By Michelle Webster-Hein
After work I fetched my bicycle from the shop where they had tuned it up–wrapped my Ram’s Horn handlebars with fresh tape, tightened the brakes, flossed the cassette until it sparkled. In truth, it is my mother’s bike–her first bike–a now-vintage twelve-speed Schwinn.
We have spent a good bit of time together, this bike and I, mainly summer mornings and Saturday afternoons, the occasional evening whipping down a sidewalk in the dark. But there is something magical about the first ride of spring, when the wind burns your throat and chaps your hands and stings your eyes but you pump pump pump regardless until you are whirring so fast you are equal parts thrilled and afraid.
Michelle Webster-Hein writes and teaches in Ypsilanti, Michigan, where she lives with her husband and daughter. You can find her work (now or soon) in upstreet, Midwestern Gothic, Ruminate Magazine and Perigee, among other places. She holds an MFA from Vermont College of Fine Arts. Work by Michelle Webster-Hein has been included in Issue 15.1. She is co-editor of River Teeth‘s Beautiful Things weekly column.
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