Jay Austin and Lauren Geoghegan were 29 when they left Washington, D.C. on bicycles. No security. No sponsors. Just a blog called Simply Cycling and a belief Jay put into words: “By and large, humans are kind.”
Jay Austin and Lauren Geoghegan were 29 when they left Washington, D.C. on bicycles. No security. No sponsors. Just a blog called Simply Cycling and a belief Jay put into words: “By and large, humans are kind.” For over a year, that belief held. Strangers fed them. Doors opened. Borders softened. Then came July 29, 2018. A quiet road in Danghara, Tajikistan.A car swerved—on purpose. The cyclists were hit. Then stabbed. Jay and Lauren were killed, along with two other riders from Switzerland and the Netherlands. ISIS later claimed responsibility. Authorities confirmed it was deliberate. What makes this story endure isn’t just the violence. It’s the collision. Two people who trusted the world met its worst edge. Their journey didn’t fail. The world did—briefly. Their words still travel farther than the car ever did. Their deaths forced an uncomfortable question onto the rest of us: What does it mean to believe in kindness when proof of...