Read The Devil's Playground Online
Authors: Stav Sherez
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General
much about.
Jon had never had a bar mitzvah, never eaten chicken
soup except out of a can, didn’t learn Hebrew or fast on the
Day of Atonement, ate pork all his life, went out with a
Catholic girl and never once thought of visiting Israel. He’d
hidden behind the fence of his name and had effected a
passable imitation of an English gentile for most of his life.
Of course, his father had achieved more than a passable
imitation and Jon, in this at least, had his father as a role
model for the years to come. The word ‘Jew’ did not come
into the Reed household, as if even the mention of it might
infect the child and cripple him in what was gradually becoming
a harsher world.
As he walked across the crowded squares of Amsterdam,
so filled with bustle and steam, the crisscrossing of trams
and bicycles, the small runnels gouged into the road, Jon
remembered the incident when his father, being questioned
as to whether or not he was a Jew by Polish officials at a
remote border post, had replied ‘Absolutely not.’ Until then
Jon hadn’t really thought about such things; his relatives had
strange accents and even stranger foods but that seemed a
throwback to some time before the year zero, or so his father
had always insisted.
That day at the border crossing, the young Jon found
himself surprisingly shocked at his father’s reply, so much
so that he quickly rolled down the Mercedes’s window and
blurted out ‘He is a Jew’ at the border guards. His father had
subsequently been taken into a small hut where, he later told
his son, the guards had stripped and searched him. He would
never let Jon forget that moment, saying ‘I hope this teaches
you a lesson’ many a time after recounting the horrifying
events that occurred within the customs shack. Jon was sure
that the incident had taught him a lesson, but as to what the
lesson was or whether there was a moral to glean from it, he
didn’t know, and in the following years he made sure not to
allude to this mysterious part of his heritage that had caused
his father such undue punishment and humiliation.
Jake’s story had awakened in him a long lost sense of, well
he couldn’t really call it Jewishness, never having experienced
or been taught what that was, but more a feeling of a curious
membership of some esoteric group. He remembered that
the only time he’d felt any Jewish identity was when he was
being abused. Called a Yid or a miser, watching the other
boys rubbing their noses and singing the praises of Adolf
Hitler. It was no more than if they’d mocked the colour of his hair or the way he slouched, there was nothing behind the naming but the will to hurt, yet it still rankled and made
him wonder why there was so much hate directed against this
attribute that he’d unwillingly received at birth. Consequently
he’d never considered himself Jewish. Though the insults
still hurt, he knew that they really weren’t directed at him,
that the kids had somehow got it wrong, had got him mixed
up with someone else.
The rain stopped as he wound through the thin, clasping
alleys of the red-light district, avoiding the hustlers and
early-morning wrecks. Out of an alley he emerged into the
sudden explosion of space that is Nieuwmarkt. He had to
stop, take in the space, the open vista stretching across the
square. Out of the dark huddle and into the light. He lit a
cigarette and stared at the Waag, the weigh-house that looked
like a medieval castle, almost arbitrarily located at the centre
of the square. He looked around. It was early, the city, sleepy
and slow, was still shuttered and shrouded in the aching
movements of waking. The cobblestoned and unadorned
square was empty, stretching beyond the Waag and to the
tall buildings on the other side. The castle with its round
medieval towers, its slitted windows and garrets, seemed an
afterthought, as if to compensate for the massive emptiness
of the square. Here he could breathe, see the sky as more
than a strip painted between roofs. He enjoyed standing
around, no one to hassle him here, only a few feet from the
district but also in another world.
The Jewish quarter lay to the east of the Waag, a long
boulevard that wound down to the museum. He sat in a cafe,
only just opening, the waitress bleary-eyed and tired, and
ordered an espresso. He wanted to delay things for a bit. He
knew the museum was waiting for him. It was the only link
he had left to Jake. And though the detective had been pretty
clear, he knew that this was something he had to do. Besides,
it was a museum, he could be going there for a thousand
other reasons and by late afternoon he would be on a plane,
heading back, the detective none the wiser. He sat and smoked quietly, watching the people slowly passing by and feeling no desire to return to London.
Back home, his days always started exactly the same, a
slow trudge to the bathroom, coffee and a cigarette, a CD
playing. Then he’d go downstairs, check the mail, back
upstairs, boot up the computer, download his emails, browse
the web, maybe buying a book or CD and by then it would
be time for lunch. So the days disappeared in a pleasant
routine that masked any surprise or shock, making them go
quicker, filling up with things that didn’t matter. The last
year had gone by frighteningly fast. Was that just getting
older, he wondered, time telescoping down into number of
years left, or something altogether different? It scared him
that he’d begun to worry about time running out. He’d always
thought that would come after his fiftieth birthday.
He got up, paid and crossed the great, empty square.
Checked his map and headed down St Antoniebreestraat.
Jake had stretched out the days they’d spent together,
filling up the usually vacuous time with silences and gestures,
smiles and mysteries. Why hadn’t he missed all that before?
Or had he and just not realized it? The latter was probably
more accurate, some things are so essential a part of your
life that you never pause to think about them until they’re
gone. And even then, for the first few months, years, you
just feel the hollowness of something lacking and you ascribe
it to other things that are missing in your life — your wife,
success, self-confidence, money. It takes a long time to realize
it isn’t anything as earth-shattering as that, that it is in fact
something very small and easily replaceable. It was good to
be nudged out of those old patterns and routines that he now glimpsed might actually be the cause rather than the symptom of his malaise. And yet, when the old man had left,
he’d slipped right back into the same old habits like an
alcoholic remembering the sound of the cap breaking open.
Amsterdam had blasted all that, exploded those cigarettes
and mail checks into pieces, so that although he’d been away
only for a couple of days, it already felt like years and those
routines almost the movements of another man.
He lit a cigarette and watched as a couple of teenagers
walked past him, holding hands and smiling as if the world
didn’t exist. Or maybe it’s exactly because it does, he thought,
maybe that’s it. He continued walking, waiting for the Jewish
Quarter to appear in all its imagined old-world grandeur and
seediness. But it was gone. The street was lined with small
shops selling cuddly toys, books, magazines, small items that
you know you don’t need but kind of want anyway. Above
lay apartment blocks, the whole street one long promenade
of sixties’ pastel-coloured buildings. Balconies and small
windows. Clotheslines and TV aerials. People slowly emerging
into the day. He remembered reading how the whole
quarter had been torn down. Replaced by this prefab apartment
complex that stretched from Nieuwmarkt down to the
Waterlooplein. He’d been hoping for clotted doorways, old
grimy steps, the smells of cabbage and coffee, bullet holes in
the stonework. But, staring up at the cool, calculated planes
of these dwellings, he could have been anywhere and he tried
to not let this disappointment cloud his day.
There was no reason to go back for the moment. None at
all. London always depressed him in the autumn with its grey
skies and grey people trudging through the clogged and sticky
streets. He knew that he needed a change and, in London,
ensconced in the cocoon of his flat, he could never drag up
the sufficient amount of will and excitement to make such a
decision, to say ‘Fuck it’ and get on the next plane out of
there. There were always reasons for not doing it, for putting
it off or ruling it out.
He remembered the building opposite his flat, the dole
office, and how he would sometimes watch the glum men
and women queuing up, slowly wasting their time, inching
forward, knowing that if it hadn’t been for his father’s death
and the resultant inheritance, he would be just like them,
waiting his turn even now. Sometimes at night they forgot
to turn off the led signs and he could see from his window,
as he sat on the sofa, the clear red illumination that said
please wait. For months he had seen the sign lit up in
that empty hall across the street and if he’d needed any
confirmation for the life he was leading, he would stare at it
for a few minutes. Now that he was finally away, he knew
that the waiting was over, that you can delay and defer your
life only for so long.
He checked his watch. The flight was getting closer. But
first he had debts to pay. To the old man and perhaps also
to the religion he’d been born into. What had happened to
Jake? Over and over again, it rang through his head. What
the hell could have caused a man like that to do such things
to his own body? It seemed almost unimaginable to Jon, a
shocking reversal of all that he thought was given. The
bloody tissues on the floor. The scars and skin, like something
out of a horror flick. And he thought about what the
detective had said. Snuff films. Torture. Sex. Wondering if
Jake really did all that to himself, if it wasn’t something else,
someone else.
He crossed the canal and headed towards the museum.
Everything around him was new, the demolished medieval
buildings of the Jewish Quarter nothing but unremembered
ghosts. Everything modern and shiny. The massive buildings,
the streets uncobbled now, the great white expanse of the
Operahouse. He came to a stop by the black granite monument
that stood at the edge of the land, almost dangling
between the confluence of the wide, raging Amstel and the
quiet Zwanenburgwal, the place where the city spills open.
He stared up at it. The inscription in Hebrew and Dutch.
The way the black reflected the scuzzy sun and the swirl of
the canals behind it. It looked like a monolith from the film 2001. Some pre-natural signifier stranded here in another empty square, the sterile, dead concrete fields of the Opera
house stretching out in every direction, bounded only by the restless canals and the memory of what used to be.
The Jewish Historical Museum had once been four separate
synagogues, greatly frequented by the many Jews of Amsterdam.
After the war, there being not many Jews left, the
buildings lay empty until the 1980s when they were converted
into one composite structure that now served as Amsterdam’s
memory of its Jews. Four synagogues, from the ancient
stone of the Grote, built in 1671, to the stark brickwork of
the Nieuwe, built a hundred years later, to the functional
spaces of the extended gallery appended in 1987. All together
now. Linked by a feat of architecture even more impressive
for the fact that it was almost invisible. Four synagogues,
merged and buttressed, under one roof, a sort of homogenizing
of past and present, the kind of thing this city was so
good at.
He remembered Jake telling him about the place, animated,
the closest he’d got to enthusiasm. After learning
about his father’s will, the old man had come here to see
what records he could find about his family, his real family,
and he’d described it to Jon with all the reverence of a new
husband describing his wife’s body. Jon wondered whether
the detective had already been there, already questioned the
people. It didn’t matter. As long as he didn’t bump into him
… and even then, he could just say he was sightseeing. He
had his own investigations to make, parallel but not congruent
with the detective’s. He felt a hot buzz of expectation
shoot through him, a quiver of curiosity, now that his search
for Jake was becoming less abstract.
Jon entered the museum. An old man, positively Metiluselean,
sat at the counter, collecting fees and handing out guides
and brochures.
‘I’m looking for a friend of mine,’ Jon said, surprising
himself. He’d meant to lead up to it, start talking about
something in general and narrow it down. The old man