Stories: I was eight months pregnant, swollen and exhausted

I was eight months pregnant, swollen and exhausted, when I stepped onto the tram after my doctor’s appointment. My back ached. My ankles looked like they belonged to someone else. All I wanted was to sit down and get home.

By some miracle, I found an empty seat.

At the next stop, a woman climbed on, balancing a baby on one hip and a heavy-looking bag on the other shoulder. She looked utterly drained — hair half-tied, dark circles under her eyes, the baby fussing against her chest.

No one moved.

I hesitated only a second before standing. “Here,” I said gently. “Please.”

She looked at my stomach first, then at my face. Her expression flickered — surprise? Guilt? Something unreadable.

“You’re sure?” she asked quietly.

“I’m sure.”

She nodded and sat down, whispering thank you.

The ride felt longer standing. The tram jolted at every turn, and I gripped the pole tighter than usual. When her stop came, she stood carefully. As she passed me, she met my eyes again — that same strange look — and stepped off.

A moment later, I felt something damp against my hand inside my tote bag.

My stomach dropped.

Slowly, I reached in and pulled it out.

It was a small, folded washcloth. Wet.

For one horrifying second, my mind raced — had she dropped something disgusting into my bag? Was it from the baby?

My heart thudded as I unfolded it.

Inside the washcloth was a sealed plastic pouch.

And inside that pouch… was a small envelope.

My hands trembled as I opened it.

There was cash. Not a fortune — maybe a couple hundred dollars — but enough to matter. Tucked behind it was a note written in hurried handwriting.

“You’re going to need this more than I do. I saw the hospital bracelet on your wrist. I remember those days. I remember being scared. You stood when you didn’t have to. Thank you for seeing me. Pay it forward when you can.”

I stared at the tram doors long after she disappeared into the crowd.

I hadn’t even realized I was still wearing the thin hospital band from my appointment. I’d just been told I might need extra monitoring for the baby. The medical bills had been quietly piling up in the back of my mind.

Tears blurred my vision.

It wasn’t about the money.

It was about being seen.

About two tired women on a crowded tram, each carrying more than they showed.

That night, I placed the envelope in my bedside drawer.

Months later, when my son was born healthy and strong, I used that same amount — plus a little more — to buy groceries and diapers for a young mother I saw struggling at the pharmacy.

Because kindness, I realized, doesn’t stop where it lands.

It keeps traveling.

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