Read The Devil's Playground Online
Authors: Stav Sherez
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General
digression. No more time for music. No time for love or
memory. There is only time to write. There is only a small
number of blank pages left. There is the sound of marching
in the daytime. Rifle shots in the night. This room is getting
smaller. The light is so bad that I cannot see what it is I am
doing but I no longer have a choice.
I went back to the first page. The playbill. It was written by
another woman in another time on another world. It will not
do any more. I have no new paper to start over. I must write
in the spaces that are left. The only colour I still have is red.
Somehow that is fitting. I put it all together. It has weight.
A certain dignity in its heft and volume. This is a year of my
life. I will leave it at Ottilie’s house. There, maybe, it will be safe. I have only one thing left to do. The dedication.
The author
St Jean, August 1941/42
or between heaven
and earth beyond
our era in the year
1 of the
New Salvation
He dreamt of plane crashes when he finally got to bed that
morning. The beautiful obliteration of the shattered fuselage.
The rip and roar of metal, twisting in white-hot agony. The
screams of the falling.
The phone woke him with its insistent fusillade of rings.
‘Jon.’
It was her. He let the hotel’s answering machine pick up
the call.
‘Are you there? Jon? … I hate these things. God … I was
hoping that you’d come back last night… I’m at the seminar
now but I’ll be back home in an hour … call me, please.’
Jon waited for the beep, then got up. Checked the small
piece of paper that Nagatha had handed him the night before.
He looked back to the blinking red light, so insistent and
desperate. Some things would have to wait.
The rain was constant as a heartbeat. It soaked through his
clothes as he waited for the detective at the corner of Dam
Square.
He’d had to get out of his room. The walls were closing
in on him again. So he’d called Van Hijn, explained about
the Doctor’s address, said ‘Meet me there.’ The detective had
demurred, but Jon had told him that he was going anyway,
accompanied or not, knowing that Van Hijn would then not
have a choice, or rather wouldn’t allow himself the choice.
He watched the rain hit the streets like a shower of artillery,
saw how people took up certain shapes to insulate themselves
from it, unnatural angular modifications that they believed
would protect them. Everyone running, hurried, pissed off
and wet. Jon knew the feeling from London and how the
rain closed everybody off in their own shell.
‘Sorry, I’m late.’ The detective smiled, his hair was wet
and matted down and he looked as if he was drowning.
‘Can’t move too fast. Afraid I’ll split if I make any sudden
movements.’
‘Good to see you’re feeling better then. Hope I’m not
keeping you away from your animals.’ They shook hands,
oddly formal in the rain.
Van Hijn smiled, spat out his cigarette. ‘I’m sure they can
live without me for a few hours.’
They were buzzed in by the landlord of the building. He
inspected Van Hijn’s badge as if he were an archaeologist
staring at some new discovery, then nodded.
‘He went away a lot. Haven’t seen him for a couple of
weeks but that’s not so unusual.’
Wisitors?’ Van Hijn asked, a puddle forming around his
feet.
‘Not many, no. Unless you count whores. A few of those.’
Jon showed him the photo of Jake. The landlord nodded
again slowly. ‘Yes, him I’ve seen several times. Don’t know
if he was visiting the Doctor though. People get buzzed in,
I see them in the lobby but I don’t know who they’re visiting.’
‘Thank you,’ Van Hijn said, taking the master key.
They walked up the stairs, paint and carpet both peeling,
Jon remembering Jake’s description of the place, a chill
sweeping through him, walking again in the old man’s footsteps, trying to recover a ghost.
The Doctor’s flat was clean and neat and empty. There
was no sign that anyone had been there recently. No smell
of food, rumpled sheets, temporary litter, none of the small
accretions that coalesce around a life, the things you don’t
have time to deal with, that you leave for later. They walked
slowly through the two rooms, silent, each alone in their
thoughts and in what they expected from this.
In the main room, two faded, dust-soaked armchairs faced
each other and it was easy for Jon to imagine the two old
men sitting there, letting evenings ebb over a game of chess.
‘Here,’ Van Hijn called. Jon crossed the room and entered
the bedroom.
The detective was holding up a small cine camera. Wires.
A digital video camera. Jon felt his body shudder.
‘No tapes,’ Van Hijn said, throwing the devices back on
to the floor. ‘There’s no fucking tapes anywhere. Someone
got here before us.’
‘You don’t think he’s coming back?’ Jon asked.
Van Hijn shrugged. ‘He probably knew that as soon as we
found Jake this place would be compromised.’
‘Fuck.‘Jon expelled the word as if it had hooks.
Something snapped inside the detective’s head. ‘What did
you think, Jon? That he’d be here waiting for you with a
signed confession?’ Van Hijn kicked a small box of leads
across the room. He looked up, something softened in his
face. ‘Sorry. Guess I couldn’t help expecting something too.’
Van Hijn tried to smile but his face was grim.
Jon took the living room. He searched slowly through the
accumulations of a life. Books in German and English,
medical textbooks whose weight and gravity seemed to
belong to another time. Small ceramic medieval coats-of
arms that littered the mantelpiece, the bookshelves, almost
every flat surface. There were copies of old Dutch newspapers
and he put them aside for the detective. A large folder
containing drawings. There were so many clues here. Every
object was a clue. Everything that wasn’t here was a clue.
He got up, slowly stretching, thinking how this had been
another colossal waste of time and expectation, when the
window exploded.
The force of the blast and noise pushed him back and he
landed on the edge of a table, a sharp piercing thrust in his
spine, and then on the floor. Shards of glass scattered through
the room as the carpet began burning.
‘Get up!’ The detective was pulling jon’s arm. He’d blacked
out. The window was smashed. Black smoke was filling the
room. The curtains roared with flames. A broken bottle
trailing a rag lay in the middle of the carpet, flames licking
the air around it.
Jon came to. His mouth dry and hot, tasting bitter, his
arm and back screaming in pain, the detective’s voice far
away and muffled. All around him the light danced and
crackled.
‘Quick. The whole place is going up.’ Van Hijn grabbed
Jon’s arm and draped it across his shoulder. He thought
about his wounds. Would they split open? There was only
one way to find out.
Jon began to feel his legs again slowly coming to life,
taking his weight. The detective pushed him through the
hall, the fire quickly gaining behind them. Jon got to the door
first. Turned the handle. Nothing. Did it again. The same
result.
Locked.
He began to scream.
Van Hijn pushed him out of the way. Pulled out his gun
and blew the lock. The sound was terrible. Jon’s eardrums
felt as if they had been pierced. He was dizzy again and it
took all his concentration to stay upright while the detective
kicked at the door, once, twice, until finally it sheared away,
spilling in light and oxygen.
Downstairs the landlord lay face-down on his table. He
wasn’t moving. Van Hijn lifted his head and it nearly came
off His throat cut ear to ear, the classic Colombian necktie.
‘Shit, they certainly knew what they were doing,’ the detective
said breathlessly. Blood was pooling around the body and
had already made its way to the edge of the table where it
dribbled down on to the floor. A strange chemical smell in
the air. Burning cocaine.
Jon watched as Van Hijn called the police and fire crews.
He could feel it coming. A warm liquid onrush of fear and
spent adrenalin. He leaned down and vomited on the hotel
steps. He stood there shaking as he tried to light a cigarette
to get the taste out of his mouth. Every time he blinked he
could see the landlord’s head and the slowly growing halo of
blood surrounding it like some obscene replica of a Giotto
saint. He spat out the cigarette, shaking still, knowing that
there must have been something of value in the flat, something
that had necessitated the destruction of everything to
make it obscure.
He was behind him again. It was the same man he’d seen
before. Jon began to walk faster, feeling the sweat prickly on
his back, turning round every now and then to see his pursuer
stop to light a cigarette or read a concert poster. He regretted
now that he’d left the detective at the Doctor’s building.
Perhaps the man was just finishing the job. Jon fingered the
canister that still lay in his pocket, a small but necessary
comfort.
He began walking outwards, away from the clutch of the
canals, from the dense squirm of people that made pursuit
so easy. He got on a tram at Rokin and watched with relief
as the man stood there, breathless at the station, getting
smaller until he was gone.
Jon got off the tram when he thought he was far enough
away. He walked past the stately buildings thinking about
Suze, the brittle touches and smiles they’d exchanged the
previous night. He continued to walk, under grey scudded
clouds waiting to burst. He tried not to think about the
places they’d visited. Tried not to think about the dead
landlord or the fire in the flat. Thinking only made things
worse.
He stopped to light a cigarette and recognized the street
name. Coincidence or had his footsteps carried him here
knowingly? It didn’t matter. He walked up the street until he
found her house.
He stood between the two stone lions, finished his cigarette
and rang the bell.
‘Mr Reed, how nice to see you,’ she said as she opened
the door, trying to disguise the smile that had appeared,
spontaneous like a flower burst, on her face.
‘Hello, Mrs De Roedel,’ he said, explaining how he found
himself on her street.
‘No need for excuses. Come in, I’ll make some tea. I also
have some lovely pastries that were not meant to be eaten
alone.’
He followed her down the empty hall.
Everything was gone.
The ornamental decorations, Empire plunder, paintings
and adornments. All gone. The hall was bare. She led him to
the front room and disappeared into the kitchen before he
could say anything. He stared at the walls, previously splashed
with painted ancestors, now vacant apart from the discoloration
where the frames had hung, leaving only ghostly traces
of what had been. Around the room were many white
removal boxes. Taped and filled. There was something
creepy about a room of this size being so empty.
‘Lots of sugar, I remember,’ she said as she slowly poured
the tea into Jon’s cup, making sure not to splash or spatter
the liquid.
‘Thank you.’ Jon took the cup, cradled it in his hand,
feeling the pleasing heat make its way through his bones.
‘Looks like I just caught you in time,’ he said.
Mrs De Roedel looked at him blankly for a second,
then understood and smiled gently. ‘Oh no, Mr Reed. I
think I’ll be here a long time yet.’ She sat down, graceful as
a china cat. “I just thought it was time for a clean-up. Though
it’s not spring, I know. Time to redecorate, don’t you
think?’
Jon nodded, wondering how she could seem so resilient
when he knew her heart was smashed. ‘What about all that
stuff?’ he said, pointing to the boxes, lined like tired soldiers
across the perimeter of the room.
She shrugged, sipped her tea soundlessly. ‘Most of it’s
going to the museum.’ She put her cup down. It rattled and
spilled on the table. ‘Who else am I going to give it to?’ Her
hand went to cover her mouth. Jon looked down while the
old lady made some choking sounds. ‘It was her inheritance,
all this. Stuff my family and my husband’s had collected over
the years. I guess we thought it was history. Maybe we were
wrong. Maybe it’s better in a museum. I’m beginning to think
we shouldn’t clutter up our life with things.’ There was a
silence in which the walls seemed to sag and then she looked
up and asked him about Jake and he told her about the video
that the old man had left him. How Jake had befriended
a Holocaust survivor, a prisoner-doctor, and recorded his
testimony. He mentioned his own reservations, the fact that