I came home from my wife’s funeral to find fifteen motorcycles in my driveway and my back door kicked in. My neighbors had called the police twice. Inside, I could hear power tools running.
I was still in my funeral suit, holding the folded flag from Sarah’s casket. I’d just buried the love of my life, and now someone was destroying my home. I braced myself, ready to confront whoever was inside. But what I found stopped me cold. Seven bikers were installing new cabinets.
Three were painting the living room. Two were repairing the porch, and one was on the roof fixing holes I hadn’t been able to afford. At the kitchen table, crying over a photo, sat my son—the son I hadn’t spoken to in eleven years. He explained everything. Before Sarah’s illness worsened, she had called him, asking him to make sure I wouldn’t fall apart after she was gone. My son had reached out to his motorcycle club, and these men had come to help—rebuilding, repainting, and restoring my house according to a detailed list my wife had left.