Windsor Star

Mystery man stuck in a gap between eras

- RICHARD WARNICA

The mystery landed in a crack between two eras of Toronto and settled there, stuck for hours, until the wall caved in. When it was gone, finally, the gap left behind looked impossibly small — a handspan, a notebook, an iPhone and a half. And yet, for eight hours, it contained a man.

Daniel Lee’s son heard him first. He was in his father’s restaurant, closed now for 14 years, when the voice — faint, pleading, and difficult to place — leaked in. He thought at first it was coming from the kitchen, then perhaps the back lane. But both were empty. So, perplexed, he looked where it seemed no person could be.

Tom’s Restaurant, a lunch counter on the eastern edge of Toronto’s downtown, opened in 1956, according to city licensing records. In 1968, Lee, a native of Tai Shan, China, bought the restaurant from Tom himself, kept the name and started serving what he describes now as “Canadian food.” In about 1980, Lee switched gears, rebranded the restaurant — kept the original decor — and started selling Chinese.

Lee and his wife raised three children in the apartment above Tom’s. They watched the neighbourh­ood shift and tremble around them for decades. In 2003, Lee’s heart nearly gave out. He underwent a bypass — you can still see the pale scar — and closed the restaurant.

But the Lees stayed in their apartment. They left the lunch counter downstairs unchanged.

Today, Tom’s stands between colliding ideas of what Toronto is and will become. Half a block north lies perhaps the last sliver of Toronto’s ungentrifi­ed downtown. Directly south, separated from the restaurant by a 20cm gap, is a large, expensive condominiu­m complex.

On Tuesday, Lee’s son followed the voice out to the back lane, found nothing, then climbed the fire escape and peered down into the dark sliver between the condo and the restaurant. Remarkably, wedged inside, in obvious distress, was a man.

The man would later tell firefighte­rs he had fallen off the roof and slid between the buildings. He couldn’t pull himself out, and, the firefighte­rs, 24 of them in all, couldn’t either. They reached him with ropes, but he was too weak from the squeeze.

Eventually, they came up with another plan. The firefighte­rs entered Lee’s kitchen. They pulled equipment, unused in more than a decade, away from the wall, and they started chipping away at the triple brick and concrete exterior, being careful not to spray debris onto the man on the other side, according to Capt. Michael Westwood from the Toronto Fire Services.

By 11:02 Tuesday night, the man was free, three hours after the firefighte­rs arrived and about eight hours after he originally slipped into the narrow lane. He was assessed on the scene and taken to hospital in serious but non-life-threatenin­g condition. His identity has not been released.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada