When Kim Wright's classic Vespa vanished at the hands of a Hastings thief three years ago, she never stopped looking, hoping it would return.
Astonishingly, it's actually happened.
Wright, 52, the owner/operator of Global Autoworks in Hastings, had just fully repainted and restored her Vespa 90 1966 and parked iton display in the front of the store when it was stolen in July 2018.
"The shop was broken into, the window smashed, and the Vespa was stolen," Wright said.
"I was gutted, I felt violated. I cried when I lost the Vespa."
The theft of the 90cc, two-stroke Vespa was reported to police, put on social media, and Wright even made an old-fashioned wanted poster to pin and stick around the area.
Wright said the Vespa was part of her identity, and became her foot in the door at a classic bike club in her 20s.
Her fondest memories of it revolve around doing skids in her brother's driveway more than 30 years ago.
"I came back from overseas in 1988, and bought it for $300 the same year from Hastings," she said.
"I bought it when I was 18 - spent my first two weeks' pay to get it.
"I rode a bicycle at Rupert Ryans, in the freezing cold to get it. I used to ride it all the time, I used to do skids in my brother's driveway, which used to annoy him cause he had to clean up after."
As she grew older it was dismantled to restore, and had been in a box for 15 years before she decided to take the plunge and do it.
Then the theft. For three years the search proved fruitless, until last week.
"I used to drive around, looking for it.
"One of our customers, 90-year-old Leighton Clark, used to drive around looking for it. He had a picture of it stuck to the visor of his car and every time he'd forget what it looked like, he would flip open the visor to see it," and jog his memory.
While Wright and a hoard of others kept a lookout for her treasured Vespa, she bought a replacement Vespa, but "it just wasn't the same".