One Delphi man is going home with a bike that helped raise thousands of dollars to remember Abby Williams and Libby German, the two girls who were murdered in Delphi nearly two years ago.

Chris Christensen isn't related to Abby Williams or Libby German, but every day, right next to his house, there's a $1 million softball field being built to remember them.

"It's a very good cause," Christensen said. "It's a good location, and what the community is doing to get behind it is amazing."

To help the cause, he bought a raffle ticket from Harley-Davidson dealership in Wabash, Indiana, to win a bike, which helped fund the project.

"It's a full donation," General Manager Vince Persico said. "So that every single dollar is going toward the cause."

After $21,000 raised, Christensen found out he was the lucky winner.

"Oh!" Christensen said. "I never win anything! So I was just very happy."

A shiny new bike is nice and all, but it's just a small part of the real reason Christensen went in on the raffle.

"It's not about me," Christensen said. "It's not about this bike. It's about these two girls and our community coming together. And trying to find this guy and make life out of death, so to speak."

Abby's grandfather, Mike Patty, is spearheading the park project to make sure people remember.

"Every morning, there's a picture in the hallway," Patty said. "I say 'good morning' to her every day. And then I think of what the last hour of these girls' lives were like and that's what motivates me every day."

But with the good memories of Libby and Abby, Patty and the entire community of Delphi is forced to remember February of 2017, when the girls were violently torn from this world.

"When it happened in our town, it was personal," Christensen said. "We want to step up and do something about it. It's time to do something. To show the world that we're not going to put up with this. This stops here."

Knowing that the killer still walks free isn't helping anyone's conscience.

"Frustrated. It makes me mad," Patty said. "It's just not right. We're still trying to catch a killer out there. He's walking around somewhere. He lives down the street, down the hall from somebody. And I need the public's help. This guy has to be lucky every single day not to get caught. We only have to be lucky one day. And we're going to catch him."

While this story isn't about the bike, or really even the park, Christensen hopes the bike and the field together help keep that memory alive.

"Oh, yeah. Yeah. I'll want to take it over there and ride it," Christensen said. "In memory of the girls and the freedom that they are going to miss out on."

So, with a reminder of Libby and Abby next to his house and a reminder of Libby and Abby on the road, there's no way Chris Christensen is going to forget about those two girls, and the hope is that many others have that constant reminder, as well.

If you have any information regarding the killer, you're asked to call the Delphi homicide investigation tip line at 844-459-5786.