Hundreds of bikers showed up at the funeral of a boy no one wanted to bury because his father was in prison for murder.
The funeral director called us after spending two hours alone in the chapel, waiting for someone—anyone—to come say goodbye to little Tomás Lucero.
The boy had died of leukemia after a three-year battle with his grandmother as his only visitor, and she suffered a heart attack the day before the burial.
Social Services said they had complied, the foster family claimed it wasn’t their responsibility, and the parish said they couldn’t associate with the son of a murderer.
So this innocent man, who in his final months wondered if his father still loved him, was to be buried alone in a municipal grave with only a number on each headstone.
That’s when Miguelón, president of the Nomadic Riders, made the decision: “No child goes underground alone. I don’t care whose child he is.”
What none of us knew was that Tomás’s father, in his maximum security cell, had just learned of his son’s death and was planning to take his own life that night.
The guards had him under surveillance, but we all know how those stories usually end. What happened next not only gave the boy the farewell he deserved, but also saved a man who thought he had nothing left to live for.
I was having my morning coffee at the club when the call came in. Emilio Pardo, the director of the Paz Eterna Funeral Home, sounded like he’d been crying.
“Manolo, I need help,” he said. “I have a situation here that I can’t handle alone.”
Emilio had buried my wife five years earlier, treating her with dignity when cancer had left her bone-deep. I owed him a favor.
“What’s happening?”
“There’s a boy here. Ten years old. He died yesterday at the General Hospital. No one has come. And no one will come.”
“Foster child?”
“Worse. His father is Marcos Lucero.”
I knew that name. Everyone knew it. Marcos Lucero had killed three people in a settling of scores four years ago. Life sentence. It had been on every newscast.
“The boy had been dying of leukemia for three years,” Emilio continued. “His grandmother was all he had, and yesterday she had a heart attack. He’s in the ICU; he might not make it. The Community says they should bury him. The foster family is washing their hands of it. Even my team refuses. They say it’s bad luck to bury the son of a murderer.”
“What do you need?”
“Pallbearers. Someone to… to accompany him. He’s just a child, Manolo. He didn’t choose his father.”
I stood up, determined. “Give me two hours.”
“Manolo, I only need four people—”
“You’ll have more than four.”
I hung up and played the sketch in the clubroom. Within minutes, thirty-seven Nomad Riders were in the main room.
“Brothers,” I said. “There’s a ten-year-old boy about to be buried alone because his father is in prison. He died of cancer. No one will claim him. No one will mourn him.”
The silence was absolute.
“I’m going to his funeral,” I continued. “I don’t force anyone to come. It’s none of the club’s business. But if you think no child should go alone, meet me at Eternal Peace in ninety minutes.”
The Old Bear spoke first: “My grandson is ten.”
“Mine too,” said Hammer.
“My boy would have been ten,” Ron muttered quietly. “If the drunk driver hadn’t…”
There was no need for it to end.
Miguelón stood up. “Call the other clubs. All the clubs. This isn’t about territories or patches. It’s about a kid.”
The calls were made. Rebel Eagles. Steel Knights. Asphalt Demons. Clubs that hadn’t spoken to each other in years. Clubs with bitter resentments. But when they heard about Tomás Lucero, they all said the same thing: “We’ll be there.”
I arrived at the funeral home first. Emilio was outside the chapel, lost.
“Manolo, I didn’t mean—”
The roar interrupted him. First came the Nomads, forty-three bikes. Then the Eagles, fifty. The Knights, thirty-five. The Demons, twenty-eight.
They kept arriving. Veterans clubs. Christian bikers. Fans who heard about it through social media. By 2 p.m., the Paz Eterna parking lot and three surrounding streets were packed with motorcycles.
Emilio’s eyes were wide open: “There must be three hundred motorcycles.”
“Three hundred and twelve,” Miguelón corrected, coming closer. “We counted them.”
We were led to the chapel, where a small white coffin awaited, with a modest bouquet of supermarket flowers beside it.
“Is that all?” asked Snake, his voice raspy.
“The flowers are from the hospital,” Emilio admitted. “Standard protocol.”
“Fuck the protocol,” someone muttered.
The chapel was filled. Tough men, many with tears in their eyes, filed past the coffin. Someone brought a stuffed animal. Another, a toy motorcycle. Soon, offerings were piled up around it—toys, flowers, even a leather jacket with “Honorary Rider” embroidered on it.
But it was Lápida, a veteran of the Águilas, who broke my heart. He placed a photo next to the coffin: “This was my boy, Javier. The same age when leukemia took him. I couldn’t save him either, Tomás. But you’re not alone now. Javier will show you the way up.”
One by one, the bikers spoke. Not about Tomás—no one knew him—but about lost children, about innocence stolen, about how no child deserves to die alone for the sins of their father.
Then Emilio received a call. He came back pale.
“The prison,” he said. “Marcos Lucero… he knows. About Tomás. About the funeral. The guards are watching him for suicide risk. He’s asking if… if anyone came for his son.”
The silence was total.
Miguelón stood up: “Put it on speakerphone.”
After hesitating, Emilio knocked. A broken voice filled the chapel.
“Hello? Is anyone there? Please, is anyone with my child?”
“Marcos Lucero,” Miguelón said firmly. “This is Miguel Watson, president of the Nomadic Riders. There are 312 motorcycles here from 17 different clubs. We all came for Tomás.”
Silence. Then, sobs. Heartbreaking, from a man who had lost everything.
“He loved… motorcycles,” Marcos stammered. “Before he ruined everything. He had a toy Harley. He slept with it. He said he wanted to be a biker when he grew up.”
“It will be,” Miguelón promised. “With us. Every Memorial, every charity ride, every time we set off, Tomás will be with us. I swear on behalf of all the clubs here.”
“I couldn’t even say goodbye,” Marcos whispered. “Or hug him. Or tell him I loved him.”
“Tell him now,” I chimed in. “We’ll make sure he hears it.”
The next few minutes were a father’s farewell. Marcos talked about Tomás’s first steps, his love for dinosaurs, his bravery in the hospital. He apologized a thousand times for not being there. And today, every time we start our bikes, the wind seems to carry the laughter of a child who can finally fly free.
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