A Little Girl Defended Her Biker Dad. Then Career Day Changed Everything-Quieen - Chainityai

A Little Girl Defended Her Biker Dad. Then Career Day Changed Everything-Quieen

My six-year-old daughter, Ivy, did not understand b-roll, chyrons, producer rundowns, or why adults on television can say a thing in one tone and make it sound like a verdict.

She understood her father.

That was the problem.

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At 6:15 on a Tuesday morning in February of 2023, she was sitting cross-legged on our living room rug in pink pajamas with a bowl of Cheerios in her lap.

The house still had that early-morning chill that creeps under the front door before the heat catches up.

My coffee smelled burnt because I had made it too strong, and the TV was low enough that the words came through like someone talking from another room.

Ivy liked the Channel 9 weather lady.

Cheryl waved at kids after her Tuesday and Thursday segments, and Ivy waved back every time like Cheryl could see her.

So when the news changed from weather to a story about a federal investigation, Ivy did not look away.

She was waiting for the next friendly thing.

Instead, Bryce Halloran looked into the camera with blond hair, a blue tie, and the calm confidence of a man reading words somebody else had put in front of him.

He said authorities were investigating dangerous criminal motorcycle organizations operating across central Iowa.

Then the footage behind him changed.

For fourteen seconds, the station played video from a children’s hospital charity ride that Rex’s motorcycle club had done three Augusts before.

I knew that ride.

I had packed bottled water in a cooler the night before because Rex forgot everything except tools and road gloves.

I had watched forty-six Harleys roll out from a parking lot while nurses stood near the curb taking pictures.

Rex was wingman in the second row.

He had come home sunburned and happy and left his boots by the back door.

None of that was on the screen.

What was on the screen was my husband’s face under a chyron that made him look like evidence.

Rex was thirty-eight then.

He had worked at the same transmission shop off I-80 for fourteen years.

He left before dawn, came home smelling like oil and cold metal, and still had the patience to let Ivy climb into his lap with a hairbrush and demand two perfect braids.

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