Rose

The biker’s name was Dean.

And ten years ago, Rose had been everything to him.

She was the only person who could calm him, soften him, make him believe a man like him could still build a real life.

Then one day she disappeared.

No goodbye.
No note.
Nothing.

Dean had searched until it nearly destroyed him.

Now her little girl was standing in front of him, crying in a diner, with a stranger pretending to be her father.

The man at the counter straightened and tried to laugh it off.

“You got the wrong idea.”

Dean stepped forward once.

That was enough.

Every biker in the diner stood up behind him.

No shouting.
No chaos.
Just leather creaking, chairs scraping, and a wall of silence moving toward the man.

The little girl clung to Dean’s vest and whispered, “He said if I talked, he’d hurt my mom again.”

Dean’s hands curled into fists so tight his knuckles turned white.

He looked at the man.

“Where is Rose?”

The man’s mouth opened, then closed.

Dean took one more step.

This time his voice was colder.

“Where is she?”

The man glanced toward the diner window.

That was all Dean needed.

One biker was already outside checking the rusty sedan parked near the pumps.

Another came back fast.

“There’s a woman in the back seat.”

Dean ran.

He yanked the rear door open.

And there she was.

Rose.

Alive.

Bruised.
Weak.
Barely conscious.

Her face was thinner.
Her lips split.
But it was Rose.

For one second Dean forgot how to breathe.

Her eyes fluttered open when she heard the little girl crying.

“Mama!”

The child launched herself into the car.

Rose gathered her up weakly, kissing her dirty hair with shaking lips.

Then Rose looked up—

and saw Dean.

Her whole face collapsed.

Not from fear.

From relief too painful to hold.

“I told her,” Rose whispered, voice broken, “if she ever saw the wolf patch… she’d be safe.”

Dean dropped to his knees beside the car.

He looked from Rose to the little girl.

Then back again.

And in a voice that barely made it out of his chest, he asked the question already tearing him apart:

“Is she mine?”

Rose started crying before she answered.

She touched the little girl’s hair.

Then looked straight into Dean’s eyes.

“Yes.”

Dean broke.

Not like a biker.
Not like a fighter.

Like a man who had just found his whole heart in the back seat of a filthy car.

Behind him, the fake father tried to run.

He made it three steps before three bikers slammed him to the ground.

But Dean didn’t even turn around.

He only took Rose’s trembling hand and the little girl’s tiny one and held both.

The child looked between them, confused and crying.

Then she asked the softest, most devastating question of all:

“So… are you my real dad?”

VA

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