Read The Devil's Playground Online
Authors: Stav Sherez
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General
the Doctor’s testimony seemed to show only the worst. The
arc of descent. He told her things he knew he couldn’t tell
Suze or the detective. Things he’d kept inside himself. How
he was beginning to think that he’d been sucked, or maybe
suckered, into this investigation. How Jake had laid certain
clues that only he would find, and he told her that he didn’t
understand why the old man had done it, what he’d been
trying to prove.
She nodded and refilled his cup, pushed the cake plate
across to him. They sat and talked until the light dropped
from the day.
‘I have something for you,’ she said as he was about to leave.
‘I cleaned up Beatrice’s room too. All her stuff. I couldn’t
stand being reminded any more, for all those clothes to have
no one to wear them, all those books with no one to read
them. I found it behind her bookcase. I called the nice
detective but they told me he was off the case. They didn’t
seem interested. I knew you would come back.’
She went into the main room. He heard every footstep
as it diminished and then amplified. Every beat of his
heart.
She took a small black object out of an envelope. He put
his hand out. She placed it in his palm.
It was cold and plastic. His palm was drenched in sweat.
He looked down.
It was a single reel of 8 mm film.
He got off the tram and entered the District, pulsing with
the night swarm of pedestrians and shoppers. The film
nestled in his inside jacket pocket, zipped up, constantly
touched and prodded to make sure it was still there. He
wondered if Suze had a projector. He thought that it would
be a good way to get to see her. Neutral ground.
He wanted to call her right away. To see what was on the
film. Holding it up to the light had just confirmed that it was
indeed war footage, or at least bore a close resemblance to
it. He would have to slip it through a projector, have it
beamed on a screen to see why Beatrice had hidden this
particular reel above all others.
The previous night had led him no closer to Jake, maybe
only further away. The films were real and Jake couldn’t be
considered as a snuff extra. But now he felt something rising,
a small sliver of hope that soon things would be answered,
that one way or another, soon, he would know.
Then he saw the man again. Smiling this time. He was
tired of being afraid, of always having to look over his
shoulder. But he remembered the detective’s words, the
devices the killer had used, the pleasure he’d taken. His
pursuer was too far away to make an identification, but
looking at him, he felt something familiar about the man,
a shudder of recognition. He turned, walked through the
night, quickening his step, trying to keep control, not break
into a full-out run, though a part of his brain was screaming
to do just that. Through the tourists and crack dealers and
the girls on their coffee breaks. He bounced like a pinball
from canal to canal until he finally looked behind him and
didn’t see anyone following. He felt excited, proud for a
moment that he’d finally eluded his pursuer. Felt the fear
slip and ebb.
It was getting late and the streets were thinning out. The
tourists had gone home and now only hardcore smokers and
whorefuckers remained, their faces equally determined by
their desires as they shuffled by him.
He walked past the Old Church, almost stumbling over a
couple making love in its shadow until he found himself in
front of the Skull & Roses tattoo parlour. He looked towards
the basement. The buzzer glowed nicotine yellow. A piercing
parlour, the detective had said. Jon moved nearer the steps.
He could hear movement down in the basement and he saw
the lights flickering and smelled the acrid tang of burnt
coke. He thought of Wouter, the previous night, the burnt
down flat.
He looked to his left and right. There was no one around.
He began descending the stairs, searching through his
pockets, taking out the mace. He tested his fingers against
the button. Stared at the door. He heard something creeping
in the darkness to his left but could see only two bins,
standing silent. A cat moved and he nearly maced it. He
caught his breath. Laughed. Felt a sharp shred of nerve and
fear pulse through him. He reached out his hand towards
the buzzer, thinking, I have to do this, I have to see what’s
there, when someone grabbed his wrist.
Trains. Long, rust-caked and articulated like snakes. Trains
rolling across the sleepy hills and empty towns. Trains, shuddering and packed, the tracks like black fingers uncoiling
from Berlin and heading across the Eastern European plain.
He sat and watched the documentary footage, scratchy
and pocked, as it narrated and speculated. Trains and timetables.
A skeleton infrastructure, stretched and spined across
the back of Europe. Like the nerves that twisted around
muscle and bone. A new network of capillaries, artery and
vein, shunting new kinds of things away from the fatherland,
cleansing as the heart beat faster and faster and the blood
sped its way across the plain.
Quirk lit a cigarette, coughed, wiped the spit off his lower
lip, dark and brown, speckled with blood, someday soon, he
knew. He watched the programme change but there really
was no change at all. Bormann stared at him. Bormann, whose skull became such a relic like the fingerbones of burnt saints. All the time now the TV was filled with images of
that era. He’d spent thirty years forgetting, or kidding himself
so. Living a small life, in small rooms, small cities, where the
density of your surroundings always hugs you and will never
let you fall. And then the programmes started. Every night.
Every channel sometimes it seemed. Endless footage, run
and rerun, black and white or, for novelty value, in colour.
He saw the place he’d spent his childhood in. The barbed
wire and dark forested blackness beyond. He didn’t feel pain
or loss or hate or any of those things. It was where he’d
grown up. He hadn’t known any different. It was nostalgic
in the way every street corner is where you once played and
joked and kissed girls. Though he’d never done that. Not
much of any of that at all. And afterwards those things just
didn’t seem important any more.
Quirk stubbed the cigarette and flipped the channel.
Another documentary. Another pit, out in the Russian
forests, smiling officers, handshakes, yes, yes, yes. Were
people so goddamn interested, he wondered. They must be.
Otherwise why show all this. Education? Well, what the fuck
could you learn from this? Death? Fear? A loss of belief? All
that and more. Well, let them watch, they would never
understand for to watch something is not to experience it
however much it may set itself up as a facsimile thereof.
Quirk had even heard of a ‘theme’ concentration camp down
in the Bavarian hills. You paid your money and were given a
pair of striped pyjamas that chafed and rubbed against your
skin. Not much food. A night at most. See how it was, the
adverts proclaimed. Understand. Feel. And so Germans,
overfilled with guilt and shame paid for these humiliations,
not understanding that choice was all. That in the morning
they would give back their rough clothing, rub cream over
their cracked and burnt skin, get back into their Volvos and
stationwagons, talk to the kids, sigh deeply, shake their heads
and then remember that tomorrow they’re back at work.
He flipped again. Into cableland. The refuge of the documentarian, the fake historian, the ghouls and fiends who got
a kick out of all this stuff. You could sit and watch torture
and death non-stop if you wanted to. Modern day and
medieval. All inclusive, one package. The new pornography.
He checked his watch. Karl should have reported back by
now. Probably fucked it all up. Ten years he feeds them
information and then when the big one finally comes around
they send him some insecure, drug-addled muscle. Christ.
Quality had definitely dropped. It had been so hard to part
with the address. So fucking hard. But he knew that this way
he’d get another chance at the 49 reels. The Germans needed
a place to work on the man, convince him of the films’
rightful place … and then perhaps his chance would come.
At least he’d get to see them again, those films, those days.
He lit another cigarette, coughed, not so bad this time and
tuned into some glasses-wearing geek explaining how the
Holocaust could not have happened, absolutely, definitively,
because if they really had gassed so many people then more
molecules of the chemical would have embedded themselves
in the surrounding ground. And since, this geek asserted,
there were only trace elements of those, then obviously the
Holocaust was a lie, a myth set up by the Zionists to perpetuate
their victimhood and consolidate their position as de facto rulers of the world.
The doorbell buzzed. Quirk flipped the channel on to the
outside cam, saw the German and his woman standing there,
flipped back to the programme and buzzed them in.
‘Shhh,’ he said, gesturing for them to sit. He watched the
geek display his facts and provenance.
‘Fucking Jew,’ Karl spat.
Quirk laughed.
‘Don’t see why you find it so funny, old man. Who do
you think these deniers are? Friends of the Reich? No. Jews. Set out to discredit the Fiihrer’s most palpable achievement.’
Quirk watched the woman. She hadn’t said anything. It
was the first time he’d seen her. Surprised, yes — he hadn’t
expected a woman, but he supposed times were changing.
She looked pissed off and he immediately felt that charge
that always fizzled and flashed between people who shared
a bed. Dieter must have been short, Quirk thought, to send
this lumphead and his fucking girlfriend. There was a sound
outside. Quirk looked towards the door. Locked. Just kids
playing. He wondered why he was so jumpy.
‘These fucking liars,’ Karl said, watching the TV flicker,
shovelling another mound on to his card. The woman looked
at him sharply but he ignored her, continued. ‘They defile
the Fiihrer’s glory. Every day trying to deny all we achieved
and doing it in our name. If the Holocaust didn’t happen
then why do these same people profess to admire Hitler so
much — because he conquered several countries for a few
years? Fuck, everyone’s done that at one time or another — Napoleon didn’t inspire groups or meetings or ideology.’
‘I know this,’ Quirk snapped, suddenly impatient, disgusted
with it all. ‘It’s done?’ he asked though he could smell
the tang of ash and flame that clung to Karl’s clothes like
cigarette smoke.
Karl nodded. ‘As you said, old man. All gone. The whole
floor, just to make sure.’ He stepped forward, took the
remote and flicked the set off. Quirk started to get up but
then realizing it would be easier this way, said nothing. He
was glad that they had at least achieved this small task. Now
there would be no connections, no betraying trails leading
back to here.
“You want to tell us why we had to burn that place?’
Quirk thought about it. ‘No.’
‘Well, what about the films?’ Karl was bored, pissed off — they’d almost been caught by the policeman, fucking Greta arguing again, them both so tired and almost didn’t notice.
But no matter, it was done. The place was ashes. The heat
had felt good.
‘You have to make sure he has the films, the originals,
before you do anything.’
Karl nodded. What did the old man know? Fucking
patronizing him like Dieter and the rest back in Frankfurt.
Had Dieter told the old man he was Czech? Fuck. He knew
he had to get these films, get them and store them somewhere
safe, somewhere even Greta wouldn’t know — these were his
bargaining chips into the new world and he was damn sure
not going to let them go. He moved towards the instrument
table to his right, picked up several needles, different shapes
and sizes, running his finger smoothly against the tips. ‘You
giving me this address suggests that you have already ascertained
that.’ Karl took two of the needles and slipped them
into the folds of his coat.
‘This is where the website comes from. The computer,
you see. So what, you kill him and then search his flat, find
he put the films in a safety deposit somewhere? How’s Dieter
going to like that?’
The old man had a point. Yes. The films were the most
important thing, couldn’t get carried away now, not when
they were so close.
After they’d left, Quirk switched the set off and locked
the basement door. He hoped they wouldn’t fuck up. They
looked as though they were more than capable of it, but
surely Dieter wouldn’t have left something this important in
an idiot’s hands. Shit, he should stop worrying. He’d owed