Chapter 1
They call me โIronjawโ because I took a crowbar to the face in โ09 and didnโt drop.
Itโs a stupid nickname.
It implies Iโm tough, or unbreakable, or some kind of hero from a gritty action movie.
Iโm none of those things.
Iโm just Caleb.
Iโm a forty-year-old man with bad knees, a worse credit score, and a liver thatโs been filing complaints against me since the Bush administration.
I ride a Harley because itโs the only place the noise in my head gets drowned out by the noise of the engine.
And I ride with the โDevilโs Houndsโ not because weโre a criminal mastermind syndicate, but because weโre all just varying degrees of broken men who donโt fit anywhere else.
That Tuesday started like any other Tuesday in the scorching hellscape that is rural Arizona.
We were at Marloweโs Grill.
Itโs one of those places that smells permanently of bacon grease and sanitizer.
The kind of joint where the waitress calls you โHoneyโ even if you look like you just parole-walked out of San Quentin.
There were nine of us.
We took up the three big booths in the back.
Tiny, who is actually six-foot-seven and weighs as much as a vending machine, was complaining about his ex-wife.
Again.
Spook was trying to fix his sunglasses with a bent fork.
The rest of the guys were laughing, eating burgers that dripped grease onto the Formica tables, just being loud.
We make people nervous. I know that.
When you wear a leather vest with a patch on the back in 100-degree weather, people tend to look at their shoes when you walk by.
Weโre used to the side-eyes.
Weโre used to the mothers pulling their kids closer.
And honestly? We prefer it that way.
Itโs easier to be the villain everyone expects than to try and explain that youโre just a guy who likes motorcycles and hates shaving.
I was halfway through a plate of chili cheese fries when the bell above the door jangled.
It wasnโt a confident ring.
It was a weak, hesitant sound.
Usually, when that door opens, a blast of furnace-hot air hits you, followed by some trucker or a tourist family looking for a bathroom.
But this time, the air felt different.
The room didnโt just get hotter; it got quieter.
I looked up, wiping chili off my beard with a napkin that felt like sandpaper.
The diner went dead silent.
Even the sizzle from the grill seemed to pause.
Standing in the doorway, silhouetted against the blinding white sun of the parking lot, was a ghost.
At least, thatโs what he looked like.
It was a boy.
He couldnโt have been more than seven years old.
He was pale, painfully thin, and wearing a dirty t-shirt that hung off his shoulders like a sheet on a wire hanger.
He was barefoot.
On the asphalt outside, it was easily 110 degrees.
I looked at his feet.
They were red, blistered, and caked with black road grime.
My stomach turned over.
But it was his face that made the chili fries feel like lead in my gut.
He didnโt look like a lost kid.
Lost kids cry.
Lost kids look around frantically for their moms.
Lost kids make noise.
This kid was silent.
His eyes were wide, dark, and completely devoid of the light thatโs supposed to be in a childโs eyes.
He looked shell-shocked.
Like a soldier whoโd seen his whole platoon wiped out, only he was just a little boy in Snoopy boxers and a torn shirt.
The waitress, a sweet older lady named Barb, started to move toward him.
โOh, honey,โ she said, her voice trembling. โAre you okay? Whereโs yourโฆโ
The boy didnโt even look at her.
He stepped into the room, the door closing slowly behind him.
The silence in the diner was heavy, suffocating.
There were other people there โ a family of four in the corner, two deputies at the counter drinking coffee.
The kid ignored the family.
He ignored the cops.
His eyes scanned the room with a terrifying precision.
He was looking for something.
Or someone.
I felt a sudden urge to reach for the knife on my belt.
Not to hurt him, but because every instinct I had honed over twenty years of living rough was screaming DANGER.
Then, his eyes locked on us.
Specifically, on me.
I froze.
Iโm a big guy. Iโve got scars on my face, tattoos up my neck, and a look that generally says โGo away.โ
I am the last person a child should look at for safety.
I am the person parents warn their kids about.
But this kid?
He didnโt flinch.
He started walking.
Past the terrified family.
Past the confused deputies who were just starting to turn around on their stools.
He walked straight toward the back of the diner.
Toward the โbad guys.โ
Tiny stopped chewing.
โBoss,โ he whispered to me, his voice unusually high. โWhat is this?โ
โQuiet,โ I muttered.
The sound of the boyโs bare feet slapping against the linoleum floor was the only noise in the room.
Slap. Slap. Slap.
He stopped at the edge of our table.
He was so small his head barely cleared the top of the booth.
Up close, the damage was worse.
There was a bruise blooming across his jawline, purple and yellow like a rotten plum.
His lip was split.
And on his neckโฆ
I clenched my fists under the table so hard my knuckles popped.
On his neck were finger marks.
Fresh ones.
Red welts that perfectly matched the span of a large manโs hand.
Someone had choked this child.
Recently.
My heart started hammering against my ribs, a slow, heavy war drum.
I realized I had stopped breathing.
The kid looked at Tiny.
Then he looked at Spook.
Then he looked back at me.
He stared right into my eyes, and for a second, I felt like he was reading my entire soul.
He saw the violence in me.
He saw the anger.
He saw the capacity for brutality that I kept on a leash every single day.
And he didnโt run away.
He took a shaky breath.
His little chest heaved, the ribs visible through the thin fabric of his shirt.
He reached out a hand.
His fingers were trembling so bad they vibrated.
He touched the leather of my vest.
Right on the patch that said Enforcer.
The deputies were standing up now.
โHey!โ one of them barked, his hand dropping to his holster out of habit. โYou, boy! Come here!โ
The boy flinched, his shoulders hunching up to protect his ears.
But he didnโt turn around.
He didnโt look at the law.
He kept his eyes on me.
He knew.
Somehow, in that twisted, heartbreaking logic of survival, he knew that the police couldnโt help him.
Laws have loopholes.
Cops have protocols.
Paperwork takes time.
And this kid didnโt have time.
He needed something else.
He needed a monster.
He needed a monster to fight the monster that was chasing him.
I slowly took my sunglasses off.
I wanted him to see me.
I wanted him to see that I wasnโt looking away.
โHey, kid,โ I said, my voice sounding like gravel grinding in a mixer. โYou okay?โ
It was a stupid question.
Clearly, he wasnโt okay.
He was about as far from okay as you could get without being in a coffin.
He licked his split lip.
A tiny drop of blood welled up.
He leaned in closer.
The smell coming off him hit me then.
It wasnโt just sweat and road dust.
It was fear.
If youโve never smelled raw, primal fear on a human being, pray you never do.
It smells like copper and sour milk.
He leaned in so close I could feel his jagged breath on my cheek.
The whole diner was watching.
The deputies were moving toward us, shouting commands that sounded like they were coming from underwater.
โSir! Step away from the minor!โ
I ignored them.
I ignored Tinyโs panicked look.
I ignored the fact that I was on probation and interacting with this situation was a one-way ticket back to a cell.
I leaned down.
โWhat do you need?โ I whispered.
The boyโs eyes filled with tears, but they didnโt spill over.
He was holding them back with a strength that a seven-year-old shouldnโt possess.
He opened his mouth.
His voice was a rasp. A whisper.
Like his throat had been crushed.
Because it had been.
โAre youโฆโ he wheezed, pausing to swallow the pain. โAre you the bad guys?โ
The question hung in the air between us.
I looked at my brothers.
I looked at our tattoos, our cuts, the jagged edges of our lives.
We were the outcasts. The rejects. The ones society threw away.
โYeah,โ I said softly, never breaking eye contact. โYeah, kid. I guess we are.โ
A strange look passed over his face.
Relief.
It was pure, unadulterated relief.
His little shoulders dropped.
He let out a breath that sounded like a sob.
โGood,โ he whispered.
He gripped my leather vest tighter, his knuckles turning white.
He pulled himself closer to me, like he was trying to climb inside the safety of my darkness.
โGood,โ he said again, his voice trembling but gaining a terrifying clarity. โBecause heโs not afraid of the police.โ
He paused, and his eyes darted to the window, to the parking lot, to the road leading back the way he came.
โHeโs only afraid of bad men.โ
I felt the hair on the back of my neck stand up.
It was an electric charge, a warning signal that screamed PREDATOR.
โWho?โ I asked. โWho is he?โ
The boy didnโt answer.
Instead, he looked past me, through the window behind our booth.
His eyes went wide.
His pupils dilated until his eyes were almost entirely black.
He started to shake.
Not a tremble, but a violent convulsion of terror.
โHim,โ the boy squeaked.
I turned my head.
Slowly.
Outside, a black truck had just pulled into the lot.
It wasnโt a normal truck.
It was a massive, lifted beast with tinted windows and a grill guard that looked like it was designed to ram through concrete walls.
The engine idled with a low, menacing growl that I could feel vibrating through the glass.
The driverโs door opened.
A boot hit the pavement.
A heavy, steel-toed work boot.
Then a leg.
Then the rest of him.
The man was huge.
He made Tiny look average.
He was wearing a clean, pressed button-down shirt tucked into jeans.
He looked respectable.
He looked like a deacon, or a banker, or a pillar of the community.
Except for his eyes.
Even from this distance, through the glare of the sun, I could see them.
They were empty.
He was smiling.
It was a smile that didnโt reach his eyes.
It was the smile of a butcher looking at a lamb.
He reached into the back seat of the truck and pulled something out.
It wasnโt a weapon.
Not technically.
It was a dog leash.
A thick, leather dog leash.
He wrapped it around his hand, snapping it taut with a crack that I could almost hear through the glass.
He started walking toward the diner.
He wasnโt rushing.
He was strolling.
Confident.
Because he knew he owned the world.
He knew that cops and laws and polite society couldnโt stop him.
The boy whimpered.
It was a sound of pure, broken despair.
He let go of my vest and tried to slide under the table.
โHeโs going to take me back,โ the boy sobbed, curling into a ball at my feet. โPlease donโt let him take me back to the room. Please.โ
I looked down at the shivering heap of humanity under my boots.
Then I looked up at the man walking toward the door.
I looked at the deputies, who were still confused, still hesitating, still wondering what the protocol was.
They wouldnโt stop him.
This guy looked like money. He looked like power.
Heโd talk his way out of it.
Heโd say the kid was disturbed, or autistic, or having an episode.
And they would believe him.
They would hand this boy back to the monster, and the monster would take him home, and the world would keep spinning.
Unless.
Unless a bad guy did something about it.
I felt a calm settle over me.
It was the cold, icy calm of violence.
I hadnโt felt it in years.
I missed it.
I looked at Tiny.
Tiny was already cracking his knuckles.
I looked at Spook.
Spook had already palmed his steak knife.
I looked at the rest of the crew.
Nine men.
Nine screw-ups.
Nine problems for society.
And right now, we were the only hope this kid had.
I stood up.
My knees popped.
I adjusted my vest.
I stepped out of the booth, placing myself directly between the door and the trembling boy under the table.
The bell above the door rang again.
This time, it sounded like a funeral toll.
The man stepped inside.
The heat rushed in with him, but the air around him was freezing.
He scanned the room, ignoring the waitress, ignoring the cops.
His eyes locked on the empty space where the boy should have been, and then they drifted up to me.
He smiled.
โAfternoon, gentlemen,โ he said. His voice was smooth, deep, and cultured. โI believe you found something of mine.โ
He held out a hand, expecting me to move.
Expecting me to obey.
โIf youโll just step aside,โ he said, his smile widening to show too many teeth, โIโll take the trash out.โ
I looked at his hand.
I looked at the leash.
And I smiled back.
โNah,โ I said.
The entire diner seemed to inhale at once.
โExcuse me?โ the man said, his smile faltering just a fraction.
โI said nah,โ I repeated, my voice dropping an octave.
I picked up my coffee mug. It was heavy ceramic. Solid.
โYou see,โ I said, stepping forward until I was in his personal space. โWe didnโt find a boy.โ
I tightened my grip on the mug.
โWe found a reason.โ
And then, before he could blink, before the cops could shout, before the world could catch upโฆ
I swung.
The ceramic mug connected with a sickening thud against the manโs temple. He staggered back, his confident smile replaced by a look of stunned rage. The leash fell from his numb fingers, clattering on the linoleum. He was big, but he wasnโt expecting it. Nobody expects Ironjaw to swing a coffee cup.
He snarled, a low, animal sound that ripped through the sudden silence. The two deputies, Miller and Hayes, finally sprung into action, shouting for everyone to freeze. But they were too late. My brothers were already moving. Tiny was a blur of motion, a six-foot-seven vending machine of fury. He met the man, who I now figured was Sterling Thorne, with a shove that sent him reeling into the empty table behind him.
The table buckled, dishes clattering to the floor. Tiny was practically vibrating with anger, his eyes locked on the bruises on the boy under our booth. Spook, his steak knife glinting, positioned himself to cut off Thorneโs escape if he tried to bolt. The rest of the Hounds formed a rough semicircle, not attacking, but making it clear that Thorne was surrounded.
Thorne, despite the mug-shaped dent on his head, was still a formidable presence. He pushed himself up, wiping a smear of blood from his temple. His eyes, now devoid of the earlier empty charm, narrowed on me. โYouโll regret this, biker scum,โ he hissed, his cultured voice now laced with venom.
Deputy Miller, a younger cop, had his hand on his holster. Deputy Hayes, older and wiser, held up a calming hand. โWhoa, whoa, everyone! Settle down! What the hell is going on here?โ
โHe tried to take the boy,โ I stated, my voice flat. โThe boy said he was afraid of him. Said heโd take him back to โthe room.โโ
Thorne laughed, a chilling, humorless sound. โNonsense. My son is troubled. He ran away. Iโm merely retrieving him.โ He gestured vaguely at the booth. โHeโs just confused.โ
โConfused children donโt have finger marks on their necks,โ I countered, the words like cold steel. โAnd they donโt look at a monster like you with pure terror.โ
The boy, Finn, made a small sound from under the table, a whimper that cut through the tension like a razor. It was all the confirmation anyone needed. Deputy Hayes, his face grim, finally stepped between us and Thorne. โSir, weโre going to need to ask you some questions.โ
Thorne straightened his shirt, trying to regain his composure, but the blood on his temple betrayed him. โThis is outrageous. Iโll be suing this establishment, theseโฆ hooligans, and your department.โ
I just stared at him, my eyes not leaving his. My brothers shifted, their glares promising a world of pain if he so much as breathed wrong. Thorne must have seen it, because he backed down, a calculated retreat. โFine,โ he said, holding his hands up in a show of false compliance. โWe can talk. But I demand to see my son. He needs to come with me.โ
โHeโs not going anywhere with you,โ I growled.
Deputy Miller, still looking uncertain, started to say something about parental rights. But Deputy Hayes cut him off with a look. โWeโll handle this at the station,โ Hayes said to Thorne, his voice firm. โFor now, youโll wait outside. We need to speak with the boy and theseโฆ gentlemen.โ
Thorne shot one last hateful glance at me, a promise of retribution in his eyes, before turning and walking out. He didnโt slam the door, but the soft click as it closed felt like a ticking clock.
The diner breathed again. Barb, the waitress, hurried over with a first-aid kit, her hands trembling as she offered it to me. I waved it off, my knuckles throbbing, but otherwise okay. My focus was on the boy. I knelt down, peering under the table. Finn was still curled up, his small body shaking.
โHey, kid,โ I said softly, my voice still rough but trying to be gentle. โHeโs gone. For now.โ
He slowly uncurled, his eyes wide and scared. โHeโll come back,โ he whispered, his voice still a painful rasp. โHe always comes back.โ
โNot this time,โ Tiny boomed, his voice a surprising comfort despite its volume. โNot when the Devilโs Hounds are on the job.โ
The deputies were looking at us, at the boy, then back at us. Deputy Hayes sighed, running a hand over his face. โAlright, Ironjaw. Whatโs his name?โ
โI donโt know,โ I admitted. โHe didnโt tell me.โ
โFinn,โ the boy choked out, almost silently. โMy name is Finn.โ
Deputy Hayes knelt too, trying to be reassuring. โFinn, can you tell us what happened? Who was that man?โ
Finn shrank back, pulling his knees to his chest. He looked at me, then at Tiny, then at Spook, as if seeking permission. He trusted us, the โbad guys,โ more than the law. It was a hell of a thing to witness.
โHeโs not my dad,โ Finn whispered, his voice cracking. โMy dad died. Thatโs Sterling Thorne. Heโฆ he bought me.โ
The words hit the diner like a physical blow. Barb gasped, covering her mouth. The family in the corner looked horrified. Even the deputies froze, their faces going pale. โBought you?โ Deputy Miller repeated, disbelief warring with sudden, cold dread.
โHe bought my momโs trailer when she couldnโt pay,โ Finn explained, the words tumbling out now, though still quiet. โHe said heโd take care of me. But heโฆ he took me to the room. He said if I was good, heโd bring my mom there too.โ His eyes welled up, tears finally spilling over. โBut he never did. He just said I had to earn it.โ
A cold rage settled deep in my gut, colder than the calm Iโd felt just minutes ago. This wasnโt just abuse. This was something far darker. The room. The way heโd said โtake the trash out.โ It wasnโt just about Finn.
โWhat room, Finn?โ I asked, my voice barely a whisper.
He shivered. โThe one where the other kids are. He keeps them there. Sometimes he brings new ones. Sometimesโฆ sometimes they stop making noise.โ
My blood ran colder than it ever had. Tinyโs massive fist clenched, making the table shake. Spook dropped his knife with a clatter. This wasnโt just a monster. This was a monster with a lair.
Deputy Hayes stood up, his face ashen. He pulled out his radio. โWe have a situation. Potential child abduction and trafficking. Requesting backup and immediate investigation into Sterling Thorne.โ He gave a look to his partner. โMiller, go with Caleb and his men. Get the kid some shoes and some water, then take him to the station. And make sure Thorne doesnโt get near him.โ
He was trusting us. The โbad guys.โ It was a strange feeling.
We got Finn out of the diner, ignoring the lingering stares. Tiny gently picked him up, cradling the small boy against his massive chest. Finn, exhausted and traumatized, leaned into Tinyโs warmth, finding a strange comfort there. I grabbed a pair of clean, unused socks and a pair of sturdy, small boots Barb kept under the counter for emergencies. He ate a plate of scrambled eggs and bacon like he hadnโt seen food in days, which he probably hadnโt.
At the station, Finn recounted his story in more detail to a kind social worker, his words punctuated by sobs. He described a remote property, a building with boarded-up windows, and the faces of other children. He was articulate, despite his age and trauma, and his story was chillingly consistent.
Deputy Hayes, after hearing Finnโs full account, came to us in the interrogation room. โThorneโs a big fish, Ironjaw. Owns half the commercial property in town. Heโs got lawyers on speed dial and a reputation for philanthropy. Getting a warrant for his property based solely on a traumatized childโs testimony and a biker gangโs brawl isnโt going to be easy.โ
โSo, what?โ Tiny scoffed. โWe just let him get away? Let those other kids stay in that โroomโ?โ
โNo,โ I said, a dangerous calm in my voice. โWe donโt. We just need more than words.โ
I looked at my crew. We werenโt cops. We werenโt lawyers. We were โundesirables.โ But we had our own ways of getting information, our own network, our own methods. For twenty years, weโd made people afraid of us. Now, weโd use that fear for something good.
โSpook,โ I began, โyou know the backroads, the forgotten places. Find Thorneโs property. The one Finn described.โ
Spook nodded, already pulling out a tattered map from his vest pocket. He had a knack for knowing things, for seeing what others missed. His quiet demeanor hid a sharp mind.
โTiny, Reaper, get on the phones. Call anyone we know who owes us a favor, anyone with eyes and ears in Thorneโs empire. We need to know everything heโs doing, where heโs going, who heโs talking to.โ
For the next two days, the Devilโs Hounds worked like a well-oiled machine. Not for profit, not for revenge, but for a scared little boy and the unknown children he spoke of. Spook found the property โ a sprawling, remote ranch far outside town, surrounded by high fences and hidden by dense brush. It was listed under a shell corporation, a common tactic for shady dealings.
Meanwhile, Tiny and Reaperโs digging uncovered some disturbing patterns. Thorne had a habit of buying properties from struggling families, particularly single mothers, often at below-market value, sometimes offering a โpackage dealโ that included vague promises of โcareโ for their children. It was a sick, twisted scheme, preying on the most vulnerable.
The twist deepened when one of our contacts, a retired private investigator named Silas who owed me a big one, found something chilling. Sterling Thorne wasnโt just a local businessman. Years ago, under a different name, heโd been involved in a similar case in another state, a suspected child trafficking ring that was never fully proven due to lack of concrete evidence and a powerful legal team. Heโd vanished, resurfaced here as Sterling Thorne, and started building his empire anew. This wasnโt a one-off. This was a pattern. This was his lifeโs work, disguised by a veneer of respectability.
โHe targeted the weakest,โ Silas explained over a crackling phone line. โSingle parents, undocumented families, anyone who wouldnโt be missed, or who would be too afraid to speak up.โ
We had our evidence. Or at least, enough to make the deputies act. I presented everything to Deputy Hayes โ the property details, the shell corporation, the historical records connecting Thorne to the previous case. Hayes, a good man underneath his badge, looked at the stack of documents, his face grim. โThis is a lot, Caleb. But we still need a warrant, and a judge might hesitate without direct observation.โ
โThen we give you direct observation,โ I said, my voice low and steady. โWe go there. We find the proof. Then you come in.โ
Hayes looked at me, then at my patched vest, then at the determined faces of the Hounds. He knew what I was proposing. It was risky. It was on the edge of illegal. But it was the only way. โYou go in, you donโt engage,โ he warned, his voice tight. โYou get the proof. You get out. And you call me.โ
โUnderstood,โ I said.
That night, under a sliver of moon, the Devilโs Hounds rode. No loud engines this time. We parked our bikes miles away, hidden in a dry creek bed, and approached Thorneโs ranch on foot. Spook, with his silent movements and keen senses, led the way. We moved like shadows through the desert scrub, each of us feeling the weight of Finnโs words, the faces of those unknown children.
The ranch house was large, imposing, but a smaller, dilapidated outbuilding caught our attention. It was well-hidden, surrounded by overgrown brush, and its windows were indeed boarded up, just as Finn had described. A single, heavy-duty padlock secured the door.
We approached cautiously. Tiny, with his immense strength, made short work of the padlock. The door creaked open, revealing a stale, suffocating darkness. The air inside was heavy, thick with the smell of fear and desperation. My heart clenched.
Spook flicked on a small, powerful flashlight. The beam cut through the gloom, revealing a sight that turned my stomach. Small, makeshift beds were lined against the walls. Clothes, toys, and drawings were scattered on the floor. And huddled in the corner, eyes wide with terror, were three children. Two girls, no older than Finn, and a younger boy, probably five.
They were pale, thin, and their eyes held the same dead light Finnโs had. They didnโt cry out, just stared, like cornered animals. One of the girls had a drawing clutched in her hand โ a crude picture of Thorne, with an angry, scrawled face.
โWe got โem,โ I whispered into my comms, my voice raw with emotion. โHayes, weโre in. Weโve got three children. Get in here.โ
Deputy Hayes arrived with a full contingent of patrol cars and an unmarked van within minutes. Thorne, alerted by the commotion, stumbled out of his main house, still wearing silk pajamas, yelling about trespassers. He looked utterly disheveled and outraged, but the moment his eyes landed on the open door of the outbuilding, and then on the deputies, his face fell. The mask of respectability shattered.
He tried to run, but Tiny, moving with surprising speed, cut him off. Thorne put up a struggle, snarling and spitting, but he was no match for the combined force of the Hounds and the deputies. He was cuffed, his powerful faรงade crumbling completely.
The children were quickly and gently taken into care. Finn, who had been brought to the scene with the social worker, was reunited with the other children, a flicker of hope returning to his eyes as he saw familiar faces. It was a heartbreaking, yet profoundly rewarding moment.
In the aftermath, the full extent of Sterling Thorneโs depravity came to light. The evidence we provided, combined with the childrenโs testimonies, was undeniable. He was charged with kidnapping, child abuse, and trafficking. His carefully constructed empire crumbled, revealing a rotten core. His philanthropic image was destroyed, his โrespectableโ standing a cruel joke.
The Devilโs Hounds, surprisingly, werenโt charged. Deputy Hayes, in his report, emphasized our โcooperationโ and how our โlocal knowledgeโ was instrumental in the rescue. He painted us as reluctant informants, not vigilantes. He knew what weโd done, and he understood why. He was a good man, and sometimes, good men know when to bend the rules for a greater good.
Finn was placed in a loving foster home, along with the other children. We visited him a few times, bringing him a small, custom-made motorcycle toy and a new pair of sneakers. He still flinched at loud noises, and his eyes still held a lingering sadness, but the light was slowly returning. He even managed a genuine smile when Tiny let him sit on his Harley.
Iโve spent twenty years making people afraid of me, cultivating an image of a hardened, unfeeling man. But standing there, watching Finnโs hesitant smile, a profound truth settled in my heart. Sometimes, the true monsters arenโt the ones covered in tattoos and leather, riding loud bikes. Sometimes, theyโre the ones in tailored suits, with clean hands and empty smiles, hiding their darkness behind a faรงade of respectability.
The world judges you by what it sees, by the labels it assigns. But true character, true good, can be found in the most unexpected places. Itโs not about being โgoodโ or โbadโ by societyโs narrow definitions. Itโs about what you do when the truly vulnerable need protection, when an innocent child needs a monster to fight another monster. Itโs about having a reason. And sometimes, the hardest, most broken men are the ones with the most heart, especially when it comes to defending those who have nothing. We were the bad guys, sure. But that day, we were also heroes, and that felt a hell of a lot better than being feared.
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