Not just for brief visits or video calls, but for a genuine chance to be my daughter’s father again. To teach her, guide her, watch her grow. To show her that appearances deceive, that strength comes in many forms, and that love—real love—transcends prejudice and distance and even the well-meaning but misguided judgments of those who think they know what’s best.
I straddled the Harley, feeling its familiar weight beneath me, and kicked it to life. The thunder of the engine echoed off nearby houses—a sound some found threatening but which had always meant freedom to me. Freedom, and now, perhaps, the promise of redemption.
I pointed the bike toward the open road, toward the storm I could see building on the horizon. Tomorrow would bring its own battles, its own challenges in the fight to reclaim my place in my daughter’s life. But tonight—tonight I would ride into the thunder, adding my own rumble to the heavens’ percussion.
Tonight, somewhere in Seattle, my daughter would hear the storm and know her father was thinking of her. And perhaps, just perhaps, the same thunder that had once been used to paint me as dangerous and unstable would become the voice that called her back to me. Because sometimes, thunder isn’t just noise.
Sometimes, it’s a promise. A declaration. A father’s unyielding love carrying across impossible distances to reach the one person who has always seen him clearly—not as a stereotype or a threat, but simply as Daddy.
The man he was always meant to be.





