No one expected fifty bikers to show up at Mikey’s funeral. Especially not the four boys who had bullied him into taking his life. Mikey was 14—kind, artistic, and relentlessly harassed at school. When I found him in the garage, his note named them: “They tell me to kill myself every day. Now they’ll be happy.” The school called it “tragic.” The police saw no crime. The principal offered condolences—and asked us to hold the funeral during class hours so “the boys could attend quietly.”

I was drowning in helplessness. Three days before the funeral, Sam, a biker who’d met Mikey at the gas station, came to my door. His nephew had died the same way. “Call us if you want presence,” he said. “No trouble.” I didn’t call—until I read Mikey’s journal. Pain on every page. Screenshots of cruel texts. I called.

The next morning, fifty bikers from the Steel Angels stood in silence around the cemetery. The bullies and their families froze. One biker placed a teddy bear near Mikey’s photo. Another wept.

At school, the bikers returned—invited this time. They spoke of lost children. One woman said, “Words are weapons. Some wounds don’t bleed.” Students cried. Some apologized. Mikey’s bullies transferred. The principal resigned. Reforms followed. Mikey’s story made the news. I joined the Angels. We ride for the ones we lost—and for the ones we still can save.