Read The Devil's Playground Online
Authors: Stav Sherez
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General
rhythm of the city, the way the land seemed to pulse
up at you in the form of bridges, both a connection and a
disconnection, a link and a break. It was as if the streets were
nothing but an elaborate Rubik’s Cube, constantly shifting,
from the wide open Mojaves of the empty squares to the
sweetheart of the sudden darkness that surrounds you in the
smaller streets. He walked south, into the great commercial
district, past skyscrapers and smoked-glass office buildings,
the new face of the city, reflected endlessly in its mirrors
and distortions. Walking, walking, walking, all the while
soundtracked by the music pumping into his head, leaving
no room for wayward thoughts.
He watched the people swarm and ebb. Dressed in suits
and rags. Women so beautiful it broke your eyes. Men tall,
cold and professional. Bikes skidding across his line of
vision, trams hurding, cars puttering. There were so many
ways to get run over in this city, so many crisscrossing lines
of travel.
He noticed how he looked at women differently after
having been in the District. He didn’t like it, but he kept
doing it. Strange what shapes this city wrought upon you,
what subtle shifts and changes — as if everything was up for
sale, whispering in its alleys, ‘Everything is yours for a price.’
Or maybe the city had only made him realize that this was
the way he looked at women. The way all men do.
On the second day he walked west, into the old Jewish
Quarter, though there was not much left of it but tourism and
commemoration. He read the multilingual plaques, looked at
the stern monuments, their obsidian darkness a metaphor
for all that had occurred. The city itself was like a textbook.
A palimpsest of history, seen in its gables and arches, the
length of its canals, the monuments and squares that
described the spilling of the city from its centre into the
farthest reaches of the old marshland.
He sat in cafes, music affixed to his ears, and watched
stoned tourists stumbling about, serious strollers, the whole
mess of life, so colourful and different here. In London he
had stopped noticing. Here the world was born anew, each
small facet worthy of contemplation, even the taste of the
coffee or croissants, the way the lights of the restaurants
danced upon the roiling surface of the canals at night.
It was on the second day, in the Jewish Quarter, that he
began to realize he was being followed.
It wasn’t much. But attuned as he was, alert as he was, he
noticed the same man (had he seen him yesterday?), the same
man always there when he turned or stopped to light a
cigarette. Always too far for him to see the face. Only the
long black trenchcoat he wore, the battered biker boots and
constant cigarettes.
Jon tried to ignore him. Not to let fear get the better
of him. But it was there. Shooting through his veins. He
remembered what Suze had said and he wondered if he was
next. If this man had previously followed Jake and Beatrice
too, staking them out, getting their routines down.
He walked through the long streets, so much quieter
and sparser than back in the District, every now and then
stopping, looking behind him for a flash of black that told
him the man was still there.
He began to walk fast, as if something urgent was pressing
down upon him. He took as many turnings as he could find,
tracing squiggles and asymmetric loops that he hoped would
be hard to follow. He didn’t even stop to light cigarettes
now, just kept backing and double-backing, walking through
alleys and then turning on himself only to see the swish of
black behind a corner, the spiralling cigarette smoke creeping
from a blind alley. He began to run, carefully sideswiping
other pedestrians, frantically looking behind.
Every time he stopped, he saw the man, getting more
brazen now, not even hiding. And was that a smile on his
face?
Then the man started running towards him.
Jon sprinted across the canal, down an alley, heart beating
hard, sweat breaking out cold and clammy, hearing his pursuer’s
footsteps clicking on the cobblestones behind him.
Before long he realized that he was back in the District.
He ran past the girls behind glass, the small-fronted cafes,
not knowing which way he was going, thinking maybe that’s
better, maybe that’s the only way you can lose someone. He
doubled up an alley and stood in a small square. High
visibility. He got out of there quickly, looked back, didn’t see
anyone.
He didn’t stop though. He kept running through the alley
until he nearly slammed bang into the man in black.
He stopped just in time, slunk into a nearby doorway and
watched his pursuer scanning the square.
Jon smiled, watching the man’s head rotate, searching for
him. He got his breath back. Still he couldn’t see the man’s
face.
The man in black turned round.
Jon leapt into the doorway’s niche hoping he hadn’t been
seen. He could hear his heart beat thick and fast through his
body. He waited for the man to find him. To finish it all.
But he didn’t, and when Jon summoned up the courage
to look he saw the man disappearing into the square.
He quickly propelled himself out of the doorway and into
a group of sightseers, all the while keeping his eye on his
pursuer, now walking towards Nieuwmarkt. Jon pulled away
from the tourist pack and stood at the head of an alley. The
man in black turned left at the end. Jon ran the length of the
alley, came to a stop, saw the man walking down some stairs
into a basement below a tattoo parlour. He waited a couple
of minutes and then walked over, pretending to gaze at the
window display. He stared at the photos, canvases of flesh
still inflamed from the needle, pinned under the flashbulb
explosion of the camera. He thought about Kaplan’s story
about the wall of eyes. It made him feel dizzy. The window
display of flesh made him sick.
There was no sign on the door of the basement, only a
buzzer. Jon smoked a cigarette and waited across the street.
His pursuer still hadn’t come out. He checked his watch.
Took his wallet out, found Van Hijn’s card.
Jon and Van Hijn sat in the back of the Hieronymus Bosch
patisserie, staring out over the canal and the busy tramways
of Damrak. One wall of the establishment had been covered
with an immense reproduction of the artist’s famous triptych
and Jon stared at the ugly deformed creatures that populated
the mural as he waited for the detective to return from the
cake trolley. The house stereo was playing ‘Frankie Teardrop’
by Suicide, the pounding electric rhythm brutal and relentless.
He’d called the station and they’d told him about the
attack on the detective. He’d called the hospital only to be
informed that Van Hijn had checked himself out against
medical advice. He’d finally reached the detective at his flat.
Told him that he had to see him.
Van Hijn eased slowly into his chair. His movements were
careful and precise as if he were moving through a space
filled with invisible obstacles. Jon saw him wince when he
sat down, a slight upturn of his lip, a glazing of the eyes.
‘You okay?’ he asked, unable to think of anything else to
say.
‘I will be once I get some cake,’ Van Hijn replied.
Jon couldn’t wait. The onrush of information was too
much. He wanted to share his fears, hoping that they would
seem pathetic, dope paranoia, that kind of thing. He told the
detective about the testimony that Jake had left. The videos
hidden in the CD cases. He watched as the detective took it
all in, making the odd note. He told him about the Doctor,
the man who followed him, perhaps the killer. Van Hijn
nodded, not saying much, digesting the information. Jon
thought he’d congratulate him but Van Hijn just looked up,
tired and sick. ‘You know I’m off the case?’ he finally said.
Jon shook his head. He felt a sinking in his stomach.
‘You’re giving up?’
‘No. But things have changed. It won’t be as easy now.’
He crushed his cigarette. ‘I’ve been moved to a different
case. Trouble at the zoo.’
‘You’re joking.’ Jon felt his hopes drain away like the
coffee in his cup. Without the detective there was only him
and after outrunning the man that morning, Jon wasn’t all
that certain he could do it by himself. Or wanted to.
‘No joke. A couple of the zoo attendants are running their
own little side business. Opening up late at night. Apparently
people pay good money to watch them beat the animals.’
Jon stared at him.
‘Pay a little more and they give you a baseball bat and the
keys to the monkey cage.’ The detective coughed, stirred his
coffee.
‘What about the serial killer? The films? The case?’ Jon
said, leaning forward, trying to impose himself into the space
that had opened up between them.
Van Hijn shrugged. He understood Jon’s anger and
enthusiasm, saw himself, younger, in Jon. But he could also
see what it would lead to, the bitter disappointments and
sleepless nights.
‘I don’t know that I can be any more use, Jon. There’s
others now, fresh to the case, perhaps they’ll see something
I didn’t.’
Jon leaned back, grabbed his cup. The detective had
changed. Something had gone out of him since their last
meeting. ‘I don’t believe you’re giving up.’
‘I’m not giving up, Jon. I don’t have a choice any more.’
‘No?’
And Van Hijn didn’t quite know how to answer that.
Because there was always a choice. Was he running away
from the past again? The past that existed only in his head
but whose clutch was firmer than that of the present? He
thought about the films. A certain seductive symmetry in
that. He looked at Jon and felt envious of his vigour, his lack
of apprehension, the way he’d followed this through despite
all the warnings and obstacles. He was a different man from
the shambling wreck who had entered his office a couple of
weeks ago. Murder had made him a man, freed him from
the restraints he’d imposed on himself. A strange irony
indeed. ‘Maybe you’re right.’ He motioned towards the waitress
for another drink. ‘Perhaps I’ve just forgotten how to
live my life, in some way, perhaps that’s it.’
Jon stared at him. Had the detective changed so much
since their first meeting? ‘How do you deal with it?’ he said,
a question that he’d been asking himself ever since his
arrival in the city. He was curious to know what answers the
Dutchman had formulated during his time as a policeman
and he didn’t want him to let go, not so easily.
‘I don’t really know. I ask myself this question over and
over again and I come up with all sorts of answers, none
ultimately satisfying, of course. I ask myself how I should
react and when I weigh it up against how I do, I always find
it lacking.’
The detective looked up from his cheesecake, his eyes
locking on to Jon’s. *You know, you’ve got to stop every
now and then and say to yourself, this is the best moment
of my life up to now — it doesn’t get any better than this.
No, don’t laugh, I’m serious … you say it when you’re
listening to a song and the harmonies come in, in a way
you didn’t expect, suddenly flooding you with California
sunshine. Or when you bite into a piece of warm pastry, the
heady smell filling your nose and then the crisp, crumbly
texture and rich flavours that saturate your mouth … or
when you find a book you’ve been searching ages for… you
find it cheap in a discarded pile in the back of a secondhand
bookshop — you have to say it to yourself, “It doesn’t get
any better than this,” because if you don’t say it at those
moments, when are you going to say it? Those are the things
that count.’
‘Must be hard to continue.’
‘Yes, it gets harder but it’s also more of a reason to do it.’
Van Hijn lit a cigarette, taking his time, drawing the smoke
into his lungs. ‘Make lists, Jon. Write down your favourite
albums, your favourite books, the food you like eating most.
Write it down so that when you need it, it’s there.’
Jon looked at the detective and wondered whether he was
right. Perhaps he was. Maybe you needed to make a balance
book, the bad shit against the good. Tally it up. See where
that takes you.
They had another round of drinks and Jon told him about
the morning’s pursuit. The unlabelled basement buzzer. He
watched as the detective sat up, winced at the pain it caused
him.
‘I told you not to get involved.’
‘Nothing happened to me. I can take care of myself.’ Jon
looked up. ‘You know this place?’
Van Hijn nodded. ‘It’s a piercing parlour.’
‘Somehow that doesn’t come as a surprise.’
‘I was coming back from there when I was attacked.
Something doesn’t make sense. They’ve arrested some kids,