She Defended a Hell’s Angel When Cops Harassed Him! The Next Day, 200 Bikers Showed Up at Her Diner…

We protect our own. The words hit heavy as 200 leather-clad bikers filled every corner of Lisa’s struggling diner. 24 hours earlier, she’d stood up for a lone hell’s angel when local cops harassed him. What happened next would leave an entire town in tears.
She Defended a Hell's Angel When Cops Harassed Him! The Next Day, 200 Bikers Showed Up at Her Diner…
Lisa Parker’s hands were chapped and red as she wiped down the sticky counter at Parker’s Diner for the third time that hour. The lunch rush, if you could call eight customers a rush, had ended and she was mentally calculating if today’s take would cover the electric bill that sat unopened in her purse. The final notice stamp had bled through the envelope.

Just a few more months, she muttered, tucking a strand of brown hair behind her ear. It was the same empty promise she’d been making herself for 18 months now, ever since her father’s massive stroke had put him in a care facility and her in charge of the family diner. Her nursing career in the city, her apartment, her life, all put on hold for a small-town greasy spoon that was bleeding money faster than she could bandage the wounds.

The ancient ceiling fan spun lazily overhead, barely moving the humid summer air. Outside, Millfield’s Main Street was quiet, as it always was these days, since the factory had cut the third shift. The bank had foreclosed on three businesses already this year.

Some days, Lisa wondered if Parker’s Diner would be next. The bell above the door jingled, that cheerful little sound her father had always loved, and Lisa glanced up. Her stomach tightened instantly.

A mountain of a man dressed in worn leather pushed through the doorway. His weathered face was half hidden behind a wild gray beard that looked like it had seen dust from a thousand highways. Faded tattoos crawled up his thick forearms, like illustrated stories of a hard life, disappearing beneath rolled-up sleeves.

But it was the patch on his vest that made the room go still, the unmistakable death’s head insignia of the Hell’s Angels. The handful of remaining customers froze. Old Mrs. Patterson actually clutched her pearls.

The Simmons brothers stopped mid-bite, forks hovering in the air. Even the radio seemed to hit a moment of static. The biker seemed to feel the tension, his massive shoulders hunching slightly, as he made his way to the counter.

Each heavy bootfall echoed against the worn linoleum like a hammer strike. He deliberately chose the stool at the far end, keeping distance between himself and the other patrons. A man used to being unwelcome, Lisa could practically hear her father’s voice in her head.

Everyone’s money spends the same at Parker’s. But her father had never had to serve a Hell’s Angel in their small, conservative town, where rumors about the motorcycle club circulated like gospel. Lisa steadied her hand, grabbed a cloudy plastic menu and a glass of ice water.