It starts one fateful Sunday afternoon as I’m off to
edit a three part series for school. There is no phone in my pocket – “one less
distraction” I say to myself. At the time, it was the least of my concerns.
But it wasn’t.
Fast forward to 11pm. The scene: my living room, home
to the frantic search for a cell phone that can’t be traced. Where is it?
Indeed where was it? Did I drop it?
Outside it was snowing merrily, with nonchalance as if to
say, I’m here to trouble you more.
And off I go back to school. The great cell phone hunt
has begun.
Plastic bags on my knees, double layers on, with my
warmest hat, mitts and scarf I search amidst the snow – on all fours – for a
tiny minuscule BlackBerry. A BlackBerry that is the very lifeblood of my
fledging journalism career.
It was nowhere to be found.
Dejected I lay in bed, but not before sweeping my
apartment’s parking lot one last time. The clock stuck 1 o’clock.
“I have a class in 7 hours,” I say to myself. “This is
futile.”
And so Sunday turned Monday. And the search resumed.
The snow was receding, the ground was slowly exposing itself. But still no BlackBerry.
“It’s going straight to voicemail. The phone is lost
forever.”
But a part of me kept me from calling my service
provider. No, I’d wait it out a bit more, unless there was drastic usage on my
phone’s account. There wasn’t. 24 hours had passed.
For a guy who lived 17 years of his life without a cell phone, one day without one was tough.
For a guy who lived 17 years of his life without a cell phone, one day without one was tough.
It was rough.
But still, there was no cell phone.
And so Tuesday dawned bright and sunny. It was the
perfect day. It was my day off, and all efforts were directed to locating this
cell phone. I was due in Leamington on Wednesday. Would I be willing to make
the trip with no proper means of communication?
Unlikely.
And then, almost as if something called out to me, I
tried to track my phone online. It was just after noon.
There was a trace. Not two kilometres away. Suddenly
there was hope. A hope that increased when the phone was accurately tracked to
within 7 metres.
“But how did the phone reach there?” I hadn’t been in
the area in almost three weeks. This was one of life’s great mysteries.
Four hours later, after some frantic dialing to see if
someone will answer the phone, I set out to see who has my phone.
Now, there are plenty of stupid things that one can do.
And this was right up there. Picture walking up a stranger’s driveway, and
asking them if they had your missing (possibly stolen) phone? Crazy right?
But there was hope.
And so with an able sidekick in Greg, Starsky and
Hutch, as he termed our duo, we approached our first potential location.
The door opens. And a man, morbidly obese with a vest
and shorts, walks out.
“Can I help you?”
We didn’t know whether to talk or to run.
“I know this sounds weird sir. But would you have
happened to have seen a cell phone?” I ask, nervously. “I lost mine and tracked
it to one of these houses.”
“No, I haven’t sorry!”
And that was it. Was he lying? There was no way we
could be sure.
The other house, his neighbour, was not home. And it was
almost dark. The bubble of joy, burst.
Twenty minutes
later, a little McDonalds cheered me up. I mean, is there anything that a McNugget
can’t do? It was just past six o’clock now.
“Let’s give it one more shot before I drop you home
Greg,” I say. “Maybe they’re home now.”
And so, back we go. This time there’s activity in the
once empty house. Two cars are on the driveway. This is it.
I go up to the door, and ring the bell. Just like
before.
“Can I help you?” asks a tall, greying man.
“Yes. Would you perhaps have seen a BlackBerry lying
about? I lost mine, and tracked it to one of these houses. I know this sounds
crazy.”
“No. No.” he said. “Is it a Z10?”
I was shocked and happy at the same time.
“Yes. A black one.”
“Come on in. My son found one yesterday in the Fanshawe
parking lot.”
And once inside, his wife hands me a badly damaged cell
phone. It’s still working, but the display would need some major repairs.
I didn’t quite catch their names. I’m now wishing I did
as I recall my adventures.
“How did you know it was here?” asked the lady.
“Tracked it online. The phone was on and I got a
signal.”
“That’s amazing!”
It sure was. And then we spoke for fifteen minutes,
mostly about how I was able to locate the phone.
You see it turns out that Brandon, who works at
Fanshawe College found the phone on Monday evening and took it home. He meant
to bring it to school the next day, but forgot. His dad, a BlackBerry user
himself, turned it on to see if he could try and reach the owner.
“That was the smartest thing you did sir,” I say
exuberantly.
“It kept going off and I couldn’t answer it,” said the
lady. “Wou
I’d thought I lost the phone somewhere. And the chances
of finding it were pretty slim. But no, there was hope.
Brandon had saved the day.
I’ve tried to reach out to Brandon at Fanshawe a number
of times now. But our paths don’t seem to cross. Sure the phone was damaged; a
vehicle had driven over it. But Brandon had saved me a lot of money.
So Brandon, if you ever read this, and we’re unable to
meet: Thank You. This means a lot to me.
If we do ever meet, and I hope we do, there's a beer or two in it for you.