They came at 7 AM sharp, leather vests gleaming in the morning sun, surrounding our small house like guardian angels with tattoos and gray beards.
My son Tommy had been refusing to go to school for three weeks, terrified that if he left the house, I might disappear too like Daddy did. Every morning ended in tears and begging, his small hands clutching my legs, promising to be good if I just let him stay home forever.
These weren’t strangers – they were Jim’s brothers, men who’d been suspiciously absent since the funeral three months ago.
“Mommy, why are Daddy’s friends here?” Tommy whispered, pressing his nose against the glass.
The lead biker, a massive man called Bear who’d been Jim’s best friend since their Army days, walked up our driveway carrying something that made my heart stop.Continue reading…