Read The Devil's Playground Online
Authors: Stav Sherez
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General
Roedel, I shouldn’t have come, I’ll go now if you want
me to.’
She stood up and Jon knew he’d fucked up again, she was
going to tell him to leave. He’d stepped over a line, imagined
similarity when there was none. He stood up too.
‘No stay, please, Mr Reed. I was just going to make a
drink. Would you like one?’
‘Yes. Thank you.’ He sat down, feeling embarrassed and
watched as she went into the adjoining room.
He studied the massive canvas hanging opposite him. So
large, it dwarfed the room. India. The compound in the
centre of the frame was a colonial structure. He saw the
neatly plotted crops, the strict geometry imposed on the crazy
land, everywhere people working, dark-skinned, turbaned
figures setting up tents, chopping wood, carrying huge,
impossibly heavy pieces of cloth, the Dutch on their white
horses looking on from above and in the distance, a great
ship, manned by so many slaves he couldn’t count them,
setting off from the channel, searching for more lands and
bounties, the cycle endless and terrible.
He looked down, stared at the gnarled swirl and heft of
the table. There was a quietness to the house that Jon had
yet to experience in Amsterdam. It seemed that wherever
you were in this city, you could hear the crowds, the rain and
police sirens through the walls - here he heard only his own
shallow breathing and the distant hiss of a stove-top kettle
announcing its readiness.
She brought in a small tray with assorted pastries and
cakes and put it down on the table in front of him. She
poured the tea into his cup and then into hers and offered
him a slice of cake. They sipped their tea politely, not saying
anything to each other, caught up perhaps in the beautiful
stillness of the room.
‘Tell me about Beatrice,’ Jon said, finally breaking the
silence.
She carefully put her cup of tea down, her hand shaking,
looked up at him. ‘What can I say to you, Mr Reed? With all
respect, how can I tell you?’
‘I don’t know, just tell me anything you can. I know only
what I read in the papers.’
She sighed and Jon thought she wasn’t going to say anything.
He twitched in his chair.
‘She loved her father so much. He couldn’t take it when
he heard what happened. He disappeared for two days and
came back to me crying. I had never seen him look like that.
He begged me for forgiveness, I thought he meant about
Beatrice, and so I gave it to him. He left that night.’ She
coughed into a small handkerchief, excused herself and continued.
‘You know, when she was twelve, we were on holiday
in Italy and we were walking along the beachfront. As we
passed by the pier we heard this terrible noise coming from
underneath it. Beatrice ran to see what was going on before
we could stop her and my husband followed.
‘There was a man beating his dog. He was cursing and
berating him at the same time as he was slashing the poor
beast with a belt. My husband quickly took Beatrice in his
arms and joined me and we left the beach. All the way back
to the hotel Beatrice was crying in the car. “Why didn’t you
do anything, Daddy? Why didn’t you stop that man?” just
over and over again, crying so violently that my husband was
overcome himself and had to pull the car up to the side of
the highway and I sat there and watched them both hold
each other, silently trembling for about ten minutes before
we could resume our trip.’ She wiped the tears from her eyes. ‘I’m sorry Mr Reed. That must seem like a horribly sentimental thing to tell you, but it was all … all I could
think of.’
‘It’s okay. Thank you for sharing it, Mrs De Roedel,’ Jon
replied, moved by her tale despite himself. He went over to
her sofa, sat down and held the old woman in his arms, feeling the hard knots of her bones against his and the saggy flesh that gave as he pressed up to it. She cried in his arms,
shaking and sobbing and he held her, watching the light
slant in through the blinds, until she was cried out and she
apologized to him, wiping her eyes with the small initialled
handkerchief.
‘You know, I grew up during the war. I remember when
the Canadians liberated the city and people shot all the
remaining Germans on sight. There were bodies everywhere,
young handsome boys in SS uniforms and the city kids, kids
of my age, picked through their pockets and kicked them in
their faces as they lay there in the mud. Older men came and
mutilated the bodies and no one cleared up. They left them
like that for a few days, a horrible sight, Mr Reed. I remember
walking past the body of an SS man, we knew them from
the skulls on their uniforms, and I saw that his groin had
been cut out and I began crying. My father who was with
me, just looked at me angrily. “Stop crying,” he said, shouting
really, “you should be rejoicing. What you see there are devils
- devils who have been defeated, this is a happy day, Elaine,
remember it for one day you will know.” And I really thought
then that the worst was over. I really thought that nothing
would cause me such pain again.’
Jon let the story have the necessary space it needed to
settle. They sat in silence for a minute or two, Jon staring at
the painting, the old woman at her hands.
‘Mrs De Roedel, was there anything strange that you
noticed before Beatrice’s disappearance?’ He hadn’t meant
to be so abrupt. It was too late now that it was said. He tried
to look apologetic as he watched her gather herself together
like a sleeper rudely awakened.
‘The police have already asked me all that, Mr Reed. I’m
afraid there’s not much I noticed. I told them what I knew.’
‘What was she involved in before her disappearance?’
‘She was a student, Mr Reed. She did what all students do.
She studied hard, she went out to parties, she got drunk.’
‘Can I see her room?’ Now that he was here he was
determined to get what he wanted, not to shrink like so many
times before.
The room was like that of any young woman caught between
the suspended days of her youth and a future now unrealizable.
There were faded posters of pop stars and movie idols,
books neatly arrayed, CDs and small trinkets. Make-up cases
and mirrors. The small accretions of a life, a personal history
externalized in the way we fill up space. Nothing sadder than
a room that no one will return to, Jon thought, as he looked
around.
He saw it immediately. Almost hidden. Sitting on a small
stool by the bed, partly covered by a tasselled Indian shawl.
A black, plastic projector. An 8 mm projector.
‘What’s that?’ he asked Mrs De Roedel, hoping she
wouldn’t sense the breathless excitement in his voice.
She seemed to have drifted off and her reply sounded as
if it was coming from a detuned radio. ‘Oh, I think that was
a present from a friend of hers. She was working on some
project that involved all those old films.’
Jon’s heart catapulted inside his chest. It filled his throat.
‘Are any of the films here?’
‘No. She said the humidity in the house ruined them.’
‘Who was her friend?’
‘I don’t know, Mr Reed. I’m afraid I never kept track of
these things. Someone from her classes, I think. A man.
Twice he left messages with me, that’s all I know.’
Jon stood still as he watched the old lady retire downstairs
telling him to take his time.
He stared at the projector. Controlled his breathing.
Checked the reels but they were both empty. He felt disappointed
though he’d known there’d be nothing there. He
wondered if there was a link between Beatrice and Jake,
something outside of their common deaths — the equipment
seemed to suggest it. Of course Van Hijn would say it was
circumstantial and there was probably no point in telling
him, he’d just berate Jon for having disturbed the old lady.
But Jon knew that there was more to it than that. Had to be.
He walked around the room, looking at the law books on
the shelves, those long words seemingly without vowels that
the Dutch were so fond of. Anthologies of American poetry.
A collection of Thackeray novels in English. Swinburne.
Whitman. Romantic poets. And he didn’t even notice it the
first time, his eyes slipping easily over the many coloured
spines. It was only after he’d turned around that it registered.
He looked back at the bookcase. And there it was, innocently
nestled among the greats of Victoriana.
The small, unassuming spine. The Garden of Earthly Delights.
He pulled it gently out from between Wordsworth and
Shelley. Dr Chaim Kaplan subtly embossed on the front. A
photo of that most famous of barbed-wire fences. A small
book: 126 pages. He looked behind him. Slipped the book
into his pocket. Went downstairs.
Jon sat with Mrs De Roedel until it got dark, listening to her
stories of the old days in Amsterdam and eating the cakes
and pastries that she kept insisting he have. She’d talked
about Beatrice fondly, as if she’d merely gone off to university
rather than for good. She never once mentioned the husband,
father, suicide.
‘It’s getting late, Mr Reed, you’re probably dying to go.’
She reached her hand across the table and put it on his.
“Thank you for staying with me, listening to my boring
stories. You can’t know but it means a lot.’
‘I’ll stay longer if you want.’ He took her hand. ‘I’ve got
nowhere to go. I like being here.’
‘Then come again sometime but I’ve tired you enough for
one evening, I can see that.’
‘I will come again. I promise. Thank you for your hospitality.’
“You
can’t flatter an old lady.’ She smiled and for a moment
Jon could see the woman she’d once been, the face behind
her face. ‘But you’ve made a pretty good attempt,’ she added.
Jon left her like that, sitting on the sofa, staring at the
portraits on the walls, herself like an undiscovered Vermeer
caught in the fragile beam of light.
Once outside, he walked furiously through the rain-beaten
streets, moving with such force and determination that even
the hustlers stepped out of his path. All the way back to the hotel he couldn’t stop shaking.
The Skull & Roses tattoo parlour stood at the end of a long
alleyway that led from the Old Church. About a minute’s
walk from where Jake’s body was found, Van Hijn thought,
a coincidence most certainly, but in his years as a police
officer he’d learned to take coincidences seriously.
His stomach felt bad. It always felt bad when he was about
to do something he didn’t want to. It had been feeling bad a
lot lately. A dull, twisting pain that sat heavy and solid as a
stone in his lower abdomen. The cheesecake he’d just had
didn’t help. Neither did that faintly chemical smell that
seemed to be following him around these days.
He’d been to three parlours already. Shown his photos,
got non-committal sighs of appreciation, but no positives.
None of them seemed to be lying. He wanted to go home.
Stupidly left this one for last.
He descended the stairs leading to the basement. There
was no sign, just a black door and a small plastic buzzer.
‘Yes?’ The voice came from behind the door, muffled and
impatient.
‘Detective Van Hijn. I need to speak to Mr Quirk.’
The door opened and a teenage boy, long hair lank and
matted, stood there staring at him as if he’d never seen a
man before.
‘I assume you’re not him,’ the detective said as he stepped
past the boy and into a small waiting room with its sickly
pastel plastic chairs and magazines adorned with chrome and
flesh.
‘He’s working. If you don’t mind waiting, I’m sure …’
Van Hijn stepped up to the boy. ‘Get him,’ he said.
‘I can’t disturb him in the middle of a …’
They both heard the scream.
It came from behind a white door at the end of the waiting
room.
Van Hijn pulled out his gun, his stomach crying out. He
swallowed, heard the second scream and ran towards the door.
It wasn’t locked and he charged in, gun pointing, shouting
‘Stop! Police!’
It was only then that he saw what was going on.
In the middle of the room was a chair, somewhat like a
dentist’s, and on it, stripped to the waist, a teenage boy.
The old man he assumed was Quirk stood beside him
holding something in his hand. The boy’s nipple was clamped
into the device and was stretched out, about four inches
from his chest. There were tears in the boy’s eyes as he
looked towards the detective.
‘What the fuck are you doing?’ the old man shouted,
letting go of the clamp, the boy screaming again as the skin
quickly sprung back.
Van Hijn looked towards the boy. ‘Are you okay?’ he asked
him. The boy nodded dreamily. ‘What’s going on here?’
‘He was piercing my nipple,’ the boy said, suddenly
ashamed.
Quirk couldn’t help but unleash a smile. ‘What, you think