My Teen Son Posted One Photo on Facebook — and Dozens of Bikers Showed Up at Our House That Night

My Teen Son Posted One Photo on Facebook — and Dozens of Bikers Showed Up at Our House That Night

“One more thing,” he said.

He handed Cai a small cloth-wrapped bundle.

Inside was a simple black patch with white letters.

RIDE WITH HEART

“He wanted you to have that,” Gearbox said. “Not to recruit you. Just as a reminder the best parts of him belong to you.”

“I’m not mad at you.”

Cai turned it over.

“I don’t even know if I like motorcycles,” he admitted.

“That’s fine,” Delsey said. “You’re allowed to love the man and hate the noise.”

Cai huffed out a tiny laugh.

He looked at me.

“I’m not mad at you,” he said. “I just wish I didn’t have to find him on Facebook.”

For a minute it was just us.

That sentence cracked me open.

I sank onto the rug and started sobbing.

“I’m sorry,” I said. “I thought I was protecting you. I should’ve told you everything.”

Cai dropped down and hugged me tight.

For a minute it was just us, crying on the floor, a lockbox between us while two bikers pretended not to stare.

Eventually, we got ourselves together.

“For what it’s worth, you did good.”

Gearbox checked his watch.

“We should clear out before your neighbors lose it,” he said.

“Too late,” I muttered.

He gave a small smile.

“For what it’s worth, you did good. Kid’s solid.”

I sniffed. “That’s mostly him.”

Gearbox chuckled and stepped out.

At the door, he put his boots back on and looked at Cai.

“Happy birthday, kid,” he said. “Your old man would’ve made an embarrassing scene about sixteen.”

Cai lifted the letter.

“He kind of already did,” he said.

Gearbox chuckled and stepped out.

Engines rumbled back to life, low and controlled. The bikes rolled away in pairs, taillights disappearing at the end of the street.

“Did you ever ride with him?”

The house went quiet.

Cai and I ended up at the kitchen table as the sky got lighter.

He read the letter again, slower this time.

He asked questions.

“What was his first bike?”

“Did you ever ride with him?”

He smiled through tears.

“What did you two fight about?”

I answered.

Not with polished stories. Just with the truth. Even when it made me look small.

Later, he opened the “13” letter, even though that age had passed.

He smiled through tears.

“He really thought I’d be into skateboards,” he said. “He was wrong.”

Not just grief.

We laughed.

That night, when a single motorcycle passed on the main road, my shoulders still tensed.

But under the flinch, there was something else.

Not just grief.

“Did anyone know my dad?”

Something like relief.

My son posted one photo and asked a group of strangers, “Did anyone know my dad?”

And a line of bikers showed up in the middle of the night to say, “Yeah. We did. And he loved you more than you know.”

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