“Don’t tell the biker standing outside the can.cer ward window that the little girl inside isn’t supposed to have visitors. If he stops showing up at 8 AM, she might start believing the last person who promised to come back has disappeared too.”
The nurse first heard someone mention the biker just as she turned into the pediatric oncology hallway.
At first, she assumed it was just another anxious parent.
Hospitals are full of unusual routines. Some family members arrive long before visiting hours. Others sit outside rooms long after they’re supposed to leave. And sometimes strangers wander the halls looking lost.
But the man people were whispering about was different.
Because he never came inside.
Every morning, right at 8:00 AM, the same biker appeared outside the large window of room 214.
He never knocked.
He never tried to enter.
He simply stood on the narrow concrete path beside the hospital garden, quietly looking in.
The nurse had noticed him before. It was hard not to.
He looked like someone who belonged on a long stretch of highway, not outside a children’s cancer ward.
The man was big. Broad shoulders filled a sleeveless leather vest. Tattoos covered both arms like dark sleeves of ink. His beard was thick, his boots heavy, and road dust clung to his jeans like he had traveled far just to stand in that exact spot.
And every morning he brought something with him.
That day it was a small stuffed rabbit.
One of the ears was bent, and the toy’s eye had clearly been stitched back on with thick thread.
The biker lifted it gently against the glass.
Inside the room, seven year old Emily noticed.
She slowly sat up in her hospital bed. Her face was pale beneath a thin hospital cap, but when she saw the rabbit, she smiled.
It wasn’t an excited smile.
It was softer. Tired, but genuine.
She pressed her small hand against the glass.
The biker mirrored the gesture. His palm met the window from the outside.
He didn’t smile. He simply stood there, present.
Then he reached into his vest pocket and pulled out something else.
A small silver motorcycle pendant.
He rolled it slowly between his fingers.
Back and forth.
Back and forth.
As if it were something he carried everywhere.
The nurse felt a tightness in her chest.
Because according to Emily’s chart, the girl’s father had died months earlier.