A BIKER CAME TO MY WIFE’S GRAVE EVERY SINGLE WEEK, AND FOR MONTHS, I HAD NO IDEA WHO HE WAS…

A BIKER CAME TO MY WIFE’S GRAVE EVERY SINGLE WEEK, AND FOR MONTHS, I HAD NO IDEA WHO HE WAS…

For six months, I watched him from inside my car.

Same day.

Same time.

Every Saturday at exactly 2 PM, he would ride into the cemetery on his Harley, park near the old oak tree, and walk straight to Emily’s headstone.

Then he would sit beside her grave for one full hour.

He never brought flowers.

Never left a note.

Never spoke loud enough for me to hear.

He just sat cross-legged in the grass, head lowered, like he was carrying a pain too heavy to stand with.

The first time I saw him, I thought he had made a mistake.

It was a large cemetery. Graves could be easy to confuse.

But then he came back the next Saturday.

And the Saturday after that.

And again after that.

Week after week, this stranger mourned my wife like she had belonged to him too.

At first, I was confused.

Then I became angry.

Who was he?

How did he know Emily?

Why was this man showing up for her every week when some people in her own family barely came at all?

Emily had died fourteen months earlier from breast cancer.

She was only forty-three.

We had been married for twenty years.

Two children.

A quiet home.

A normal life.

At least, that was what I thought.

Nothing about my wife’s life made sense with this man.

Emily had been a pediatric nurse.

She volunteered at church.

She drove a silver minivan and packed snacks for every school event.

Her idea of breaking the rules was ordering dessert before dinner.

But this biker grieved her like he had lost someone irreplaceable.

Sometimes, from my car, I saw his shoulders shake.w

Sometimes, before he left, he placed one rough hand against her headstone and kept it there for several seconds.

Like he was saying goodbye all over again.

By the third month, I could not take it anymore.

That Saturday, I stepped out of my car and walked toward him.

He heard my footsteps but did not turn around.

His hand stayed pressed against Emily’s name.