Read The Devil's Playground Online
Authors: Stav Sherez
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General
And it was even better than Dante. It was well written and
more explicit and horrifying than any other books about the
camps I’d read, which was quite a few, due to my research
on Charlotte. The Doctor told of his time as a “volunteer”
for medical experiments; there were things in that book no
one else talks about, the trade in dead human flesh among
prisoners, rape and sex slayings, long technical passages
describing how they turned bodies into soap. That book
changed everything for us, it really galvanized and centred
us as a group.’
‘How?’ Back to the Holocaust, Jon thought, watching the
sights drift by, always, in this city, leading back to that.
‘I think it showed us that the only way was through representation, that the fear of wearing away the image like a bar of
cheap soap was something we had to confront, to confront
and break through. That we had to use images as bullets.
Bullets to be fired into the heart of apathy. There was such
courage in that book, such heartbreak and sadness — but most
of all there was the relentless necessity of telling. The desire
for memory, in the form of words and images, to be kept and
retold down the ages. We all felt swept along by the book, it
affected us very deeply, it was a terrible and necessary book.’
She looked at him aware that she’d said too much. That it was
too late now.
‘Necessary?’
‘So that people know what happened. If you don’t think
the bogeyman exists, you never get the chance to fight him.
That’s what my mother always said.’
The canal boat came to the end of its trip and they silently
alighted along with a group of elderly American women in
shell suits and sneakers, chatting and smoking cigarettes in
the night air.
‘We traced the author.’ Suze hesitated. It was too late to
back out now, whatever the consequences. ‘He was still alive.
Living here in Amsterdam.’
‘How’d you find him?’ Jon leaned forward, stopped
walking.
‘Dominic, one of the members of the Council, managed
to trace him somehow through the Internet. He invited him
along to meetings.’
‘Did he come?’ He was holding her arm. Squeezing. He
noticed it now.
‘Yes. He was an old man, still had a thick German accent.
His eyes were like the eyes of a goat, no feeling or empathy
- that always scared me. I said to myself, it’s because of what
he’s been through, but still, I never liked sitting next to
him. He would nod his head and listen to us talk. Answer
questions, very polite and reserved, an old-school gentlemen,
I guess, but those eyes …’
‘And?’
‘And that was it really, he came a couple of times and then
we never saw him again.’ She wanted to move away from
the subject, from where it was inevitably leading - she hadn’t
even thought about it recently and now it was coming back,
like a nightmare that refuses to die in the dawn, magnifying
in the bright light of day. She knew that she should tell him
everything but she couldn’t bring herself to. What would he
think of her then?
Jon didn’t think much about Jake during that time, didn’t
even look at the slip of numbers in his wallet that the
detective had insisted on him keeping, and it wasn’t until
Suze read the newspaper article one morning that it all
came back. A short, terse column which recounted in cold,
functional prose the victims of the supposed serial killer. A
round-up of facts, easily digestible nuggets of death, sparked
by the celebrity funeral of Beatrice’s father.
Jon made Suze read him the full article, her halting translation
releasing the sentences one at a time, letting them sink
deeply into his mind.
When she finished, she put the paper down and sipped
from her drink. He could sense her fading slightly from him,
nothing much, just a slight reduction.
‘I need to go and see her,’ he said, suddenly convinced.
‘Who?’ But it was obvious. ‘Do you really want to do this,
Jon? Have you asked yourself whether it can do any good?
What it’ll do to you?’
‘It doesn’t matter,’ he said, though he knew it did, and
he’d felt the slight shifts in him from the moment he’d
arrived in the city, shifts that now opened up new and hungry
spaces. ‘I need to see her.’
“I don’t think it’s a good idea,’ she said, but she could see
that his mind was made up and that she could only do further
damage by trying to make him stop. She bit her lip and
remained silent.
20
His pager had beeped an hour into the first film; he’d
forgotten to turn it off again. His day off. High Sierra and In
a Lonely Place. Double Bogart. A light lunch. Some cake for
the movie. The rain kept at bay for a while. And then his
pager had gone off.
He called the number.
‘AYN Technologies.’
‘It’s Van Hijn,’ he mumbled.
‘The preview’s just come online, detective. I think you
should come and see.’
He’d seen the Bogart film four times before. So it was no
great loss, and now he felt a curious excitement at the news
as he hurried through the drenched streets.
He’d thought it would be awful. Intolerable. This dredging
of the past, all the history that he’d purposefully forgotten,
but instead he felt a huge relief, to be able to move through
that history without collapsing under its weight. To accept
that it was never past, that it would always be here, a part of
him, a part of the city.
As he swept through the rain he had a sense that someone
was shadowing him, glimpses when he turned a corner or
stopped to light a cigarette, an old instinct that had never
left him. It wasn’t the first time he’d felt this and he walked
in circles, doubled back and bluffed, used side doors until he
was sure that he was alone.
‘You made it here quickly,’ Piet said, standing behind the
inner door.
Van Hijn smiled, smile number 46, humble yet interested,
not giving away too much, and followed him inside.
Unlike the time before there was no buzz of concerted
effort, no sequestering or hunched concentration, everyone
was gathered around the large computer monitor on Piet’s
desk watching a flickering black and white stream.
‘It was posted half an hour ago.’
‘Is it real?’ Van Hijn asked.
Piet nodded.
The others left them alone. Van Hijn sat down facing
the monitor. If it was real, then he was wrong. Totally and
utterly wrong. His theory fucked. He felt the floor sink, as if
he’d stepped in mud. The screen was blank. The Realplayer
was on.
‘It’s only a minute long.’
Van Hijn was about to say something when the screen
flickered and an image began to take shape. He sat and
watched the segment and when it was over he motioned for
Piet to run it again. He did this four times, each time couched
in silence, watching the film unfold, these horrors imagined
but unseen until now.
‘Is he really doing what I think he’s doing?’ Van Hijn
asked, pointing to the officer in the foreground.
‘You have a keen eye, detective. Yes, he is.’
‘Christ!’
‘Christ had nothing to do with it.’
‘Begs the question, doesn’t it?’
‘So they say.’
Van Hijn watched the clip again. He kept his face a mask
though what he saw on that screen turned everything upside
down. It was one thing to read and hear about these events,
but you never really got it, no, not until you’d seen it. He
turned away, stared out of the window, trying to flee from
their spell, the mesmerizing allure of filmed evil, of rare
history.
‘Quite a piece, huh, detective?’ Piet leaned over and clicked
the mouse a couple of times. The film disappeared and in its
place Snoopy bounced across the screen.
‘And there’s no doubt?’
Piet shook his head. ‘No doubt at all. Manny over there.’
He pointed to a small dark man hunched over a computer.
‘He ran the film through his software, blew up certain bits.
Here …’
He clicked twice. The screen filled with what Van Hijn
recognized as the top corner of the previous footage. The
operating table out of sight. A man walked quickly across
the frame, disappearing off its edges into the blackness. It
took him only a second or so to cross the room. In the normal
footage he was just a blip, a smudge in the background while
all eyes were pinned to what was happening on the table.
Now Van Hijn could see the man’s face, turning slightly to
acknowledge the scene in the foreground, a smile breaking
the strict geometry of his face, for only a second, before he
disappears.
‘You recognize him?’
‘He looks familiar, that’s all,’ Van Hijn conceded.
Piet laughed. ‘Familiar? That, detective, is perhaps the
only footage we have of Mengele at Auschwitz.’
‘Mengele.’ The name hung in the air, heavy and poisonous,
between them. The name that was almost a metonym for all
the horrors of the camp. The name of the man who sterilized
women with Barium.
‘Doesn’t look so evil, does he?’ Piet said, clicking back to
the screen saver. ‘It’s no coincidence that this piece was
chosen for the preview. Not just for its gruesomeness you
see, though prospective buyers will want to know that this
footage is of the import that is claimed. No, it wasn’t very
hard for us to spot Mengele.’
‘The film carries its own provenance.’ He felt deflated and
yet strangely exhilarated at the same time. So, perhaps Jake
had found the real films. Had been murdered for them.
There was what the old man of the museum had told him.
Jake rummaging in the basement. Jake being obsessed by
the filmed documentation of the time. The timing of the
49 reels’ appearance and that very visual texture of those
eight dead girls.
‘Exactly. This is what we’ve feared all along. That these
rumours are true. That these films exist.’
‘How many people have bid on it?’ He leaned back,
wanting to get away from the humming claw of the computer.
‘Forty-four so far. Current high bid’s around $110,000
though it will get far higher in the days to come. The web
counter shows over a quarter of a million hits already.’
‘People are watching this segment?’
‘All over the world.’
‘How? I had to come here. You said it couldn’t be accessed
without knowing a string of passwords.’
‘These things get out. They spread faster than is imaginable.
One person sees it, cuts and pastes the link and passwords,
sends it to thirty people on his list, a little note
attached, check this out, they watch and yes, perhaps they’re
horrified, disgusted, can’t believe what they’re seeing, that
anyone would put this kind of thing up on the net, and yet
they’ll still pass it on, what do you think of this, they add,
distancing themselves from the source, each of them to
another group of people. It grows exponentially and with
the kind of speed that was once unimaginable.’
They sat and talked some more and then Piet took him to
a large room off the back. Inside he showed him some of
the things that AYN had successfully bid on. ‘These are
things no one wants apart from as souvenirs - Naziana that’s
why we could afford them. The real stuff, the important
stuff, is far beyond our means.’
He showed him plates embossed with the Berchtesgaden
logo. ‘Heroes of the Reich’ playing cards. Van Hijn shuffled
through the deck. They were all there: Eichmann, dark
and scrawny, Himmler the junkie, Goebbels the gimp, the
hook-nosed and hunchbacked Brunner, below them their
attributes and scoring. Lampshades with nipples. Mengele’s
spectacles. The rug from the bunker that Adolf reputedly
chewed on in those last days. Faked postcards, train timetables,
a bottle of amphetamine tablets that belonged to the
Fiihrer.
Van Hijn picked up a paperback book. There was a stack
of them to his left. All identical. A thin, faded book with a barbed-wire fence on its cover. ‘What’s this?’ he asked.
Piet turned and looked at the detective. ‘The Garden of
Earthly Delights. It’s a Holocaust memoir. But one that is
very popular among collectors. Quite rare now,’ Piet said,
gnomically. Van Hijn took the book, checked behind him.
Piet had already walked on. The detective slipped it into his
jacket pocket.
‘This is only a small and insignificant part of a greater
whole.’ Piet stopped at the far end of the room. ‘But in my
years here, I don’t think there’s been anything as significant,
or as dangerous as these films on auction now.’
Van Hijn knew what was implied. Go and find them. Bury
them here or somewhere else. He knew it was what he should
do. Do what his father had never had the guts to. That
preview had been enough. What if the whole collection was
aired on the net? Or kept in a vault somewhere for a time
when its true ‘merits’ would be appreciated? He also understood