I watched from across the street as Grandpa Jack sat alone at a long table, his helmet cradled in his weathered hands. He waited for two hours while waitstaff circled with pity in their eyes.
Not one family member came. Not even my father—his own son.
This is the man who taught me how to ride. Who picked me up when life knocked me down. Who sold his own Harley to pay for my dad’s braces. And yet… no one showed.
Three weeks earlier, he’d called everyone himself:
“Big 8-0 coming up,” he’d said, laughing like his old Harley at idle.
“Let’s meet at Riverside Grill. Nothing fancy. Just family.”
But my family sees Grandpa Jack as an embarrassment—an old biker covered in tattoos and club patches, still riding every day like time forgot him.
My father? A polished corporate attorney who’s spent 30 years trying to bury the fact he grew up in a bike shop.
I’m the black sheep. The one who wears Jack’s old support gear and still rides beside him.
When I called Dad to confirm he was going, his voice turned cold.