The 7-dollar hit job that changed everything

Every conversation stopped. Fifteen leather-clad veterans sat frozen, staring at this tiny kid in a dinosaur shirt who’d just asked us to commit murder like he was requesting extra ketchup. His mother was in the bathroom, had no idea her son had approached the scariest-looking table in the Denny’s, had no idea what he was about to reveal.

“Please,” he added, his voice small but determined. “I have seven dollars.” He pulled out crumpled bills from his pocket, placing them on our table between the coffee cups. His little hands were shaking, but his eyes were dead serious.

Big Mike, our club president and a grandfather of four, knelt down. “What’s your name, buddy?”

“Tyler,” the boy whispered. “Mom’s coming back soon. Will you help or not?”

“Tyler, why do you want us to hurt your stepdad?” Mike asked gently.

The boy pulled down the collar of his shirt. Faint, purple fingerprints marked his throat. “He said if I tell anyone, he’ll hurt Mom worse than he hurts me. But you’re bikers. You’re tough. You can stop him.”

That’s when we noticed everything else: the way he favored his left side, the brace on his wrist, the faded yellow bruise on his jaw someone had tried to cover with makeup. Continues…