THEY SPENT THEIR LAST 18 DOLLARS ON 342 BABY CHICKS; EVERYONE LAUGHED UNTIL THE GRASSHOPPERS CAME.
The summer of 1934 did not arrive in Dry Creek so much as settle over it like a punishment.
The air smelled of hot dust, bitter weeds, and wood left too long under the sun.

Every time the wind rose, it scratched at the farmhouse windows and pushed dirt through cracks Ellen Miller had already stuffed with cloth.
By morning, there would be a gray film on the kitchen table.
By noon, there would be grit between teeth.
By evening, even the water in the bucket tasted faintly of earth.
Thomas Miller used to say a farm could forgive one hard year.
One year made a family careful.
Two years made them quiet.
Three years made them count things they used to take for granted.
Beans in the jar.
Cornmeal in the sack.
Kerosene in the lamp.
The number of eggs in the basket.
The number of times a child asked for seconds and then tried to pretend he had not.
The Millers had never been wealthy, and nobody in Dry Creek would have claimed otherwise.
Their farmhouse sat low at the edge of the valley, with a sagging porch, a wire fence, and a mailbox that leaned as if the wind had been arguing with it for years.
There was an old truck in the yard and a small American flag on the porch rail, faded by weather but still there.
Before the drought, Ellen could keep something warm on the stove most afternoons.
Thomas could walk into Avery’s General Store and buy seed on credit without feeling every eye in the room turn toward his back.
The children had chores, dirt on their knees, and the kind of laughter that carried past the barn.
Then the rain began missing them.
First it missed them by weeks.
Then by months.
The fields cracked open in thin, hard lines.
Corn leaves curled inward.
The hens scratched longer and found less.
Neighbors started speaking in smaller voices, as if loud talk might scare away whatever mercy remained.
By July, the Miller pantry had a sound.
It was the hollow clap of a cupboard door closing on almost nothing.
At 5:17 on a Wednesday evening, Ellen placed every coin and bill they had left on the kitchen table.
The children watched from the doorway.
Thomas sat with his elbows on his knees, hat in his hands, looking at the money as if it were a problem he could fix with work.
Eighteen dollars.
That was all.
Ellen counted it twice.
Then she counted it a third time, slower, because a person counts money differently when there is no more coming.
The kitchen smelled faintly of dust and weak soup.
The clock ticked over the stove.
Outside, a loose hinge on the chicken shed knocked softly in the wind.
Eighteen dollars could buy flour.
It could pay a little toward the store account.
It could be hidden in a jar for sickness, a broken axle, or the day they might have to pack what fit in the truck and leave the rest behind.
Everybody in town seemed to know what they should do with it.
That was one of the cruel privileges of not being the person at the table.
Advice is cheap when someone else’s hunger is paying for it.
Two days earlier, Thomas had heard a man at Avery’s mention a hatchery one town over.
The hatchery was failing.
It had more chicks than buyers, more bills than cash, and no room to feed what had just hatched.
Newborn chicks were being sold for almost nothing.
Thomas did not speak of it right away.
He carried the thought home like a coal inside his shirt.
That evening, Ellen served thin soup in three small bowls and one larger cracked bowl she gave to Thomas.
He pushed it back toward her until she divided it again.
The children pretended not to notice.
Then Thomas said, “I want to buy chicks.”
Nobody moved for a moment.
Their youngest boy had been lifting a spoon, and it stayed in the air.
Ellen looked at Thomas for a long time.
“How many?” she asked.
“As many as eighteen dollars buys.”
The words sat between them like something alive.
“Thomas,” she said quietly, “we are counting beans.”
“I know.”
“We owe Mr. Avery.”
“I know.”
“The children need flour more than they need birds.”
That one made him close his eyes.
When he opened them, there was no stubborn pride in his face.
There was only a tired kind of terror.
“If we buy flour,” he said, “we eat for a few days. Then we are back at this table with nothing that grows.”
Ellen looked down at her hands.
The skin around her knuckles was rough from washing, mending, carrying, saving, and pretending that saving was the same as surviving.
“And if the chicks die?” she asked.
Thomas did not lie to her.
“Then we were already lost.”
That was why she listened.
Not because the plan sounded safe.
It did not.
It sounded like putting their last match into a wet stove and praying the flame would catch.
But Ellen had known Thomas for eleven years.
He was not a man who chased schemes.
He fixed what broke.
He paid what he owed when he could.
He had once walked eight miles in rain to return a borrowed wrench because he had promised it back by morning.
If that man was willing to risk their last eighteen dollars on something as fragile as a chick, then the truth had already reached him before it reached the rest of them.
They were closer to the edge than anyone wanted to say.
At 6:40 the next morning, they loaded a wooden crate into the back of the truck.
Ellen wrapped the money in a handkerchief and held it in her lap the whole drive.
The road to the hatchery was pale with dust.
Every fence post looked tired.
Every field they passed seemed to be waiting for bad news.
The hatchery itself was hotter inside than outside, full of frantic peeping and the sour-sweet smell of feed, feathers, and damp wood.
Thomas counted the money once more at the counter.
The man behind it wrote the receipt in blue ink that smeared under his thumb.
342 newborn chicks.
Paid in full.
$18.
Three hundred forty-two.
Ellen stared at the number as if it might change.
It did not.
On the ride home, the truck sounded different.
The crate behind them trembled with peeping.
The children ran into the yard when they heard the engine, and before Thomas lifted the first box down, the noise had already filled the farm.
The chicks were tiny yellow scraps of life.
They stumbled over one another.
They opened their beaks and cried as if they had been promised the world and delivered to a dry yard with a desperate family.
The children smiled for the first time in days.
Ellen almost did too.
Then she looked toward the road and saw two men slowing by the fence.
By dusk, everyone knew.
Dry Creek was a small enough place that news could cross it faster than rain.
Two men became three women.
Three women became boys whispering outside the store.
By the next morning, the story was on the church steps, by the well, and along the front porches where people sat because there was nothing else to do but watch dust move.
“Eighteen dollars,” one man said.
“On birds,” another answered.
“Hundreds of them.”
“Can’t feed his children, but he bought a flock.”
“Madness.”
At Avery’s General Store, the laughter was softer because Thomas was standing near the flour sacks.
But it was not soft enough.
Laughter does not have to be loud to humiliate a man.
Sometimes the quiet kind cuts deeper because everyone is pretending it is not happening.
Mr. Avery kept the store ledger under the counter.
He had written Miller in pencil, not ink, which Ellen once took as mercy.
That morning, Thomas heard him tell another customer, “A desperate man can always find a new road to ruin.”
Thomas bought nothing.
He went home with his hat low and his jaw tight.
Ellen heard things too.
A woman near the church pump said the Millers would be eating the chicks one by one before August.
Another said Ellen should have stopped him if she had any sense.
Ellen carried her bucket home without spilling it.
At the porch, her oldest daughter asked, “Mama, are they right?”
Ellen set the bucket down.
She wanted to say no with the clean confidence children deserve.
Instead, she knelt, wiped dust from the girl’s cheek, and said, “Then we will work hard enough to make them wrong.”
That night, Thomas built the first shelter from scrap boards.
The next day, he added wire.
The day after that, he pulled tin from a collapsed shed and hammered it into shade.
The children gathered crumbs, seeds, beetles, dry bits of grain from sack seams, and anything else that might keep the chicks alive.
Ellen kept a box beside the stove for the weakest ones.
She woke in the night when their peeping changed.
She learned which sound meant hunger and which meant cold.
Thomas started a notebook.
It was one of the children’s school notebooks, half-filled with sums and spelling practice.
He turned to a clean page and wrote the date.
Day 1: 342.
Day 3: 339.
Day 8: 337.
The first three losses hurt more than he expected.
He buried them beyond the fence because the children were watching.
After that, every bird that survived felt like proof, though proof of what he could not yet say.
At 4:30 every morning, Thomas checked the pen.
He counted standing birds first.
Then the ones near the heat.
Then the ones slow to move.
He wrote numbers in the notebook with a stub of pencil.
He did not know any scientific word for what he was doing.
He only knew that panic without method becomes waste.
So he made a method.
The town kept laughing.
Less openly as the days went on, perhaps because the Millers did not collapse fast enough to satisfy people.
But the laughter remained.
It was in the way men stopped talking when Thomas entered the store.
It was in the way women looked toward Ellen’s basket before looking at her face.
It was in the way boys shouted chick noises near the road and ran before Thomas could turn.
The children heard enough to understand shame before they understood arithmetic.
Ellen saw that and grew quieter.
One evening, after the children were in bed, she found Thomas outside the coop.
He was crouched by the wire, watching the chicks sleep in a warm yellow pile.
“Do you regret it?” she asked.
He did not answer quickly.
A man who loves his family measures regret differently.
Not by pride.
By whether his children had to pay for it.
“Every hour,” he said.
Then he looked at the pen.
“And not once.”
Ellen sat beside him on an overturned bucket.
For a while, they listened to the little sounds inside the coop.
The farm did not feel saved.
It only felt less empty.
That was enough for one night.
By the second week, the valley looked brittle.
Corn leaves twisted tight.
The bean rows were patchy.
The pasture had turned the color of old rope.
People began watching the horizon with the suspicious attention farmers give to weather, insects, and debt collectors.
There had been talk in nearby counties.
Grasshoppers.
Not a few.
Swarms.
A man from west of Dry Creek claimed they had stripped a field so clean it looked burned.
Another said they came like weather and left like thieves.
At Avery’s, men argued over whether the stories were exaggerated.
Thomas said nothing.
He bought a small sack of cracked grain on credit he had no right to ask for.
Mr. Avery let him have it after staring at the ledger for a long time.
“You know this goes down,” Avery said.
“I know.”
“Those birds better turn into something.”
Thomas looked at him.
“That is the hope.”
Hope sounded foolish in that store.
It sounded better back home, where 337 chicks were still alive.
Then the wind changed.
It happened on a morning so bright the sky looked almost cruel.
No clouds.
No rain smell.
No thunder.
Just a humming.
At first, Thomas thought it was fence wire vibrating.
Then he thought it might be a truck far off.
Then his oldest boy came running from the road so fast he nearly fell.
“Pa,” he gasped. “Clouds are coming.”
Thomas stepped away from the coop door and looked up.
There were no storm clouds.
There was a dark living sheet moving over the far fields.
It shimmered in the light.
It rose and fell and thickened.
For one heartbeat, the human mind tried to make it into weather because weather was at least familiar.
Then the first grasshoppers hit the dry fence posts.
The sound was small by itself.
A tap.
Then another.
Then hundreds.
Then thousands.
They struck the barn wall, the porch steps, the tin roof, the corn leaves.
They landed on shirtsleeves and windowsills.
They clung to fence wire.
They began to eat.
The sound of that eating was the sound that silenced Dry Creek.
It was steady and busy and terrible.
Ellen came out with a dish towel in her hand.
The children crowded behind her.
Down the road, neighbors appeared at fence lines, at porch rails, beside wagons, all of them staring toward the fields.
Nobody laughed.
A joke can live through poverty.
It cannot live long through the moment everyone realizes the same thing is coming for them.
The swarm reached the Miller field and dropped onto the crop.
Thomas ran to the chick pen.
Inside, the 337 birds had changed.
They were no longer a helpless yellow pile.
They were alert.
Their heads jerked toward the movement.
Their bodies pressed toward the gate.
Every instinct in them seemed to have awakened at once.
Thomas put his hand on the latch.
“Wait!” someone shouted.
It was Mr. Avery.
The storekeeper came down the road at an awkward run, coat flapping, a burlap sack in one hand.
His face was pale.
He looked first at the swarm, then at the pen, then at Thomas.
“Don’t waste them,” he called. “If you open that gate, make it count.”
Thomas almost laughed at the word waste.
Two weeks earlier, the whole town had called the chicks a waste.
Now the man who kept his debts in pencil was begging him to use them carefully.
Ellen met Thomas’s eyes.
There are moments in a marriage when a whole conversation passes without a sound.
This was one.
She was afraid.
So was he.
But fear had been living with them for so long that it no longer got the final vote.
Thomas lifted the latch.
The gate swung open.
For a second, nothing happened.
The chicks surged to the edge and stopped, startled by the wide yard, the moving grass, the monstrous sound in the field.
Then one grasshopper landed almost at their feet.
A chick struck.
Another followed.
Then the whole pen seemed to spill forward.
They ran in a messy, frantic wave, not graceful, not organized, but alive with purpose.
They snapped at the insects along the fence.
They chased them through the dust.
They scattered under the corn leaves and between the rows.
The Miller children shouted without meaning to.
Ellen clutched the porch rail.
Thomas stood with the open gate in his hand, unable to move.
Across the road, a neighbor’s wife began to cry.
Not because the danger was gone.
It was not.
But because the thing everyone had mocked was fighting back.
The chicks could not stop an entire plague.
No single pen of birds could save the whole valley.
But around the Miller yard, the movement changed.
Grasshoppers that landed near the coop disappeared fast.
The birds grew bolder.
They spread wider.
They drove into the rows where the crop was still standing.
Their small bodies flashed yellow and brown through the dust.
By midday, neighbors began bringing what they had.
A bucket.
A crate.
A length of wire.
A handful of grain.
Not charity, exactly.
People are proud even when they are ashamed.
They called it helping manage the birds.
They called it protecting the road ditch.
They called it common sense.
Ellen let them call it whatever they needed.
She knew an apology when it came carrying a bucket.
Mr. Avery stayed longest.
He helped Thomas move a section of wire so the chicks could work along the edge of the garden without scattering too far.
His store shirt was soaked through by noon.
Dust stuck to his face.
At one point, he looked at the birds and shook his head.
“I said a hard thing about you,” he told Thomas.
Thomas tied the wire to a post.
“I heard.”
Avery swallowed.
“I was wrong.”
Thomas did not make it easy for him.
He only nodded once.
Some apologies deserve acceptance.
Some deserve to stand in the heat a while first.
By evening, the worst of the swarm had moved east.
It left damage everywhere.
Some fields were stripped.
Some gardens were gone.
Corn that had barely survived the drought now stood ragged.
But the Miller place, though battered, was not empty.
The yard was littered with chewed leaves, broken stems, and exhausted chicks.
Ellen and the children gathered the birds carefully as the light began to soften.
Thomas counted them.
He expected losses.
There were some.
Not many.
The notebook came out again.
The pencil moved slower this time because his hand was shaking.
That night, Dry Creek did not laugh about the Millers.
At Avery’s General Store, men spoke of the swarm, the damage, and the little birds that had run straight into it.
On porches, women repeated what they had seen with their own eyes.
By the church steps, someone said Thomas had been lucky.
Another answered, “Maybe. But he was ready when luck arrived.”
That line traveled farther than the jokes had.
In the days that followed, people came to the Miller farm for eggs that did not exist yet, for advice Thomas did not pretend to have, and for a look at the flock that had made them all feel foolish.
Thomas never turned the story into a sermon.
Ellen never said, “I told you so,” because she had not known either.
What they had known was smaller and harder.
They had known flour would end.
They had known debt would remain.
They had known that sometimes survival means choosing the fragile thing because it is the only thing in the room with a future.
Weeks passed.
The chicks grew.
Not all of them.
Enough.
Some became hens.
Some became trade.
Some became food later, when food was needed and shame no longer sat so heavily at the table.
Mr. Avery marked payments in his ledger, still in pencil at first, then finally in ink.
The Miller children learned to collect eggs before breakfast.
Ellen kept one of the early feathers tucked behind a jar on the shelf, not because she was sentimental, but because objects remember what people try to forget.
Thomas kept the hatchery receipt folded inside the school notebook.
342 newborn chicks.
Paid in full.
$18.
Years later, when people in Dry Creek told the story, they liked to say the whole town learned a lesson that summer.
That was too clean.
Towns do not learn all at once.
People remember in pieces.
One man remembers laughing at a fence.
One woman remembers crying when the swarm hit her garden.
One storekeeper remembers a ledger, a cruel sentence, and the heat of shame under his collar.
And one family remembers eighteen dollars on a kitchen table, a handkerchief folded around their last chance, and 337 small heads lifting toward the sky at the exact moment everyone else finally understood.
A laugh does not break bone.
But sometimes, when it lands on the wrong family, it lives long enough to watch them survive it.