A Florida firefighter who spent 10 years trying to have a baby of his own finally got his wish in January, and it happened on the job.

It happened on January 2 when a baby girl was dropped off at a Safe Haven Baby Box at the MLK First Responder Campus in Ocala, about 80 miles northwest of Orlando.

An alarm went off at 2 a.m., said the firefighter who eventually adopted the baby girl as his own. While mostly everyone at the station was asleep, he and another Ocala Fire Rescue employee set out to see what was going on.

The firefighter who adopted the child has chosen to remain anonymous to protect his family’s privacy, but he recalled opening the box, revealing a baby girl wearing a pink beanie and onesie. She had a matching blanket and next to her was a pink bottle, he told USA TODAY.

He knew immediately that he wanted to raise her as his own.

“When I walked into the front office where the box is located, I opened it and saw my beautiful daughter laying in it,” he wrote in an email.

The Safe Haven Baby Box program has locations in Indiana, Kentucky, Arkansas, Florida, New Mexico, North Carolina, Tennessee, Pennsylvania and Arizona. 

The boxes are located outside of fire departments and emergency response buildings. They have silent alarms so people can drop off babies “no questions asked,” according to the program’s website.

The baby girl in Florida, eventually named Zoey, was the 23rd baby dropped off nationwide since 2017, according to the Ocala StarBanner, part of the USA TODAY network.

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Locking eyes with the baby girl told him all he needed to know

Once the alarm went off and he headed outside to open the box, the firefighter picked the child up and walked her into the station.