My mother died on a Tuesday. Pancreatic cancer. She was 67. I came from Seattle for the funeral and stayed to clean up the house. I hadn’t been home in three years. My mother and I weren’t close. We had our reasons. I thought I’d sign some papers, clean out her things, and make a list by Friday. The house was worse than I expected. The paint was peeling off in sheets. Gutters were hanging loose. The porch railing was rotten. She’d been sick for over a year, and there was no one to help her through it. Or so I thought. The first night, I fell asleep on her couch surrounded by boxes. I woke up at 4:00 a.m. to the sound of something scraping against the outside wall. I looked out the window, and my heart almost stopped. There were motorcycles lining the street. At least nine of them. And there were men on ladders. On the porch. On the side of the house. In the dark. With work lights attached to sawhorses. They were painting my mother’s house. Pink. Not salmon. Not blush. Bright, deliberate, unmistakable pink. I grabbed my phone and almost called 911. Then one of them saw me at the window. Big guy. Gray beard. Paint roller in his hand. He didn’t run. He just nodded and went back to painting. I went outside in my pajamas. Barefoot. Shivering. Not from the cold. “What are you doing?” I said. The big guy climbed down his ladder. He wiped his hands on his jeans. He looked at me with the saddest eyes I’ve ever seen on a man of his stature. “You must be Claire,” he said. “How do you know my name?” “Because you’re mine…”

Walt brought me a folding chair because I looked like I might fall over. He set it up on the porch, and I sat there in the dark, watching strangers paint my mother’s house while he told me everything.

It all started eleven years ago. Walt’s motorcycle broke down on the country road, about a mile from here. He walked to the nearest house. My mother’s house.

“She was on the front steps shelling peas,” Walt said. “I was dressed in full leather. Patches. A bandana. I probably looked like a troublemaker. Most people would have come in and locked the door.”

“What did she do?”

“She said, ‘You look great. Want some lemonade?'”

She gave him lemonade. Then lunch. Then she drove him to the auto parts store in her station wagon, while he sat in the passenger seat, holding a plate of leftover meatloaf she’d insisted he take.

“I came back the next day to fix the bike,” Walt said. “She fed me again. I noticed the steps on her front porch were rotten. I fixed them. She told me it wasn’t necessary. I told her she didn’t have to feed me either.”

It became a tradition. Walt returned the following Monday. He brought a friend. My mother fed them both. They fixed her gutters.

The following Monday, four bikers arrived. She prepared a roast. They raked her yard and repaired a hole in the garage roof.

After a few months, it had become a regular occurrence. Every Monday. The crew arrived at noon. My mother prepared lunch. Soup in winter. Sandwiches in summer. Always pie. Always enough for everyone, no matter how many people were there.

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