The police called it a tragic accident. My brother, Finn, the black sheep who traded a college degree for a leather vest, gone too soon. The whole town showed up to the funeral with their crocodile tears, whispering about the life he “wasted.” They had no idea what he really did for this community.
Then they arrived. A dozen motorcycles, their engines a low growl that shook the church’s stained-glass windows. They didn’t look like mourners; they looked like an invading army.
My mother trembled as they lifted Finn’s casket, these huge, bearded men with tattoos covering their knuckles. I thought they were disrespecting his memory. I was so wrong.
The leader, a man they called ‘Preacher,’ paused by my mother. He leaned down, his voice a gravelly whisper I couldn’t hear over the wind. He pressed a small, folded piece of paper into her palm, his eyes locking onto the town sheriff who stood stiffly by the hearse.
The sheriff’s face went completely pale. I had no idea this one moment would unravel everything. Later, after the fake condolences and empty casseroles, my mother finally opened the note in the silence of our kitchen.
Her hand flew to her mouth, a choked sob escaping her lips. I rushed to her side and looked down at the crumpled paper. It wasn’t a sympathy card.
It was a single sentence that made my blood run cold. “Sheriff Brody knows Finn didn’t crash; he was run off the road.”
I read it again, then a third time. The words didn’t change.
They just burned deeper into my mind. An accident. That’s what they told us.
Finn lost control on Miller’s Bend, a notoriously sharp curve on the old highway. No other vehicles involved. A simple, heartbreaking tragedy.
But this note painted a different picture. A darker one. It suggested murder.
My mother sank into a chair, the paper trembling in her hand. “Martha,” she whispered, her voice barely audible. “What does this mean?”
I didn’t have an answer.
All I had was a sudden, chilling memory of Sheriff Brody at our door. His condolences had felt rehearsed, his eyes avoiding ours. He had seemed almost eager to close the case, to label it and file it away.
“We have to talk to him,” I said, my voice firmer than I felt. “To Preacher.”
Finding a man named Preacher who led a biker gang wasn’t as hard as it sounded. Everyone knew the old, abandoned garage at the edge of town where they sometimes gathered.
It was a place polite society avoided. The next evening, with my mother refusing to stay home, we drove there. The sun was setting, casting long, menacing shadows from the rusted gas pumps.
The same motorcycles from the funeral were parked in a line, gleaming under the single working floodlight. As we got out of the car, the men stopped what they were doing, their conversations dying. They turned to watch us, their expressions unreadable.
Preacher detached himself from the group. He was even more intimidating up close, a mountain of a man with a graying beard and eyes that had seen far too much. He didn’t wait for us to speak.
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