200 bikers surrounded orphanage when the sheriff tried evicting twenty-three kids on Christmas Eve, but what they didn’t know was that I was the judge who’d signed the eviction order.My name is Judge Harold Matthews, and I’ve been on the bench for twenty-two years. I’ve made thousands of decisions. Signed countless orders. Destroyed families and saved them. But nothing—absolutely nothing—prepared me for what happened that night in December.
I was sitting in my car across the street from St. Catherine’s Children’s Home, watching the sheriff’s department prepare to execute the eviction order I’d signed three days earlier. The bank had foreclosed. The home had ninety days to vacate. They’d stretched it to six months through appeals, but the law was the law.
Twenty-three kids, ages four to seventeen, were about to be split up and sent to different facilities across the state. On Christmas Eve.
I shouldn’t have been there. Judges don’t usually watch their orders get carried out. But something pulled me to that street. Maybe guilt. Maybe morbid curiosity. Maybe I just needed to see the consequences of my decisions for once.
That’s when I heard them. The rumble started low, like distant thunder. Then it grew. And grew. And grew.
Motorcycles. Dozens of them. Then hundreds.
They came from every direction, headlights cutting through the December darkness. They surrounded the orphanage in a massive circle, engines revving, creating a wall of chrome and leather between the sheriff’s deputies and the front door.
Sheriff Tom Bradley, a man I’d known for fifteen years, stood there with his eviction notice in hand, staring at the sea of bikers. His six deputies looked terrified.
Then the engines cut off. All at once. The silence was deafening.
A man stepped off his bike and walked toward the sheriff. He was massive—maybe 6’4″, gray beard down to his chest, leather vest covered in military patches.