Part I: The Right to Repair
The wind in South Dakota doesn’t just blow; it scrapes. It howls across the plains, carrying topsoil and the bitter reminder that out here, you are only as good as your last harvest.
I’m Tessa Morgan. I’m twenty-eight, my knuckles are permanently stained with motor oil, and up until a month ago, I was the heir to a dying farm. My father, Arthur Morgan, a man whose spine was bending under the weight of three generations of agricultural debt, had just rolled the dice on our survival. He bought the Agri-Tech Harvester Pro 9000.
It was a gleaming, massive beast of green and yellow steel, outfitted with GPS guidance, automated yield mapping, and a climate-controlled cab that looked like the cockpit of a fighter jet. It was also financed with a loan so predatory it made my stomach turn.
“This is it, Tess,” my father had said, standing in the shadow of the massive auger, his voice trembling with a mixture of awe and exhaustion. “The dealer says we’ll cut our harvest time in half. We won’t lose a single bushel to the weather. We are finally catching up.”
But I didn’t see a savior. I saw a padlock.
I had spent my entire life elbow-deep in diesel engines, keeping our old, rattling equipment alive with duct tape, welding wire, and sheer stubbornness. When I opened the hood of the Pro 9000, I didn’t find an engine I could fix. I found sealed computer modules, tamper-proof screws, and a diagnostic port that required a proprietary digital key.
That night, I read the end-user license agreement buried in the financing paperwork. It was a death sentence.
Section 8 – Maintenance and Liability: Any unauthorized repair, bypassing of digital sensors, or use of non-OEM parts will result in an immediate warranty void and an automatic software lockout of the machinery.
I ran the diagnostics simulator on my laptop. The results were terrifying. If a single ten-dollar moisture sensor failed in the middle of a dusty field, the combine’s computer would brick the engine. We wouldn’t be allowed to replace the sensor ourselves. We would have to wait for an authorized technician to drive out from Sioux Falls—at three hundred dollars an hour—while our crops sat vulnerable to hail and rot.
“Dad, we can’t keep this,” I told him the next morning over cold coffee. “It’s a trap. We don’t own this combine. We’re just renting the right to use it, and if it breaks, they hold our harvest hostage.”
Arthur slammed his mug on the table, the ceramic cracking. “Nobody harvests with scrap metal anymore, Tessa! You think we can pull a million-dollar crop out of the dirt with your rusty wrenches? The bank is breathing down my neck. We use the new machine, or we lose the land!”
I didn’t argue. I just waited until he drove into town to meet with the loan officer. Then, I hooked up the flatbed, loaded the Pro 9000’s detachable header, and drove the massive machine straight back to the dealership.
I invoked the seventy-two-hour commercial cooling-off period. I ate a brutal thirty-thousand-dollar restocking fee, but I walked away from the debt trap.
I didn’t take the refunded money back to the farm. I drove behind the county auction house, to a sprawling, ten-acre lot hidden behind a rusted chain-link fence. It was a graveyard of American agriculture. Dozens of dead machines—old Case IHs, Fords, Gleaners, and International Harvesters—sat rotting in the tall grass, their paint bleached by the sun, their bones picked clean by scavengers.
I bought the entire lot.
When the deed was finalized, the county had a field day. The local Facebook groups lit up. The corporate farmers in their air-conditioned trucks recorded me walking through the rusted hulks, posting it with mocking captions: “Welcome to the Morgan Museum of Dead Machines.” They called me the Trash Queen.
When I brought the deed home, my father didn’t yell. He just looked at me with hollow, defeated eyes, walked into the house, and locked the door.
But I wasn’t building a museum. I was building an army.

I took the remaining cash and hired three mechanics who had been pushed out by the corporate dealerships for refusing to play the software game. There was “Pops” Jenkins, an elderly Black man who could tune a 1980s diesel engine by sound alone; Hector, a first-generation immigrant with a welding torch that moved like magic; and Sam, a high-school dropout who was a wizard at rewiring analog electrical systems.
We moved into the junkyard. For weeks, the air was thick with the smell of burning metal, diesel exhaust, and cheap coffee. We cannibalized parts, fusing a Gleaner cab to an International chassis. We stripped out every microchip, every GPS module, and every digital sensor, replacing them with heavy-duty mechanical linkages, raw hydraulics, and analog gauges.
They were ugly. They were loud. They blew thick plumes of black smoke into the pristine South Dakota sky, and they moved at half the speed of the modern machines.
But they were pure, indestructible iron.
As September rolled in, the wheat turned a deep, golden amber. The harvest window was opening. The county was watching, waiting for the Trash Queen to fail.
Part II: The Iron Harvest
The sky over the plains was bruised with the threat of an early autumn storm. The air was heavy, charged with static and the frantic, desperate energy of the harvest.
At 6:00 AM on a Tuesday, the disaster struck. But it didn’t come from the sky. It came from the cloud.
An over-the-air firmware update, mandated by Agri-Tech to comply with new emission reporting standards, was pushed to every Pro 9000 series combine in the region. There was a glitch in the code. When the operators turned their ignition keys, the digital dashboards flashed red.
Error Code 404: System Override. Contact Dealer.
Across three counties, hundreds of state-of-the-art, million-dollar combines shut off simultaneously. The massive green machines sat dead in the fields like expensive lawn ornaments. The dealership phone lines jammed. The authorized technicians were overwhelmed, estimating a wait time of up to a week for a manual reboot.
But the wheat wouldn’t wait a week. The storm on the horizon was promising hail, which would shatter the wheat heads and wipe out the entire year’s income in an hour.
I was standing in our machine shed, covered in grease, when my phone started ringing. It wasn’t the dealer. It was our neighbors. The same men who had laughed at me in the diner.
“Tessa,” a panicked voice crackled over the line. “Are your… are your machines running?”
I looked out into the yard. Pops, Hector, and Sam were already firing up our fleet. The old diesel engines roared to life, a chaotic, deafening symphony of clattering valves and grinding gears. There wasn’t a single microchip in any of them to receive the poisoned update.
“Yeah,” I said, a slow smile spreading across my face. “They’re running.”
We rolled out onto the highway. Our convoy of four resurrected, Frankenstein combines looked like something out of a post-apocalyptic movie. We hit our fields first. The old Gleaner header chewed through the wheat with brutal, mechanical efficiency. It wasn’t pretty, and it wasn’t quiet, but it didn’t stop.
By mid-afternoon, our harvest was safely in the grain carts.
Then, we crossed the property line. We drove onto the corporate farms. For the next forty-eight hours, we didn’t sleep. Pops, Hector, Sam, and I drank black coffee from thermoses, keeping the old iron beasts fed with diesel and grease. We harvested the neighbors’ fields while their million-dollar tech bricks sat uselessly in the dirt.
The “Morgan Museum” saved the county.
When the storm finally broke on Thursday morning, turning the unharvested fields into ruined soup, our silos, and the silos of everyone we helped, were full.
The next day, the exhaustion set in. I drove back to the junkyard behind the auction house to park the lead combine. The yard was quiet now, the rusted frames of the stripped machines looking less like a graveyard and more like a fortress.
I walked into the dilapidated cinderblock office at the back of the lot to file the paperwork. The office had been abandoned by the auction house years ago, used only for storing old records.
While looking for a blank ledger, I pulled open a rusted filing cabinet that was jammed shut. Inside wasn’t junk. It was a meticulously organized archive of auction records dating back ten years.
I started flipping through the manila folders, and my blood ran cold. Twist.
The junkyard wasn’t just a dumping ground for old machines. It was an intentional quarantine. The auction house, working in tandem with the local dealership, had been systematically buying up older, analog, easily repairable machinery and hiding it here to restrict the local supply. They were starving the farmers of independent parts.
By forcing the county to rely on the new, software-locked machines, the dealership ensured massive maintenance profits. But the auction house had a darker motive. The records showed a direct pipeline: a farmer would go into debt for a new machine, the machine would break down, the repair costs and lockouts would cause a missed harvest, the bank would foreclose, and the auction house would sell the land to corporate conglomerates at a massive premium.
They were manufacturing foreclosures. And this junkyard was the evidence of the cure they had been hiding.
My hands were shaking as I took photos of the documents. I needed a moment to breathe. I walked out into the cool air and climbed into the cab of the oldest machine on the lot—a battered, faded red International Harvester that Pops had warned me was beyond saving.
I sat in the worn vinyl seat, staring at the analog gauges. I reached up to pull down the sun visor, and a small, folded piece of paper fluttered into my lap.
It was covered in dust, yellowed with age. I picked it up and unfolded it.
The handwriting was jagged, sharp, and unmistakable. It was my father’s.
I stared at the words, the world around me suddenly spinning into a terrifying new context. The man I thought had been a naive victim of the system hadn’t been naive at all.
“If Tessa ever buys this yard, tell her I knew the bank was coming. The red International has the rest of the ledgers in the grain tank. I couldn’t fight them, Tess. I hope you can.”
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