Young Riders Mocked An Old Biker Before His Vest Silenced The Diner-rosocute

The old Harley rolled into Rusty’s Roadhouse just after two in the afternoon, coughing once and then settling into a low, patient rumble.

A gray-haired rider swung one leg over the seat and stood still for a second before he trusted his knee.

His name was Walter Mercer, but nearly everyone who had earned his trust called him Ghost.

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He wore a faded leather vest over a black shirt, old boots with road dust at the seams, and the kind of beard that looked less styled than survived.

The young men at the counter noticed him before the waitress did.

There were five of them, all in new jackets, all with bikes outside that still looked showroom-clean, all loud enough to make sure the room understood they belonged there.

Tyler Brooks was the loudest.

He had been riding for three years, which was long enough to buy confidence and not long enough to earn it.

When Ghost stepped inside with his helmet tucked under his arm, Tyler looked him over and smiled at the others.

“Someone show grandpa the nursing home exit,” he said.

The boys laughed, and Ghost kept walking.

Sally, the waitress, had worked that road for twenty years and had seen men mistake leather for character every summer.

She set a mug in front of Ghost and asked if he wanted coffee.

“Black,” he said.

His voice sounded like gravel washed clean by rain.

Tyler leaned back on his stool and pointed his chin toward the parking lot.

“That rusty thing yours?”

Ghost lifted the mug with both hands because the old joints in his fingers were stiff after cold wind.

“It is.”

“Looks older than you,” Tyler said.

One of his friends added, “Riding’s a young man’s game.”

Sally’s face hardened.

“Boys, that’s enough.”

Ghost raised one hand without looking back.

“It’s all right, Sally. They don’t know any better.”

That should have ended it, but Tyler heard mercy as weakness.

He slid off his stool and walked two steps closer, making sure the room had to watch.

“What don’t we know, old-timer?”

Ghost took one slow drink of coffee.

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