Read The Devil's Playground Online
Authors: Stav Sherez
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General
He ground his foot down into the floor. It was not what
he’d meant to say. His abruptness surprised him, he’d once
been the opposite, so shy and reluctant to come to the point.
‘So that’s why you called me?’ She tried to make it a joke
but realized from his tone that it hadn’t worked.
‘No, not just that. I saw your friend Dominic last night.
He gave me the last of the CDs.’
She knew this was not the time to talk about personal
things. Not now. ‘Jake’s CD?’
‘Yes, and …’ His words hovered in the space between
them. He took a deep breath, felt his hands clench in his
pocket, heard the hum of distance in the wires. ‘And I miss
you, Suze. Shit, I know that sounds …’
She cut in, ‘Don’t say anything.’ There was a pause in
which neither of them spoke.
Then: ‘Suze, have you got an 8 mm projector?’
‘So, you just want me for my machines?’
He laughed. ‘Of course, what else did you think? No, I
have a reel of film that Jake gave to Beatrice to hide. Not
one of the 49. This is different. I think it’s why she was killed, why Jake was killed.’
‘Over one reel of film?’
‘Over what’s on it.’
She lit a cigarette. ‘I can borrow a projector from the
museum. Meet me at the flat in an hour.’
He heard her exhale smoke through the wires, saw her
lips pressing up against the plastic of the phone. ‘I’ll see you
then.’
Dominic had woken up with a bad hangover and a feeling
of having done something wrong. He looked around for Bill,
saw the dog standing by his water dish, just watching it, and
decided it was time to get out of bed. He brushed his teeth,
tearing away at the fast food and sugar skin he’d left on them
the night before and went through all the possible variations
of tonight’s auction closing.
The thought made him smile for the first time that morning
and he suddenly felt as if a whole mountain of shit
was gradually lifting from his back. He fed Bill, somewhat
concerned by the dog’s unenthusiastic eating and put on the
Birthday Party’s Junkyard, enjoying the noise and dissonance
of the music as it filled and splintered the room. He smoked
two cigarettes and drank three glasses of gin with the overwhelming feeling of anticipated relief that hits you when you
know the scariest rollercoaster ride of your life is almost
over.
‘It’s good to see you,’ she said and put her arms around his
neck, moving her body closer to his, feeling the warm rub
of his skin. She felt him move back at first, tense and coiled
like a barbed-wire fence, then easing, letting his body drape
into hers. They both stood back. Looked at each other, each
unwilling to say anything that might break the moment. He
put the bag down on her table.
‘You want some breakfast?’ she said, opening the curtains
on a rare slice of sunshine. ‘I’ve got bagels and croissants.’
‘No, I’m fine.’
‘Tell me about Dominic’ They sat on her sofa, one at
either end, facing each other, the hum of a Richard Buckner
CD pulsing in the background.
‘He’s been following me for days. I thought it was Wouter
but it was Dominic all along.’
She moved towards him. ‘Why? He’s a bit creepy but…’
‘This.’ He pointed to the bag that lay innocently on the
table. ‘It all has to do with this. Jake’s murder. The serial
killer. Everything.’
‘The Nazi snuff films?’
He shook his head. ‘He’s hidden them. No, this is Jake’s
last video.’
She sat there unable to say anything else. Dominic, behind
the films? It made sense, made more sense than she wanted
to admit. His preoccupation these past few weeks, his connections
and evangelical fervour. ‘He was doing it for the
Council,’ she said.
Jon shook his head. ‘No, he was doing it for Jake. For
himself too.’
What’s he going to do with them?’
‘Post them on the web for everyone to see.’
‘Christ!’ she said, lighting a cigarette, moving towards
him.
‘You disagree?’ He thought she’d be thrilled, that it would
be the apex of all that the Council believed in. He stared at
her crumpled form and realized how wrong he’d been. ‘I
thought that’s what the Council’s theories were all about?’
“I thought that too, until I realized that we were wrong or
perhaps just too simplistic, too idealistic. There have to be
other ways of disseminating this information. The bottom
line is how do you live? Can you live with all that hate filling
up inside you? Can you do something positive with it or does it just infect you and make you into the very thing you despise?’
Dominic spent the day hiding in the shade of corner tables
in small coffee shops around the District. He knew that
staying at home was not an option. Even if nothing happened, the anticipation of it doing so would have driven him crazy. Today of all days he wanted to remain sane.
He sat in an early show of a Belgian porn film. A couple
on a holiday island fall in love with the local donkey. The
man who owns the donkey and who, by day, rents him out
to small children for short rides, agrees to let the couple have
the animal, nights, for a larger fee than he charges the kids.
Dominic watched as the couple made love to the donkey
without ever touching each other. He got bored after twenty
minutes, the couple were still discovering the joys of their
newfound friend at night and the kids were still riding him
by day though a few of the children had complained that
Pablo, their favourite beach burro, was acting a little weird
these last few days. Moody, they said, and Dominic heard
the man in the seat behind him grunt feverishly, reaching an
orgasm. Dominic noticed how the man had come as soon
as the screen was filled up with children’s faces and he felt
suddenly disgusted, smelling the sour stench of spunk all
around him, its sticky purchase under his feet.
He left the cinema and started walking through the District,
trying to keep his face hidden, his movements banal, El Hombre Invisible like Bill Burroughs, and he fortified himself with the steely image of the gaunt writer wandering
through the streets of Tangiers, a ghost flitting through the
city.
At the corner of Zeedijk, he saw an amazing sight come
towards him. At first he thought she was a whore but no
whores were that good-looking, not even in Amsterdam, and
anyway he could see that she was holding a map in her left
hand. He stood there stunned as she came up to him and in
a slight, lilting German accent asked him the way to the
Old Church. ‘It’s my first day in Amsterdam and I don’t
understand this system at all.’
‘It’s a bitch to master,’ Dominic replied, trying not to look
at her breasts.
‘Is it far?’ Her eyes were like pools of cool water on a
blistering summer day.
‘No, about two minutes, just take the left…’
‘Please, could you show me the way?’ She tilted her head
towards him, put her hand on his arm. ‘I’m scared of being
lost again and this place frightens me. What if they think I’m
one of those women and start touching me? They already
look at me like that here.’
‘No problem, I was walking that way myself.’ Terribly
English and terribly proud of himself, Dominic took her
hand, surprised that she let it stay in his and walked with her
the long route to the Old Church, enthralled by the way she
spoke and the way she looked.
‘Please, if you could, I know you’ve been very kind already
but I need to go to this place. I was told it was by the
Old Church.’ She took a piece of paper from her cleavage.
Dominic saw the paper come up and a breast nearly follow
it, revealing a tease of darker skin before she adjusted
herself.
Dominic watched as she tried to read the paper. A whiff
of harsh chemicals flooded his nose and then, from behind,
a sudden shadow. He barely had time to feel the metal
making contact with the back of his head before the darkness
swallowed him whole.
Van Hijn arrived at Dominic’s flat, realizing immediately that
he was too late. The door hung open. Light spilled on to the
hallway carpet. He stepped inside, his gun at the ready this
time, but no one was there. Only the mess that was left when
the place had been searched. A quiet, contained fury evident
in the scatter of objects. He walked around the small flat
quickly, trying to ascertain what remained. Though the flat
had been turned over there was no apparent sign of struggle.
Nothing to suggest that Dominic had been in when they’d
arrived.
He tried booting up the computer but it was busted, the
hard drive lying in fragments at his feet. Then he heard
whimpering.
It was coming from the closet. He drew his gun. Reached
out and opened the door.
The dog lay wrapped in barbed wire at the bottom of the
closet. He was shivering and crying, small sobs coming from
his throat, blood pooling about him.
‘Jesus Christ.’ Van Hijn put the gun back in his pocket,
dropping to his knees and reaching out to the dog. He could
see one glassy eye turn up towards him and he wondered if
the dog would go crazy, unleash all its pain on him. But it
just moaned. The detective noticed a long, thin needle lying
next to the animal, spotted with blood. It looked like the one
he’d seen at Quirk’s. He flashed on Quirk’s smile, the folds
of the old man’s face, his buried accent, the secret room.
Jon’s pursuer disappearing into the basement. He’d been
meaning to pay the old piercer another visit. Looking around
the wrecked flat he realized it was all he had left.
Van Hijn grabbed one of the strands of wire and slowly
began unravelling it from the animal’s body. If the dog was
in the way they could have just killed him, he thought; this
was for pleasure, an added bonus. He spent the next few
minutes carefully unwrapping the animal, who seemed to
understand that the detective meant him no harm. The dog
whimpered and screamed every time the wire caught on his
flesh or took off a piece of fur. But he never lashed out.
Van Hijn realized he was crying. He wiped his eyes on his
sleeve and took off the last bit of wire. He went to the
kitchen, found a bowl, filled it with water and brought it to
the dog. He looked on as the dog slowly lifted its head, in
considerable pain, and began lapping up the liquid. With that
done, his chest heavy and choked, Van Hijn locked the door
behind him and headed for Quirk’s piercing parlour.
Dominic watched as Karl argued with Quirk, hoping it would
prolong the time before he started to work on him. He knew
it was coming though and wondered how he would stand up
to it. He hoped he would be the person he believed himself
to be.
It had all led to this.
He shouldn’t have been surprised. It had started as something
right. Something necessary. He had done what was
needed. He’d done everything so that the films would go
online. So that people would see once and for all. Sitting
there, strapped to the piercing chair, watching Karl, the girl
and Quirk, he made a promise to himself: not to tell them
where the reels were even if it meant his death. He thought
there was not much chance of him leaving this room either
way and strangely, he felt alive then. He heard every word
they spoke and noticed every part of the room, the small
table with the piercing instruments, the broken chair in the
corner and the black bag that was next to him on the floor.
I will not say a thing to them. I will not feel any pain, he
repeated to himself as he saw the piercer come towards him.
‘One last time. Where are the films?’
Dominic shook his head. The German turned towards
him. ‘I suggest you tell him,’ he said. ‘Quirk here has perfected
the art of piercing through the nerve, I don’t think it’s something you’ll appreciate.’ He laughed.
Dominic looked at him blankly. Quirk smiled. ‘Okay, I
prefer it this way too,’ he said and reached for his equipment.
He put the first needle into Dominic’s left thigh. It went
in cleanly, smoothly, like a breath of cold air on the skin.
Dominic looked down at the piercer’s bald head and his
withered hands manipulating the needle, finding the right
place, then pushing it in.
There was a moment when he didn’t feel anything, when
everything stopped, the room, the people, all stopped dead
as if they’d been freeze-framed. And then it hit him. Like a
punch, a kick to the balls, like nothing he’d ever experienced
before, and he squirmed and cried out and puked and pissed
himself as his whole body flared up in pain. He saw Bill
running through a field of brilliant green in migraine sunshine
and then he passed out.
Karl took out a small bottle of smelling salts.
‘Much quicker, you see,’ Quirk said, looking at Karl, quietly
proud of himself.