Tuck's Revenge (17 page)

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Authors: Rory Flannigan

Tags: #new age, #womens fiction, #new adult contemporary, #biker sex, #mc club, #biker romance, #mc romance

BOOK: Tuck's Revenge
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I will tell you my view of who
these people really were, and not the views, assumptions, and
opinions of news media outlets looking to make a buck from
sensationalizing a group of people. Nor the opinions of law
enforcement that didn't know them, and never spent over a few
minutes with any of them. However, they criticized and criminalized
them to have an enemy to fight against.

Yes, I'm speaking of bikers and
bike clubs. You know, the kind of bikers who have been demonized in
movies, television, and newspapers since the 1930s. Those entities
will always tell you only one side of the story in order to
sensationalize and make money off nothing more than their opinion.
But here I will tell you in as much detail as possible my version
of who these people really are.

No, I don't expect to change
many hearts and minds with what I tell you here. Though I am in
hopes it will give those that read this a different perspective as
to
who
and
what
we really are. Because face the facts…we have been around for
over 80 years, and we haven't ever had the ability to take over the
world or even cause any radical change to the world. Logically, how
could we be all that we have been hyped-up to being?

So…before I get into the crux of
the story, I guess I should begin where all stories begin—the birth
of the subject. And since the subject of this story is myself, we
shall begin there. However, I must first assure you that I have no
remembrance of 1958, which was the year of my birth.

My earliest recollection of reality
didn't come to me until about 1961. At three years old, and being
born into a somewhat reclusive and scattered family, as far as I
can recall I was a happy child. But at the age of three or four
years old, how would I really know one way or the other since I had
nothing else to compare it to at the time. It was possibly about
the time of life when I realized I was different in some ways,
compared to other kids my age. Most kids in my age group had a
stable family life, and they lived at home with a mother and
father, but I never had a concept of that, because the way things
were when I was a child, my grandfather had played the role of the
father figure in my life. While other kids saw it as odd, it was
normal to me, or the only normal I knew at the time.

I was born to a single mother,
because my father had decided to leave before I was born, and since
it was his choice to do so, he seems to be pretty much irrelevant
to any events in my life. I do have a recollection of him in the
sense of when my mother and my grandparents talked about him, they
referred to him as "Hardhead" or our "Sperm Donor". And the only
connection we had to him was through his parents, who would show up
once a year or so to visit my brother, not necessarily to visit me.
From what I was told, they labored under the illusion that I
possibly wasn't his kid, so they never claimed me as one of their
grandchildren. I did meet my sperm donor for the first time when I
was about thirty-four years old, and other than me looking somewhat
like him, that was the extent of the connection with him. It seems
I was unlucky enough to get his looks, but my brother was unlucky
enough to get his piss poor attitude and mentality as a human
being. I've never had any dealings with the man—I don't know
him—and have no wishes to know him. Therefore, I have no feeling
good or bad for him. He could die tomorrow, and I wouldn't shed a
tear over his death.

 

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