Read The Devil's Playground Online
Authors: Stav Sherez
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General
‘And then more came. And I was happy. I know that’s a
terrible thing to say but it’s what I felt. Not happy that they
were dead but now that they were dead I was happy it
was in this way. I thought having it splashed across the
newspapers would create something positive. In February
when the police had the suspect I hoped they’d got the
wrong man and when the next girl was found I felt a surge
of excitement. But now I’m asking myself how did I even
think like that? How could I? Did I really want more people
dead just so a point could be made?’
Dominic leaned back in the chair. Which is why we need
to crank it up a notch,’ he said.
Suze looked at him blankly. We need to stop. Didn’t
you hear what I’ve been saying? Stop and reassess our
motives.’
We can’t stop. They won’t stop. Killings will continue.
Our fascination with them will only expand. It’s up to us to
show people the true face of murder.’
She realized what he meant. ‘You’re going to use Beatrice.’
She caught his eyes. Watched them shift, then light up. He
smiled.
‘A friend passed me the police photos. Not the smiling
graduation shot on the front pages. The after shots.’
‘Get rid of them.’ She grabbed his hand and squeezed
tight.
‘No.’ But he didn’t pull away.
‘Please, Dominic. It’s gone too far. I know your intentions
are good but I’m not sure this is the solution any more.’
‘People need to see what the word “murder” stands for.
They need to see the blood, skin and bone that make up this
word. The pain and loss and never-againness. I thought you
understood.’ He shook his head, unclenched, stood up, called
his dog Bill to his side. ‘This is the only weapon we have.
We don’t have guns, we have images. You’ll see. I’ve got
something special waiting. Something that will make all this
talk academic. We need to take it to another level. We need
to take it as far as it can go.’ He turned from her before she
could answer him. He didn’t want to hear. She would see
when it was all over. She would understand the necessity of
it. Then she would move across a table and place her hand
in his, smile and say, ‘I should have known all along.’ He
wanted to share conversations with her that no one else
understood, to hold her when memory ripped through her
soul like broken glass, to stop her shaking and make her
smile. But he could never say these things to her. His own
fear was like a gag slowly working its way down his throat.
But this would all change very soon. And then they would be joined and the world would melt away from them, fall off the edges, vanish altogether.
She sat and watched him disappear into the flux of itinerary
chasing tourists, lost now, just another floating ghost.
She lit a cigarette and leafed through the Breugel book,
quickly getting drawn into the vertiginous plains and
impossible towers of his work, wanting her thoughts to be
completely engulfed, submerged, silenced and squeezed out.
It was only when the coffee was done, the cigarette too, that she noticed the price tag on the inside front cover, the ”. nill price, the name of a new bookshop, and she wondered had he really found it secondhand or bought it new and
forgotten to take off the label? She looked up, not wanting
her head crammed with such thoughts, with so little kindness
and she pledged to try harder. Feeling better already, filled
with the instant absolution that making a promise bestows,
she got up, tucked the book under her arm and was quickly
swallowed up by the tremulous masses.
He sat amid his machines, shiny, humming computers and
insect-like chipboards, the transferring equipment, the black
editing boxes and the old film projector that his dad had
given him on his sixteenth birthday — the only time it seemed
to Dominic that the old man had actually thought about
what he was buying his son, rather than the token, sometimes
wildly inappropriate, present that was the norm.
He thought about his meeting with Suze, all the things left
unspoken, the silence in their lives which neither of them
could break. Would she leave the Council? When he’d seen
the paper that morning, he knew that things would change,
that they could not continue as they had done. But while for
Suze it seemed a severance, for him it was an indication that
they were right. That things had to be brought out into the
open. The world was always darker when it lay hidden behind
words.
He thought about the body in the canal. The feel of dead
hair. The slurp of the water swallowing it up.
He looked through his CD s and picked out Willie Nelson’s Red Headed Stranger. The opening bars of ‘Time of the Preacher’ crept into the room and then the lone, high voice
filled the space around him. Sometimes every song on an
album told you about yourself. Dominic listened quietly,
thinking about Suze.
Later, the dog came and curled at his feet.
‘Come on now, I went and bought this especially for you
so I want to see you eating it,’ Dominic said as he picked up
the two cream cakes off the table. ‘That’s more like it.’ He
smiled, watching the dog lap up the cake and, in one gulp,
swallow it. He stroked Bill a few times and muttered some
words. There was an awful smell in his flat these days. He
knew he’d been letting himself go. But it was almost over
now. And someone was coming. The old man had said so.
He had an idea where this person would go. It was visible
from his window. He rigged a small cam to the outside of
his window ledge, facing the enclosure. Routed it so that it
appeared as a self-contained square in the top right of his
computer screen, overlaying the Work. He sighed, lit a cigarette.
It was almost finished and yet why did he feel so
apathetic towards it? He should have been thrilled, scared
yes, but overjoyed too … instead he felt numb and he tried
not to think about Suze or about what they’d said. How it
was him who should have felt guilty for the girl’s death and
not her. He smoked weed and listened to Hiisker Did until
his brain stopped humming, and when he fell asleep that
night it was Beatrice who kept him company until dawn.
Van Hijn walked through the rain which had picked up and
was slung almost horizontally by a brewing north-easterly
wind that had wrapped itself around the city.
He didn’t want to do this.
Each step seemed to take for ever. He had a sudden urge
for cheesecake and he stopped at a small patisserie and had
one slice of chocolate and one slice of banana. He felt better
immediately though he knew he’d suffer for it. He’d eaten
too fast again and that telling first shot of pain would soon
come, then the full heartburn and indigestion doublewhammo.
He stood outside the piercing parlour and waited for his
stomach to settle. He smoked two cigarettes. Checked his
watch. The Englishman should be on his way home by now.
That was good. If Jon Reed fucked up in some way, they
would blame it on him. Take him off the case for good.
Immediate suspension. He had a feeling that Jon was searching
for something beyond his friend’s death and it worried
him. Another thing to get stressed about. He looked out at
the canal. It calmed him, he loved the open view here, so
different from the District. There was something in openness,
in unrestricted vistas and vast spaces that made you feel as
if your very self was expanded. He turned back, feeling
better. The rain continued regardless. Umbrellas josded the
sky like spears in an Uccello painting. He took a deep breath
and stepped inside.
‘Good afternoon.’ The blonde receptionist smiled.
Van Hijn smiled back. Maybe this wouldn’t be as bad as
he thought.
‘Afternoon.’ He flashed his badge. ‘I’d like to talk to the
piercer, please.’
‘Concerning?’ Her smile hadn’t changed. She wore nurse’s
whites, was older than she’d first appeared. Her hair spilled
like honey on white shoulders and Van Hijn noted how she
held herself more like a work of art than a human being,
delicately poised in the space she occupied with a certain
measure that seemed to betray deep character. For a moment
Van Hijn was speechless. He looked down at the table. Small
printed leaflets and photocopied disclaimers. A half-eaten
sandwich.
‘Just routine questions. Could you get him, please?’
She nodded, a smile still lurking somewhere in her face.
Van Hijn watched as she went into the room behind her. He
felt for the photos in his pocket. Twenty Polaroids.
Images of scarring. Images of burns. Images of holes.
Jake’s body. In little pieces.
Whatever his friend Jon might have thought, it was obvious
to Van Hijn that most of the damage done to Jake’s
body was self-inflicted. He’d been a detective in Amsterdam
long enough to recognize the markings. The city was a
bright, shining light for these moths of the night, slamming
themselves against the fire, trying to find that one perfect
moment of stillness. He could feel their urgent desire to
break free of things the world held dear. He knew it in
himself, the need for separateness, the constant cigarettes,
weed, needles and hooks of their own. We all gradually kill
ourselves, he thought, we all, moment by moment, do things that make us less and we accept this, even cherish it. And yet we continue.
The woman came back through the door.
‘The piercer?’ he said, feeling slightly annoyed.
‘Yes.’ She sat down in front of him, a lithe, heart
quickening movement that quashed all his anxiety and annoyance
with the flick of her heel. ‘My receptionist told me that
you wanted to ask me a few questions.’ She smiled, watching
the surprise on his face. ‘I’m sorry, it’s not your fault, there’s not too many women working in this business. Don’t worry,
it’s just a way to pass the time, I don’t even take it personally
any more.’
‘I’m sorry, I shouldn’t…’
‘Forget it. Take a seat. I’m Annabelle, what did you want
to know?’
He sat down. He wanted to sink into the chair. Let it
gobble him up. How stupid. How fucking thoughtless. He
couldn’t believe it. He would have to try harder.
‘A case I’m working on. The victim had numerous scars
and markings that I think were self-inflicted or, at least,
willingly inflicted.’
‘Piercings?’
Van Hijn nodded. He reached for the photographs. The
phone rang. She picked it up, began speaking.
He stared at the small parlour to his left. Tiled white.
Sloping away. Spotless. A chair at its centre, a drain in the
floor. What a strange way to make a living, he thought, then
smiled, people probably said the same about him.
He flicked through the photos while she spoke on the
phone. He wondered how Jon could not have known about
Jake’s self-mutilations. Their relationship intrigued him. Why
would someone take in such a seriously scarred man? But if
Jon hadn’t known? Still, it was hard to fathom, especially
with the old man dead with that book in his pocket. Perhaps
it would have been better to ask Jon to stay, keep an eye
on him.
‘Sorry about that.’ She’d put the phone down, was staring
at him. ‘I used to have a receptionist but then we got divorced.
Have to do it all myself now.’
He didn’t know what to say so he showed her the photos.
She sat down and looked at them slowly, like an old woman
seeing her grandchildren’s holiday snaps, except the kids are
so small that she has to squint, to make them take form out
of the blur. She made little sounds — like appreciation? Van
Hijn couldn’t tell.
‘Definitely.’ She was nodding. ‘This man’s like a walking
textbook of body modification. Very impressive.’
‘Ever seen him before?’ He handed her the face shot.
‘I’d recognize those markings before I recognized a face,
but no, never seen him. I definitely would have remembered.’
He felt a slight sinking, familiar as hell. ‘Anything else you
can tell me?’
She looked back at the photos. Took one out. Pointed.
Her nails were painted a deep blood red. Van Hijn looked
from them to the photo. ‘This. This is from suspension.’
‘Suspension?’ It was a new world. One of many that
existed congruent with our own, occasionally touching or
leaking in. He looked at her and wondered how she’d got
into this — the former husband, a lover, something else? Was
he just being prejudiced again? He wasn’t sure, wasn’t sure
at all if he’d wonder the same thing about a man.
‘From flesh hooks. Big in Native American ceremonies.
Big in modification circles too. The true test of a person, if
you will.’
‘So, not everybody does this?’
‘No, not at all. Most people come for ordinary piercings.
That’s what I do. Nose. Lips. Ears. Belly. Some pop star’s
done it and there’s a rush. That’s how it goes. But that’s just