Dealer Cut Off a Farmer—Then 11 Accounts Walked Out With Him-eirian

The first thing Caleb Mercer noticed when he walked into Parrish County Implement was that nobody looked up.

That was how a small town warned a man before it hurt him.

The bell over the glass door still jingled the way it had when Caleb was a boy.

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The fluorescent lights still buzzed over the showroom.

The smell was still rubber tires, gear oil, new paint, floor wax, and coffee that had been sitting too long on a burner behind the parts counter.

Even the tractors were lined up the same way, red hoods polished beneath ceiling fans, American flag hanging over the service desk like it had a say in what happened under it.

But nobody said his name.

For thirty-two years, someone always had.

Caleb Mercer’s family had been walking through that door since before Caleb could see over the parts counter.

His father had bought shear bolts there.

His mother had sent peach pies there after long harvest seasons.

His grandfather had once settled a bill with a handwritten note, three calves, and a handshake from Doyle Parrish’s father.

That was the old version of Parrish County Implement.

The new version had glass finance offices, branded floor mats, bright banners from national manufacturers, and young salesmen from Omaha who spoke to farmers like they were credit profiles wearing boots.

Caleb was forty-eight, though the drought had put older shadows around his eyes.

He ran Mercer Ridge Farm twelve miles outside town, where the road turned from pavement to gravel and the fields rolled just enough to catch wind from the north.

His 1996 Ford pickup had no air conditioning, a cracked windshield, and a glove box that would not close unless you hit it with the heel of your hand.

He had driven it that morning with the windows down, not because the air felt good, but because the truck left him no choice.

The air smelled like dry weeds and coming heat.

He had rehearsed the same sentence all the way there.

I need time, Doyle.

Not forgiveness.

Not charity.

Time.

His soybean drill had broken twice in one week.

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