A Single Dad Helped a Pregnant Billionaire in the Storm — By Morning, He Lost Everything – Part 2

They both sat there for a moment, dripping and breathing hard, the small car filling with the sound of rain on metal and their ragged breathing. The woman was shaking, not just from cold, shock probably, or fear, or both. Noah cranked the heat up as high as it would go, which wasn’t very high in a 15-year-old Civic, but it was something.

He shrugged out of his soaked jacket and handed it to her. “Here, it’s wet, but it’s warmer than nothing.” She took it with trembling hands, wrapping it around her shoulders. “Thank you. Thank you.” I She stopped, pressed a hand to her mouth, and for a horrible second, Noah thought she might be sick.

Then he realized she was crying. “Hey,” Noah said quietly. “You’re safe now. I promise you’re safe.” Everyone just drove past, she whispered. Car after car, and nobody stopped. Nobody even slowed down. Noah didn’t have a good answer for that, so he said nothing. He knew exactly why people hadn’t stopped.

Same reason he almost hadn’t. Everyone had somewhere to be, something more important than a stranger’s crisis. The clock on the dashboard read 6:57 p.m. 3 minutes. Noah stared at those glowing numbers and felt something vital break apart in his chest. The meeting regional director Webb, the promotion that would have changed everything. All of it gone.

He became aware the woman was watching him, her dark eyes sharp despite the tears. “You were going somewhere,” she said. “It wasn’t a question. It’s fine. It’s not fine. You stopped for me.” And she gestured helplessly at the clock. You’re late for something important. E. Not as important as making sure you’re okay. Noah lied.

It was the kind of lie you told because the truth that missing this meeting might cost him everything would make her feel worse. And she was already barely holding together. The woman studied his face for a long moment then looked down at her hands. What’s your name? Noah Bennett. I’m Victoria. She didn’t offer a last name and Noah didn’t ask. Didn’t matter anyway.

All that mattered right now was getting her somewhere safe and dry. Okay, Victoria, where can I take you? Hospital? Home? But Victoria’s face did something complicated. Fear and calculation and something else Noah couldn’t identify. The Grand View Medical Center about 15 mi north. Noah knew the place.

expensive private hospital where rich people went for elective surgery and babies delivered by personal obstitricians. The kind of place that charged you just for breathing their airconditioned air made sense given the Range Rover. Grand View it is. Noah started the engine, checked his mirrors, and pulled back onto the highway.

They drove in silence for the first few minutes, Noah focusing on the road while Victoria gradually stopped shaking. The heat was helping. So was the simple fact of not being alone anymore. How far along are you? Noah asked, mostly to fill the silence. 34 weeks, they said. Victoria paused, one hand moving to her belly. They said he might come early.

Apparently, he’s stubborn. Noah smiled despite everything. Boys usually are. My daughter came 2 weeks late like she was already making us wait for her. You have a daughter? Emma, she’s eight. Is she with her mother tonight? The question hit harder than it should have, even though Victoria couldn’t have known. Noah kept his eyes on the road and his voice steady when he answered.

Her mother passed away four years ago. Victoria’s sharp intake of breath was audible even over the rain. I’m so sorry. I shouldn’t have. It’s okay. You didn’t know. But the car felt smaller now. But the waited with the kind of heavy silence that comes from stepping on emotional landmines. Noah wished he hadn’t said anything.

Wished he could have just deflected or changed the subject. Victoria was the one who broke the silence this time. It must be hard raising her alone. Shasa. Yeah. Noah said simply because what else was there to say? It was hard. Every single day was hard. He loved Emma more than his own life. But that didn’t make single parenthood any less exhausting.

“She’s lucky to have you,” Victoria said quietly. Noah wasn’t sure about that, but he appreciated the sentiment anyway. They passed an exit sign. 10 mi to Grand View Medical Center. The storm was finally starting to ease. Rain shifting from torrential to merely heavy. “Can I ask you something?” Victoria said. “Sure.

Why did you stop?” Noah glanced at her, surprised. What do you mean? Everyone else drove past. They saw me and they just kept going. But you stopped. Even though she gestured at the clock again, now reading 7:12 p.m. Even though it cost you something, why? Noah thought about it. The real answer was complicated, tangled up with memories of the night Sarah died and how many strangers had helped him in those horrible first weeks.

How his neighbor had watched Emma for days without asking for anything. How the guy at the grocery store had quietly paid for their food when Noah’s card got declined. Small kindnesses from people who didn’t have to care but did anyway. Because somebody needed help, Noah said finally. That’s reason enough. Victoria looked at him like he’d said something profound instead of obvious.

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