A taxi driver who took a pregnant woman to the hospital for free… and then her…

It was a rainy night, one of those that makes the city look like a broken mirror. I’d been driving for ten hours when I saw her on the corner of the main avenue, soaked, one hand on her stomach and the other desperately raised. I approached, and before I could say anything, she opened the back door.

“Please, please,” she begged, her voice breaking. “I need to get to San José Hospital. The baby’s coming.”

I looked at her in the rearview mirror. She was young, maybe twenty-five, her face contorted with pain. Her cheeks were wet, though I couldn’t tell if it was from the rain or her tears.

“Get in, get in,” I said. “Relax, we’ll get there.”

I started quickly, but carefully. Each red light seemed like an eternity. She was breathing deeply, trying to control her contractions.

“What’s your name?” I asked, trying to keep her calm.

“Carolina,” she answered between gasps. “Oh God, it hurts so much.”

“It’s almost time, Carolina. Breathe like they taught you, okay?”

“I didn’t go to class,” she said, her voice cracking. “I couldn’t… I don’t have anyone. Her father left when he found out I was pregnant.”

A lump formed in my throat. I thought of my own daughter, who was about this girl’s age.

“Now you have me, okay? You’re not alone. We’ll get there all right.”

The traffic was stifled by the rain, but I took side streets I knew by heart after twenty years of driving a taxi. Carolina moaned in the backseat.

“I won’t be able to pay,” she said suddenly. “I spent everything I had on the deposit for the apartment. I… I’m so sorry.”

“Forget about that,” I replied. Now the important thing is that you and your baby are okay.

When we finally arrived at the hospital, I ran downstairs to get help. Two nurses came out with a wheelchair and quickly took her to the emergency room. She turned to look at me before entering.

“Wait! What’s your name?”

“Roberto,” I yelled. “Roberto Méndez! But don’t worry about that for now. Good luck!”

I stood there in the rain, watching the automatic doors close behind her. I returned to the taxi, turned off the meter I’d never turned on, and went home thinking about that lonely girl about to become a mother.

The days passed, and I thought I’d never know what had happened to Carolina and her baby. Until one afternoon, three weeks later, I received a call from an unknown number.

“Mr. Roberto Méndez?” a woman’s voice asked.

“Yes, who’s speaking?”

“I’m Carolina, from the taxi. Do you remember me?”

“Of course I remember! How are you and the baby?”

“Fine, thank God. I had a beautiful boy, his name is Matías. Mr. Roberto, I… I need to see him. I have something very important to ask you.”

We agreed to meet at the park near the hospital. When I arrived, I saw her sitting on a bench with a stroller next to her. She looked different, calmer, with a smile lighting up her face.

“Mr. Roberto,” she said, standing up. “Look, this is Matías.”

I looked into the stroller and saw a tiny baby, asleep, with his fists closed next to his face.

“He’s beautiful, Carolina. Congratulations.”

“You saved me that night,” she said, her eyes shining. “Not only did you take me to the hospital, but you made me feel like I wasn’t alone. That meant the world to me.”

“I just did what anyone would have done,” I replied uncomfortably.

“No, that’s not true. Five taxis drove by before you, and none of them stopped when they saw I was pregnant and soaked.” He paused and took a deep breath. “Mr. Roberto, I don’t have any family here. My parents are in another state and have barely spoken to me since I got pregnant. Matías’s father disappeared. But I want my son to grow up knowing there are good people in the world, people like you.”

He bent down, carefully picked up the baby, and handed him to me.

“Would you like to be Matías’s godfather?”

I froze, holding that warm baby in my arms, looking into his slowly opening eyes.

“Carolina, I…”

“Please,” he insisted. “I have no one else. And you’ve already proven you’re the kind of man I want to be an example for my son.”

A lump formed in my throat. I looked at little Matías, who grabbed my finger with his tiny hand.

“It would be an honor,” I finally said, my voice breaking.

Carolina covered her mouth, and tears began to roll down her cheeks.

“Thank you, thank you, thank you,” she repeated.

The baptism was simple, in a small neighborhood chapel. I invited my wife and daughter, who fell in love with Matías immediately. Since then, Carolina and I have kept in touch. I’ve helped her get a better job, my wife brings her baby clothes my grandchildren no longer wear, and I visit them every month.

Sometimes, when I drive my taxi at night and see someone in need on the street, I think about that rainy night. I think about how a simple act of kindness can change not just a moment, but an entire life.

Now, when I take Matías to the park on Sundays and he calls me “padrino” in that little three-year-old voice, I know that free ride was the most valuable of my entire career.

Because in the end, it’s not about the fares we charge, but about the people we help along the way.