Read The Devil's Playground Online
Authors: Stav Sherez
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General
Darkness came. A medieval darkness. But he could still feel
the rain and he wondered how it had got through the shield
of houses. Everything moved slowly but he knew that when
it came, it would come fast and out of nowhere.
He walked back through the busy shopping canyon of
Kalverstraat, the only one going against the flow of bodies,
and he saw that the zombie-like stream of consumers was
trying to show him something. As the people passed him,
they turned their arms around so that he could see them.
Old ladies and young children showed him their numbers; a
group of mentally retarded kids passed by, their smiling
marshmallow faces looking up at him as they too exposed
their camp tattoos. And he didn’t want to look. Knew what
he would find. And when he did look, he saw the numbers,
messily etched out on his own wrist.
He kept checking his pockets, certain that they’d been perused,
felt and emptied, but miraculously his new wallet was
still there. The Doctor’s book was also in his. pocket. He’d
forgotten all about it, or perhaps had not been quite ready
to read it yesterday. He stopped in the street and stared at
the cover, flicked through the yellowed pages. He thought
of the book as a wound: writing the slow, sinewy movements
of the scalpel through the white pulpy body but, he sensed,
it was also a way out of the wound. Both one and the other
and always at the same time, continuously pushing and
nuzzling like two bloodied hounds in a fight to the death.
He stared up at the engorged street, slipped the book back
in his pocket. The pain had now moved up to his neck and
he was sure that he was about to have a heart attack.
He passed a coffee shop near the Rijksmuseum and heard
the sound of the Grateful Dead spilling out, Jerry Garcia’s
guitar lines like the tentacles of some prehistoric sea monster
reaching out of the place, snapping and coiling, wrapping
themselves around him in the street. He felt a deep empty
ache in his stomach, a memory of that autumn day listening
with Jake to the Dead. It seemed almost another lifetime.
He went inside, sat at a table, managed to order a drink,
his eyes focused on the speakers above.
Jon sat listening to Garcia as the guitar emerged, roaring
through the mix, and the bass came rumbling, hungry and
fast, quickly behind it. Then everything exploded. The Dead
had slowly built up a wall of noise that unleashed the Tiger
Jam, Jerry’s unique circular feedback noise solo, peaking in
intensity, the man picking more notes, cleaner and faster
than anyone else had ever done.
As the song came cascading down, the spaces between
the notes becoming elastic, Jon tried to remember which
version this was. He knew that Jerry had used the Tiger over a small stretch of years and he tried to slot his mind back into position as the Dead effortlessly segued into the
fast polka step of Marty Robbins’s cowboy death ballad, ‘El
Paso’, and he realized then that this was none other than the
legendary Creamery benefit at the Veneta County Fairgrounds,
Kesey’s place, in Oregon, 27 August 1972. The
ultimate performance of ‘Dark Star’ according to most
Deadheads, a swelling apocalyptic maelstrom that was unique
to this performance.
The waitress had been watching Jon staring emptily at the
speaker, when he suddenly leapt up, sprung like a jack-in-the
box. She watched as he frantically emptied his pockets,
throwing cigarette packets, tissues, crumpled notes and a
paperback book on to the table. Poor tourist got pick
pocketed, she thought, and went back to her work.
He nearly had a heart attack when the wallet wasn’t where
it was supposed to be and then he remembered that he’d
moved it around different pockets just in case anyone had
been following him and noted where it was. He upended the
whole thing on the table, pulling out receipts and banknotes
until he found the small strip of photocopied paper.
It was so fucking obvious. It had been staring at him all
along, hidden in plain sight.
3117171 - 3/1/67
American dates, of course.
s - n - 71
The Dead at the Veneta County Fairgrounds, Oregon.
‘I just awaken the barbaric, the prehistoric demons,
to a new Godless life.’
— Werner Herzog
‘I have talked to you about the difficulty of being Jewish, which
is the same as the difficulty of writing.
For Judaism and writing are but the same waiting, the same
hope, the same wearing out.’
— Edmond Jabes
3
G1
The Dead at the Fillmore West, San Francisco.
All classic performances. All part of his collection of live
Grateful Dead CDs. Back in London. The ones Jake had
listened to.
He walked up to the waitress, asked her where the phone
was. She smiled, pointed. He dialled Suze’s number, hoping
it would be the answering machine, hoping he could just
leave a message and not be drawn into anything more.
‘Jon, I’m so glad you called, I’m sorry …’
‘Suze, I have to go to London. I can’t talk now. I’ll call
you when I get back,’ he said, and hung up the phone before
she could reply.
Boarding the plane, hung over, wishing he was back in bed,
he wondered again, what exactly did he think he was doing?
Buckling himself into the miniature seat that pressed and
prodded him from all sides, it seemed he’d made a dreadful
mistake. Everyone else on board was smiling with the initial
rush of holiday adrenalin or the warm smugness of finally
going home. But for him it was neither of these things. Not
coming or going but somehow still suspended in the spaces
in between. Secretly dreading his return to London lest he
end up staying.
It was stupid to think those numbers meant anything, that
they would somehow clear everything away like a quick wipe
to the inside of a steamed-up windscreen, and all the way to
the airport he’d been having second thoughts, big bad doubts
about his hallucinogenic satori. He’d left the cafe immediately
after calling Suze, checked out of the hotel and headed for
the airport. It was only at Schiphol, with twenty minutes to
go till his flight, that he realized he’d left The Garden of Earthly Delights on the coffee-shop table. It made him feel terrible.
Beatrice’s book and all for what, for a string of numbers, a
flash of fake insight.
But the old man had liked the Grateful Dead and the
bookmark with the code had been in his book after all.
He felt that he needed this, so as not to give up hope and
consign Jake’s death to being just another unsolved murder.
There were too many of those, too many bodies without
stories, both here in the present and in the texts and photos
at the Jewish museum.
He knew that the detective would probably give up soon
enough or be transferred to another case. If and when the
killer was caught, all that mattered to anyone would be how many he’d killed, not who, just the bare statistics. Not much would be said about Jake, nor about Beatrice, and murder
would just be the word MURDER, nothing behind it at all
— no screaming, pleading, crying, torture, rape — none of the
gritty stuff, the small, horrible details that make you choke
and curse humanity. No, none of that, just the fact that he
killed this number of people and where does he rate in the
taxonomy of killers, the Nilsen ratings, above or below
Dahmer? Manson?
The plane took off and Jon began to sweat, hope and failure
swirling in his mind. He drank two Bloody Marys and looked
out over the English Channel, a small smudge of grey,
thousands of feet below. He scratched his emergent beard,
enjoying the strange feel of hair on his skin. Maybe it would
be good to get out of Amsterdam for the weekend, he
thought. Maybe it was Suze, maybe that was the real reason
he’d decided to fly back to London.
Getting away from her or from himself? Or from the part
of himself that opened up in her presence? He’d enjoyed
making love to her the other night, bound and tied, enjoyed
it too much perhaps, and though she’d asked for it, he knew
that he too was getting a certain pleasure from inflicting the
soft hurts which she so deeply desired. The whole thing had
made him uneasy.
And then she’d come up with that request. And he wondered,
if he’d surrendered to her desires would there be any
possibility for them? Or was it his reluctance to step into
that arena which precluded a future? He thought of her
Colorado eyes, her little-girl stare which always made him
laugh and the small, serpentine smiles that crept from her
mouth at the most unexpected of times. Why the hell couldn’t
she just be normal and not want to be hit, tied up? Why does
everyone want what’s so bad for them?
Stupid question, he thought, stupid fucking question.
Better he should think of those eyes and that look of hers,
keep that in mind.
London was perversely sunny for October and he stood for
a few minutes, eyes closed, outside Terminal 4, just letting
the weak winter sun bathe him with whatever heat it had to
give. He took a taxi home, trying to avoid making any
conversation with the driver as they inched along the M4
early-evening rush.
Cruising through Chiswick, Jon felt the anticipation growing
in his stomach, and he tried to tell himself that it might
all be for nothing, trying not to get too worked up, too
excited — after all, what the hell could Jake have put inside a
double-CD case?
He paid the driver, picked up his mail and went straight
to the flat. It looked smaller somehow as he turned on the
light and watched the dust scatter through the air. Smaller
and darker than he remembered it to be, and he suddenly
felt a crushing sensation as though someone had just stamped
on his ribcage. The flat was so empty and it was only now
that he realized it, like walking out of a smoky room, coming
back, and only then smelling the smoke. He stood there for
a few minutes feeling everything draw away from him. He
looked at the sofa where Jake had sat and he felt furious for
having let the old man go. He wanted to scream at the room
for not telling him. For not realizing what he’d meant to him
while he was still alive. The dumbest of mistakes, used to
prop up countless Hollywood movies and he’d fallen for it.
‘I’m not going to let you slip away this time,’ he said to
the empty room. ‘I’ll follow it through.’
He went to the kitchen and poured himself a scotch,
ripped open a pack of Marlboros and sat down facing the
television. He picked up the framed review, that review,
which took pride of place on top of the TV. Stared at it,
skim-reading the derisive paragraphs. He undipped the
frame, pulled out the cutting and crumpled it in his fist. It
gave so easily, he was surprised. He put the empty frame
back in its place then smoked two cigarettes, letting the
anticipation course through him, watching the black screen.
He got up and went over to his CD cabinet. It had
originally been a shallow cupboard but Jon had removed the
door and mouldings and put up shelves so that it became a
neat indented bookcase for his live Grateful Dead CDs. He
had about 200 of them, live concerts burned on to disc from
across the group’s history, mostly triples, this being the
length of an average Dead show.
He took out the two concerts. The boxes didn’t feel any
heavier or substantially different. He’d somehow thought
that when he got here, he would know immediately. He
prepared himself for the worst.
He opened the cases. Everything looked normal. As it
should be.
A dizzying rush of disappointment swept through him.
What had he thought Jake had left anyway, the name of his
killer? The thing that would make his death okay for Jon?
He’d wanted something, yes, some magic talisman that
would explain and absolve everything, and instead he’d followed
a bad trail, the old man probably just jotted down his
favourite Dead concerts while waiting for a bus, nothing
more. Jon stared, deflated, at his reflection in the CDs, his
face coming back thin and far away. And that was when he
noticed it.
He’d always used one type of blank CD for his recordings.
Discs 1 and 3 were of this brand but disc 2 was a TDK.
He’d never used those.
Excitement bubbled up in his brain as he frantically
opened the other case and found that the Fillmore East set
also had an anomalous second disc sitting on top of the
original.
He sat staring at them for a while, not quite knowing what
to do, or not quite daring, just staring at this face that stared
back, bearded and dull — his own - and he thought that
maybe he should just leave, get back in a cab, back to