Authors: Anthony Bidulka
ting my gaze burrow comfortably into the fire.
“No, thanks, Mom.” I felt so very good inside.
At 9 p.m. Mom retired to her room to watch
reruns of
Matlock
and
Murder She Wrote
. I decided
to try for the Christmas feeling to go with this
new-found familial instinct I was developing. I
dug up Barbra’s Christmas collar—a ruffled thing
of red and green silk which she dutifully wears
every year with a minimum of apparent indigna-
tion. I found a red bandana at the bottom of my
underwear drawer (don’t ask) for Brutus. For
myself I snuggled into my favourite holiday
sweater, a worn and cozy thing with a trail of tiny
reindeers scampering around the threadbare collar,
cuffs and hem. That done I stacked celebrity-sung
Christmas tunes on the CD player and retreated to
the kitchen to pour myself a glass of eggnog heav-
ily laced with Gosling’s Black Seal dark rum. I had
just restoked the fire and settled in with my
thoughts when the front doorbell rang.
“Hey,” said a fellow beneath a utilitarian win-
ter coat, knitted toque and thick, brilliant bur-
gundy scarf. “Sorry to bother you.” He was a little
out of breath.
“That’s okay,” I said. “Come in.” It wasn’t too
cold out but the darkness made it seem so and the
heavy clouds were finally beginning to deposit
350 — F l i g h t o f A q u av i t
their cargo in the form of butterfly-sized
snowflakes.
“Oh no, no thanks,” he said. “I live down the
street.”
I looked closer. With all the winter parapherna-
lia covering him all I could really make out was a
fringe of dark hair sticking out from beneath the
toque, small dark eyes and an indistinct nose. I
supposed he looked somewhat familiar so I gave
him an “oh, of course!” sounding “Oh, hello!”
First it was the three monkey neighbour ladies
and now this guy. Where had I been the last few
years? Who were these people? I’m not a “can I
borrow some sugar” kind of neighbour, but I’d
always thought I could at least recognize most of
the people who live on my street.
“I hate to bother you—I’ve tried a few other
houses on the block but no one seems to be home
tonight. Out Christmas shopping I guess,” he said.
“I guess,” I agreed agreeably.
“The problem is that I only have the truck for
an hour before I have to take it back.” This said he
used his head to indicate an area in the general
direction of the street. Of course, with all the trees
surrounding my front yard, I couldn’t see a thing.
I took his word for it and continued to listen. “You
see I had a desk made special for my daughter for
Christmas and I borrowed a truck to pick it up.
The guy at the studio helped me load it into the
truck but I forgot I’d have no one to help me get it
out of the truck and into the house. It’s a surprise
for her. It’s got space for her computer and print-
er and all her other stuff. Cherry wood.”
Anthony Bidulka — 351
Oh, oh. Woodworking. Guy stuff. “Very nice,”
I said.
“So, I kinda need a hand.”
“You want me to help you get the desk out of
the truck?” I clarified.
“Yeah, if you could. Out of the truck and into
the house. Before my daughter and her mother get
home. I hate to disturb you…”
“No, no, that’s okay.” It wasn’t exactly a sleigh
ride in the park, but helping thy neighbour
seemed like a sufficiently Christmassy thing to do
to fit in with my theme for the evening. “Won’t
you come in while I get my coat?”
“No, no, I’ll just wait by the truck. It’s the big
one down the street. You can’t miss it.”
When he turned to leave I shut the door to keep
Barbra and Brutus inside while I threw on the near-
est coat in the foyer closet, a pair of boots, a kicky,
striped Gap scarf and some gloves. Instructing the
disappointed dogs to stay indoors and listen to
Celine Dion, I left the house and followed my
neighbour out to the street. Indeed, about halfway
down the block was a massive three-ton truck, its
box covered by a flat, metal roof, probably to keep
snow off the desk. The tailgate doors were open,
revealing a gaping, black hole. Somewhere in that
hole was the cherry wood desk.
“Big truck!” I said when I’d caught up. “Just
how big is this desk?” I joked.
“Hand-crafted,” he said by way of question-
able explanation. “Maybe you could get in and
start untying the bungee cords we used to hold it
in place. I have to get my gloves out of the cab.”
352 — F l i g h t o f A q u av i t
He stood and waited for my response.
“Sure,” I said, peering into the back of the truck
where I could see a faint square outline.
“Russell!”
We both turned around. The voice had come
from behind us. A familiar voice. One I wasn’t
expecting.
“Jared!” I called back.
Jared had pulled up in a black Jeep Cherokee in
front of my house and was now striding towards
us. He was wearing a bright yellow ski jacket,
jeans and a pair of Nikes. Even in the dusky light
given off by the street lamps his face and hair
shone with vitality and life.
“Hi,” he greeted when he reached us.
I checked his face for signs of anything amiss. I
hadn’t had a chance—on purpose or not, I don’t
know—to talk with either Jared or Anthony about
what had happened at Diva’s. Was that why he
was here? Had something happened between the
two of them? He didn’t look stressed or sad or
worried or anything, but he did look like someone
who was ready to have a good, long talk. “Hi,” I
said back.
“What are you up to? Sorry to just drop by, I
would have called but…” And he smiled impishly.
“I’m helping my neighbour get a desk out of
his truck,” I said rather proudly, gesturing
towards said neighbour.
“I’ll help you,” he readily offered along with a
wide smile at both of us.
“Oh no,” the man said. “No, that’s okay. Why
don’t you two have your visit? We can do this
Anthony Bidulka — 353
some other time.”
“No problem, sir,” Jared said politely.
“I thought you said you only had the truck for
an hour,” I said. “With Jared here it’ll take us two
seconds.”
“No really…I can get someone else…” he
began, but we’d already hopped into the bed of
the truck.
The desk was surprisingly small. I could have
pretty much done the job myself but I was glad to
have an activity to delay the inevitable discussion
with Jared. I needed time to think about what to
say to him. After we unhooked the bungee cords
holding the desk to the floor, I hoisted one end, he
the other and we began our moving-man shuffle.
That’s when we heard the sudden loud clang and
everything went dark.
“Russell?”
“Jared?”
“I just wanted to check I hadn’t passed out and
didn’t know it. What’s going on?”
Although we were only inches apart the black-
ness was so complete I couldn’t make out his face.
“The tailgate doors must have been thrown shut
by accident,” I said. “Come on, let’s put the desk
down and help him. Those doors looked heavy.”
“It’s so dark in here I can’t tell which way is the
front of the truck and which is the back,” Jared said
as we lowered the desk to the floor of the box and
bumbled our way around, often bumping into one
another.
When we reached the tailgate I pushed on it.
But it didn’t budge. It was the type with two doors
354 — F l i g h t o f A q u av i t
that swing open to the sides. There was a storm
coming and I surmised the rising wind must have
ripped the doors from their moorings and
slammed them shut.
“Push on it,” I instructed as I continued to do
the same.
“I am,” Jared answered from somewhere next
to me in the dark. “But it’s not moving an inch.
What’s your neighbour’s name? Let’s call out to
him. Maybe he got into the cab to warm up and
doesn’t even know what’s happened.”
“I don’t know.”
“You don’t know what? His name?” he asked,
incredulous.
“No,” I admitted sheepishly, bearing the full
weight of my ignorance.
“Hey sir!” Jared yelled out.
Nothing.
We both began calling out, hoping our voices
were loud enough to carry through steel.
Nothing.
We began to bang.
And then the body of the truck lurched.
“What the hell was that?” Jared asked, sudden-
ly alarmed.
In the utter darkness of the box, unable to see
even my own hand in front of my face, it was as if
a ghost had appeared in front of me and pushed
me backwards. I fell with a resounding thump
onto my ass. A similar sound to my right told me
the same fate had befallen Jared. He let out a mew
of pain.
“You okay?” I asked, concerned.
Anthony Bidulka — 355
“I landed right on my tailbone. Man that hurts.
But yeah, I’m okay.”
“That desk isn’t made of cherry wood,” I com-
mented flatly, a creepy suspicion having invaded
my brain.
“Huh?”
We sat there not saying anything for a few sec-
onds. We listened to the telltale sounds. Although
we couldn’t believe it, we both knew what was
happening.
The truck was moving.
We were being kidnapped.
Chapter 19
I THOUGHT OF ELISABETH KUBLER-ROSS and her well-
known, oft-quoted research on the stages people
go through when dealing with death: denial,
anger, bargaining, depression and finally accept-
ance. Although no one had died, as our trip in the
blackened bowels of the three-ton truck contin-
ued, I hit all five—several times. After getting
back to our feet we banged away on the locked
tailgate doors and sides of the truck box, yelling at
the top of our lungs, certain this was some sort of
mistake or stupid joke. But after twenty minutes,
grim awareness set in—there was nothing funny
going on. For a while we dumbly stood where we
were, not saying much to one another, listening to
the sounds and swaying with the motion of the
truck. At the beginning there were a lot of stops
and starts. City driving. But then the truck’s speed
rose and there were no more stops. Highway driv-
ing. We were being taken out of the city! This was
a discouraging realization. Having looked for and
failed to find a way to escape our steel prison we
were rendered inactive. And we were cold.
The longer we stood in the back of that truck,
the colder it seemed to get. We searched for any-
thing that might help keep us warm, but there was
nothing. All we had was each other. And a desk.
We found a spot no more comfortable than any
other in the barren space and slumped down next
to each other for warmth, our knees close to our
Anthony Bidulka — 357
chests. Jared was worse off than I. I had a coat,
gloves, scarf and a good pair of boots. All he had
was a jacket that was more stylish than warm and
a pair of Nikes. Not good winter wear if you’re
planning to be kidnapped and held captive in the
box of a truck so cold it might as well have been a
refrigerator. But who knew? I offered to share my
clothing bounty but he refused, claiming he was
okay as long as his hands were in his pockets, and
that he had really thick socks on under his run-
ning shoes.
It was a unique sensation being back there, in
the dark, not knowing where we were going. To
lose sense of sight and control of your own imme-
diate destiny is not a pleasant thing. They say
when you lose one sense the other four are
improved. Hoping that was true, I began to focus
on what else my body was telling me. The only
thing I could smell was Jared. For all the years I’ve
known him, he’s always worn the same cologne.
I’ve never known what it’s called or, to my knowl-
edge, smelled it on anyone else. I like that because
I always know when he’s near. It’s a subtle, spicy,
manly smell. Pleasant. The only nice thing about
what was happening to us. As far as taste, well,
the only thing I was tasting, and in abundance,
was fear. That left touch and hearing. I decided
that for my purposes feeling the movement of the
truck throughout my body was like using my
sense of touch. And together with the sound of the