Tires screaming.
Engines roaring in perfect synchronization.
Then—
Light exploded through the windows.
Blinding. White. Violent.
Heads snapped toward the glass as black SUVs slid into position outside with surgical precision, forming a wall between the diner and the world.
Doors didn’t slam.
They opened in unison.
Men stepped out — fast, controlled, coordinated. Dark suits. Earpieces. Weapons visible for just a fraction too long to be accidental.
Inside, no one breathed.
The biker’s grin cracked.
Not fully.
Just enough.
The old man finally moved.
Slowly… he looked up.
Not at the SUVs.
At the biker.
Eye contact.
Unblinking.
Certain.
The waitress’s voice trembled from somewhere behind the counter, barely more than air—
“Oh God… that’s the governor’s security convoy.”
The words didn’t land softly.
They hit.
Hard.
The biker stepped back.
Just one step.
But it was enough.
Enough to say everything his laughter couldn’t anymore.
The cane still lay on the floor between them.
Untouched.
Irrelevant now.
Because the man they mocked…
Was never just an old man.
And in the reflection of the diner window, as suited figures closed in—
The power had already changed hands.
