh, the kind designed to make the person on the receiving end feel smaller while everyone else learned where to stand.

“Try the junk man,” Dave said, pushing the envelope back with two fingers. “That’s all your kind can afford.”

Brad laughed then, too, and Rick did not stop him.

Carl looked at the envelope, then at Dave’s hand, then at the new tractors behind them.

Instead, he asked whether they had anything in his range.

Rick shifted his weight and said the kind of farmers making it in 1979 were running big modern equipment.

Dave added that antique iron would not keep Carl farming long.

Brad said there was a salvage dealer in Ames, if Carl wanted something that might still run.

Carl picked up the envelope and put his cap back on.

He walked out through the glass doors without turning around, and the laughter followed him into the cold air like something thrown at his back.

Thirty minutes south, Pete Hendricks had a gravel lot full of machines that still had work left in them.

Pete was seventy-three, wore suspenders because belts annoyed him, and had been watching farm booms turn into farm busts since before Dave Morrison owned his first tie.

He listened when Carl explained what he needed.

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