09/13/2025
The foster parents pushed the little autistic boy out of their car at the motorcycle dealership and drove away, leaving him with just a note saying "Can't handle him anymore."
I was buying new brake pads when this kid in dinosaur pajamas just stood there in the parking lot, rocking back and forth, clutching a worn stuffed dragon while customers walked around him like he was invisible.
The dealership manager was already calling the police to "remove the abandoned child" when the boy walked straight up to my Harley, placed his small hand on the gas tank, and spoke his first words in six months: "Pretty bike. Like dragon wings."
I'm Big Mike, sixty-four years old, been riding for forty-six years, and I'd never seen anything like this. The kid wasn't scared of me – a 6'2" bearded biker covered in tattoos. He just kept stroking my bike like it was alive, humming some tune I didn't recognize.
The note taped to his back said his name was Lucas, he was "severely autistic and nonverbal," and that his foster family "couldn't manage his violent outbursts anymore." Except this kid wasn't violent. He was terrified. And somehow, my motorcycle was the only thing keeping him calm.
I knelt down beside Lucas, careful not to move too fast. In my years, I'd learned that bikes weren't the only things that needed gentle handling.
"Hey buddy," I said softly. "Nice dragon you got there."
He didn't look at me but held up the stuffed animal. "Toothless. From movie."
So he could talk, just chose not to most of the time. I recognized that. After Vietnam, I didn't speak for three months.
The dealership manager approached. "Sir, the police are coming to collect the child. You might want to move your bike."
"He's not going anywhere," I said, my voice carrying enough edge to make the manager step back.
Lucas had started tracing the Harley emblem with his finger, over and over. A repetitive behavior, but it was keeping him grounded.
"Lucas," I said. "Would you like to sit on the motorcycle?"
His whole body stilled. Then, for the first time, he looked directly at me. His eyes were green, bright with intelligence that most people probably missed.
"Really?"
"Really."
I lifted him carefully onto the seat. His face transformed – pure joy. He made a vrooming sound, holding his dragon up like it was flying.
That's when child services arrived. Ms. Patterson, according to her badge, looked harried and impatient.
"Lucas Martinez? I'm here to take you to the emergency placement center."
Lucas's joy evaporated. He gripped the handlebars and started screaming – not words, just pure terror.
"No! No! No!" He was rocking violently now, and I could see why foster families might panic. But I also saw what they missed – he wasn't having a tantrum. He was having a panic attack.
"Hey, hey, Lucas," I said, placing my hand gently on his back. "Breathe with me. In... out... in... out."
Surprisingly, he did. His breathing slowed to match mine.
Ms. Patterson looked shocked. "How did you—"
"Patience," I said. "Something you folks seem short on."
She bristled. "Sir, I need to take the child."
"Where?"
"Emergency placement. Group home until we can find another foster family."
"The last family just dumped him like trash. Maybe the problem isn't the kid."
Lucas had gone still, listening. Kids always knew when adults were discussing their fate.
"Sir, I appreciate your concern, but—"
"I'll take him."
The words were out before I thought them through. But looking at this kid, abandoned in a parking lot, clinging to my bike like it was a lifeline, I couldn't let him disappear into the system again.
"That’s not possible. We can’t give a child to a biker like you. You people aren’t safe and...Read more in Comment or Most relevant -> All comments 👇