Life stories 19/04/2026 06:06

Part 2: For a second, the whole diner disappeared around him.

The clink of silverware.
The hum of the refrigerator behind the counter.
The soft scrape of a waitress refilling coffee.

None of it mattered anymore.

All he could see was the black key in his hand.

She’s alive. Don’t trust Knox.

Not “run.”
Not “help me.”
Not “tell the police.”

Just that.

Which meant Mara was still thinking like Daniel had taught them all to think:
say only what matters,
and say it only once.

The biker looked back at the little girl.

“What’s your name?”

“Ellie.”

His throat tightened.

Because Daniel had once told him that if he ever had a daughter, he’d name her Ellie after his mother.

No one else knew that.
No one except the three men who had been with him the night he got drunk enough to admit he wanted out of the club someday.

Out.
Clean.
Gone.

With a woman no one had met.
And a child no one was supposed to know about.

The biker sat back down slowly, lowering his voice.

“Did your dad give you anything else?”

Ellie nodded and pulled a small folded photo from her pocket.

It showed Daniel, alive, bearded, smiling faintly, crouched beside a red motorcycle. A much younger Mara stood behind him, one hand on his shoulder.

And in Daniel’s arms…

a baby girl wrapped in a pink blanket.

Ellie.

The biker shut his eyes for half a second.

So it was true.

Daniel hadn’t died childless.

He had died protecting a family.

Or pretending to.

“Where did Mara tell you to go after this?” he asked.

Ellie looked down at her hands.

“She said if you believed me, you’d take me somewhere with lots of crosses.”

The biker went still.

The cemetery.

Not Daniel’s grave.
Too obvious.

The old churchyard behind Saint Bartholomew, where the club used to stash cash and papers inside hollow angel statues before Knox took over.

He knew the place.

And if Mara chose that, it meant she didn’t just have proof.

She had proof against someone high enough that normal hiding places were already dead.

He looked toward the window.

A black truck had just pulled up outside the diner.

Too clean.
Too fast.
Too familiar.

Ellie saw it too and whispered, “That’s the truck the red-haired lady was scared of.”

The biker’s whole body went cold.

Because behind the wheel sat one of Knox’s men.

He was smiling.

The biker grabbed the photo, the key, and Ellie’s small hand.

“Listen to me,” he said. “From now on, you don’t say your father’s name to anyone else.”

Ellie looked up at him. “Why?”

He looked at the truck outside, then back at the child Daniel had somehow hidden from an entire violent world.

“Because if Knox finds out who you are,” he said, “he’ll finish what he started the night your father almost got out alive.”

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