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They Spent Their Last $18 on 342 Chicks — Everyone Laughed Until the Grasshoppers Came

We cover them with anything that’ll hold. Canvas, burlap, old flower sacks. We make them big enough to cover 10 ft at a time, and we move them every morning. Owen followed her, his jaw tight. Lena, that’s crazy. I know. She turned to face him, her eyes hard. But if we don’t, we lose everything. The corn, the beans, the garden, and every neighbor who’s been laughing at us gets to watch us starve.

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He was quiet for a long moment. Then he nodded. All right, we build. They worked through the afternoon, stripping the wagon bed down to its bones, bending green willow branches into arches, lashing them together with twine and strips of old leather. They stretched torn canvas over the frames, patching holes with flower sacks and spare cloth.

The pens looked like something out of a fever dream. Crooked, fragile, barely holding together. But they were big and they were light enough to drag. By evening they had four new pens, each one large enough to hold 50 chicks. Owen dragged them out to the cornfield while Lena herded the birds inside, coaxing them with handfuls of cracked corn.

The chicks scattered and squalked, but they went. And when the sun set, the field was covered in a patchwork of makeshift pens, each one crawling with hungry birds. Lena stood at the edge of the corn and watched them peck at the ground. The baby grasshoppers were still there, crawling between the stalks, but fewer now.

The chicks were eating them slowly, not fast enough. She looked at Owen, his face stre with dirt and exhaustion. It’s not enough, she said quietly. I know. We need more chicks in the field. All of them. Even the weak ones. Owen’s jaw tightened. If we move them all, we lose the ones that can’t keep up. If we don’t, Lena said, we lose everything.

Owen didn’t argue. He was too tired, and he knew she was right. They worked through the night by lantern light, dismantling the bruder boxes in the barn and carrying armfuls of peeping chicks out to the field. The weak ones stumbled in the grass. Some didn’t make it more than a few steps before collapsing. Lena picked them up gently, one by one, and set them inside the pens anyway.

“They’ll eat what they can,” she whispered. “That’s all we can ask.” By dawn, every pen was full. 342 chicks spread across 8 acres of corn, beans, and garden rose. The field looked like a strange living quilt. Wire and canvas and feathers shifting in the early light. Owen stood at the fence, swaying on his feet.

His hands were blistered, his shirt soaked through with sweat. Lena brought him water from the well, and he drank without speaking. Then the sun rose higher, and the heat came with it, the kind of heat that made the air shimmer and the ground crack. The chicks huddled in the shade of the pens, panting. Lena soaked old flower sacks in water and draped them over the wire to give them cover.

Owen hauled bucket after bucket from the well, pouring water into shallow pans so the birds could drink. It wasn’t enough. By midday, three chicks were dead. By evening, seven more. Lena knelt beside one of the pens and stared at the small, still bodies. Her throat tightened, but she didn’t cry. She couldn’t afford to. Owen crouched beside her, his voice low.

We’re losing them faster than they can eat the hoppers. I know. Maybe we should pull back. Save what we can. Lena shook her head. If we pull back now, the hoppers will hatch faster than we can stop them. We’ll lose the corn, the beans, everything. She looked up at him, her face pale and drawn. We have to hold the line.

Owen studied her for a long moment, then nodded. Then we hold it. That night they didn’t sleep. They moved through the field with lanterns, checking every pen, refilling water, pulling out the dead. The chicks that survived were stronger now, louder, more aggressive. They tore into the grasshoppers with a kind of desperate hunger, and the ground beneath the pens was littered with insect shells.

It was working slowly, but the heat wasn’t letting up. and neither were the hoppers. By the fourth morning, the settlement had started to notice. Owen was hauling water from the creek when he saw Martin Holloway standing at the fence line, staring out at the field. The man’s face was grim.

His own wheat was already showing damage. Thin patches where the hoppers had begun to feed. “Thought you were fools,” Martin said quietly. Still might be, but your field’s the only one that ain’t halfeaten. Owen set down the buckets. We’re not out of it yet. No, Martin agreed. But you’re still in it. That’s more than the rest of us can say.

Word spread fast after that. By midday, three more families had come by, not to mock, but to watch. They stood at the edge of the Calhoun property, silent as Lena and Owen moved the pens again, the chicks now visibly larger, their movements sharper, more coordinated. The ground behind them was a graveyard of grasshopper husks.

Lena didn’t acknowledge the visitors. She couldn’t afford to. Every hour mattered now. The hoppers were thickening in the bean rows, and the corn was starting to show stress from the heat. If the plants weakened, the insects would finish them in days. That afternoon, Owen rigged a shade cloth over the most exposed pen using an old quilt and two fence posts.

It wasn’t much, but it dropped the temperature just enough to keep the chicks from panting. Lena watched him work, her hands blistered and shaking, and felt something crack open inside her chest. Not despair, but something close to it. Gratitude maybe, or just exhaustion so deep it felt like love. You should rest, Owen said, tying off the last corner.

So should you, he smiled faintly. We<unk>ll rest when it’s over. But that night, the wind shifted. It came from the south, hot and dry, carrying with it the smell of dust and something else, something sharp and living. Lena stood outside the cabin, listening. In the distance, she could hear it, a low, crackling hum like static before a storm.

Owen stepped out beside her. “That’s not thunder.” “No,” Lena whispered. “It’s not.” The swarm was coming, not the scattered hoppers they’d been fighting. This was the main wave. The one that had stripped fields two counties over. The one people had been praying would turn east. It was heading straight for them.

Lena’s hands curled into fists. They had 307 chicks left, 12 pens, a/4 acre of corn and beans that had somehow survived this far. And now the real test. By dawn, the horizon had turned gray brown, a living wall that blotted out the sun. The hum had grown into a roar. Millions of wings beating in unison. a sound that made the earth itself seem to vibrate.

Lena and Owen stood at the edge of their property, watching the swarm descend on the Henderson’s wheat field a half mile north. Within minutes, the golden stalks vanished, replaced by a writhing carpet of insects so thick the ground disappeared beneath them. “We move the pens now,” Owen said, his voice tight.

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