A six-year-old boy, bruised and barefoot in his pajamas, ran straight to the scariest-looking biker he could find and begged, “Please pretend you’re my dad before he finds me.”
It was late at a Shell station. I was pumping gas, my leather vest covered in skulls and patches from years in the Widowmakers Motorcycle Club, when the boy came sprinting across the lot. Behind him, a pickup truck screeched around the corner. He ducked behind my Harley, trembling with fear.
The man who got out of the truck looked like a model suburban dad—clean-cut, polite—but the terror in the boy’s eyes told a different story. “Where is he?” the man demanded. “Where’s my son?”
“Don’t know what you’re talking about,” I said, keeping my voice calm. The boy whispered something that made my blood run cold: “He hurt my mom… police don’t believe me. Please.”
That’s when three more bikers pulled in—my brothers from the club, all Vietnam veterans. Tank, Preacher, and Ghost. Men who had seen enough to recognize danger instantly.
“Problem here, Hammer?” Tank asked.
I explained the situation. The man’s confident façade faltered as he realized he was now facing four large, experienced bikers instead of one. After a tense moment, he returned to his truck and drove off, keeping an eye on the boy from a distance.
Continue reading on next page…