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Keni

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…‿ℒℴνℯ⁀❣🌹
Switzerland 🇨🇭
instagram: esme_wildflower
Bali, Indonesia
Banyu Wana Amertha waterfall, Bali
tadej_cerkvenik
I drive Uber. Mostly nights.
Last week, around 11 PM, I picked up an old man. Fragile. Polite. The kind of quiet that feels heavy.
He got in and said,
“I need you to take me to five places tonight. I’ll pay you $500. Cash. But you can’t ask why until we’re done.”
He handed me five addresses.
---
**First stop:** a house in the suburbs.
He didn’t get out. Just stared at it. Ten minutes. Shoulders shaking. Silent tears.
“Okay,” he whispered. “Next one.”
---
**Second stop:** an elementary school. Dark. Empty.
He walked to the playground. Sat on a swing. Let it move gently in the night air. Twenty minutes.
When he came back, he smiled through wet eyes.
“I taught here. Forty-three years. Best part of my life.”
---
**Third stop:** a small diner.
He ordered coffee. Didn’t drink it. Just sat in a booth, looking around like he was watching ghosts.
“My wife and I had our first date here. 1967.”
---
**Fourth stop:** the cemetery.
He stood at a grave, speaking words meant only for one person. Thirty minutes.
When he returned, his voice was thinner.
“My wife. Three years today.”
---
**Fifth stop:** the hospital.
“Now I’ll tell you why,” he said.
“I have stage four cancer. Weeks left. Maybe days. Tonight I wanted to see my whole life one last time… before I can’t anymore.”
And just like that, the air in my car changed.
“The house — where I raised my kids.
The school — where I found purpose.
The diner — where I fell in love.
The cemetery — where I said goodbye.
And here…” he looked up at the hospital doors,
“...where I’m checking in. Hospice floor. I’m not going home.”
He handed me the $500.
“Thank you for driving me through my life. You’re the last stranger who’ll ever be kind to me. I wanted it to be gentle. You made it gentle.”
I tried to refuse. He pressed it into my hand.
“I have no one to leave it to. My kids don’t speak to me. No friends left. You gave me three hours of kindness. That’s worth more than money.”
He picked up his small suitcase.
“What’s your name?”
“Marcus.”
He nodded.
“Thank you, Marcus. For being the last good thing.”
And he walked inside.
---
I sat in my car and sobbed. For an hour.
The next day, I went back.
Room 412.
He smiled when he saw me.
“Marcus. You came back.”
“I couldn’t let that be the end.”
For two weeks, I visited every day. Brought coffee. Read him the news. Sometimes we just sat in silence. He told me about his wife. His students. His regrets. The phone calls that stopped coming.
“I thought I’d die invisible,” he said once.
“But you saw me.”
On a Tuesday at 3:17 AM, I was holding his hand when he took his last breath.
His final words:
“Tell people… look at strangers. Really look. Everyone’s dying. Some faster than others. Be kind on the way. You were kind. You saved my last days.”
The monitor went flat.
He didn’t die alone.
---
Six people came to his funeral.
Me. Three nurses. A lawyer. One former student.
Eighty-one years of life.
Forty-three years of teaching.
Fifty-two years of loving one woman.
Six people.
I spoke.
“He paid me $500 to drive him through his memories. But what he gave me was priceless. Every stranger is someone’s whole world. Every person you pass is carrying a lifetime of love, regret, loss, and hope. Kindness isn’t extra. It’s everything.”
I still keep that $500 in my glove box. Never spent a dollar.
It reminds me:
Every ride could be someone’s last.
Every goodbye might be final.
Every stranger is one gentle moment away from feeling seen.
So now I drive differently.
I ask questions.
I listen longer.
I look people in the eyes.
Because somewhere tonight, someone is taking their last ride.
Be the driver who makes it gentle.
**Quiet moments. Loud truths.**