Read The Devil's Playground Online
Authors: Stav Sherez
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General
would gladly take Berlin with its greyness and death if I
could be with him there. But I do not think he is there. Maybe
in Amsterdam where I believe my father is, where Paula is.
I fear for Alfred, he is so sweet and useless in the eyes of
others, no one sees his passion and fire. It is only the newness
of this place, the light, the surroundings, which make it
bearable without him. I feel that he is like one of my lungs
and that without him I will not live long.
I look at the sea and roads here. The roads so narrow and
slight, as if ashamed to be conduits for such a modern load.
There is an excitement in new places, a quickening of the
heart; it appeals to everything we have lost. It tells us that
all is not gone. That we can see again, that the light bouncing
off a bicycle standing by the side of a fence can be more
beautiful than anything man has ever or will ever create.
But there is also sadness. We take our losses with us.
Everything left behind. Everything unknown. I will not
surrender to my inheritance. I will not prove the old man
right. I must do something wildly unusual or I will go crazy.
It was so strange to be out of the District. To see the other
world that existed congruent to the one he knew so well.
The everyday shuffle of commuters, last-minute cigarettes
outside glass-fronted office blocks, new buildings constantly
going up, a surprise at every corner, unfamiliarity at every
corner. The old city slowly giving way to the new, its body marked and scarred but painted over, a palimpsest which the past kept pushing against, at every turn and step, in the
ghosts and phantom limbs of demolished buildings and
renewed facades.
For the past seven years Van Hijn’s life had been bordered
and circumscribed by the small yet all encompassing boundaries
of the red-light district, his District, and he felt a
sudden moment of release, as if the area were a prison so
well designed that only on escaping did you even realize its
true nature and function.
He found the address that the old man of the museum
had written down. Another remnant from a previous century,
he thought, walking up to the splintered doorframe, the
rusted buzzer.
No name.
He pressed it. Heard something like an amplified insect
whirr, looked up to see a small camera mounted high above,
away from the hands of intruders, tracking its way towards
him.
He put on his best smile, serious yet unthreatening - he’d
once spent time in front of a mirror perfecting a vast array
of smiles that conveyed many things - and held his badge
out towards the dead eye of the lens.
He heard a small click and the door opened. A young
man, black frizzy hair, Lennon glasses, dark polo-neck and
trousers, stood smiling.
Van Hijn didn’t know what he’d expected, another Methusalan
perhaps.
The man shook his hand and led him inside. ‘Glad to meet
you, detective. Piet Pretorius. We can talk upstairs,’ he said,
in almost perfect Dutch, but not quite; Van Hijn noted a
touch of Afrikaans there. ‘Moshe at the museum told me
you might be coming.’
‘Oh.’ He hated it when the element of surprise was gone.
This man had had time to think of what to present of himself
and his organization, what to say, how much … yet if Moshe
hadn’t called, the door might not have been opened at all.
‘He told you why I was coming?’
‘Yes.’ The man stopped, turned around, creeping closer.
‘You understand most people will never know about this, let
alone see it. We are not a public information group or a
resource for policemen. Some things can exist only in the
shadows.’
Van Hijn nodded and the man continued down the hall.
It had once been a wide passageway, wide for Amsterdam
where every building had a width tax levied on it, but was
now narrowed severely by hundreds of white cardboard
boxes stacked on both sides, each seemingly on the point of
toppling and setting the whole thing off in a chain reaction.
As they passed, plumes of dust spun like dirt devils from the
tops of the boxes. Van Hijn walked carefully, inhaling the
deep, rich aroma of old books and paper gone yellow and
musty. It was somehow comforting.
The man stopped when they reached the fourth floor. He
stood before a black door. Metal, Van Hijn reckoned, pretty
much unassailable. He watched as another camera picked up
their faces and then a slow whoosh of hydraulic release and
the door opened.
It could have been any office. Van Hijn stared at the small
partitions, people locked behind computer screens, each in
their own cubicle, the giant hum of machinery like static
saturating the air. A sense of purpose and dedication surrounded
them like smoke. Some turned and watched as he
walked past and he noticed how young they were, staring at
him with light-drained eyes. They reached a cubicle at the
far end of the room, by the window, and the man motioned
Van Hijn to sit.
‘Welcome to AYN, detective. As you can see we are not
a big organization and our resources are limited but I will be
happy to help you in any way you wish.’ He flicked on the
computer screen and a leather-jacketed Snoopy ran across
the desktop, back and forth, a cute grin on his face.
‘I don’t know how much Moshe told you about what we
do,’ Piet said.
‘Nothing.’
‘You know about the Internet, detective, about auction
sites?’
Van Hijn nodded.
‘Well, when these auction sites were first set up, at the
same time another group of sites were encoded and put into
motion. Sites for selling things that can’t be sold on Ebay or
Amazon. A lot of these sites just sell bootleg CDs, films on
video months before they’ve reached the cinema - harmless,
really. But there’s a small group of sites that sell items of,
shall I say, special interest. Several of us noticed that the
Internet suddenly provided an incredibly easy, risk-free and
profitable place for the dissemination of these items. Some
even thought the Internet came into being because of this
very need. Regardless, we track them here.’
Van Hijn watched as the man keyed in some commands.
‘What kind of items?’
‘Yes, you’re interested, of course you are, everyone is. The
organization was founded in the mid-fifties when this type
of memorabilia started appearing regularly at auctions, in the
backs of military magazines. Then came the Internet and
suddenly it seemed the whole world was flooded. We started
out monitoring only items that had links to Nazism or
other anti-Semitic content. The collapse of the Soviet Union
inundated the market with newly “unearthed” souvenirs that
had been taken during the fall of Berlin and slept, silent and
cold, for that long Russian winter. There was so much. Of
course, Hitler’s skull and hairpiece, his teeth and shoes these
things hold a certain allure. People who might not even
believe in that man will want his relics. People will collect
anything and the more illustrious or infamous its history the
more it’s desired. We tracked who the buyers were, the
sellers, we made lists and drew up charts. Certain patterns
kept emerging. There were a few groups who were buying
the majority of the stuff. There were groups that were interested
only in certain things - in Holocaustiana for example.’
Tou track only anti-Semitic objects?’ Van Hijn understood
how something like the Net could be the breeding
ground and habitat of rumours and myths that externalized
our darkest folds, and how its very structure was similar. The
snaking, sinewy lines reaching out, spilling information, the
constant cluster of numbers streaming in.
‘No.’ Piet shook his head. ‘We track anything of the sort.
Hairpieces and underpants - all that stuff, we leave. We’re
primarily interested in film. There is something about film,
don’t you agree? Something that makes us forget we are
watching it. That takes us somewhere else. We believe in it
more deeply than in the other plastic arts. I think we may
even believe in it more deeply than in our day-to-day lives.
A few years ago a sudden glut of video footage from the
Yugoslav wars hit the market. Home-made videos from the
rape camps near Manjaca and the concentration camps of
Omarska. There were streaming real-time previews available. You could test before you bought. It seems that in every regime, everywhere across the globe, people have filmed the
worst atrocities and of course it makes you wonder why.
People don’t film stuff unless they want to watch it repeatedly,
or preserve the memory, or disseminate it. You see what we
are dealing with here? We are talking late-night entertainment.
There are parties organized. Strict non-copying regulations.
These items have to remain scarce, you see, or they’re
not quite the same.’
Snoopy kept walking across the screen. All ones and zeros,
Van Hijn thought, whether it was a cute animated beagle or
rape footage, it was just numbers to the computer. ‘Moshe
mentioned something about reels of Nazi film.’ He thought
it best to keep to himself what he knew, what he suspected,
about the nature of these films. That they weren’t the holy
grail that Piet and the others sought. That they were something
else altogether.
Piet turned to look at him, his fingers still tapping on the
keyboard. ‘Yes, there has been a somewhat unnatural amount
of interest since that was posted. Enough to suggest that this
might be the real thing.’
‘The real thing?’ He felt his heart speed. A tremor. But
these people were always looking for the real thing, he
understood their excitement and he wondered how good the
fakery had been to convince them. Had Jake been used to
add ‘authenticity’ to the footage? Was he a victim or an
assailant? He knew he would have to watch these films, that
inside them lay the answer to the murders of the last nine
months.
‘For many years, ever since the end of the war, there were
rumours going around that there was some surviving footage
that the Nazis had taken inside the camps. Of course it is
well documented that many things were filmed but they
were, if nothing else, extremely assiduous in destroying a lot
of this stuff before the Russians came. But this was different,
rumours of footage of the medical experiments, actual footage
of Mengele working in his lab. Can you imagine that?
Even I, a Jew, have to confess a certain desire to see that.
To actually see this man, these things. Like all rumours it
had its moments of intensity and then of silence. Every few
years someone would claim to have found such reels but
they always proved false.’
‘And what makes you think they’re genuine this time
round?’ Van Hijn said, still suspicious.
‘I don’t know. I’ve been doing this job for ten years. It
feels like it could be true. You sense these things. How words
will suddenly give you a certain chill. We’ll see in the next
couple of days.’
‘What happens then?’ Van Hijn asked.
‘The preview goes online.’ The man clicked the mouse.
Snoopy disappeared and a single html page took its place.
Van Hijn read the scant paragraph of information that
announced the forthcoming auction of 49 reels of highly
collectible ‘home movies’ shot during the Nazi regime. There
was a time and date for the auction and a further statement
that a small preview of the footage would go online at the
site’s address in a week’s time. This would be the only
preview. The footage was believed to have been privately
shot at different concentration camps across the Third Reich
during the years 1942 to 1944. Thirty of the 49 reels were in
colour. There was no further information.
Van Hijn leaned back and lit a cigarette. A few faces turned
his way, expressed disapproval and then hunched back into
their monitors. The room vibrated with the low, lulling hum
of processors firing, printer keys rattling and the pling-plock
of keys hammered by young, agile fingers.
“You mentioned that you track the people who buy these
things,’ he said, trying to find somewhere to flick his ash,
settling on his palm.
‘There are a lot of groups whose mandate is the search
for such artefacts.’ The man handed him an empty CD case,
pointed at his cigarette. ‘Have you heard of SPAR, detective?’
Van Hijn shook his head. This was a new world to him,
existing behind the bland plastic of hard drives, humming
in the wires as it crossed continents and oceans, like the
perfect spy.
ŚWe have reports that two of their members, one male
and one female, arrived here in Amsterdam late last night.’
‘What… why?’
‘ They are after the films. The 49 reels. Their presence here
in the city leads us to suspect that we might be dealing with
the genuine article.’
‘So the films are here,’ Van Hijn said, more to himself