A Thug Put His Foot On Chuck & Bruce Lee’s hamburger plate — he didn’t know who he was messing with. DD
A thug crushed Bruce Lee’s burger under his boot in front of Chuck Norris, then raised a chair to strike. In that instant, the whole bar realized they had picked the wrong two men to mess with that night. The two of them hadn’t shared a mat in years. Chuck Norris and Bruce Lee, household names, action stars who’d filled theaters and turned heads for decades, had both been swallowed up by their own worlds.
movies, training camps, endorsements, family, [music] the endless grind of staying on top, schedules that didn’t line up, phone [music] calls that got shorter. It had been too long since they’d actually thrown kicks and blocks [music] at each other just for the hell of it. That afternoon, though, the old gym behind Chuck’s house finally saw them face off again.
Bruce showed up first, quiet as ever, already warming up with slow, perfect forms. Chuck walked in grinning, towel over his shoulder, and didn’t waste time. “Well, look who decided to crawl out of his mansion,” Chuck said, [music] voice carrying that big Texas draw. “Thought Hollywood finally turned you into one of those guys who only trains with mirrors.

Bruce didn’t miss a beat,” shifting into a side stance. And I thought Texas finally taught you how to shut up before you throw a punch. They laughed short, real laughs, and got [music] to it. No cameras, no crowds, just the two of them moving like they used to. By the end, they were breathing hard, shirts soaked, but both of them wore the same loose [music] smile.
It felt good, better than good, like something missing had clicked back into place. Chuck wiped his face with the towel. “Come on, my spot down the road. Beer, wings, no rush. We’re not signing autographs tonight.” [music] Bruce raised an eyebrow. You sure? Last time we went out, somebody wanted a picture every 5 minutes.
[music] That’s why we’re going to my bar, Chuck said, clapping him on the back. Place is full of regulars who mind their own business. Besides, you’re the big Hollywood star now. I’m just the guy who used to beat you at arm wrestling. Bruce shook his head, small grin tugging at his mouth. You never [music] beat me at arm wrestling.

details,” Chuck said, already heading for the truck. The bar sat tucked off the main drag low roof, gravel [music] lot, neon beer signs flickering in the windows. Chuck parked, led the way inside like he owned the place. Rey, the bartender, spotted him right away. “Chuck!” Tables open and holy hell, is that Bruce Lee? A couple heads turned at [music] the bar, eyes widened.
A guy in a flannel shirt paused [music] midsip. Stared. Another regular nudged his buddy, whispered something. Bruce felt the shift in the room. The quick ripple of recognition. He’d Chuck waved it off. Big easy grin. [music] Yeah. Yeah, it’s him. But don’t start. [music] No autographs tonight, folks. He’s off the clock.
Bruce slid into the booth across from him, shaking his head. You didn’t have to announce it. [music] What? They’re going to notice anyway. Might as well get it out of the way. [music] Chuck leaned in, lowered his voice just enough for Bruce to hear. Besides, you’re the Hollywood golden boy. Me? I’m just happy they still let me in here.

But don’t worry, this place [music] is tight. Nobody’s going to make a scene or start snapping pictures. We’re good. Bruce glanced around. The bar was what Chuck had promised. Worn wood, soft yellow light, low hum of conversation, a few older guys at the rail, a couple playing pool in the back.
[music] Nobody rushed over. Nobody pulled out a phone, just curious looks. Then back to their drinks. It felt [music] safe. They ordered two beers, basket of wings, and settled in. Chuck raised his glass. Tonight’s we actually get to [music] steal back. Bruce tapped his bottle against it. Two that for a while it was easy.
They talked about the old days, new fighters coming up, [music] how the business had changed. Bruce said less than Chuck, but every word carried weight. Chuck laughed at the right spots, nodded, [music] threw in a few more jabs about Bruce being too philosophical for a bar stool. Bruce just smiled. [music] Let it roll off.

Then the three guys at the far end of the bar started looking over. At first it was nothing, [music] just glances that lingered. One of them, thick through the shoulders. Cap pulled low, muttered to his friends. They chuckled. The sound [music] carried low but sharp. Chuck caught it. Kept talking [music] like he hadn’t.
Bruce kept his eyes on the table. Calm. The mutters [music] grew. Words floated across. Look at that. Who let him in? doesn’t belong. Then the big one turned on his stool, voice louder now. Meant to carry. [music] Hey, kung fu boy. You lost? This ain’t no dojo. His buddies laughed, slapping the bar.
Chuck’s hand tightened on his bottle. The big guy leaned in even closer now, [music] breath sour with beer, his voice dropping to a mean draw that carried anyway. Go on, [ __ ] [music] Say something or you too busy eating rice and Bowen to talk. His buddies howled at that one. One of them slapping the bar hard enough to rattle glasses.
Yeah, [ __ ] Go back to your laundry or whatever the hell you do. This here’s American territory. The words landed heavy, deliberate. They didn’t know who Bruce was. No flash of recognition, no starruck paws. To them, he was just some Asian guy in the wrong bar. easy pickings. The slur hung in the air like smoke, thick and ugly.
A couple regulars shifted on their stools, but kept quiet, eyes down. The jukebox [music] kept playing low, but nobody moved to change it. Chuck felt every muscle lock up. His bottle was white knuckled in his grip, the glass creaking under his fingers. He’d taken plenty of hits in his life, bar fights, movie sets, real scraps, [music] but this cut different. It wasn’t just words.
It was aimed at Bruce, the man he’d trained [music] with, laughed with, respected more than almost anybody. The heat in his chest boiled over into something sharper, colder. He started to rise again, slow [music] this time. Chair scraping back louder. Bruce’s hand stayed on his wrist, firmer now, not stopping him cold, but holding the line.
Bruce spoke low, only for him. Let it go. They’re not worth the night. Chuck exhaled hard through his nose sat back [music] down. His eyes stayed on the three. Muscles in his forearms stood out. He wasn’t agreeing he was holding for Bruce, but the anger sat there heavy [music] and waiting.
The big guy saw the lack of reaction and took it as weakness. [music] He slid off the stool, beer in hand, started walking over slow. [music] His friends watched, grinning wide. He stopped at the edge of their booth, leaning in too close. [music] What’s the matter, China? Cat got your tongue. Or you just here to look pretty for your boyfriend. [music] The bar went still.
A few heads turned, then looked away fast. [music] The air felt thicker. Pressed down. Chuck’s chair creaked. [music] His pulse thumped loud in his ears. Bruce lifted his eyes slow, [music] level, no anger showing. The guy waited, smirk growing. He thought he’d won already. Bruce let the silence sit there between them, not because he had nothing to say, but because he understood the kind of man standing over him.
[music] Men like that fed on reaction. They wanted a flinch, a curse, a shove, any sign that they had gotten inside somebody’s head. Bruce gave him none of it. He kept one hand near his glass, the other resting easy on the table. And when he finally spoke, his voice was low enough that the man had to lean in a little more to hear it.
[music] “You’ve said your peace,” Bruce said. “Now go enjoy your drink.” The words were plain, but that plainess did something worse to the man than anger would have done. [music] It made him look small. He had come over to perform, to turn the room into his stage, and Bruce into his target. And Bruce had answered him the way a grown man answers a rude stranger in a grocery line.
No fear, no heat, no importance. A laugh came from the bar behind him, mean and sharp. Another of the men called out, “You going to let him talk to you like that, [music] Denny?” So that was his name. Denny turned his head just enough to flash a grin at his friends, [music] though it did not sit on him as easy now.
He had expected the table to belong to him by this point. Instead, [music] he was standing there with a drink in his hand, trying to make a quiet man look weak [music] and somehow coming off weaker himself. At the far end of the bar, an older man in a denim jacket set his beer down and cleared [music] his throat. He did not stand, but he spoke loud enough to reach the booth.
Denny, he said, leave it alone. You don’t know who you’re pushing. A few eyes lifted. Denny glanced over and his face hardened with the sort of offended pride that shows up fast in [music] men who can dish out disrespect but cannot take even a little correction. Mind your own business, Walter. Walter did not back off.
He looked from Denny to Chuck, then to Bruce, and his mouth tightened in a way that suggested he knew more than he intended to say. I am minding my business. [music] I’m also telling you that you’re making a mistake. The worst thing a fool can be given is a chance to save [music] face, because sometimes he would rather lose everything than take it.
Denny snorted, then leaned in even closer, bringing [music] the stink of whiskey with him. What mistake? He said that I’m talking to some little foreign hot shot and his cowboy pal. I [music] don’t see a mistake. I see a joke. Chuck’s chair gave another hard creek beneath him. Denny saw the exchange and [music] misunderstood that, too.
He mistook Bruce’s control for weakness and Chuck’s restraint for fear. And once a man tells himself a lie that flatters [music] him, he will usually keep building on it until the ground gives way under him. He lifted his glass, took a slow swallow, then set it down on the edge of their table without [music] asking.
What’s the matter? He said, looking right at Bruce now. [music] You don’t understand plain English, or you two proud to answer. [music] Behind him, one of his friends laughed louder than the joke deserved. Another started making a mock version of Bruce’s speech, stretching syllables, clipping words, turning a real man into a cheap act for the room.
The sound of it moved through the bar like something rotten. A woman near the wall lowered her eyes to her drink. The server at the end of the aisle stopped with a tray in her hands [music] and then quietly turned away. Bruce reached for his own glass and took a measured sip. Chuck could feel that change. He knew Bruce was not ignoring the insult.
He was choosing not to answer it on Denny’s terms. That choice only made Denny uglier. He planted one hand on the table and bent closer, crowding Bruce’s space on purpose now, using his body the way lesser men often do when words stop giving them what they want. Maybe you need help, he said. Maybe your friend here translates for you.
Chuck raised his eyes to him, [music] and the look in them had gone flat and cold. “Back away from the table,” he said. Now [music] there was no bark in it, no wild temper, and that made it stronger. It sounded like a man giving somebody one last clean chance before the road ended. Denny heard it, but the warning bounced off the thick shell of his own arrogance.
[music] He gave Chuck a sideways glance and grinned like he’d been handed proof of something. “There it is,” he said. [music] “Thought so.” Big man does the talking. Two of the others left the bar then and came closer, drawn by the smell of escalation. One dragged a chair across the floor and turned [music] it backward before sitting down near the booth as if he had been invited into the conversation.
Chuck drew a long breath through his nose. He stayed seated, though the effort of it was beginning to show. His chest [music] rose heavier now. The muscle in his jaw jumped once. His [music] eyes tracked every movement around the booth. Counting bodies, [music] distance, angle, hands. Denny noticed the hand on Chuck’s wrist and laughed.
[music] What? He got to calm you down, too? He looked at Bruce again, his face bright with that ugly pleasure cruel men get when they think they have found the exact place to stick the knife. Man, I’ve seen tougher guys in the back of a takeout line. Walter spoke up again from the bar, [music] and this time his voice was harder.
Denny, I’m telling you plain. Sit down [music] and shut up. Denny swung toward him, already irritated by being checked twice. You keep talking like they’re somebody special. Walter held his gaze. No, I’m talking like you’re too [music] dumb to see what’s in front of you. A few seconds passed. That should [music] have cooled it if Pride had not already taken full control.
Instead, the words seemed to shame Denny in front of his friends, [music] and shame in men like him usually comes out as meanness. His face changed first. [music] The grin stayed there, but it turned hard around the edges, like something nailed in place instead of felt. He looked [music] back at Bruce, then at Chuck, and whatever little caution Walter’s warning might have stirred in him got buried under the need to prove he was still the biggest man in the room.
Walter did not answer again. He only looked at Denny the way a man looks at somebody already halfway over a cliff. The room felt that look, but Denny did not. Or maybe he did and hated it so much he had to push harder. Bruce’s plate sat between him and the table edge, mostly untouched now. Denny’s eyes dropped to it. [music] Something bright and nasty came into his face, the kind of thought a decent man would feel ashamed even to have.
He let one hand rest on the booth, shifted his weight, then sneered down at the food. “Well,” he said. “If he ain’t talking, maybe he can eat.” [music] Before anyone at the table could move, Denny drove the side of his boot into the lower edge of the booth and caught the table hard enough to jolt it.
The plate jumped, then slid, then [music] flipped. Food hit the table, the seat, and the floor in a wet mess. A glass tipped and rolled. [music] A fork clattered across the wood and dropped into the aisle. The whole bar went dead [music] still. Then he laughed. Chuck stood up so fast the booth shuddered behind him.
Bruce stood a half beat later. Denny saw both men standing and still [music] chose arrogance. That was how far gone he was by then. He looked from Chuck to Bruce and mistook the last of Bruce’s silence for surrender. He mistook Chuck’s fury for bluster. He had spent too long being the kind of man people stepped away from.
And that kind of history will lie to a fool right up until it gets him hurt. “What now?” Denny said, spreading his hands. “You going to do something about it?” Bruce said nothing. That made Denny boulder. He stepped in again, close enough now that the front of his shirt almost brushed Bruce’s chest, and raised one hand as if to shove him backward, as if [music] the whole point of the night had been to make Bruce accept physically and publicly a lower place in the room.
That was the last clean second [music] he got. The moment Denny’s arm came forward, Bruce moved. There was nothing wild in it, and nothing extra. One instant he was standing still and the next his hand [music] had cut across the line of Denny’s shove, turning it off course while his other hand caught and checked the man’s [music] balance.
It happened so fast Denny did not even look frightened at first. He looked confused. His own momentum carried him wrong. His feet lost the shape they needed, and the body he trusted to [music] bully people through a room suddenly stopped obeying him the way he expected. Denny crashed shoulder first into the end of the booth, knocking the breath out of himself and slamming his glass to the floor where it burst underfoot.
That break in the sound set the room off. The first man came off the divider fast, not [music] thinking anymore, just charging on anger and habit, the way men do when they have spent too many years mistaking bullying for strength. Chuck met him halfway, not [music] with panic, not with wasted motion, but with the kind of force that looked simple until it landed.
His fist drove into the man’s midsection so hard the man folded at once, all the air leaving him in one broken grunt, and before he could even understand what had happened, Chuck shoved him sideways with both hands and sent him crashing across a nearby table. Glass jumped, chairs screeched. A woman near the wall cried out and stumbled backward, one hand over her mouth.
The second one was already moving. He came from Bruce’s blind side, too eager to wait, reaching in with both hands as if he could just grab hold and drag Bruce down into a brawl. [music] Bruce turned before the grip could settle. One short strike cut the rush off at its center. A fast check at the arm broke the grab before it became control.
And then a clean step to the outside [music] put Bruce where the man no longer expected him to be. The attacker lurched past, wrong-footed and offbalance, and Bruce redirected him just enough that he slammed shoulder first into the same friend Chuck had sent flying. [music] The two of them tangled together in a burst of cursing and flailing limbs.
[music] Denny came back into it with a raw sound in his throat. No swagger left now. No grin, no little show for the room. Being thrown off, being made to look foolish in front of strangers. Had turned his pride into something uglier. [music] He charged Bruce wide and heavy, throwing a looping shot that belonged more to bar fights than fighting.
Bruce slipped inside it, [music] close enough to take away its force, and answered with one sharp strike that snapped Denny’s [music] head to the side. Before Denny could recover, Bruce hooked his leg, turned his weight against him, and dumped him hard into the side of the booth again. Silverware rattled.
[music] The table jumped. Denny hit wood and vinyl with a heavy thud that made the whole row shake. For one tight [music] second, it looked like the lesson had been delivered. It should have ended there. Any man with sense would have felt the ground changing under him by then. Any man with a shred of survival in him would have seen that these were not scared customers, not [music] easy victims, not men who had been enduring in silence because they were weak, but sense was in short supply that night.
And the kind of men who build themselves out of cheap [music] cruelty, do not let go quickly once the room stops being afraid of them. The one [music] Chuck had driven into the table staggered back up with murder in his face and blood on his lip. Another one, the thick-sh shouldered one, who had been hanging near the bar with a bottle in hand, came in at the same time.
And now they [music] were not trying to posture anymore. They were trying to swarm. Chuck saw it first and shifted left, cutting one man off before he could get near Bruce. The attacker swung low and wild. Chuck absorbed the line of it on his frame, then answered with brutal economy, a forearm that checked the next rush, and a short shot to the ribs that bent the man sideways.
Chuck did not chase him. He simply stayed in front of him, drove him back another step and hit him again with enough force to strip the fight out of his posture. The man stumbled into a chair, knocked it over, and went down one knee first, coughing and trying to drag air back into his lungs. At the same [music] time, Bruce had the other one in front of him and Denny trying to rise behind him.
That was where the tension in the room turned vicious. Bruce moved in small lines, not large ones. He did not brawl. He cut angles. Every time one of them thought they had him lined up, he shifted half a step, and the opening was gone. The thick one lunged with a clumsy [music] grab, and Bruce struck the arm, turned the shoulder, and sent him stumbling across the aisle.
Denny [music] pushed up from the booth with a curse and came in again, slower now, but meaner, reaching [music] instead of swinging, trying to drag Bruce close enough to dirty the fight. Bruce checked him with a fast strike to the body, then another to the jaw, each one short, clean, and hard enough to stop the next thought before it formed.
But the men were no longer attacking one at a time. They came in overlapping now. One from the side, one from the front, one trying to circle behind. And for a few hot seconds, the bar became all scrape and impact and broken rhythm. [music] Boots slid through spilled drink. Somebody shouted for them to stop. [music] Nobody did. The room had gone beyond words.
Then the worst move of the night happened. The thick one staggered backward, hit [music] an empty chair, and instead of falling over it, he grabbed it by the back rest with both hands. Something changed in [music] his face when he lifted it. It was no longer barroom anger. It was the blunt, ugly intention to [ __ ] somebody.
[music] He raised the chair high, stepping in behind Bruce, while Denny kept Bruce’s attention in front, and the whole thing clicked into place at once, [music] like a trap meant to end in blood. Walter half rose from his stool. The waitress screamed. [music] Chuck turned and saw the chair coming down. Bruce.
Bruce had already sensed the shift and started to pivot. But the blow was coming fast and from too close. Chuck covered the distance [music] on instinct. He drove off his back foot and whipped a kick into the chair just [music] as it dropped toward Bruce’s head. The impact sounded like a gunshot in the bar. Wood burst apart in midair.
One leg snapped free and spun across the room. The seat split down the middle. Jagged [music] pieces flew sideways, skidding over the floor and slamming into table legs. The man holding it lost his grip at once and cried out, not from bravery broken, but from pure shock as the shattered frame recoiled through his hands and tore his balance out from under him.
For one frozen second, every soul in the bar stared at the wreckage hanging in the air and raining down around them. Then Chuck stepped through the falling splinters like he had been waiting all night for somebody to make exactly that mistake. For a few seconds, no one moved. Chuck stayed where he was, broad and square between the men and Bruce.
Not chasing, not speaking, just making it plain with his body that the road had run out. Bruce angled himself enough to keep all three men in view, calm as ever, though the calm looked different now. Earlier it had been patience. Now it was consequence. Walter slowly rose from his stool.
He picked up his beer, set it down again, then looked at Denny with the dry disgust. [music] I told you, he said. Picking a fight with two of the toughest men in Hollywood was never a good idea. Denny turned toward him and for [music] a second it looked like he might spit back one more insult on reflex alone, but the [music] words never came.
His eyes flicked from Walter to Chuck, then to Bruce, [music] and something ugly and stubborn in him finally gave way to recognition. The shame of it hit harder than any of the blows had. A few minutes earlier, Denny and his friends had owned the room through fear, or thought they did. They had picked a fight with Bruce Lee and Chuck Norris after humiliating one of them in public like [music] gutter trash.
There was no saving face from that. Denny bent to grab the back of a chair for balance, thought better of it when he saw Chuck’s eyes [music] on him, and straightened carefully instead. His nose was bleeding. One cheek [music] had begun to swell. His breath came shallow, and not because of pain alone. He was scared now.
And worse [music] than that, he knew other people could see it. Nobody in the bar laughed. That made it worse. Bruce said nothing. He backed up one step, then [music] another. Bruce did not move toward him. Chuck did not either. That was the final humiliation. They were [music] not being driven out. They were being allowed to leave. Denny’s friend muttered.
Let’s go. with none of the toughness he had worn earlier. The other one grabbed his jacket off the floor, nearly [music] dropped it, then caught it against his chest like a man trying to carry what little pride he [music] had left. Denny was the last to turn, and when he did, he did it [music] fast, as if walking out too slowly might invite the room to remember his face forever.
They made for the door in a ragged cluster, each of them holding some part of himself as he moved, one arm tight to the ribs, [music] one hand to the jaw, one shoulder rolled strange from hitting the booth, their boots crossed through spilled drink, broken [music] glass, and chair splinters. The wreckage of the scene they had started and lost.
The whole bar watched them go in dead silence. And in that silence, there was something harsher than cheering would have [music] been. It was the silence of witnesses who had already judged them and found nothing worth saying. When the door finally opened and the cold night air spilled in, Denny glanced back once, but Bruce just held his gaze without hate and without fear, and that stripped the moment bare.
Denny turned away first and limped out with the others, the door shut behind them. For one [music] breath, the whole place stayed still. Then the bar erupted in applause. Walter clapped first, [music] then the owner, then the men near the front, then the woman by the wall who had covered her mouth earlier, and after that the whole room gave itself over to it, [music] not because they enjoyed the violence, and not because they had suddenly become a cheering crowd, but because fear had held them all evening and then broken.
They were clapping for the end of that. Chuck let [music] out a breath through his nose and looked halfway embarrassed by it, though the tightness in his shoulders had not fully left yet. Bruce dipped his head once, small and polite, as if accepting nothing more than the room’s relief.
The applause faded almost as quickly as it came, that more than anything [music] gave the bar back its shape. The owner started directing two men to help move the broken table aside. The waitress, still shaky, bent to gather what glass she safely could. [music] Somebody set a chair upright. Somebody else returned a fallen napkin holder to the bar.
Ordinary sounds came back in pieces. A cough, the scrape of [music] wood, the low murmur of voices finding their way again. Within a minute or two, the place had begun that quiet American habit of returning to normal after something ugly. Not [music] because it had been forgotten, but because people had decided life had to keep moving.
Chuck looked at [music] the mess around the booth, then at Bruce. Well, he said, “That got out of hand. Bruce’s mouth moved first. Not quite a smile, but close. It did.” They sat back down. Then the owner came over, still looking half stunned and half grateful, [music] and told them their drinks were on the house. Chuck thanked him.
Bruce nodded. The waitress replaced the ruined plate without being asked, though Bruce only waved it off after a moment. [music] He was not interested in food anymore. Chuck lifted his [music] glass, found it empty, and set it down again with a tired little laugh. For a while, they just sat there, letting the room settle around them.
The bar had mostly returned to itself. People were talking again, [music] though now and then someone looked over, not staring exactly, [music] but carrying that look people wear when they know they have just seen something. They will tell again later. Walter raised his beer in their direction. Chuck raised two fingers back.
Then Chuck turned toward Bruce and the humor left his face just enough for something more honest to show through. “Tell me something,” he said. “Why [music] didn’t you react sooner?” Bruce leaned back a little and looked at the tabletop where the wet ring from Denny’s glass still marked the wood. His voice when it came was quiet and [music] even.
Because violence has never been the best answer, he said. Most times once you choose it, [music] you lose something. Even if you win, Chuck nodded once, though not all the way convinced. And tonight, Bruce glanced at him. This time the smile came clearer. tonight,” he said. “It may have been necessary.” Chuck [music] barked out a laugh at that, the first easy one since the fight began.
That may be the most polite way anybody’s ever said. “Those idiots [music] had it coming.” Bruce gave him a look that held just enough dry amusement to answer without words. Chuck shook his head. [music] I still say I should have stood up sooner and missed the part where you saved me from getting a chair broken over my head. Bruce asked.
That pulled a real grin out of Chuck. You saw that? I heard the chair, Bruce said. Hard not to. Chuck leaned back, finally looking like the tension had let go of him for real. You’re welcome. By the way, Bruce nodded once, solemn on purpose. I’ll remember [music] it if I ever need furniture protection again. Chuck laughed harder at that, and Bruce did too.
[music] just a little enough to let the night move away from its worst point. There was no boasting in it, no replaying the fight to puff themselves [music] up. Just two men, tired now, letting humor do what it sometimes [music] can after ugly things have passed through a room and left their mark behind. Outside, [music] the night went on like nothing had happened.
Inside, the bar found its rhythm again. Drinks were poured. Voices rose and fell. Someone fed coins into the jukebox. A fresh rag wiped down the [music] counter. Yet the room was not quite the same as before. It carried a new memory in it, [music] one that would stay long after the broken chair had been swept up and the spilled liquor dried.
[music] And at the center of that memory would remain two men. One who had endured insult without surrendering his dignity and one who had held his anger in check until protecting his friend required more than restraint. [music] People would remember the fight. Sure. But the part that would last longer was the thing that came before it.
The patience, the warning, the chance given and wasted, and the plain truth that some men mistake decency for weakness. Right up until the moment they are forced to learn the
