Read The Devil's Playground Online
Authors: Stav Sherez
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General
reeled back, fell off the sofa; she heard the dog grunt, then
saw Dominic coming towards her.
‘No.’ She realized she was on the verge of screaming,
slipping into hysteria.
“I want you so much,’ he said. She understood that
somehow she had caused this, she’d not been strong
enough to voice her feelings early on and now it had come
to this.
‘Jon’s no good for you, Suze. He’ll leave as soon as you
tell him about Jake. Please, we could have such an amazing
life together, I know.’
‘Stop it, Dominic’ She eyed the door, calculated distance,
speed and likely obstacles.
Ś“Why? Am I making you uncomfortable?’ His tone had
changed, sarcasm thickening those northern vowels, and he
moved closer towards her. ‘And you hate that, don’t you?
Hate having any kind of confrontation, anything that will
make you feel less than good. You lied to Jon, you lied to
me just to make your life easier. How do you think it feels
hearing you talk about him like that?’
And she realized he was right, or partly right or not right
at all, but still it was the way he felt and therefore had as
much validity as anything else. ‘I’m sorry, Dominic. I should
have been more sensitive.’ She knew she needed to say this,
that things were quickly moving out of control. ‘I hide from
things, I don’t mention them, but I’m trying, Dominic, I’m
really trying.’
He turned from her, walked towards the bedroom. ‘Please,
just go. Get out of here. Before anything happens,’ he said
and disappeared into the other room, shutting the door
behind him. She grabbed her things and left.
When she was gone, he went to the hollowed-out niche he
used for the video camera. He first made sure that the front
door was locked, that she wouldn’t burst in, having forgotten
her cigarettes. Then he took the camera and wired it to the
TV. He rewound the tape. Rolled himself a joint and
stretched out on the sofa. The weed was good. His mind
was spinning Instantly.
Yet what he saw wasn’t good. Not any more. Not for a
long time now. Not since the touch of the body. That slimy,
cold clasp of dead flesh. The sound of it hitting the canal
water. Its slow descent into the blackness. Shit. He had to
stop thinking about it. He rolled and sparked another joint.
Blew the images from his mind. Turned on the TV. Set the
tape to play, to replace the images in his head with ones
more desirable.
She’d been sitting dead in the eye of the camera’s lens.
Centred perfectly. If he’d staged it, he couldn’t have done a
better job. He was glad he’d set the zoom right.
Suze’s face danced on the screen, alternately crying, smiling,
angry and appalled. He lay back and butted the joint.
Slipped his zip slowly down and felt the hardness raging
underneath. He stared at her as she mutely retold her story
and he came, shuddering, almost falling off the sofa. He
wiped up, stopped the tape, put the camera back in position
and smoked another cigarette.
Later, he sat on the bed and began to think about Jon and
his place in all this. He needed something else to think about.
He felt as if his chest had collapsed, one of those bombs had
sucked the lungs out of his mouth. The whole room folding
over him. The work of the last few weeks, all the time since
Jake had died. He ground his foot down into the floor until
the pain made him scream. Then he felt a bit better.
Bill walked into the room, came to rest by him. Dominic
buried his face in the dog’s soft fur. If Jon was so intent on
playing the detective, well, there were ways that he could
deal him in, make him part of it. Of course, he already was
- he just didn’t know it yet. He should have told Suze, he
knew that, told her that Jon was in danger, that they all were,
everyone linked to the group, to the doctor. But something
held him back. Of course she suspected but not the full
extent of things. Not how far they’d gone. He knew she was
scared and he liked her like that. He stared up at his computers,
the flickering screens, the editing boxes, the projectors.
Jon would have to be careful, and if the time came, and
he was almost sure that it would, then Jon would be pulled
into this, used as a buffer. After all, Dominic thought, he
wants to know, he wants to be a part of it. It’s the least I can
do.
The next morning Jon woke up alone in his apartment. It
was another sunny day and his head felt as if an entire jazz
band had taken up residence inside it. He barely managed to
make himself some coffee, spilling the grounds all over the
floor, suck two cigarettes and take a couple of painkillers
before the pain became too much. He lay in bed, his head
pounding, and thought about the night before. He couldn’t
remember what he’d done after he got in. It didn’t really
matter, was probably best left forgotten anyway.
When the pills had shaved the edge off the pain he went
straight to his computer. He’d had an idea last night, miraculously still remembered it this morning. He recalled the day
Jake had gone, waking up to an empty flat, the computer
buzzing like an unwanted friend. And then it had struck him.
The computer shouldn’t have been on.
He smoked a cigarette while it booted, watched the icons
lining up in their usual positions, a Giant Sand record wheezing
in the background. He hit the Explorer button, scrolled
down to the History folder.
Clicked.
Double clicked.
Worked out the exact day that Jake had left, clicked again.
And there it was — a list of fifteen or so pages that Jake
had visited that morning. It had been there all along, like the
CDRs, waiting for him to discover it.
Jon started going through the list, clicking on the links,
making sure he wasn’t online, making sure he got the same
page that Jake had viewed and not an updated one. We are
all our own detectives, he thought, here on the net, we all
become that.
Sites detailing body-modification conventions.
Ebay. Items no longer available.
The Heathrow webpage, details of flights to Amsterdam.
But nothing that would have made Jake return, nothing
Jon could see. He kept going through the pages, slowly
scrutinizing every word, just in case it was the smallest of
things that drove Jake back. But there was nothing, absolutely
nothing.
Jon leaned forward, lit another cigarette, breathed out his
frustration. And then he realized. He hadn’t looked at it
because it was his default home page. But now he could see
that Jake had linked from it. He followed the trail of
addresses. Brought up the BBC News front page that Jake
had looked at — linked to the Northern European news
section, linked down from there, and there she was.
Beatrice. Unnamed, unseen, but lurking between the
words flickering on the screen. A small paragraph related the
discovery of another body thought to be linked to the current
string of murders that had been taking place in Amsterdam
since January. Jon read and re-read the article. The short
detailing of Van Hijn’s blunder in February. The-killing of
the suspect who happened not to be the suspect at all but
another freak, a rapist with a collection of mounted nipples.
But it had been Beatrice, the ghost of her lurking in those
tense, brittle words, that had drawn Jake back to Amsterdam.
Which means he must have known. Must have had some
idea at least. Though she hadn’t been named, he knew that
Jake had recognized her. There was no doubt about it in his
mind, though why Jake went back or what his involvement
was, Jon still hadn’t figured.
He saved the pages into his files. Turned off the CD
though Howe was still singing about being stuck in the
desert, comfort eroded by the dark night. He loaded the
CDR and fast-forwarded it until he reached the place where
he’d stopped the night before. He didn’t feel so bad towards
Jake this morning and when the old man’s face appeared he
felt a deep, thrusting sadness engulf him.
‘Dr Chaim Kaplan.
‘I should have known really. Should have known that this frail old man would become the pivot on which my new life turned. I sat in
on a few of the Council meetings, watched him, noticed how the
group obviously revered the old man, deferring to his opinions on a wide range of things.
‘I kept drinking, taking more and more drugs and walking around
the city, always finding myself at a monument to the war dead or
some neighbourhood my family had once walked through. I visited
the old house that had been detailed in the tax records. A grand
nineteenth-century gabled monster in the lush green calm of the
museum quarter. I stood there and watched a young family as they
arrived back from some kind of weekend trip. Father and mother
and three small children all gaily unloading the accessories of their lives. They joked with one another and promptly carried everything into the house, laughing and smiling. A couple of hours later, I saw them having dinner in the front room, and I watched transfixed as the man slowly carved the roast and served it to his family. There was such a sense of peace in that room that I would have given up
my life, right then, for a few seconds of its warmth.
‘I was staying with a friend of mine, a member of the Council. He left me to my own devices and was as gracious a host as one could hope for. He kept insisting that I should go and see the Doctor, that I should talk to the old man. That there were connections between the two of us that I had only guessed. He told me so many times that finally I said yes. And I admit, I was intrigued by what I’d heard and seen of the Doctor. His survival from the hell that had sucked my family down. The sense of him being a last link in that awful
chain.
‘The Doctor lived in a small, fifth-floor walk-up apartment just off the Rembrandtplein. The common parts of the building had once
been elegant but were now faded with years of neglect and the
whole place had that shabby European feel of something grand
gone rotten.
‘The old man opened the door and asked me in. He was always
polite, always the gentleman. It gave us a connection in those early meetings, an entry port into each other’s lives. We were both from a generation that still held on to those virtues of politeness and a stiff, respectful formality and, even though the Doctor was over
twenty years older than me, he still seemed closer in many ways than people twenty years younger, a generation I don’t really understand.
‘We talked about nothing at first. Comments about the weather
and state of the city. Sometimes we would talk over some of the
ideas we’d heard at a Council meeting, or about an article in the day’s paper. We were really only skirting around each other for the first two weeks. Afraid of what lay in the past, what lay waiting. We
played chess a lot, a silent game of unspoken friendship, sipping the Doctor’s exquisite coffee and eating his delicate Austrian pastries.
‘One night, I believe it was a holiday, we’d got very drunk on
expensive schnapps and smoked a few joints. The old man was really loose. I’d never seen him like that before, it was as if the alcohol and drugs had taken thirty years off him.
‘That’s enough of me talking though. My story ends here and this
is where his begins. I wanted to preserve some things in their original state. Things that would soon be gone. After he had told me his
story, I went back, I borrowed a video camera and turned it on him.
I made him tell it again. Naturally, he was glad to.’
The screen went blank and Jon lit a cigarette, shaking in
anticipation. He fast-forwarded. Still nothing. Feverishly, he
reached for the second CD, almost snapping it as he shoved
it into the tray, and waited.
An older man’s face appeared, slim and gaunt but filled
with life, with a certain animation that is absent from most
elderly people. He took a silver case out of his perfectly
pressed suit and extracted a thin, unfiltered cigarette. His
hands were small and delicate like a woman’s, extremely
clean and manicured. He put the cigarette to his mouth and
took a deep drag that made his cheekbones even more
prominent — almost a human skull, Jon thought, if he didn’t
have that fire in his eyes. He began speaking in slightly
accented English, in a stronger and deeper voice than his
body had suggested. ‘What, you want me to talk about my
childhood, my doggie and all that stuff?’
‘No.‘Jake’s clipped, English tones came from some place
off-screen, ‘just tell me some background.’
‘Okay, background you want.’ The Doctor took another
distressingly deep drag off the cigarette and continued.
‘I was born into a comfortably well-off family in 1922. My father had been a surgeon in the Great War and had lost a leg at Passchendaele.
It was always given that I would follow in his footsteps and I had no objections to this. But you know the rest. You know about the
Nuremberg laws, all that. My childhood, adolescence, all that means nothing. That was a former life, perhaps not even mine. My life