They tried not to look at me, those boys in their borrowed black suits, shifting on their feet like the grass was burning. They had come prepared for flowers and forgiveness, a quiet service, maybe a few mumbled apologies. What they got instead was a wall of leather and steel lining the road like a verdict, engines idling low, every rumble a question they couldn’t answer.
The bikers didn’t speak. They just removed their helmets when the coffin passed, rough hands over their hearts, eyes fixed on the boys who’d been texting, laughing, not watching the road. My son had fixed their bikes for free, stayed late at the shop, trusted them. As the last handful of dirt hit the wood, one rider stepped forward, placed my boy’s grease-stained bandana on the grave, and finally, the silence said everything they never would.
