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July 02, 2008

Lost

Late on Monday evening a young fella hailed me outside Central railway station. Opening the door he asked, “Can you take me to the nearest police station ?” “No worries, jump in.” “There’s only one problem,” he explained, “I’ve got no money.”

He seemed okay but there was also a group of girls waiting up ahead. “Is this an emergency?” I asked. “Yeah,” he replied. “Why?” “I been kidnapped, but I escaped.” I waved him in.

He was a seventeen year old schoolboy from a small central western New South Wales town, over 300kms away. “Look, here’s my school jacket,” he said, unrolling a bundle he was clutching to prove he wasn’t lying. The jacket bore the high school insignia.

At lunchtime that day he’d been returning to school from the shops when a vehicle stopped and four men jumped out. They placed a bag over his head and bundled him into the car, at which point he became unconscious.

“How,” I asked, “did they bash you?” “Nah.” “Drug you?” “Nah, but I must have been unconscious because next thing I woke up about an hour ago, on the floor of a cellar.” Okay, I thought, noting he’d related this tale coherently and without emotion.

The kid then climbed a staircase to locked doors when a bloke came in carrying a tray of food. So he pushed him down the stairs, found his jacket and phone and escaped. “Where did you come out?” I asked. “In a laneway behind some office building around here,” he claimed. Phew.

The phone rang, his mother. Naturally she was frantic with worry and gave him a relative’s address in Sydney’s northwest suburbs. “Can you take me there ?” he asked. I talked to the mother and confirmed that payment would be made at the destination.

After further queries I learnt that this was not the first time the kid had been abducted. “What do you think will happen now?” I asked. He paused. “I dunno,” he said quietly. “Hope they don’t send me to W......House.” “What’s that?” “A mental home.”

When I inquired about previous visits to the home he said he’d ‘rather not go into that’, and fell silent. It seemed that mention of the home had brought him back to reality, shattering the kidnapping delusion.

His phone rang again. Once more a concerned female, ‘just a friend’, could be heard jabbering from his earpiece. “I’m not running away,” he patiently explained. “I’ll tell you all about it when I get home.”

Upon arrival we were met by a young fella around twenty years old who greeted the kid with a certain bemusement, or resignation. It was plain that this was a repeat episode for the kid, a sick puppy of sorts.

The relative paid me and tipped another twenty. “Thanks mate,” he said, “You’re a real lifesaver.” Closing the door the kid sparked up, informing his relative, “Gees, I’ve really got the munchies!” They both started laughing and wandered off into a unit block.

Comments

Honestly Adrian, you work the most interesting job of anyone I know (and I don't know you, but read your blog regularly). The opportunity to interact with such a wide range of society and lear such fascinating stories must be a real perk of your job. Shame about the downsides though, but I for one love hearing your tales!

What a weird story!!

http://nztaxiblog.wordpress.com

Nice to see this kid has family to support him whenever he loses direction - but it must make life hard on them!

And yes Adrian - if only all cabbies were as responsible as you...

An excellent story and I can concur with Adam's comments including that it is most interesting work.

I only got into it at all because my age had precluded me from the merit process in the job market. At least with taxis that is not a barrier. I have had no regrets, plus the added bonus of not carrying any emotional baggage or stress at the end of a shift. My country experience is not as diverse as you'd get in the capitals but still worthwhile.

Each job can be a new adventure, especially with an open mind. It seems to reflect the diversity of life ranging from the banal and dull, the boorish and filthy, to the most joyous. Best of all is what Adrian often highlights: the unexpected.

If Adam is our famous pseph, he probably knows that Robert Ray worked his way through university through cabbing, before excelling in ALP numbers. Maybe cabbing was as valuable in his political career as his studies.

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