I didn't know the kid's name since his place wasn't on my list of places to check out. I scanned the mailboxes and figured out his last name and first initial but I won't repost them here. Instead, he will be hereto referenced as The Hipster. Not that I know anything about him except for the way he looked when I found him and while that assumption may be an inappropriate one, I need to call him something so that you can follow along. So The Hipster it is.
The curtains drew me in. It's one of the surest signs there is. Walk down a block of industrial buildings, look up above the first couple of floors and scan the windows. Curtains equal privacy equal residents. In most cases at least, according to my boss.
So I took a chance and went into the building. There was some sort of knitting factory on one or both of the lowest floors and I prepared to act lost or ask for a non-existent person if confronted by anyone from the shop. But no one paid any attention to me and I kept on up the stairs.
The top floor was different, I could tell right away. The little signs of inhabitation were there: unfinished hallways, but swept. Hooks to hold bikes, screwed into the beams on the ceiling. And tellingly enough, mats outside the door on which to wipe ones' feet.