“Are you still wearing diapers…” Everyone mocked the country girl when she pointed out that the survey team had missed a bend using her own tattered map. But when the point of origin of the rocky soil shot sand into their faces, the horrifying truth was revealed.
Scene 1: The Auction Tent, Stevens County, Kansas, March 1991
[Sound of wind, murmuring crowd, shuffling papers.]
Auctioneer Lyall Benton: “Alright, folks! First parcel on the block, 50 acres, dry but firm soil—any takers?”
Man in front row: “I’ll give twenty per acre.”
Another bidder: “Twenty-five!”
[Laughter from surrounding bidders. A young voice speaks softly but clearly from the back row.]

June Mallerie: “Thirty-nine dollars per acre.”
[Murmurs ripple through the crowd.]
Old Farmer: “Who’s that? A girl?”
Neighbor: “She can’t be serious. Look at her coat—too big, sleeves shiny.”
Lyall Benton: [leans down to his assistant] “Not too loud, but listen. That girl… she’s serious.”
Auctioneer: “Parcel number four! Sixty arid acres, windmill broken, pond dried. Any bids?”
Man in hat: [snorts] “No way. Not worth a dime.”
June: [raising her hand firmly] “Thirty-nine dollars per acre.”
[A pause. Adults exchange skeptical glances.]
Scrap metal buyer: “Fifteen-year-old, huh? She really thinks she knows the land?”
June: “I know where water lies. I’ve read the reports.”
Old Farmer: “Reports? Which reports?”
June: “My grandfather’s. Tuck Mallerie. He studied this land for decades.”
Wade Concincaid (driller): [approaches] “Kid, you serious? You’ve got enough to back that up?”
June: [holding envelope] “$682 for the down payment. That’s all I need right now.”
Lyall Benton: [raising the gavel] “Sold! Parcel number four, to card number 18.”
[Murmurs of shock. Some chuckle awkwardly, others stare in disbelief.]
Scrap metal buyer: “She… she actually did it.”
June: [quietly to herself] “Not for luck. For knowledge.”

Part 2: Lessons from Grandfather (Flashback)
[Kitchen, June as a child, Tuck Mallerie preparing maps and soil charts.]
Tuck: “June, look here. See how the grass changes color? That tells you where the soil holds water.”
June: “I see, Grandpa. But it’s just grass.”
Tuck: “It’s more than grass. It’s a map. Every blade whispers what’s below.”
June: “How do you know where to drill?”
Tuck: [holding brass water gauge] “You measure, you record, you wait. And you respect the land. That’s how you avoid mistakes.”
June: “Even if no one else believes you?”
Tuck: [smiling] “Especially then. Knowledge isn’t loud. It’s patient.”
June: “I’ll remember, Grandpa.”
Tuck: “Good. One day, you’ll need to know the truth hidden in the papers when others just see dust.”
Part 3: Securing the Well
[Three months after auction, at the drilling site.]
Wade Concincaid: “You sure about this, June? That well could be dry as a bone.”
June: “I’m sure. Grandpa’s notes point to the sandstone layer. The water is there.”
Wade: “You’re fifteen. Why are you so certain?”
June: “Because I’ve read it. Every report, every diagram, every bore record my grandfather left me.”
Wade: [pauses, then nods] “Alright. Let’s see if the girl knows more than the men who laughed at her.”
[Sound of drilling, metal against stone, dirt falling.]
Wade: “We’re thirty meters down… nothing yet.”
June: “Keep going. Trust the data.”
[Minutes pass. Water finally gushes.]
Wade: “Well, I’ll be… You were right. Water under the sandstone. You read the land.”
June: “It wasn’t just me. Grandpa showed me how.”
Neighbor: [from fence line] “Did a girl just beat every old-timer here?”
June: [smiles quietly] “No. We listened.”
Part 4: Expanding the Ranch
[Summer, 1994, at the pond with Wade.]
Wade: “Grass is growing where nothing grew for decades.”
June: “Water spreads life. That’s why we drill carefully.”
Neighbor rancher: “You paying us for water access?”
June: “Yes. Fair shares. Helps me maintain the fence and pasture. Helps you too.”
Wade: “Your grandfather would’ve been proud. You think like him.”
June: “I hope to do more than he imagined.”
Neighbor: “Never thought the girl who bought ‘dead land’ would do this.”
June: “Dead land only exists for those who refuse to read the signs.”
Part 5: Skeptics Turned Learners
[Local co-op, 1998, June talks with young ranchers.]
Young rancher: “Miss June, how’d you know the water was there?”
June: “I read the reports Tuck left me. I trusted what was in the small print.”
Young rancher: “All those grown men missed it.”
June: “Because they didn’t study. They judged by what looked dry. I studied.”
Neighbor: “You’re teaching now too?”
June: “Yes. I want the next generation to know patience, observation, and preparation matter more than noise and assumptions.”
Part 6: Legacy and Mastery
[2007, June’s ranch office, Lyall Benton visits.]
Lyall: “June… I owe you. That day at the auction, I shook your hand thinking of your grandfather, not you.”
June: “I understand. I read what he taught me. I just followed it.”
Lyall: “The well… it flows still. You’ve turned the dead land into a living ranch.”
June: “It wasn’t luck. Knowledge and patience won. And respect for the land.”
Lyall: “You’ve changed how everyone sees this county. Adults now bring their sons to learn from you.”
June: [nods, smiling] “It’s never about luck. The land rewards those who read the small print, not the loudest voice.”
[Sound of water gurgling in the background, wind through the prairie grass.]
June: “And the land keeps speaking. We just need to listen.”