I took Ubers to chemo for six months. It was a cold, rainy Tuesday in Manchester when I first met Marcus. I was standing outside the hospital, shivering in a coat that felt three sizes too big because the weight was just falling off me. I had my head wrapped in a colorful scarf, trying to hide the fact that I was losing myself one strand at a time. Marcus pulled up in a clean, silver sedan that smelled faintly of peppermint and old books.
He didnโt look at me with that pitying โcancer gazeโ that most people use. He just gave me a quick nod, asked if the temperature was okay, and started driving. Most drivers try to make awkward small talk about the weather, but Marcus seemed to sense I wasnโt in the mood. Instead, he put on a soft jazz station and let the music fill the gaps between my heavy thoughts. It was the first time in weeks I didnโt feel like a patient; I just felt like a passenger.
After that first trip, something strange happened. Every time I hit the โRequest Rideโ button on my app for my hospital appointments, Marcus was the one who accepted. At first, I thought it was just a coincidence, a fluke of the algorithm and timing. But as the weeks turned into months, it became a ritual. Heโd always show up right on time, sometimes with a hot tea waiting in the cup holder and a playlist of 80s pop because heโd noticed I hummed along to a Wham! song once.
Marcus became my silent partner in the hardest fight of my life. Heโd chat about his garden or the books he was reading, never once mentioning my bald head or the way my skin was turning a sickly shade of yellow. He treated me like a person with a future, not a tragedy in progress. On the days when the nausea was so bad I couldnโt speak, heโd just drive in a peaceful, respectful silence. He was a constant in a world that felt like it was crumbling beneath my feet.
The nurses at the oncology ward started to recognize his car, teasing me that I had a โpersonal chauffeur.โ Iโd laugh and say he was just the luckiest Uber driver in the city, but deep down, I wondered how he was always there. I tried to ask him once how he managed to be in the area so often. He just laughed and said, โI guess the stars just align for us, Arthur.โ I didnโt push it, because I was too tired to be a detective; I was just grateful for the familiar face.
My last day of treatment finally arrived in late December. The air was crisp, and the hospital was decorated with tinsel and bright lights that made me feel like I was finally waking up from a long, dark dream. I walked out of those sliding glass doors for the last time, my legs feeling a bit stronger than they had in months. Marcus was there, leaning against his car with a wide grin on his face. Heโd even tied a small red ribbon to the antenna.
The ride home was differentโit was celebratory. We sang along to the radio, and he told me a hilarious story about a cat heโd rescued from his neighborโs roof. When we pulled up to my flat, I felt a lump in my throat realizing this might be our last journey. I reached for my phone to make sure the payment went through and to give him the biggest tip the app would allow. I wanted to thank him for being the bridge that got me from the beginning to the end.
On my last day, he wouldnโt let me pay. I insisted, telling him that heโd done more for me than he could ever know and that I wanted to make sure he was taken care of. He just shook his head, looking at me with a kindness that felt like a warm blanket. โI canโt take your money today, Arthur,โ he said quietly. I started to argue, pulling up the app to show him I was serious. He sighed and said, โCheck your ride history.โ
I looked at my app and froze. As I scrolled through the last six months of trips to and from the hospital, my heart stopped. Every single rideโdozens of themโshowed a fare of ยฃ0.00. Beneath each transaction, there was a small note in the system that read: โFare covered by the driverโs personal account.โ I looked up at him, my vision blurring with sudden tears, and asked him why he would ever do such a thing.
โMy wife went through the same thing ten years ago,โ Marcus whispered, his voice cracking just a little. โWe didnโt have a car back then, and we spent half our savings just trying to get her to her appointments. I told myself that if I ever got the chance to help someone else in that position, Iโd take it.โ He told me that he hadnโt been โcoincidentallyโ nearby; he had been watching the app for my specific location every single morning I had a scheduled treatment.
He had been waiting for my request to pop up so he could grab it before anyone else did. Heโd been working extra shifts at a local warehouse during the nights just to cover the cost of the gas and the Uber service fees for my rides. I sat there in the passenger seat, overwhelmed by the sheer scale of his generosity. I wasnโt just a passenger to him; I was a way for him to honor the woman heโd lost.
But then, Marcus reached into the glove box and pulled out a small, tattered photograph of a woman with a bright smile, standing in front of a bookstore. โHer name was Elena,โ he said. I looked at the photo, and my breath caught in my throat. I recognized her immediately. Elena had been my primary school teacher twenty years ago, the woman who had first told me I was smart enough to go to university.
I told him who I wasโthe little boy sheโd stayed late to tutor when my parents were working three jobs. Marcusโs eyes went wide as he stared at me, searching my face for the child his wife had loved so much. Neither of us had realized the connection until that very moment. He hadnโt been driving a stranger; he had been driving the โbright young manโ his wife used to talk about at the dinner table all those years ago.
We sat in that silver car for a long time, crying and laughing at the impossible coincidences of life. He hadnโt known it was me when he started, and I hadnโt known it was him. But somehow, the universe had circled back to make sure we were both taken care of. The woman who had given me my start in life had, through her husband, helped me through my biggest ending. It was a beautiful, tragic, and perfect loop of kindness.
I realized that day that we are never as alone as we feel. We think our struggles are private battles, fought in the silence of hospital rooms or the back of a taxi. But there are threads of connection weaving between us all, stretching across decades and heartbreaks. Marcus wasnโt just a driver; he was a reminder that the love we put into the world always finds its way back to us, often through the hands of a stranger.
I eventually convinced him to come inside for a cup of tea, and we spent the afternoon looking through my old school reports that Elena had signed. He told me about her last days, and I told him about the lessons she taught me that gave me the strength to fight the cancer. We started as a driver and a passenger, but we ended as family. Marcus still calls me every Tuesday to see how Iโm doing, and I make sure his garden is the best-looking one on the street.
The lesson I took from those six months in the silver sedan is that kindness is the only thing that truly lasts. You donโt need a lot of money or a big platform to change someoneโs life; you just need to show up. Marcus showed up for me when I was at my lowest, not knowing he was completing a circle his wife had started twenty years prior. We are all just walking each other home, and sometimes, if weโre lucky, we get a ride from someone like Marcus.
Your life is full of people who are rooting for you, even if you havenโt met them yet or havenโt seen them in years. Donโt be afraid to accept help, and never underestimate the power of a small gesture. You might think youโre just giving someone a ride, but you might actually be giving them the will to keep going. Iโm healthy now, and every time I see a silver car, I smile and remember that I am a living testament to the power of a heart that refuses to look away.
If this story reminded you that there is still so much good in the world, please share and like this post. You never know who might be going through a hard time today and needs a reminder that help is on the way. Would you like me to help you find a way to pay forward a kindness you once received, or perhaps help you write a message to someone who helped you through a tough season?





