Ninety-Seven Bikers Returned For The Woman Who Fed One Hungry Boy-heuh

Twenty-one years after I handed a hungry boy a free meal, ninety-seven bikers rolled into my small town and stopped right outside my café.

They were not looking for trouble.

They were looking for me.

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My name is Eleanor Watkins, but hardly anyone calls me that unless there is a form to fill in or a letter that looks too official to ignore.

To everyone else, I am Ellie.

For most of my adult life, I ran Watkins Family Café, a narrow little place with steamed-up windows, uneven table legs, and a bell above the door that had been threatening to fall off since the year before it actually did.

It was never fancy.

The booths had cracks in the vinyl.

The counter had a permanent shine in the places where elbows had rested for decades.

There was always a kettle clicking somewhere in the back, always a tea towel slung over my shoulder, always someone saying they only wanted a quick cuppa and then staying until the rain eased.

I liked it that way.

A place like that does not become important because of the menu.

It becomes important because people know what will happen when they step inside.

They will be seen.

They will be spoken to.

They will be warmed up before anyone asks what they can afford.

I had a rule, and everyone who knew me knew it too.

No one left hungry.

It was not a slogan.

I never painted it on the wall or put it on a chalkboard outside.

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