PART 2: «The Sons She Lost Came Back as Strangers»
The woman’s knees almost gave out.
The biker didn’t look back at her.
He kept his eyes on the man in the suit.
“I asked if you’re looking for our mother.”
The man laughed once, nervous and angry.
“She doesn’t have sons.”
The woman’s lips trembled.
“I did.”
The whole diner went silent.
The biker slowly turned his head.
“What do you mean?”
She looked at his face like she was afraid to hope.
“I had two boys,” she whispered. “Years ago. They were taken from me after my husband died. His family said I was too poor to raise them.”
The biker’s hard expression flickered.
The man in the suit stepped forward.
“Enough. You’re coming with me.”
The biker raised one hand, stopping him without touching him.
The woman’s voice broke.
“My oldest had a scar under his chin. He fell off a red bicycle when he was six.”
The biker froze.
His hand moved slowly to his beard.
Under it, near his chin, was a thin old scar.
The other bikers stopped breathing.
The woman reached into her blouse pocket with shaking fingers and pulled out a faded photograph.
Two little boys stood beside a red bicycle, smiling with missing teeth.
The main biker took the photo.
His face collapsed.
“That’s me.”
The man in the suit went pale.
The woman covered her mouth.
“And your brother,” she whispered, pointing at the biker beside him.
The second biker stared at the picture, eyes filling.
The man in the suit backed toward the door.
“She’s lying.”
The woman finally looked at him.
“No. Your family lied. They told my sons I abandoned them. They told me they died.”
The main biker turned toward the man.
For the first time, his voice shook.
“You knew?”
The suited man said nothing.
That silence answered everything.
The woman reached for the biker’s hand.
“I didn’t need you to pretend,” she whispered. “I just needed someone to stand beside me.”
The biker held the photo tighter, tears breaking through his rough face.
Then he stepped closer and said, “You don’t have to ask strangers anymore, Mom.”
