They Vandalized My Motorcycle During My Wife’s Funeral
While I was mourning my wife at her funeral, someone vandalized my Harley in the church parking lot. A sign left on it read: “BIKER TRASH GET OUT.” It wasn’t random—it was personal. My wife Barbara and I had moved to Cedar Hills six months earlier after her cancer returned. It was a “proper” neighborhood—no motorcycles, no noise. From day one, the HOA president, Howard, made it clear my bike didn’t belong.
Barbara defended me until the end. She never asked me to change—not in 50 years. She passed away holding my hand on a Tuesday. By Friday, I rode my Harley to her funeral, just as she would’ve wanted.
After the service, I found my beloved bike tipped over and defaced. The same neighbors who pretended to care stood around, many looking unsurprised. I saw Howard across the lot, smirking.
Despite the damage, I rode home. I needed the road—the freedom, the noise, the memories.
Later, Howard approached me at the reception. “Maybe it’s time to consider something more fitting for the neighborhood,” he said.
I looked him dead in the eye. “Someone here is a coward who vandalized my bike during my wife’s funeral. And I always find out who’s done me wrong.”