Then he looked straight at me.
“I’m the one who hit your boy.”
The next part happened so fast I barely remember it.
I launched at him.
All the fear and anger that had been building for three days exploded at once. I swung without thinking. My fist connected with his jaw before hospital security rushed in and dragged me away.
Ronan didn’t fight back.
Not once.
Blood ran from his lip, but he didn’t even lift his hands.
“You need to leave,” the head nurse told him firmly. “Right now.”
But he came back.
The next morning.
And the morning after that.
And every day after that.
The hospital couldn’t legally stop him. He hadn’t broken any laws. According to the police report, the accident wasn’t even technically his fault.
And my wife—God help me—my wife Lena told the nurses to let him stay.
“He wants to be here,” she said through tears. “And Malik needs every voice he can hear.”
I couldn’t believe what I was hearing.
“That man put our son in a coma!” I shouted.
“It was an accident,” she said. “Malik ran into the street. Ronan did everything he could to stop. He stayed. He helped. He kept Malik alive until the ambulance came.”
I didn’t want to hear any of it.
Every time I saw Ronan sitting in that chair, I saw the moment my son’s life almost ended.
But he kept coming.
Morning and night.
Sometimes he read books. Sometimes he told stories.
Stories about riding motorcycles across the country. Stories about his friends. Stories about the charity work his club did for sick kids.
And sometimes… he talked about his own son.
A boy named Lucas.
Lucas had died twenty years earlier in a car accident.
“Your old man’s hurting bad, kid,” Ronan would say softly while Malik lay unconscious.
“He loves you so much he can barely stand to look at you like this.”
Then his voice would crack.
“But you’ve got people waiting on you, little man. Your mama’s got faith. And I’ve got faith too.”
One afternoon I walked in and saw him holding his phone, showing pictures to my unconscious son.
“This was Lucas,” he whispered. “About your age in this one. Loved baseball. Thought he was gonna make the majors.”
The giant biker started crying.
And something inside me shifted.
I hated him.
But watching him sit there grieving for a boy he’d lost while caring for mine… it cracked the wall I’d built around myself.
“Why do you keep coming here?” I finally asked him.
He looked surprised that I’d spoken to him.
Then he answered quietly.
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