A Toddler Asked a Hells Angels Biker If He Was a Bear. Then He Knelt-yumihong

The biggest, scariest-looking man at the Pilot Travel Center off Exit 39 of Interstate 65 in Lebanon, Tennessee, was pumping $46 of premium into a black Harley-Davidson Road King at 4:17 p.m. on a Wednesday when a 3-year-old girl in a glittery purple unicorn shirt ran straight up to him and asked, “Mister! Are you a bear?”

That was how the video started for most people.

A small child, a giant biker, a gas pump, and one sentence sharp enough to stop a whole travel center.

Image

But from where I stood at pump eleven, with my Subaru humming beside me and a stale paper cup of coffee in the holder, it did not feel like a video.

It felt like one of those moments where everyone is about to reveal who they really are.

The concrete outside the Pilot Travel Center had been baking all afternoon.

Heat lifted from it in waves, and the smell of diesel hung low under the canopy, mixing with burnt coffee from inside, hot rubber from the interstate, and the sugary frosting stuck to Lily’s fingers.

I had driven in from Nashville after a doctor’s appointment, the kind with white walls, clipped answers, and fluorescent lights that make your skin feel tired.

I wanted gas, coffee, and a receipt that actually printed.

I did not expect to remember the exact pump numbers for the rest of my life.

Pump nine was where Hannah stood with the nozzle still in her hand.

Pump eleven was mine.

The black Harley-Davidson Road King was at the next island over, angled slightly away from the travel center door, chrome flashing every time a car moved past the canopy.

And beside it stood Lucas Vance.

I did not know his name then.

Nobody at that gas island did, except maybe the men who understood the patches on his leather cut and decided to look somewhere else.

Later, when Tom Boggs’s 57-second video had already been shared, stitched, slowed down, argued over, and reposted, people dug up what they could.

Lucas Vance was forty-two.

He was six-foot-two, about 230 pounds, and built in that solid, weathered way that makes a person look less like he works out and more like life has been leaning on him for years.

His head was shaved.

His beard was dark brown and long enough to brush his chest.

His arms were covered in black-and-gray tattoos: skulls, roses, an old bald eagle, dates, and the names of fallen brothers written in looping cursive.

His cut said Hells Angels Motorcycle Club, Nashville Charter.

There was a small 1%er diamond patch on one corner, a faded American flag over his heart, rings on nearly every finger, a chrome ring on his belt, keys hanging from it, and a chain wallet resting against his thigh.

He was the kind of man people judge before he can prove them right or wrong.

Read More