Read The Devil's Playground Online
Authors: Stav Sherez
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General
‘I sat in my dead father’s flat and read everything I could about
Amsterdam during the Nazi occupation. I had Foyle’s deliver all the books they had about the period and I immersed myself in them.
‘I knew my family name. ItwasKuper. I’d gone through my father’s
documents and found out who his partner had been before the war.
I scoured through indexes and compendiums of the dead and the
surviving. I didn’t find anything and I knew that the next step was to go to Amsterdam. To be once again in the city of my birth and of my first death.
‘I had been reborn an Englishman, the son of a wealthy businessman and a trusted part of the Establishment. My father’s testament
proved only what I had intuited ever since I was thirteen. My
difference, the way my parents always seemed so alien to me, the
way the rest of the world seemed strange. These were things I knew as a child, knew them so deeply inside myself that I never doubted them.
‘I found a new freedom when I lost my father. I was no longer part of anything, I was anything I wanted to be and I felt a glorious
relief that I could never communicate to anyone else - a delightful, unimagined awakening of freedom.
‘I went to Amsterdam. I visited the places of the past. I began my search. There was a website on which you could look for survivors
of the Holocaust. I tried. It came up empty.
‘I watched hours of testimony in the basement of the Jewish
Historical Museum. Hundreds of hours of videos and scratchy celluloid filled with survivors telling their own stories. I learned all the things that I had shamefully avoided during my life. We weren’t
taught about it in school back then; the idea of Holocaust Studies had not even crept into historical academia.
‘I had caught up on my ignorance in London, had read everything,
the building mountain of horror and fact getting higher with each
book. But it wasn’t until Amsterdam - when I really came face to
face, so to speak, with the victims - that I felt it personally and unbearably.
‘When I had read my father’s testament, the fact that I’d been born a Jew had meant nothing compared to the liberating force of the knowledge that my father wasn’t really my father. Here in
Amsterdam I felt it all hit and tear through me like a slow and jagged piece of glass.
‘I watched the footage of the deportations from Amsterdam to
Westerbork on the small, constantly running TV set at the Hollandse Schouwburg. Black-and-white flickers of another time. Families dressed in their best suits looking around dazed, waving to people on the trains, wondering where the windows are. A lazy Sunday afternoon feel about the whole thing that could have been created only through a massed tissue of lies. The soldiers indolently lolling by as if park rangers and there, in the corner of the screen, a last handshake, a partial awareness in a drooping mouth quivering, while soldiers walk by chatting so unconcerned by the meaning of this whole scene and finally the train bucks and glides into the horizon, diminishing, till only a speck and then, not even that. I watched it endlessly and I scrutinized the faces of those being deported. I
wondered whether I would see my father, a face I would recognize,
some genealogical signifier. Of course no such thing happened but
I was entranced by the footage and I sat, all day sometimes, watching it as it looped its way through, forward and back again, and each
time I looked at someone else in the crowd, focused on another
fear-filled face climbing into a railway car. I was born into this, I thought, this was a part of me.
‘When I had read the books, I had been shocked and moved by
the numbers, the organizational wizardry of the Nazis, their cruel and demonic bureaucracy - but when I stared at the black-and-white faces I saw myself in the sluggish movements of dead men and
women, in the pieces of film that outlasted the lives that had been burnt on them.
‘I had been in Amsterdam for two months and had found nothing
but other people’s deaths. Then one day I got an email. An American professor who was writing a book on Dutch Jewry had uncovered
some documents relating to my family. He had seen my posting on
the net and wanted to meet.
‘He was tall and suitably professorial, a voluminous mane of hair
balancing gently on his head, and he brought with him one of
those large, wide black briefcases that salesmen use to carry their merchandise in. We had coffee opposite the Stedelijk and he showed me photos of my mother and father, sepia-drenched prints from the
thirties, a wedding photo with a swastika hanging in the distance.
There were family trees and pages from the backs of Torahs listing the dead.
‘I stared entranced at a photo of my father. A thin, hooded-eyed
man, who looked not at all like me, standing proud by a large store, his clothes impeccable and his hair greased down smooth in the
fashion of the time. I would not have recognized him. It was strange to look at that photo, to think that this was once him, for a split second of time he had been caught and that was practically all that had remained.
‘The American professor gave me the briefcase. “It belongs to you
anyway,” he said and handed me his card. He promised he would
send me a copy of the book when it was finished.
‘There had been approximately 127 members of my branch of the
Kuper family in 1939. It was the year of a golden jubilee and the
whole family had gathered together in a country house, outside
Amsterdam, to celebrate. There were photos of kids playing in
the river and adults sitting on old-fashioned deck chairs, smoking cigarettes and reading the German papers for news of the imminent
war. It was the last time the family was together.
‘By 1943 they had all been sent East, died of hunger or were living like rats, hidden in some occlusion in a house somewhere, in constant fear of the inevitability of being exposed. A Holocaust census report from the fifties shows that none of them survived.
‘One hundred and twenty-seven people. I could not believe it. I
looked at the numbers for Amsterdam Jews. Over 105,000 deported,
under 5,000 came back. A bad percentage even by wartime
standards.
‘Things become hazy here. I started drinking. I smoked drugs,
snorted them, never cared what they were as long as they were
strong. I felt fuzzy and undefined most of the time, felt like I was fighting the very clothes that kept me warm. I woke up screaming
every night. I tried not to sleep and then the demons came in the
daytime. They followed me around the city. I could feel their festering breath on my neck, hear their mechanical footsteps and insect shrieks as I passed by the canals. The city became drenched in evil, in
history, in all that had happened on its streets, and I realized then that the past does not exist. Because to call it past is to betray its touch. Everything that has happened is still with us, some of us, one of us, all of us, and together we are the past, carrying it on our shoulders, imprinted in our psyches, the personal parental hells and the ones that take place in the dark, in disused fields and pits and crematoria. A wiser man once said, if all time is eternally present, then all time is unredeemable. And maybe he was right. And maybe
he was wrong. Maybe we can escape the clutch and clamour only
by sinking ourselves further into it, accepting it as part of our eternal and terrible present.
‘But I was telling you a story. Forgive me. Yet it all comes to
the same end. I was stuck in hell. I could literally feel the spin of the planet below my feet, the onrush of people and buildings, the terrifying speed of the present, dissolving into past. It was only in alcohol and drugs that the world stopped for the briefest of moments.
Soon four months had passed and I hadn’t even realized. I would
wake up and drag myself to a bar, sit there and read survivor
testimonies until they closed, or snort some Ketamine and spend all day going through the films at the JHM. Even my body was no
refuge and, though I still practised the routines and modifications that I had all my life, they were now drained of pleasure, no more useful to take me away than an out-of-date travelcard. I tried more extreme forms but they too yielded nothing but blood. The people I was staying with tried their best and without them I would never
have made it past that terrible summer.
‘One evening I was sober enough to understand them when
they spoke to me. They said they wanted me to meet someone.
They wouldn’t let me demur and they took me to their meeting
hall. They called themselves the Revised Council of Blood. Just
another bunch of kids desperately trying to make their reality more romantic. I understood them. That night they introduced me to their new member, a frail old man, older than me. He was extremely
gracious and well spoken and he introduced himself as Dr Chaim
Kaplan.’
Jon paused the CD. Scanned back through the last few
seconds. Played them again. Jake had definitely said what
Jon had thought he’d said.
The Revised Council of Blood.
Jon looked at the flickering, paused image of the old man,
thinking, she hadn’t told him anything.
Not a fucking thing.
He’d told her enough about Jake, even shown her the
photo. She must have known. And he felt betrayed, deeply
betrayed — not only by Suze’s silence but by the old man as well. He felt resentful that Jake hadn’t told him this while he was still alive. Why had he gone through the whole charade
of hiding the CDs? And what for? So he could detail his life?
Spew street philosophy and garbled autobiography? Perhaps that was all Jake had meant to leave, a testimony of survival not too far removed from the survivors’ testimonies that he’d viewed in Amsterdam. Either way Jon felt cheated. It didn’t explain anything.
He lit a cigarette and wheeled his chair back from the
computer screen. The body stuff had disturbed him, or, more
accurately, it had disturbed his image of Jake, his memories and perceptions of the old man. Even though he’d seen the body that day in the morgue, and before that in the bathroom, he’d still refused to assimilate fully the information that he’d been given. Now that it came direcdy from Jake’s mouth, it was a deluge, unstoppable in its implications. Was this really the same man who’d stayed with him? It made his skin crawl.
And, of course, he thought about Suze too.
He should have guessed there was a connection, that pain
freaks huddle together. There was something about the city,
its subconscious, the dark alleys of its most forbidden
dreams. Something like a kind of psychological gravity that
pulled all these people together. And what about him?
He hadn’t wanted to upset what they had by talking to
Suze about it, not that day, and then they’d had that argument
and he never had a chance to ask her about Beatrice. But
now he knew, there were no doubts left, only questions as
to how deep her involvement was and whether she had
assisted in Jake’s murder. Perhaps the detective had been
right from the start. Jake could have been the killer. He had
a fondness for pain, that was obvious — had Suze and Beatrice
stumbled on to this fact, plotted to kill the old man? Succeeded
maybe, but only after Beatrice had been silenced?
No, that couldn’t be right, Jon reminded himself, Beatrice
had been killed while Jake was staying in his flat. But maybe
he’d had an accomplice.
It was all too much, too much to think about, to digest
and assimilate. He wished that they hadn’t had that argument,
it would make things more difficult when he saw her again.
And he wanted to. That was the damndest thing. He wanted
to so much.
Despite all the problems which now seemed as far away
as that enchanted city itself, despite the words they’d bounced
off the walls of her apartment, despite all that, he still wanted
her. And now there would be this between them too. Another
barrier, another obstacle.
There was a certain dangerous disassociation in what Jake
had done, and in what Suze was doing. Pain was perhaps the
most basic reflex and to be able to withstand it, to take
pleasure from it, showed a strong capability for disassociation
— the same capability that Jon had seen in the faces of
SS men as they killed babies with rifle butts to save on
ammunition.
His car was still there, unticketed, undamped and untowed
— a modern-day miracle in central London. He needed to
drive. He had no desire to get back to the computer even
though he knew there was still a lot of footage left. It had
made him feel sick and depressed. It had made the old man’s
death even more poignant and poindess, almost unbearable.
Jake had been killed twice in his mind. Once when the
detective had called him and again now, for he had to accept
that everything he’d thought he’d known about Jake was a
lie, or if not that, then only the smallest fragment of a hidden
whole. The Jake on the video was not the man he’d known
in those two weeks and it was like suddenly finding that a
stranger has been occupying your bed — a cold sweat and
short breath kind of feeling. He stuck an Uncle Tupelo tape
into the machine and turned it up to the max to drown out
the sounds of life around him and the questions inside him.
It felt strange to be driving again. The early-evening rush
hour had dwindled down to a few cars and the motorway
was clear. He drove up and down the Westway for a couple