Biker Dad Hid At His Son’s Graduation — Then The Speech Exposed Everything-heuh

A 240-pound biker killed the engine of his Harley two hundred yards down the road from Lincoln High School in Cedar Falls, Iowa at 9:47 a.m. on a Saturday morning in May.

He did not ride into the school car park as if he had a right to be seen.

He did not twist the throttle for attention.

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He pushed the bike on to the grass verge, removed his half-helmet, and set it on the tank with the sort of care a man uses when he is trying to prove he has come in peace.

The May air held the smell of cut grass, warm tarmac and petrol fading from the exhaust.

From the school gym came the muffled noise of a crowd arranging itself for ceremony.

Chairs scraped.

Families murmured.

A microphone squealed once and then settled.

Daniel Marsh stood beside the Harley and listened to all of it.

For a moment, he looked too large for the morning.

Six foot two, shaved head, salt-and-pepper goatee, arms inked with roses, anchors and the names of three dead infantry brothers.

There was a faded USMC tattoo on his neck and another mark on the inside of his right wrist.

FOR JOSH.

The letters were crude and uneven, as if they had been made less for decoration than for remembering.

He wore the black leather colours of the Iron Bluff Riders MC over a plain T-shirt, jeans and boots heavy enough to announce him even when he tried not to make a sound.

In one hand, he held a graduation programme.

It had been folded once down the middle.

His own name was not on the invitation list.

It had not been on anything to do with his son for eleven years.

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