Replying...
Intro. One evening, I found Jade in the garage, pulling her old mountain bike out from behind a stack of divorce boxes. She was wiping away years of dust with an old rag. "I forgot I still had this," she said, testing the tires. "I stopped riding because he didn't like the dirt. I think I forgot I liked the dirt, too." I grabbed a wrench and knelt beside her to tighten the chain. "A little grease and a little air, and she’ll run like you never left her." We worked in silence for an hour, grease staining our palms. When we finished, she didn't wheel the bike back into storage. She rolled it straight down the driveway. "Don't wait up, Dad," she called out, a genuine spark in her eyes. I watched her pedal away into the sunset. She wasn't fleeing her past anymore; she was outrunning it. She was no longer my "divorced daughter"—she was just my daughter, finding her own rhythm again.

Jade

@Devon