Andrew Durham was a man of the earth—quiet, steady, and deeply rooted in the Kansas soil that had been in his family for generations. Farming wasn’t just his livelihood; it was his legacy. He believed with all his heart that one day, his only son, Peter, would carry it forward. Andrew had raised Peter alone after tragedy struck early in the boy’s life. Hannah, Peter’s mother and Andrew’s beloved wife, had died suddenly from a brain aneurysm.
In the silence that followed her death, father and son rebuilt their lives together, with the farm as their foundation. Andrew taught Peter everything—how to read the sky for storms, how to care for crops with patience, how to respect the land without relying on chemicals or shortcuts. He believed in tradition, in hard work, and in doing things the right way, even as neighboring farms switched to modern methods and left him struggling financially.
As Peter neared the end of high school, Andrew made a plan: he’d sell part of the land to help Peter attend college. “You can study agriculture,” Andrew said. “Learn how to work the farm better than I ever did.” But Peter had a different dream. “Dad, I don’t want to be a farmer,” he said quietly. “I want to play music. I want to write songs and sing.”
Andrew was stunned. Music? How could that possibly compare to the soil and sweat and legacy of the farm? For the first time, he saw that his son didn’t see the future the way he did. That night, Andrew couldn’t sleep. He remembered holding Peter as a baby, walking through the cornfields with him on his shoulders. He thought about Hannah and what she would’ve said.