A Biker Learned To Braid His Daughter’s Hair. Years Later, She Broke Him-Cherry - Chainityai

A Biker Learned To Braid His Daughter’s Hair. Years Later, She Broke Him-Cherry

The biggest, hardest-looking man in our trailer park was sitting on the porch steps at 5:14 in the morning, with a phone propped against an empty beer can, a four-year-old girl asleep against his shoulder, and a little plastic comb in his enormous tattooed hand.

He was watching a YouTube tutorial called “How to Braid Your Daughter’s Hair for Daycare — Beginner Friendly!”

He had earbuds in so the sound would not wake her up.

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I was thirteen the first time I saw Wade Calloway do it.

The Oklahoma dawn had that damp blue chill that makes everything feel softer and meaner at the same time.

The gravel under my bike tires snapped quietly as I rolled past the trailers, and the air smelled like wet dust, old smoke, and coffee somebody had started too early.

Most people in Stillwater knew Wade Calloway by reputation before they knew him by name.

He was six-foot-three, broad through the shoulders, with a beard that had already started going gray back then and tattoos that made strangers turn their shopping carts around in grocery store aisles.

On the left side of his neck, a coiled rattlesnake disappeared under his collar.

On the right, CALLOWAY ran in old English letters.

Across his knuckles, in faded blue ink, were the words HOLD FAST.

Those words looked like a warning if you did not know him.

Later, I understood they were more like a prayer.

Wade had done two stretches at McAlester for things nobody in the trailer park asked him to explain.

He rode with the Iron Crows MC out of Tulsa, and the patch on his cut made people quiet.

Men who liked to act tough at the gas station stopped acting tough when Wade walked in.

Mothers pulled their children closer at the pump.

Teenagers who had been mouthing off behind the laundry room suddenly found their shoes fascinating.

Once, when I was twelve, I saw a sheriff’s deputy follow Wade from the Sonic door all the way across the parking lot with one hand resting on his hip.

Wade never looked back.

Or maybe he did not want to give the man the satisfaction.

His daughter, June, was the opposite of every rumor people had built around him.

She was tiny, strawberry-blonde, sharp-faced, and missing her two front teeth for a long stretch of childhood.

She wore little sneakers with lights in the soles, and she moved through that trailer park like she had appointed herself mayor.

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