30/03/2026
The boy asked me to hold his hand while he died because his dad wouldn't. I'm a sixty-three-year-old biker covered in tattoos with a beard down to my chest. I've buried war buddies. I've seen things that would break most men. But nothing prepared me for a seven-year-old cancer patient looking up at me and saying those words. "Mister, will you stay with me? My daddy says hospitals make him sad so he doesn't come anymore." I met Ethan three months ago at a charity toy run. Our club delivers toys to the children's hospital every Christmas. I've been doing it for twenty-two years. You walk in, hand out some teddy bears, take pictures, and leave feeling good about yourself. But Ethan was different. He was sitting alone in his room while every other kid on the floor had family around them. No balloons. No cards. No parents holding his hand. Just a bald little boy in a hospital gown clutching a worn-out stuffed elephant. I stopped at his door. "Hey buddy, you want a teddy bear?" He looked up at me with these huge blue eyes. Didn't smile. Didn't reach for the toy. Just stared at me like he was trying to figure out if I was real. "Are you scared of me?" I asked. Kids usually are at first. I'm not exactly approachable-looking. He shook his head slowly. "No. You look like the bikers on TV. The ones who protect people." Something cracked in my chest right then. "Where's your mom and dad, little man?" He looked down at his elephant. "Mommy died when I was four. Cancer too. Daddy says he can't watch another person he loves die. So he stays home." I stood there frozen. This child—this dying child—had been abandoned by the one person who should have been holding him through this hell. "What's your name?" I asked. "Ethan. What's yours?" "Thomas. But my friends call me Bear." For the first time, he almost smiled. "Because you're big like a bear?" "That's right, buddy." He looked at me for a long moment. Then he said something that changed my entire life: "Bear, will you be my friend? The nurses are nice but they're always busy. And I get really scared at night." I should have said no. Should have handed him a toy and moved on like I did with every other kid. I had my own life. My own problems. I didn't need to get attached to a dying child. But I looked at that little boy sitting alone in that hospital bed, and I saw myself sixty years ago. Different circumstances, same loneliness. My old man was a drunk who couldn't be bothered. My mama worked three jobs and was never home. I grew up alone and angry and became a man who trusted nobody. Until I found my brothers in the club. Until I found family. Ethan didn't have brothers. Didn't have family. He had a stuffed elephant and a father too broken to show up. "Yeah, buddy," I heard myself say. "I'll be your friend." I came back the next day. And the day after that. And the day after that. The nurses were suspicious at first. Who was this scary-looking biker showing up every day to see a dying child? They ran a background check on me. Called my references. Verified my charity work. But Ethan didn't care about any of that. He just cared that I showed up. "Bear, you came back!" His whole face lit up when I walked in on day three. "Told you I would, buddy." I brought him a toy motorcycle. Showed him pictures of my real bike. Told him stories about riding through the mountains. He listened like I was telling him about heaven. "When I get better, will you take me for a ride?" he asked. I looked at his chart when he wasn't watching. Stage four neuroblastoma. Survival rate less than fifteen percent. The doctors had told his father there was nothing left to try. "Absolutely, buddy," I said. "When you get better, I'll take you for the longest ride of your life." It was a lie. We both knew it was a lie. But sometimes lies are kinder than truth. But everything shattered the next day when I came to visit him. Ethan was no longer........... (continue reading in the C0MMENTS)
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