For four whole days, an endless rain lashed the state of Veracruz.
The Papaloapan River overflowed, sweeping away houses, bridges and roads.
In the news, the same phrase was repeated over and over again:
“The town of San Mateo is totally cut off.”
In a humble little house, on the outskirts of Alvarado, an old man of seventy years old watched television with red eyes.
His name was Don Ernesto Ramírez, and in his heart there was only one thought:
his daughter Lucia, who lived with her husband and young son in San Mateo.
I hadn’t heard from them for three days.
The phone lines were down.
The silence was louder than the roar of the river.

She remembered her daughter’s last words before the call was dropped:
“Dad, the water has already reached the yard… but don’t worry, we’ll be fine.”
Those words did not let him sleep.
The next morning, Don Ernesto made a decision.
He packed up what little he had: some beans, rice, dry bread, powdered milk, medicine, and a live chicken—the one he planned to cook for his grandson.
He put everything in an old Styrofoam box and, with a black marker, wrote on the lid:
“To my daughter Lucia – With all my love, Dad.”
The neighbors tried to stop him.
“Don Ernesto, don’t do it! The water is very rough!”
But he only replied in a firm voice:
“If I stay here, how am I going to know if my daughter is still alive?”
Without thinking about it any longer, he put on a patched life jacket, hugged the box, and jumped into the icy water.
The currents pushed him, the debris hit his legs, but he kept moving forward, step by step, with his soul in his chest.
The river roared like a beast.
Every meter was a battle.
Don Ernesto clung to branches, propelled himself with his arms, and prayed between his teeth:
“Virgin of Guadalupe, don’t let me fall.”
After almost two hours of fighting, he reached the first houses of San Mateo.
Only the roofs remained sticking out of the water.
On one of them were several people covered with soaked blankets.
He shouted with all his might:
“¡Lucía! ¡Lucía Ramírez!”
A heartbreaking silence.
Until a woman from another roof answered:
“Sir, Lucia and her son were rescued yesterday by helicopter! They are alive! But their house collapsed!”
Don Ernesto was paralyzed. He
let go of the box.
Tears mingled with the rain. His
whole body trembled, not from cold, but from relief and sadness at the same time.
On the way back, in the murky water, something hit his leg.
It was a wooden frame, floating among branches and garbage.
He picked it up: it was a photo of his daughter Lucia with her young son in her arms, and behind them, himself, smiling on a past birthday.
The old man took the photo to his chest and burst into tears.
“Thank you, my God,” he murmured, “if the river gives me this back, it’s because I still have them.”
The water was still running, but inside his heart a small flame of hope began to shine.
A week later, when the sun rose again over Veracruz, a military jeep pulled up in front of Don Ernesto’s house.
A soldier got out of the vehicle and asked:
“Are you Don Ernesto Ramírez?”
The old man nodded, confused.
Then, Lucia got out of the back seat.
Her clothes were stained with mud, her face tired, but her eyes full of life.
He ran to his father and hugged him so tightly that they both fell to the ground.
“Dad! They told me that you crossed the river looking for me… I thought you were dead!”
He laughed in tears.
“I couldn’t bring you food, daughter… but I brought with me all the love I have.”
The soldiers took down the old Styrofoam box they had found on the riverbank.
Everything inside was soaked, except for the paper stuck to the lid:
“For my daughter Lucia.”
Lucia pressed it to her chest, crying.
“You didn’t need to come, Dad…”
“If I hadn’t come, you’d never know how much I love you,” he replied.
Days later, the newspaper El Universal published the story with the headline:
“The father who crossed the flood for love.”
In a few hours, all of Mexico knew his name.
Neighbors, churches, and even university students came together to help him rebuild his house.
An association gave him a boat with his name engraved on the side: “Lucia I.”
When a reporter asked him if he had felt afraid, Don Ernesto smiled and said:
“No river is too big for a father’s heart.”
And while the sunset dyed the sky of Veracruz gold, the old man lifted the frame of the photo and murmured:
“A father’s love can cross any storm.”
In the midst of disaster, when all seems lost, love remains the only current capable of overcoming fear.
The story of Don Ernesto Ramírez was not just news — it was a lesson:
True love is not shouted. It is demonstrated. Even in the middle of a deluge.
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