Astronaut Mark Kelly says the condition of his wife, Rep....

Astronaut Mark Kelly says the condition of his wife, Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, has improved so much that she has been able to smile and give him a neck rub as he has kept a near-constant vigil at her hospital bedside. Credit: AP

An Arizona sheriff’s official says surveillance video shows 22-year-old Jared Loughner shooting a congresswoman in the face.

Pima County Sheriff’s Chief Rick Kastigar says Loughner then fires indiscriminately at a group of people sitting in chairs. He then shoots Ron Barber, and U.S. District Judge John Roll gets on top of Barber in an apparent effort to shield him.

Roll was shot in the back and died from his injuries, along with five others. Barber, an aide to Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, was shot in the leg and in the face and neck area and survived. Giffords is hospitalized.

Giffords was critically injured in a massacre that killed six people and wounded 12 others outside a Safeway in Tucson. The gunman had been bent on targeting her since meeting her at similar event in 2007, authorities said.

The shooting rocked Tucson and the nation, resulting in an outpouring of support for Giffords and the other victims that has taken the form of thousands of candles, cards, balloons and bouquets across the southern Arizona desert city. But for one  segment of the community, pedaling their bicycles in honor of the victims has been the start of their healing process.

Word that Giffords loved to ride her custom-made bike up and down Tucson’s bike boulevards and trails spread like wildfire across cycling blogs and through Facebook and Twitter posts.

While many people had never met Giffords, much less went on a ride with her, she’s considered part of a loose-knit group that ranges from die-hard racers clad in spandex to weekend warriors and commuters who push the pedals to get to work.

For the past two Tuesdays, cyclists have shown up en masse outside the hospital where she remained in serious condition, along with hundreds of other supporters.

The 2-mile vigil ride from the University of Arizona campus takes less than 15 minutes, but organizer Damion Alexander said there’s a lot to think about in that short time.

Inside the hospital, Giffords’ husband, Mark Kelly, has been keeping his own vigil.

He told ABC’s Diane Sawyer in an interview that aired Tuesday night that he believed for about 20 minutes that his wife was dead after seeing a mistaken television news report.

“I just, you know, walked into the bathroom, and you know, broke down,” he said. “To hear that she died is just, it’s devastating for me.” Kelly said he later learned that she was alive when he called Giffords’ mother, who was outside the operating room.

From Giffords’ husband to the cyclists and the millions of people following her recovery, all are hopeful she will return to her office — and to her old life, including the bike trail.

Waiting at home for her is a custom bike she ordered built last year by Dave Bohm, the owner of Tucson-based Bohemian Bicycles.

He explained that it was more than the sum of its parts, with an Arizona flag emblazoned across the top tube and Giffords’ name painted on the frame to look like rope. A slew of Arizona cattle brands covers the bike’s steel tubes.

It fits her personality, Bohm said.

“We don’t know what’s going to happen, but I hope to hell she’s on the bike soon enough,” he said. “If I have to, I’ll make her a set of training wheels. I’ll do it. I’ll do whatever she needs to get her back on it.” Giffords, a member of the bipartisan Congressional Bike Caucus, has also been known to ride from her home in Washington, D.C., to the Capitol building.

Giffords’ family, friends and the rest of the cycling community are confident she’s going to recover.

Tucson resident Martha Retallick took a detour from her bicycle commute Tuesday night to see the memorial outside the hospital. She met Giffords years ago before the congresswoman began her political career, but never had the chance to ride with her.

“I’ve biked in all 50 states, but I haven’t biked in Washington, D.C.,” she said. “I’d like to do that some time, and why not go with Gabby? I hope that will still be possible.”

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