06/08/2025
HE SAID I WASNāT āFATHER MATERIALāāBUT I RAISED THOSE KIDS FROM DAY ONE When my sister, Maelis, went into labor, I was halfway across the state at a motorcycle rally. Sheād begged me not to cancel, swore sheād be fine, said she had time. She didnāt. Three beautiful babies came into this worldāand she didnāt make it out. I remember holding those tiny, squirmy bodies in the NICU, still smelling like gasoline and leather. No plan. No clue. But I looked at themāRoux, Brin, and Callumāand I just knew. I wasnāt going anywhere. I traded late-night rides for late-night feedings. My crew at the shop covered for me so I could make preschool pickup. I learned how to braid Brinās hair, how to calm Rouxās meltdowns, how to get Callum to eat something besides buttered pasta. I stopped riding long distance. Sold two bikes. Built bunk beds with my bare hands. Five years. Five birthdays. Five winters of flu season and stomach bugs. I wasnāt perfect, but I showed up. Every single day. And then, out of nowhereāhe showed up. Biological father. Not on the birth certificates. Never visited Maelis once during her pregnancy. According to her, heād said triplets didnāt fit his lifestyle. But now? He wanted them. He didnāt come alone. He brought a social worker named Marianne who took one look at my oil-stained coveralls and said I was \"not the long-term developmental environment these children require.ā I couldnāt believe it. Marianne toured our small but clean home. Saw the art the kids made on the fridge. Saw their bikes in the yard. The tiny boots lined up by the door. She smiled politely. Made notes. I saw her eyes linger a little too long on the tattoo on my neck. The worst part? The kids didnāt understand. Roux hid behind me. Callum cried. Brin asked, āIs that man going to be our new daddy?ā I said, āNo oneās taking you. Not without a fight.ā And now⦠the hearingās next week. Iāve got a lawyer. A good one. Expensive as hell, but worth it. My shop\'s barely breaking even because Iām juggling everything, but Iād sell my last wrench to keep them. I donāt know what the judge will decide.š