1. JASON.
The Windowless Building sits in the grassy valley below our house, at the edge of the woods, on a tract of land that is leased out to a local rancher. The woods cover the hills at the edges of the valley, old-growth gnarled oaks with thick, twisting branches from which moss dangled and under which thick green miners lettuce and lush grass grew. From our house, we could look down at the barn and stables of the ranch, and enjoy what seemed like our own little nature preserve in the surrounding area. The thick, gnarled trees rise up from the far side of the valley up to the housing tract beyond. In addition to the barn and stables, however, there is one other building in our little slice of rural refuge. Unlike the ranch buildings, it is silent, mysterious, and inscrutable.
When we were kids, we all had a spoken agreement with the rancher as to where we could play. We could have the run of the fields and the woods, and were free to wander there at will. But of course we needed permission to enter the two-acre fenced enclosures where the barn and stables were. The only stipulation was, when the strange men in white uniforms came to the Windowless Building to do whatever it was that they did in there, we were never to be seen in the area. If they ever caught us playing down there when they showed up, they would yell at us and threaten us; "You Kids are Trespassing!" When those guys showed up, the informal deal we had with the rancher was off the table.
So, we played down in the field endlessly, having all the kind of outdoor adventures that all young kids have close to home. Digging in the dirt hoping to find gemstones. (All we found was rocks.) Chasing deer and squirrels, and hoping for a rare sight of a fox or a coyote, and secretly dreaming of coming across a Bigfoot. (We never did, but Mauro once spotted a bobcat, and that was still a pretty big deal to us.) Or, running around in the woods with toy guns and pretending to be "army men" fighting various Bad Guys, or whoever the enemy de jour was. And occasionally coming home with a rash from the poison oak. We would catch frogs and tadpoles, find snakes and be afraid even of the harmless garter snakes (until we were old enough to tell them apart from the REAL dangerous ones.) Sometimes we would hang out with the rancher and think we were real ranch dudes. Mr. Mackay was always friendly to us and let us entertain that notion, though I suppose we were never more than annoying kids to him. And if we were feeling really adventurous and our parents were none the wiser, (as most of them forbid it for safety reasons), we'd grab our flashlights and head over to Hillson's Cave for an afternoon of spelunking.
As kids, we were always fascinated with the Windowless Building. Its utter otherworldly strangeness seemed to both attract us and creep us out at the same time. For one, it was built right into the side of the hill. The woods crept down the hillside right behind it, and it sat just at the edge of the spreading oaks. It was just a faΓ§ade- a long, low single story structure with only a front to it. Even the sides of the building were built into the slope of the hill. It had a flat roof that was covered with grass and shrubs- a natural sod roof, and so if you came upon it from above, you might think you were just approaching the edge of a steep hillside or a cliff. A thin layer of asphalt led from the highway at the bottom of the valley, just a couple hundred yards away, to a driveway that ended in front of it in a wide courtyard parking lot. The faΓ§ade was made of stacked flagstones, with two pillars framing the front door on the left side of the building. To the right of the front door, the remainder of the building featured four painted metal panels that oddly resembled steel garage doors, with three more flagstone pillars between them. From the front, facing it, it almost looked like any one of the modern looking houses in our suburban neighborhood that we lived in up here in the foothills.
Except for one striking detail: It had no windows. The front door- a large green painted metal door- was set into the flagstone wall under the front porch, with two concrete steps leading up to it. There was no front window you could peer into, not even a peephole in the door. The four metal panels that made up the remainder of the front faΓ§ade were similarly blank, with no way to peer through them. There was a back door, cut into the side of the building where it merged into the hill, but this was similarly blank and inscrutable.
Countless times, I remember standing at that front door, wondering of the strange purpose of this building. Who lived here? Who would design such a home, and be so utterly antisocial as to not even be able to look out of a window or even a peephole? Countless times I knocked on the door, but to no avail- nobody ever came to answer. From time to time, I could hear strange machinery whirring and humming inside of the building. Odd noises, clunks, relays, and strange mechanical hums. Never loud clanking or roaring, just the subtle hum of fans and electricity. But nonetheless, I was stumped. What really went on inside of this strange building?
I remember asking Mom and Dad about it a few times. They didn't seem to know though. "It may be a bomb shelter," Dad would say, which would always conjure up images of war and destruction. To us naive kids, that actually sounded kind of neat. It was cool dreaming about growing up and playing soldier as a kid, marching around with a toy gun and pretending to be fighting the Nazis. In fact, when we were little, we often did just that, in the meadow and the woods surrounding the Windowless Building. But the possibility of being in an actual nuclear conflict was clearly wasn't something I would ever want to experience or even fantasize about. So, maybe it was a bomb shelter. Or maybe it was a water treatment plant, as our neighbor, Mr. Dillard, claimed. Once, I asked the rancher, Mackay, to see if he could set it straight, but he admitted he didn't really know either. He said he leased the land from a company called ThullTech. Some big pharmaceutical company, he claimed. They owned the land, and so maybe the building was some kind of storage facility. Or so he guessed. All anybody knew was, the place had been there since before our houses were built, nearly 25 years ago, and yet nobody had any conclusive idea what it was for.
So if nobody really seemed to know, I resolved to ask someone who did know. And one day, I decided to do just that. I was in my late teens by then, rapidly finishing up high school, and getting ready to go off to college in just a few months. One Saturday morning, as spring was slowly sliding into the summer and I was preoccupied with girls, prom, graduation, and homework assignments, I glanced out the window and happened to notice that the men in white uniforms had pulled up to the Windowless Building in one of their unmarked vans. THEY ought to be the ones who would answer my questions, I thought. So I hurriedly put on my shoes, slipped out the back fence and climbed down the hill. Skirting the fence line of Mackay's horse ranch, as I always did, I approached the Windowless Building and the white unformed men. It can't hurt to ask, can it?
"HAY YOU!! THERE'S NO TRESSPASSING HERE!" I had been walking across the field, deep in my own thoughts, and suddenly stopped in my tracks when I heard a loud voice. One of the workers was standing on the edge of the paved drive and was facing me, scowling. I quickened my pace and walked up to him, hoping to at least get a chance to speak to him.
Before I could get a word in, however, he barked, "You can't be down here! You need to leave!"
"I'm...Uh, Hey I was just wondering..."
"What are you DOING here?! You're not supposed to be here!"
"I just live right up the hill..." I said, pointing.
"I don't give a fuck WHERE you live! You aren't allowed to be here! This is PRIVATE PROPERTY."
"Well, I was just wondering, is that place a water treatment plant or a storage..."
"Get. OUT. LEAVE. Now!" The man said, pointing back up the hill where I had come from. "Or I will have you arrested."
"Sorry sir, but look man, I was just wondering...I just came here to ask, uh, what do you guys DO when you're down here? Is this a..."