Thirty Bikers Came To Evict A Widow, Then Saw Her Memorial Wall-myhoa

At 7:00 on a Tuesday morning, the knock on my apartment door sounded like the end of my life.

Not loud, exactly.

Just final.

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I was standing in the kitchen with one hand on the counter and the other wrapped around a paper coffee cup I had reheated twice and still had not managed to drink.

The apartment smelled like burnt toast from downstairs, old carpet, and the strawberry shampoo I had used on Sofia’s hair the night before.

Michael was in the living room trying to put his sneakers on the wrong feet because his hands were shaking.

Sofia had crawled into my lap before sunrise and refused to let go.

I knew who was on the other side of that door.

I had known for weeks that the day might come, but knowing a thing is not the same as hearing boots climb the stairs toward your children.

The second knock came harder.

“Rebecca,” Rick called through the door. “Open up.”

My landlord had never used my name like a person before.

He used it like a line item.

I lifted Sofia onto my hip, wiped my face with the heel of my hand, and opened the door.

The hallway outside my apartment was full of men in leather vests.

Thirty of them.

They stood shoulder to shoulder on the landing and down the stairs, big men with road-worn faces, heavy boots, gray beards, tattoos, sunglasses hooked into collars, and hands that looked strong enough to carry a refrigerator by themselves.

Behind them stood Rick with a clipboard tucked under one arm.

He looked calm in the way people look calm when they have convinced themselves cruelty is just business.

“Time’s up, Rebecca,” he said.

Michael slipped behind my legs and gripped my pajama pants so tightly his fingernails dug into my skin.

Sofia whimpered against my neck.

“These guys are here to move your belongings to the curb,” Rick said. “You’ve got ten minutes to take whatever you want to keep.”

My stomach dropped so fast I thought I might be sick right there in the doorway.

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