Read The Devil's Playground Online
Authors: Stav Sherez
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General
her name, I suspected it had something to do with all this.
Christ, Jon, that’s why I didn’t want you to know — it was
too close to me. I’m so fucking scared. What if I’m next?’
He hadn’t thought of that but now that he had, he realized
she was right. Two members of their stupid group had
already been killed. ‘Beatrice,’ he repeated. The golden girl
herself. ‘Dominic is involved somehow, more than just introducing
them, I’m sure of it.’
‘Leave him alone.’
‘Why are you protecting him?’
‘I’m not,’ she said though she realized that she was, but
it wasn’t something she could explain to herself, let alone
Jon.
‘I want you to contact him, Suze. To set up a meeting.’
‘No.’ She had no inclination to see Dominic again, not
after what had happened. If she called him now he’d see it
as a sign of her surrender, an apology for not sleeping with
him last night. She was beginning to see another side of him.
One that scared her. Of course he would apologize but it
would still be there between them and maybe next time he
wouldn’t stop. ‘I can’t do it.’
He stared at her and there it was again. The gap that had
opened up between them.
‘You don’t understand.’
“I think I do,’ he replied. Why was she protecting Dominic?
She moved towards him and he backed away. Dominic,
Dominic, Dominic — he was sure the answer lay there.
‘Let’s go to bed,’ she said.
‘And tie you up again?’ He got up from the sofa, moved
towards her.
‘There’s nothing wrong with it.’
‘Yes there is, Suze! Yes there is!’ he shouted. Before he
knew it, his hand was raised, crumpled into a fist. Heading for her face. Her perfect smile.
He took a deep breath. Relaxed his hand. Just.
‘Go on, hit me. I deserve it,’ she screamed at him.
He moved back, away from her, holding his fist as if it
was an unreliable gun.
‘You like it, don’t you?’ She moved towards him, he kept his back to her. She pulled him around. ‘It’s not that you don’t like it — that’s what scares you so much, isn’t it? That you just might like it too much.’
‘No!’
‘Liar.’
They stood there, a few inches apart, breathing hard, the
air dense with their words.
Jon looked at her. It had been clouding his mind for the
last few minutes. ‘If that’s what you think then there’s no
point in us carrying on.’
The words hung in the air like cigarette smoke, heavy and
cancerous. She stared at him, taking in what he’d said, the
stiff angle of his jaw, the tightening of his body.
‘But, Jon, there’s no point hiding from things. You need
to accept whatever it is you feel.’
‘So do you, Suze, so do you.’ He looked at her and, for a
moment, almost gave in. He remembered how much hope
he’d seen in her eyes when they’d first met and it was all but
drained now. Maybe it was a lie, he thought, maybe all we
saw in each other was a lie, created by our need and nurtured
by our refusal to see anything but that.
‘I’m sorry. It’s better that it happens now than a few
months down the line, a few years. Years that we’d know
we’d wasted. I can’t do this any more. Can’t keep pretending
it’s all okay, nothing wrong, just another quirk. Can’t fucking
do it. I’ve wasted enough of my life up to now. Jake woke
me up. I’m not going to make the same mistakes again. I’m
not going to waste my life.’
He turned before she could answer, out of the door, down
the stairs, his lungs burning, his mouth tasting dry and bitter.
Outside, the sky exploded, the open spaces of Nieuwmarkt
suddenly drowning him in unwelcome light. He turned left,
not knowing where he was going, not caring, wanting more
than anything else to get lost, to stumble and hide in the
streets, covered up and anonymous, to be where the world
couldn’t touch him, where it was far enough away and so
unreachable as to become a dream.
++++++++++++++++++ WINTER 1941-2. ST JEAN CAP FERRAT
I can’t get this damn song out of my head.
This stupid melody that has been following me like an
underfed cat through this small room.
I am now a habituee of small rooms. My space is defined
by their leaning and cowering walls. By the light they allow
in, by the measure of the world that leaks in through their
curtains, the world which I so longed to touch and that now
lies like an unwanted dishrag, filthy and stinking, hidden in
the darkness below the sink.
There it is again. That song.
I miss my records. They are in Berlin. I could not take
them with me. But yet, they are with me, here in my head,
my constant companions when everything else has fallen
away. But I do miss their covers, the feel of the cardboard
and smell of vinyl. I miss these simple things most of all.
More than I miss Father. Am I wrong to be like this? Is
something up with me? Am I just like the rest of them in my
family? What is wrong with me that I go from utter despair
to ridiculous happiness? I do not have answers to these
questions. This is not the time to think about such things.
This is the time to be sitting in small rooms.
I tore up the things I made today. I hate them. Hate the
way I can see myself in the folds of the paper. No one will
ever see them. What is the point? Who am I painting for? I
spent all morning and made three pieces but no one will ever
see them. Perhaps I should burn them. Perhaps Duchamp
was right and the art is only in the making, everything after,
commerce. But still, I wish someone would see them. Hung
up in a small gallery somewhere, nothing special but they
need to breathe, need to get away from me. I hate it. Hate
it all.
Today I painted seven pieces. I woke and the sun was streaming
through the window. I felt its heat like a hand on my
bare thigh. I made myself coffee and hummed a tune. The
one I couldn’t get out of my head. The tune suggested an
idea, the idea an image, the image a set of words.
They can all go to hell.
There is such freedom now that there are no rules.
No one will see these paintings. I have no one to paint for
but myself. There are no rules any more. I can do what I
want. And what I want to do is something wildly unusual.
My thoughts cannot be contained in the old forms. They are
too rigid, too reductive. They are not the world as I see it.
They are poor and empty. They are no longer relevant. We
desperately need new forms. The world is not the world.
I had to move away from Grandpapa. I couldn’t stand to be
in the same town as him any more. He drowns me with his
hatred. Makes me feel physically sick. Being near him, I am
overwhelmed by a paralysing stupor. I can’t think when he
is around, can’t paint. It is no wonder Grandmama killed
herself. I believe I would have done it much sooner had I to
live with the old goat.
Here I cannot hear his shouting. I have my own room.
The hotel is small and no one bothers me. There are more
Italian soldiers and they do not look at me in the same way
as the German soldiers. Yesterday, I was walking in town
when a young Italian whom I had seen a few times before
(and was sure had seen me) came up to me. I began to move
away, scared, I had heard the stories — but he smiled and I
knew that a smile like that could not contain anything bad.
He handed me a package. Winked and was gone. When I got
home, I opened it to find a salami, two tomatoes and a small
bar of chocolate. I began crying. I couldn’t help myself. I
held on to the chocolate like it was a lover and cried my
heart out.
The paintings are going well. I have lost count of them. One
day, I will sit down and go through them, put them into
some kind of order. I think I got the numbering mixed up,
or I changed my mind. But first I need to finish. To see the
whole thing before I know the shape it will have. I have less
materials now. I only have three colours I can use. I do not
know how much time I have left.
I can hear that awful man ranting on the radio every week.
That awful man I once was so enamoured with. I remembered
Alfred showing me the Draft of XXX Cantos that had
recently come out and his face as he read to me from those
startling stanzas, the fire and beauty and generosity of the
man that wrote them, the blinding, brilliant supernatural
rhythm of his sentences. And now he is on the radio, ranting
from Rome, screaming about credit and usury and about
how a certain people should go to hell. And yet, I still
remember the beautiful lines he wrote and I pretend that
this is a different man, not the poet but a lesser man and I
close my eyes and think of other times.
Yesterday German soldiers were in town. The hotel landlady
said it would be better if I stayed in my room. She promised
nothing would happen. I crawled under the bed. I lay there,
curled up until night. I waited for the knock on the door
though I knew that was only for theatre. That in real life
there was no knock. That these people didn’t need to knock.
I was too scared to get up and go to the bathroom. I was
afraid my shadow would give me away. I tried to remember
songs and hummed them, careful not to let any sound slip. I
do not know how much longer I can stand this.
I am desperately unhappy. I spent all day hiding under the
covers again. My old despair got the better of me and threw
me back into a slow death-like lethargy. If I can’t find any
joy in my life and my work I will kill myself. I feel so hopeless.
I have time enough to work and yet I can’t. My happiness is
at an end. I have no one to talk to. The sun has been stolen
from me. From deepest sunny brightness to greyish darkness.
I am sinking in despair. I am scared to get out of bed. It is a
winter such as few people could have experienced. Extreme
torpor, unable to move one finger … I am ill, my face always
red with dull rage and grief.
He couldn’t get the song out of his head.
It had joined him on the walk back from Suze’s. No
particular reason, not even a song he’d listened to for quite
a while. And yet there it was, constantly humming just under
everything else.
He’d fallen asleep to it, trying to remember the words, the
order of the verses - anything to forget about what had
happened earlier between him and Suze.
The morning brought with it sunshine, and the song, like
an elusive lover’s name, came back and filled his head during
breakfast.
“The silver one, please,‘Jon said and watched as the shop
assistant tallied up his purchases, twenty or so CDs and a
portable on which to play them.
He’d been too long without music. Too long with other
people’s choices, never what he would have liked. He spent
all morning browsing the aisles of a record shop on Kalverstraat.
He thought it would be the same. Some refuge in the
familiar. But there was difference here too, and he spent
hours going through the racks, picking up old favourites Springsteen, Dylan, the Dead, Miles - checking for European
bonus tracks, boodegs, things he couldn’t find back home.
And of course, that song. The tide track from Tom Waits’s Blue Valentines, the one that had been going round his head.
He sat in a cafe enjoying the wide luxury of the square, so
unlike the Amsterdam he was used to, with its clustered
streets and cloistered bars. Walk ten minutes and it’s a whole
different city. Turn a corner and you’re in another world. It
was only now that he began to realize how much a prisoner
of the District he’d become, how it had shaped and warped
his vision of the city.
He drank his coffee and looked at his CDs. He refused to
think about Suze. Every time she came up (and she came up
quite a bit) he tried to remember the track listing of a
particular album. Diversionary measures.
He popped Viva hast Blues into the personal. Plugged the
earphones right in. Took a long toke on a joint as Will
Oldham’s ravaged voice started singing. Within minutes, he
realized that a massive smile had taken residence on his face,
making his jaw hurt, his lips ache. But he did nothing to
remove it. The sun would be out only for so long. This was
the time to enjoy it. The time for other things would come
later.
He spent the next couple of days locked in the private
world that a Walkman provides. Where everything becomes
detached; the world silent and impenetrable. Something
viewed from the outside, Uke a television with a broken
speaker or an old silent movie.
He began to walk, in whichever direction he desired. Every
morning from the hotel, making sure he was out of the
District before its weight could surrender him. Make him
prisoner. On the first day he walked west, into the Jordaan, stared at the seventeenth-century workers’ houses and small shops, the unmistakable stench of the poor areas, the constant