Chapter 1: Midnight on Maple Street
The sound of the truck door slamming cut through the silence like a warning bell.
Melissa froze behind the living room curtain.
Out on the porch, all twelve of us went still.
Her ex-husband, Travis, stood at the edge of the driveway with a pistol in his hand, his face twisted with the kind of rage that had long ago stopped being human and started becoming hunger. He looked from the bikes to the men on the porch, like he was trying to decide whether fear or pride would win.
Danny rose first.
Not fast. Not threatening.
Just steady.
“You need to leave,” he said.
Travis lifted the gun slightly. “This ain’t your business.”
Bear stood up beside Danny, broad as a wall. “The second you made her fear for her life, it became everybody’s business.”
Melissa made a sound behind us. Not loud. Just one broken breath.
Travis heard it. His eyes shifted toward the window, and that tiny movement told us everything. He hadn’t come to talk. He hadn’t come to scare her. He had come to finish something.
Danny stepped down from the porch, palms visible.
“You point that thing at anyone here,” he said, “and your life gets worse, not better. Walk away.”
But some men don’t know how to walk away. They only know how to escalate until the whole world is burning with them.
Travis shouted something ugly, stepped forward, and raised the pistol.
Then everything happened at once.
Bear moved like instinct. Jax kicked over a chair. Someone yelled, “Gun!”
I lunged off the porch just as Travis fired into the air.
The shot cracked the night open.
Melissa screamed.
Bear hit Travis from the side before he could aim again. The gun skidded across the driveway. Three of us piled on before he could reach it, but Travis fought like a man possessed, swinging elbows, cursing, spitting, thrashing under all that weight.
Danny grabbed the pistol and backed away.
“Call 911!” he shouted.
I already had my phone out.
You’d think that would be the part where the story turned.
It wasn’t.