The Forgotten Crawler That Saved My Father's Dying Iowa Shop-nga9999 - Chainityai

The Forgotten Crawler That Saved My Father’s Dying Iowa Shop-nga9999

The first thing I remember about the fall my father’s shop almost died was the quiet.

It was not true silence, because a farm-implement shop always has a compressor clicking or a wrench ringing somewhere.

But the useful noise was gone: no phones, no trucks, no farmers waiting three deep at the parts counter.

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I was fourteen, and I did not know the words adults used when a business was close to failure.

I knew the way my mother folded invoices before supper.

I knew the way my father stood outside in the gravel lot after a customer drove away without buying anything.

I knew the way he looked at the sign that still said Mercer Brothers Implement, even though his brother had left years earlier and my grandfather’s hands were too stiff to hold a wrench.

My father, Dale Mercer, was forty-one then.

He had been in that shop since he was a boy, sweeping floors first, then welding, then rebuilding engines, then buying the business because he could not bear to watch the family name come down.

The farm crisis had taken neighbors, cousins, and men who once talked about seed and weather before they started talking about auctions and jobs in towns they did not want to move to.

My father sold new equipment when someone could still buy new equipment.

Mostly he sold used equipment, parts, repairs, emergency fixes, and hope wrapped in grease paper.

For a long time, that had been enough.

Then the bigger dealership in Atlantic started taking the large accounts with brighter offices, more bays, and service contracts that sounded safe to men who could not afford another surprise.

My father lowered labor rates, drove out to farms, and bought a parts computer he could barely afford.

The computer worked, but the customers did not come back.

The back corner of our shop looked like junk to strangers and like inventory to my father.

There were Farmalls, an old Massey, a Minneapolis Moline, parts machines, drill presses, a metal lathe, and the Caterpillar D2.

It was a 1948 crawler tractor, small by crawler standards, low, stubborn, scarred, and kept alive by nights of patient work.

He used it around the yard when the ground was wet.

Mostly, he kept it ready because he believed useful things should not be discarded just because they were no longer fashionable.

That belief made people laugh.

One afternoon, a salesman from Atlantic came into the shop wearing polished boots that had never sunk into a field.

He looked around like he was pricing our funeral.

He saw the D2 in the back corner and smiled at it the way a man smiles at something beneath him.

He told my father to sign it over before Christmas or watch his credit get pulled.

I was standing behind the counter with a box of filters in my arms, waiting for my father to erupt.

He only set his coffee down and let the insult hang there until the salesman left.

After the door closed, Shirley asked if she should call the bank, and my father said not yet.

Two days later, cold October rain made the gravel shine and kept coming until low fields softened and approaches turned slick.

The same soil that held good corn in July became a trap in October.

The Atlantic dealership filled up fast, and farmers without contracts were told to wait.

Waiting at harvest is not waiting; it is watching money rot upright.

The first break came from a farmer near Kirkman with a bent corn head that Atlantic could not take in time.

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