One of the gates. With a Levantina car parked inside it |
Inside one of the gates, adorned with a sign proclaiming that the place was protected by Levantina security company, stood several cars from that company.
My first thought was that it was the estate of some minor noble of earlier times, now abandoned and left to go to rack and ruin.
“Old nobility?” scoffed Danielle. “The gates are set in simple cement-block gateposts. Whoever spent a fortune on the gates spent nothing on the frame he mounted them in. And it certainly isn’t old.”
The blockhouse. Note the aerial and satellite dishes And the wire |
But there were no watch towers, no guards, no manicured parade ground. So not a prison camp or anything like that. Going past with a group of friends, we debated other possibilities.
Could it be a drug lord’s highly secure location for storing his product? It’s true that it looks too much the part, but might that not be brilliantly devious double-camouflage? Make it look too much like a drug lord’s hideaway, and no policeman would ever suspect that it could be one.
“Too obvious,” they’d all say, and go and look somewhere else.
That didn’t feel too plausible. I preferred the theory that it was a top-secret site operated by the Spanish intelligence service. Underneath that apparently uninhabited blockhouse, there were deep basements equipped with sophisticated torture devices where, even as we spoke, orange-suited prisoners suspected of criminal subversion were screaming out their confessions to crimes of which they were entirely innocent.
That seemed possible until we considered that any self-respecting Spanish spook would want to be based in Madrid. The woods of La Vallesa somewhere outside Valencia? Much too far from the metropolitan delights that make life bearable to the senior servants of the Spanish state.
The mystery all ended the day we turned up and found a Levantina car outside the gates, with its driver at the wheel. He was pleasant, polite and friendly.
“The place belonged to some guy who was crazy about security,” he explained, “and his son, who inherited it, can’t sell it. It suits us, though, as a place to keep our cars. So we rent it as a car park.”
A Levantina Seguridad car |
No minor noble entertaining his superiors to lavish dinners in the hope of an appointment further up the aristocratic ladder.
No drug lord bawling out an indolent underling who has yet again failed to liquidate an upstart competitor on a Valencia street corner.
No sadistic inquisitor pointing out that the electric dial setting has to be kept below five if his powerless victim’s survival is to be guaranteed, and then cackling insanely as he turns it up to six.
Just a car park.
“The mystery’s gone,” Danielle pointed out to me as we walked past recently. She was right. It had. Fortunately, the beauty of the woods around are more than enough to compensate.
Otherwise, how would I cope with the loss of my fantasies?
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