I sold the bike two weeks after the funeral. Couldn’t bear to see it—every curve reminded me of Mia: her laugh, her arms around me, that ridiculous pink helmet. Riding had been our escape, our therapy. But after the accident, I parked it for good. I had two kids now. I couldn’t risk it.
Letting go of the Harley felt like part of moving on. At least, that’s what I told myself. But grief doesn’t let go that easily. My son Jace once whispered to the bike like it could hear him. My daughter Lila stopped drawing when it disappeared. It wasn’t just a machine—it was part of who we were.
So when they burst through the door shouting, “Dad! There’s a man on your bike!”—my heart jumped. Out on the street, someone was riding it, flames on the tank gleaming just like I’d painted them.
The next morning, that rider—Rick—showed up. He said my kids had told him about me. He handed me a flyer: The Iron Circle Riders. “We ride together. No one rides alone.”
Rick offered to sell me the bike back—for the same price—but only if I joined them for one ride.
That Sunday, I rode again. Forty miles of backroads, wind in my face, Mia in my thoughts. A woman named Tasha listened as I told her about Mia. “She’d be proud,” she said.
When Rick gave me the key, I didn’t hesitate. I wanted it.
And when we rode that night, with my kids holding on tight, I realized: I never had to ride alone.