Read The Devil's Playground Online
Authors: Stav Sherez
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General
a gang, but it wasn’t kids, Jon. The people who did this to
me were wearing suits. That’s the one thing I remember,
black suits. That and the smell of the pavement.’
Jon looked away. Thought about what the detective had
said: black suits. The shadow in black that had pursued him
earlier. Was it possible they were one and the same?
Van Hijn rubbed his side. He tried smiling but he was in
a lot of pain. He wondered whether he should tell Jon about The Garden of Earthly Delights, his own uncomfortable reading of the book, the sense of something not quite right underlying
the text, the shifting of pronouns, the looseness of the tenses
… Or tell him what he’d learned at AYN about the presence
of SPAR in the city. But he could see that Jon had enough
on his mind — his fingers were continually looking for something
to do, his foot never still. No, better not to say anything,
about AYN or about the fact that when he’d tried to trace
them through property deeds and other records, he hadn’t
found a single mention of the organization. ‘Your beard,’ he
said pointing to Jon, changing the subject. ‘Makes you look
more Jewish, you know.’
‘I’m only learning what it is to be a Jew now. I never had
much practice before.’
ŚYou know what Isaiah Berlin once said?’
Jon shook his head.
‘A Jew is a Jew like a table is a table.’
They both laughed. Jon leaned forward. ‘You know, detective,
I don’t quite feel myself a proper Jew.’
‘Why not?’
‘It’s because I wasn’t in the Holocaust, my family weren’t
touched by it. I almost feel an impostor in my own race.’
‘You think the Holocaust makes you a Jew?’
‘No, but I feel, shit - I feel left out, if you really want to
know. I sometimes wish that I had gone through it. I feel
left out of something huge and defining.’
‘You’re fucking crazy. What do you think the Holocaust
would have taught you if you’d been lucky enough to survive
it? You think you would have learned anything if you’d gone
straight to the gas chamber on your arrival?’
‘Maybe it would have made me more of a Jew,’ Jon said,
knowing he was goading the detective now.
‘What kind of Jew do you want to be, Jon? The kind that’s
had to witness all that atrocity, the one who’s watched
children and old women being humiliated in the streets and
then killed? What kind of man is that? What kind of Jew?
The one who has to steal from his own people to survive?
Whose job it is to undress babies before the gas chamber?
The one who has to eat human flesh and let SS officers fuck
and torture him for fun? Jesus, Jon, is that the kind of man
you want to be? Do you want to live the rest of your life
embracing your hatred and need for revenge?’
‘No, I didn’t mean it like that,‘Jon said, though he had. ‘I
was wrong,’ he added.
Van Hijn took a sip of his coffee. Looked towards the
slow moving boats inching down the canal. He knew he’d
overreacted, understood how his own past coloured his
words. What he wouldn’t have given for his father to have
been elsewhere. ‘Don’t be so consumed by your hatred that
your life becomes empty without it, Jon. Find meaning in
other things.’
Jon thought about Suze. The smell of her hands, the
warmth of her breath on the back of his neck. But, fuck, it
was the hardest thing to do - to let go. And didn’t that imply
they’d won?
As if reading his mind, Van Hijn said, ‘You planning on
staying for a while?’
Jon nodded. ‘For a while. If you’ll let me, that is.’ They both
laughed. ‘There’s something here. It feels so very different
from London. I can enjoy small things, things I always took
for granted - like you say, the smell of pastry, the sound of the
cobbled streets. I love the way people mind their own business
in this city, the sense of individual freedom.’
‘Huh! That’s just a mask. You think there’s freedom here?’
Van Hijn smiled, amused for the first time that day. ‘It’s just
the same as anywhere else, only the laws are different. But
the laws are still in place, still there. We can’t let people run
around doing exactly what they want.’
‘Why not?’
‘Why not? Because not all people want to mind their own
business. Absolute freedom means letting people kill, torture,
rape and get away with it. The Nazis had absolute freedom.
So do most dictators. You come here and you think it’s
freedom but it’s only the slightest shift in the rules, the
foundations are still there. Unfortunately others make the
same mistake as you when they arrive. But unlike you, they
act on their desires and turn this city into the one that
they originally mistook it for. And so you see how easily the
imagined leaks into reality and becomes it.’
They had one last drink, the detective unable to resist
another slice of the chilli and chive custard cheesecake that
the cafe was famous for.
‘It’s fucking horrible!’ Jon said, spitting his mouthful of
the rancid substance into a serviette. ‘How can you eat
that?’ Suddenly he felt the burn of the chilli shooting up his
larynx, going nuclear in his mouth and behind that the sickly
sweet, eggy aftertaste of the custard that had cemented on
to his teeth.
‘They also do them in whiskey and liquorice, apple and
anchovy and marzipan and bacon flavour. The sweet and
the savoury. I guess it’s just not for you.’
Jon gulped down a full glass of water, ice and all. ‘Ugh!’
Van Hijn laughed, clearly amused by the spectacle. ‘So
what are your plans?’ he asked.
‘I’m going to find out who’s behind these films and from
there, how the films led to Jake’s murder. I think you were
right. The films are fake, snuff. Somehow Jake colluded and
they killed him for it.’
Van Hijn didn’t say anything, not that he now knew the
films were real or that he was certain Jake had been killed
for them. It was funny how they’d changed sides, he and
Jon, each believing the opposite of what they’d first thought.
He could have told him what he’d seen in the preview but
he knew he wouldn’t. He didn’t want Jon getting himself
killed, better to let him follow a bad trail, better disappointment than death.
‘I know someone who can show us the preview.’
‘Preview? What are you talking …’
Her phone call had woken him from an uneasy slumber
that was filled with the Doctor’s face, his cackle and sneer,
the whipflash of the city.
‘Are you okay, Jon?’ Suze asked.
ŚWaking up. Slowly.’ He lit a cigarette, sat up on the bed.
The first inhalation kicked his heart into gear. ‘You mean the
49 reels?’
ŚYes. If you don’t mind seeing me again, that is.’ She left
it hanging. Jon took three more drags off his cigarette. He
had to make a decision now.
‘How?’
‘A friend of mine owns a few porn shops. I was talking to
him the other day, happened to mention the films and he
said he knew where I could get to see the preview.’
‘When?’
‘Tonight. At seven.’ She paused. He could hear her
breathing. ‘If you want.’
‘Yes,’ he said and put the phone down.
Friday night in Amsterdam and Jon couldn’t believe the
number of people swarming the streets as he wrestled his
way through, heading for Suze’s flat. Like the Vegas of
Europe. Multitudes descended on the city every weekend in
search of sex, drugs and a freedom that was not available
back home. Groups of Eastern Europeans looking for sex,
ravers pilled-up and bug-eyed, smugglers and students,
businessmen and tramps, all congregated in the city every
Friday night, shrinking the streets and alleys and shrouding
the canals.
Jon felt uncomfortable as he passed through the smiling,
expectant hordes. He kept walking, kept looking back. He
was sure it was the same man that he’d eluded the day before.
How the hell had he found him again? And who was he?
The killer? Jon didn’t want to think that. Had been trying to
deny it all night, this morning too. A flight back to London
suddenly seemed the sensible option. If he’s the killer, why
doesn’t he just confront me, Jon thought. Better that than
this endless unknowing fear.
‘Hi.’ She was wearing a beige suede halterneck, a long, flowing
skirt and had managed to apply lipstick only to her top lip
when she answered the door.
‘You look nice,’ Jon said, relieved to be out of the public
gaze.
She stared at him and for a moment they were like
strangers trapped together in a lift, looking for anything in
common that could break the silence. ‘Thanks, come in. I’ll
just be a minute.’
He sat down on the sofa as she went off to finish her
make-up and began flicking idly through a film magazine
that lay on the coffee-table. He couldn’t concentrate. He
looked at the mess on the table - spilled weed, empty wine
glasses, a printout of Charlotte’s diary, some photocopies
of her work, CD covers — and thought how the table so
mirrored her. He looked up and saw her in the other room,
just movement. The Band was playing on the deck, horns
wailing, voices overlapping, sepia drenched and filled with
dread.
‘Have a joint. There’s some in my handbag,’ she shouted
through the open door.
He went through her bag. Took out the small sachet of
grass, paper, a lighter. He also took out the canister that lay
there. Mace. He felt safer just holding the small black tube,
like a travel deodorant, its red button screaming Press Me.
He looked back, she was still in the bedroom. He took the
can over to the window, stretched his hand outside, pressed
down. An explosion of fine mist spat out of the tube. Jon
quickly closed the window before the noxious fumes could
leak in. He smiled.
‘It’s great that women can buy these things legally here,’
he said. ‘In London they don’t have any sort of protection.’
She came back into the room. ‘Also means that the rapists
have it,’ she added. ‘You want it?’
Jon nodded.
‘Just don’t go getting yourself killed.’
He smiled and placed the small canister in his jacket.
‘It’s a nightmare out there,’ Jon said as he smoked the
joint. Their speech was now filled with banalities. Afraid to
say anything else.
‘Tell me about it. Friday night and you can’t even squeeze
into your favourite coffee shop because of all the tourists.’
She stood in front of him cleaning her glasses. She’d never
looked more desirable and he felt a strong urge to take her
then, lay her on the coffee-table and make love to her. Forget
the past. Forget everything.
Instead he rolled another joint and thought about Jake.
What had once seemed a simple murder, if there could be
such a thing, had now taken on more angles and permutations
than he would have thought possible. That such an event
could have been the effect of all these lines drawing together.
He knew the Doctor was the key. Dominic, somehow, the
link. The films, perhaps, the reason. But were they real?
Tonight he would know. If they weren’t, and were merely a
fake, a historical genre snuff movie, then had Jake been roped
in, on some pretence, and dispatched as soon as his role was
over? That seemed the most likely answer. The detective had
said as much. There were too many similarities between the
death of Jake and that of the other victims. Coincidence
seemed ludicrous.
But there was another option and though he’d been suppressing
it, he couldn’t deny its viability. Van Hijn himself
had hinted at it. Perhaps Jake had made snuff films with the
Doctor. It didn’t seem like the Jake he knew but then neither
did the corpse on the slab that day. Had Dominic found out
about it? After Beatrice’s death? And killed Jake when he
came back from London?
And what about the Doctor? Where was he hiding? In
some cellar or bolt-hole or an apartment furnished and paid
for by the government? Jon’s head began to spin. He lit the
joint and took a deep swallow.
But if the films were real then everything was turned
upside down. Did Jake find them in the museum, show them
to someone, Dominic, the Doctor, someone else? Was he
killed for them? After all they were worth a lot of money.
But then how did Beatrice fit in? How did the other seven
girls? Jon knew he couldn’t discount them. The link between
them and Jake was the only solid thing he had. That and the
films he would get to see tonight.
He’d printed out photos of both Jake and the Doctor
back in London. Freeze-framed the video and captured their
fuzzy likeness. He had to find the Doctor. And Dominic
knew where he was. He was certain of it. If only she would
get in touch with Dominic. What else was she hiding? But
no, he couldn’t think like that. Seeing her made everything
different and he wondered for whom, exactly, he’d come
back.
‘How’s the thesis going?’ he asked, trying to derail his