Read The Devil's Playground Online
Authors: Stav Sherez
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General
THE DEVIL’S PLAYGROUND
by
STAV SHEREZ
When the body of a tramp, Jake Colby, is found in a secluded Amsterdam park, Dutch police detective Ronald Van Hijn believes that this is the ninth victim of the serial killer stalking the city. Yet, all previous victims were young, female and beautiful. What could have made the killer change his MO?
On the corpse Van Hijn finds contact details for Jon Reed, an Englishman who befriended Jake in London shortly before the murder. Van Hijn summons Jon to Amsterdam to identify the body and so sets him on his own journey of discovery.
Was Jake really a tramp? What revelation about his identity led him to a life on the streets? And did his fate lie not in the hands of a serial killer but in the horror of the Holocaust death camps some 60 years before?
The Devil’s Playground is a thought-provoking debut crime thriller from a stunning new young talent.
‘A razor sharp thriller … a heady brew of stylish prose …
Like Robert Harris with a better record collection, Sherez has
an immaculate sense of pace; experdy propelling the story
along with a perfect drip-feed of clues and vivid imagery.
Gripping to the end, The Devil’s Playground is a powerful first
novel that heralds a fresh and invigorating talent in the world
of thriller writing’ Jack Magazine
‘Stav Sherez is a gifted writer, as good at evoking the heart of
a piece of music or the dank smell of a city as he is at juggling
several thought-provoking themes at once. The Devil’s
Playgrounddeserves to be the thriller of the summer’ Economist
‘A hypnotic page-turner’ City Life
‘A page-turner of a thriller’ Metro
‘Totally and utterly gripping … It’s actually the best
depiction of Amsterdam I’ve read since the novels of the late
Nicholas Freeling. For a first novel this is extraordinarily
ambitious and extraordinarily accomplished. All you want
when you close the last page is to wait for the next novel by
Stav Sherez. Now that’s as good as a first novel gets’
Classic FM
‘Demonstrating rare intelligence, brilliandy structured,
beautifully written, The Devil’s Playground’is the finest first
novel I have read in some time. It is altogether extraordinary,
and introduces a major talent’ James Sallis
‘Remarkably ambitious’ Sunday Times
‘Sherez is hunting big game. He takes the most frightening
atrocities of the twentieth century and explores them in a way
you’ll never forget. The most exciting, compelling and clever
thriller I’ve ever read’ Matt Thorne
‘Juggernaut pace and moral-twisting narrative’ The Ust
‘A dark crime thriller that begins with an act of kindness, and
ends with every moral certainty having been burned away …
The Devil’s Playground is appropriately named. A highly
charged, plausible and disturbing piece of work’ Big Issue
‘Thought-provoking and incredibly atmospheric crime
debut’ Publishing News
‘ The Devil’s Playground leads us willingly into the darkest parts of Amsterdam, where the past invades the present and not
even your own identity is certain. A taut thriller which
dissects the legacy of a frightful history with intelligence and
care’ Louise Welsh
‘A brilliant and disturbing book. As an investigation of
human perversity, it is fascinating; as a thriller, it stands
comparison with the very best. Mesmerising’ Toby Litt
‘This book probes so relentlessly, fearlessly and deeply into
the unspeakable darkness that it manages to work its way
through to some impossible and redemptive light. I’ve read it
twice and I’m sure I’ll read it again’ Steve Wynn
PENGUIN BOOKS
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Stav Sherez is a freelance journalist and music critic. The Devil’s Playground was his critically acclaimed debut novel. He is
currently working on his second novel, entitled The Ruins. He
lives in West London.
Published by the Penguin Group
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First published by Michael Joseph 2004
Published in Penguin Books 2005
To my Father and Mother with love
For Alice
Copyright Š Stav Sherez, 2004
All rights reserved
The moral right of the author has been asserted
Set by Rowland Photo typesetting Ltd, Bury St Kdmunds, Suffolk
Printed in Kngland by Clays Ltd, St Ives pic
Except in the United States of America, this book is sold subject
to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent, re-sold, hired out, or otherwise circulated without the publisher’s prior consent in any form of binding or cover other than that in
which it is published and without a similar condition including this condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser
To my wonder-agent Lesley Shaw and super-editor Beverley
Cousins — without the two of you this book would still exist
in a small room.
Thanks: James Sallis, Steve Wynn, Matt Dornan and Leo
Hollis.
I am indebted to Mary Lowenthal Felstiner’s biography To Paint Her Life: Charlotte Salomon in the Na%i Era (Harper Perennial).
Author Note
As anyone with knowledge of Amsterdam might guess, I
have moved things around to suit my purposes and will put
them back together one of these days.
All characters are fictional — even the real ones.
‘The screams were so horrible because life was beautiful.
He, the dullard, needed to be haunted by screaming throughout
his life, so that the fear, agony and grief at losing life which they evoked would remind him to cherish it in himself and others’
- William T. Vollmann
‘Conscience is a Jewish invention’
— Adolf Hitler, near the end
Amsterdam is full of butch dogs. Lean, tough beasts who
can weather out any frozen Baltic wind or spray that assails
them as they slouch along the canals.
But not this one. This one is small and wiry and shivering
in the pelting rain. All he wants to do is find some shelter.
He runs ahead. A compact, dripping bundle of fur and
legs, pulling his master along, the leash outspinning, past the
Old Church and into the park. His muzzle breaks through a
tangle of bushes and he sees the old man lying there, barefoot
and face-down. Yet it is not for him to make sense of this
but for his master, who comes puffing along, out of breath
and ready to be annoyed, ready to shout, to blame the dog
for all this rain and discomfort, when he too sees it.
It doesn’t take him long. It is a scene intimately familiar
from movies he has watched, books and plays. All this stuff
crammed into his head is finally of use. He calls the police
from his mobile phone and, as he’s waiting for someone
to answer, he’s thinking about whether they’ll want to interview
him for the evening news. The thought of this makes
him smile.
The rain refuses to pause for the scene. It has been raining
for weeks. The canals are high and turbulent and a strange
fatalism has crept into the minds of the city’s inhabitants.
Unnoticed, the beagle wanders off, bored by the whole scene,
trying to find some shelter from the awful rain. His master
stands guard beside the body. He doesn’t look down. It is
the police’s problem now, not his. The Oude Kerk keeps off
the worst of the weather. It is the oldest building in the city
but the man takes no account of this, he walks by it every
day and it is no more to him than a shape, something to
delineate the streets and canals. Instead he watches the
window-girls standing in their booths, smiling and trying to
entice through the rain. A line of tourists waits patiently
at the gated entrance to the church, their second-day-in
enthusiasm and protective mountain-wear more than enough
to make up for the weather. But the man is more concerned
with his dog. He feels the hard jerk against his wrist. He reels
the leash in and smiles at the window-girls as he hears the
approaching police sirens, straightening his hair and wishing
he’d worn his new burgundy jacket. He doesn’t like the idea
of people seeing him in his jogging gear.
Van Hijn watched as Christ was airlifted out of Rome. The
great open-armed statue wobbling precariously in the wind
under the insect chop and buzz of the helicopter, leaving the
city to bikinied sunbathers waving from rooftops and the
snarl and flash of hungry journalists.
Then the beeper on his hip went off.
The other five people in the cinema turned towards him
and, even in the dark, he could see their angry stares. The
pulse echoing through the almost empty room, disturbing
the immersion of the film, that wonderful longed-for loss of
control. All gone now.
He let it ring a couple of times more, then pressed the
small black button, got up, adjusted his trousers, sighed and
said goodbye to La Dolce Vita.
He’d left his umbrella at the cinema and by the time he got
to the scene he was soaked and in a bad mood. He’d intended
to spend the afternoon locked away in the shelter of the
screen; a Fellini double bill, a thermos of coffee and a slice
of blackcurrant cheesecake. There was nothing else to do on
such days. Days when the rain seemed like a dark cloud,
permanently orbiting the city.
‘Detective Van Hijn.’
Someone was calling him but he was still thinking about
the face of Anouk Aimee, the way her eyes seemed to dance
when she spoke, the small upcurl of her top lip.
‘Detective!’
He saw the lieutenant approaching hesitantly and he made
an effort to smile, to pretend he was glad to see him. Jan was
one of the few officers who didn’t laugh behind his back
these days. Who had seen the incident at the canal as just
a stupid accident, nothing more. The kind of thing that
happened to all cops, even the best ones.
‘What is it this time, Jan?’ He looked towards the park,
the hedges glistening with rain, the huddle of people staring
at something on the ground.
‘Take a look.’ The lieutenant shrugged. Van Hijn could
see he was tired. ‘He was found, by a dog, half an hour ago,’
Jan added.
‘A dog? Did this dog also call us and report it?’ Immediately
he felt bad about this but it was too much to say sorry in the
rain, too much just now, and he let it ride.
‘No. His owner’s over there. Seems eager to talk about it.’
‘Aren’t they all?’ Van Hijn wiped the rain from his eyebrows.
‘Get him off the scene. Take his statement and send
him home.’
Van Hijn watched as the lieutenant turned away and
disappeared into the rain. He saw the gradually forming pack
of spectators, all whisper and expectancy, standing on the
other side of the road. He didn’t understand these people
who congregated around murder scenes and accidents,
straining for a glimpse, taking home-movies, popping
flashbulbs, impersonating journalists. They were like the dark
twins of those birth addicts who roam hospitals pretending
to be expectant fathers, shivering and sweating in anticipation
of glimpsing the shuddering bloody expulsion that brings us
all into this life. It aw like watching something being born, he