The Biker Dad, The Walmart Crown, And The Grandma Who Saw Him-thuyhien

The Walmart on the eastern side of Tulsa had the same Saturday feeling every Walmart in America seems to get in late October.

The fluorescent lights hummed like they had been humming since morning.

The deli smelled like rotisserie chicken and warm bread.

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Cart wheels squeaked over the linoleum in that uneven rhythm that makes people turn their heads without knowing why.

At the customer service desk, Eileen had already handled three returns, two questions about grocery pickup, one woman arguing over a receipt, and a man who insisted a garden hose was cheaper online even though he had no proof.

She was seventy-two years old.

Her white hair was set in tight curls, the way she had worn it for years, and her reading glasses hung from a beaded chain around her neck.

Her name tag said ASK ME ABOUT GROCERY PICKUP.

She had worked that desk for eleven years, long enough to know the difference between a customer who was angry and a customer who was scared.

The two front-end cashiers in blue vests had been there since the store opened in 2007.

They had seen the usual Saturday parade.

Moms with coupons folded in their palms.

Fathers buying motor oil and birthday balloons.

Teenagers pretending they were not bored.

Grandmothers checking receipts twice before leaving.

Then Diesel walked in with a baby carrier strapped to his chest.

His real name did not matter to most people in that store because nobody was thinking that way at first.

They saw what strangers usually saw first.

Six foot four.

Two hundred and sixty pounds.

Shaved head.

A beard the color of rust and dark honey hanging down toward the fourth button of his cut.

Sleeves of old tattoos.

A dagger tattoo on the side of his neck.

A black leather vest with a small diamond-shaped patch on the front panel that made certain people look away quickly.

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