At seventy-two, a broke old biker opened his door expecting eviction papers and found the boy he once protected standing there with a house deed.
Jim Lawson had already decided he was not going to beg.
So when the black sedan rolled up in front of his sagging little rental and two strangers stepped out looking clean, expensive, and completely out of place on his cracked driveway, he pushed himself up from the recliner, planted a hand on the wall for balance, and went to the door before they could knock.
Bad news always sounded worse when you let it wait on the porch.
He opened the door hard enough to make the loose chain slap the frame.
“If this is about the rent,” he said, “I know what date it is.”
The woman on the porch paused.
She was somewhere in her forties, sharp charcoal suit, neat dark hair, calm face. The man beside her looked younger, maybe late thirties or early forties, tall and broad-shouldered, wearing a simple button-down shirt under a dark coat. He had the kind of posture that came from discipline, but there was something nervous in his eyes.
“Mr. Lawson?” the woman asked.
“That depends.”
“My name is Rebecca Hart. I’m an attorney. This is Dr. Thomas Reed. We were hoping for a few minutes of your time.”
Jim’s hand tightened on the edge of the door.
“Whatever you’re selling, I can’t afford it.”
The woman gave him a small smile.
“We’re not selling anything.”
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