This is the final post in the "Touring Series" Thank you for following along! Next week I'll pick up with new entries which will fill in the time between this tour and the first Trans Iowa. Look for an outline of what to expect next week.
This entry isn't really part of the "Race Against Death Tour" proper, but since it is having to do with that tour, and since a significant event happened along with it, I have always thought of this event as the "period' at the end of the story of this Tour. With that, I hope that you enjoy this entry and will stick around for the next series. Thanks! Now, on with the last chapter.......
With the "Race Against Death Tour" over and done with, a few days
after arriving at home a party was thrown in honor of the three
travelers at the home of their boss from the bike shop.....
______________________________________________________________________________
August 19th, 1995:
With the tour behind us we went back to our "regular" lives at the bike
shop. It was still pretty busy, being August and all. I slipped
right back into the regular routine. Saturday after work was going to be
a big party at Tom's house for our return home. More of an excuse for a
party, rather than a real reason, but what the heck, ya know?
So
I decided to ride my bike over since I planned on having a few beers
and escaping the notice of "The Law" on my bicycle after being "under
the influence" was easier on two wheels under my own power. So it was
that I pedaled over and found the party just beginning. It was just like
any other gathering for me. I never was too adept at being "in the
flow" of a party with a bunch of people, and this time was no different. Troy and Ryan were there, of course, but I didn't really connect with them. I sat around, made a few comments, and had my fair share of beer. Later
in the evening, I decided to bug out. I wasn't really feeling it.
And
to be honest, it was an anti-climatic deal anyway. I was done with the
most exciting thing I had ever done on a bicycle with no prospects of
anything around the corner, an empty house, and no one to share my
experiences with. WooHoo! Yeah.....big deal and all. So I turned the ol' Mongoose towards home and waved goodbye.
Now
in those days, I didn't ride much with a light. I usually went at a
fairly easy pace in the dark and just took it easy. We had bike paths,
so staying out of harms way was easy to figure out. Back streets and
bike paths all the way home, and I'd be in the sack trying to forget
about all of this. Or so I thought. Turned out that this last hurrah for
the tour had a pretty weird punctuation mark!
My plan was to hit
the main bike path through George Wyth State Park, link up to the East
Lake Trail, which would dump me out near the San Souci bridge. Then some
industrial area back streets would guide me to my neighborhood and
home. About a ten mile ride in all. It started out just grand. No wind,
coolish temperatures, and plenty of street lights to guide me on the way
into Geo. Wyth. That's where the speeds were dropped down really low.
Darkness in that canopied trail was thick and it was hard to see. That
being gotten through, I figured it was a no-brainer now the rest of the
way in. That is until I got to the start of the Sans Souci bridge.
I
heard crying. Crying like a young ladies cry, and it was saying,
"Please help me!" between heavy sobs. I stopped to make sure I was
hearing this for real. Yep! No doubt about it, and I could tell it was
coming from the direction of the grassy sided dike that lined the river
here. I dismounted my bike in search of the source of this crying. Well,
it didn't take long to find it. A young woman laying in the grass. She
looked to be a teenager. Maybe in her very early 20's at best. I told
her I wasn't going to hurt her as she shrank away from me at first. I
said I only wanted to know if she needed help. She sat up and said yes,
she did need help. She had been pushed out of her boyfriend's car and
had no way home. I said, "Pushed out of a car! Are you okay?!" She said she didn't know.
I
asked her to stand up if she could, and she did with little effort.
Well, at least she was moving all right, and I couldn't see any outward
signs of trauma. I began to suspect her of lying about the car deal. She
seemed really out of sorts too. Maybe high on something. Who knows in
this town! Well, things seemed odd, at best, but I figured I could at
least get her home. I mean, after the last week plus of weirdness, this wasn't too far out of the ordinary for me. She steadied herself on my arm as I pushed my
bicycle with the other, and we started out down the side walk.
I
asked her again about the car, since it seemed rather incredible that
she could have been dumped out of a moving car without injury. Well, it
seemed the car had been at a stop when she was shoved out. Okay.......maybe she's legit, I am thinking now. Well, apparently she had broke the news that she was pregnant. Okay......now I'm upset and concerned!
I
felt really bad for this gal now and was determined to see her get
home. I kept telling her it would be okay- we'd get there- don't worry
about me. At one point she tugged me to a stop and asked, "Are you an angel?"
Hmmm.....I shrugged that off. I was taken aback. Surely this was the
oddest thing anybody had ever said to me. I just wanted to keep moving,
but I felt an odd feeling inside me when she asked that question. Then,
in an instant, all hell broke loose.
Red lights were flashing all around us. An intercom voice said, "Put your hands where we can see them and move away from each other! Slowly!"
A blinding light was in our eyes. It was two squad cars and I could see
men moving cautiously towards us. Well, I was confused! What the........... And then I was answering questions. "No sir, I don't know her name. No, I have no idea why she was there. I was just trying to help her."
Meanwhile, I could hear her upset pleas to not bother me. That I had
nothing to do with the deal. I told the cop my story, and then he asked
that I just stay put for a bit while they pieced the story together from
the young women's side. I agreed to stand still and wait.
Maybe
it was ten minutes, I don't know, but it seemed like an hour. What would happen now? Would I be arrested? Would I be taken in? I stood
there and then after that excruciatingly long wait, a cop ambled back
towards me. He said, "Well, it's obvious to us you had nothing to do
with her and what happened to her, so we're going to let you go. But, I
suggest you head straight home!" he stated firmly. I said, "Don't worry about that, Sir!" And with that, I mounted up. As I pedaled away, I heard the young lady say thanks. I waved goodbye.
As
I started across the street to hit the last couple of miles to the
house I was freaked, amazed, happy, and wired all at once. I swore I
would get home as fast as I could. I didn't want anymore weirdness on
this night, as I figured I had burned through all my "good luck cards"
already. I passed through quiet city streets quickly, reached
my house, and hit my bed still breathing hard. I was at home.
It was all over. Some welcome home!
______________________________________________________________________________
Yes.......that happened. I never really found out what happened to the young lady. We watched the newspaper at work for any news, and we only discovered a report a few days later, basically telling us what I already knew. The young man who pushed her out of the car was being sought by the police, and there was no further update. Curiously, it was reported that the police were summoned because the young lady, desperate as she was, had been knocking on doors, crying for help. Apparently the residents were scared and reported her to the authorities. She, having no further recourse, threw herself into the grass, having given up on finding anyone to help her, and that is where I found her. That was the end of her story as far as I ever knew it.
But it wasn't the end of my story. Next week I will lay the outline out for the next series- "The Story Of Guitar Ted". This will be about bicycles.......kind of. It will be about my background. It will be personal at times. It will fill in a lot of gaps about my past that many of you are not aware of. It will, maybe, help you see why I did things the way I have done them in the recent past. I hope you will join me on the journey of a different kind.
I really enjoyed reading this touring series, GT. Each week, I would find myself waiting for the next installment to the story. Really good adventure write-up, and thank you for sharing!
ReplyDelete@Okie Outdoorsman- Thank you!!
ReplyDeleteyes, thank you!
ReplyDeleteI agree! It feels as if we've all been riding along with you. The one episode a week pacing is perfect.
ReplyDelete