Read The Devil's Playground Online
Authors: Stav Sherez
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General
‘The films?’ he whispered. Dominic struggled but managed
to shake his head and even peel back his lips for
something approximating a smile. He could still see Bill
running and he knew that as long as the dog ran, he would
be okay.
Quirk grinned. He liked the tough ones, the ones that
took more to get them to break. Worthy vessels for his
undoubted talent. He took another needle, wider, curved;
showed it to Dominic. He rolled up Dominic’s sleeve,
pressed his cold fingers on the skin, feeling for the right
point. When he had it, he took the needle and slid it past the
membrane and into the nerve. Dominic screamed and lost
consciousness again.
When Dominic came out of the blackness he saw Quirk
holding another needle in his hand, long and thin like a
shark’s tooth, smiling, ready to strike. Bill was gone. The
field and the flowers were all gone. Only the pain existed. A
sweet, exquisite toothache pain that pulsed through his arm
and leg, throbbing in his veins. ‘No!’ he screamed. ‘No, I’ll
tell you where they are. No more! Please!’
Karl took a cigarette from his pack, lit it and placed it
gently in Dominic’s mouth, gesturing for Quirk to move
away. ‘Where?’ he asked Dominic, his tone solicitous and
smooth as a salesman closing a sweet deal.
‘They’re in the museum. The JHM. Room 435,’ he said,
trying to catch his breath. It seemed so hard to breathe
suddenly and his stomach felt extremely hot.
Karl smiled. He looked at Quirk. ‘Finish up with him. I
believe the man came here to get some piercings. Do it.’
LATE SEPTEMBER, 1943. VILLEFRANCHE/DRANCY/
POLAND
They will come for us.
Everyone else is gone from town and no one smiles any
more. The nights are filled with screams and the groaning of
their trucks taking more people away. I am here with my
new husband. Alex. It still feels strange to say that, but
there it is. We are hiding out in Ottilie’s villa. I do not know
of anywhere else to go. The soldiers are everywhere.
We got married in the late summer heat. We stood on the
steps of the hall and we kissed and I never imagined it would
be like this. I always thought that it would be me and Alfred
and music would be playing, the stars twinkling, the very
earth would heave and groan and the wild sky would break
apart. But instead it is filled-out forms, lazy handshakes,
wry smiles and this baby that is now five months inside of
me.
It is autumn and the sky is closing in. The last week of
August brought storms terrifying and unstoppable, wrenching
the water out of its nest, waves breaking against the
small sea-front hotels. Rain like I have never seen it. Not
Berlin rain but something else, denser, so that you almost
choke to death in its spray.
Someone gave us up.
I heard the truck approach, saw the men step out, their black
uniforms slick with rain, and I screamed.
Alex told me to hide but I couldn’t leave him. We stood
up together when the men entered our room. Two young
German men. In another life they could have been my suitors.
In this life, they were smiling. The officer took out a
whip and began beating Alex with it. I screamed again but
only heard them laughing. My dear Alex fell to the floor and
began to shake.
They told us to pack our things but there was nothing left
to take. All I still had were those awful things I had
drawn in Gurs. I do not know why but I took them, folded
them and placed them inside my shirt. They broke Alex’s
ankle with a stick and dragged him by the hair out to the
truck.
We arrived at the hotel. Alex could barely climb out of
the truck. I tried to help him but the officer began to beat
me until I couldn’t hold on any longer. They marched us
into the Excelsior. SS stood like dustbins every few yards.
A short, dark, hook-nosed man stood on the balcony smiling.
They took me to a room that I was to share with other
women. Alex was taken elsewhere. The women looked at me
as I made my way to the empty space in the corner. I fell on
to the floor and revelled in its cold, hard kiss.
Someone told me that today is 24 September. They said,
remember this day. I do not know why. Today I was reunited
with Alex. They lined us up with about thirty others.
Brunner screamed and shouted. He picked an old rabbi out
of the line, started beating him, ripping his clothes off. I
looked away just before I heard the shot.
We marched up the main street towards the railway
station. The French stood on the pavements and watched
us. Some cheered. Others, I could see, were trying to hold
back their tears. I managed to grab Alex, help him stand,
and no one saw us, our hands clasped, as we marched towards
the train.
The camp here at Drancy is much larger than the one at
Gurs. But there is a different feeling here. Everyone feels
that this is the worst, that once we are moved, things can
only get better. Yesterday, Brunner handed out postcards
that had been sent from other resettled Jews. The cards were
postmarked Oswiecim, and on the back they told of better
times. Of a place where they are left alone. Where there is
food and education for the children. They spoke of better
places. We each held on to the cards for as long as we could,
loath to pass them on, as if in their surfaces we too could
find such comfort.
We know that we are going to Poland. They took our
money on entering the camp and gave us receipts, vouchers
in zlotys which we would be able to cash once we arrived.
Everyone felt much better, knowing how the Germans liked
to keep things in meticulous order, everyone thinking we are
going to a place with shops, where things can be bought and
we all held on to those little slips as if our lives depended on
them.
I think it is October. I do not know any more. Today we are
leaving. They called our names this morning and we stood
for six hours out in the cold, still naked from sleep, until the
roll-call had been repeated to Brunner’s satisfaction. They
loaded us on to a bus. I lost track of Alex. The local kids
threw stones at the bus as we were marched in.
Alex is gone. Maybe he is on another bus. Maybe he
managed to get away. I hope so. Or I hope that I will see
him on the train. Or in Poland. Where we can live as a
couple, have this child, forget these awful days.
I cannot believe that they expect us to ride in these trains.
The compartment in front of me is filled. People are squirming
and crying and the stink is terrible. I stand in line. I have
seen many shot today. I will not do anything out of line. I
want to see my Alex in Poland. I will do as they tell me.
The compartment is filled. I hear the SS shouting out
‘Close transport 60’, and suddenly all the light disappears. I
do not know how many of us are in the car. There is a steady
undercurrent of tears. Nearly everyone is standing. My face
is almost pressed against the door. I was the last one in.
Some of the old people have managed to sit between other
people’s legs. I cannot see further than that. No one is
screaming. Not yet. But I can feel it in their throats and in
mine. This rising scream that threatens to unleash at any
minute.
There is shouting from outside. I cannot make out what
they are saying. Suddenly the door is opened and I nearly
fall out. Someone grabs me from behind and stops me. Air
drifts into the car and a few people sigh, thinking maybe it
was all a trick and now we were being let off. But I could
hear the soldiers shouting. They were talking in my language.
‘We’re full. The list has been completed. You know we
can’t add people who are not represented on the list. He will
have to go on the next transport tomorrow.’
‘No. It is imperative he goes now.’
‘What’s so special about this Jew?’
‘He is English. An English Jew, can you believe that? You
see, the quicker we dispatch him the better.’
‘Okay, but you will have to report this to the Obersturmfiihrer.
He does not like it when the numbers are wrong.’
I hear the crack of wood on bone and then they shove him
into the car. He is face-to-face with me. Blood is running
down his head and if it wasn’t so cramped in here he would
collapse.
The doors shut.
Darkness again. The train begins to move. People sway
and fall into each other. I hold the man in front of me. I can
hear the deep twists of his breath.
‘Do you speak English?’ he says.
I nod and then realize he can’t see me. ‘Yes, some I speak,’
I say, hoping that is right, trying to remember what I can. I
think he smiles but I am not sure, perhaps it is only the
moonlight leaking in through a crack in the door.
‘Hello,’ he says and his breath is warm against my cheek.
‘My name is Jon Reed and I don’t know what I’m doing
here.’
“I am Charlotte,’ I say. ‘And I don’t know what I’m doing
here either.’
He presses against me and puts his hand on my stomach.
I can feel my child kicking inside and I know that he feels it
too. We stand like that, stomachs pressed against each other,
in this terrible heat.
“I can feel it,’ he says.
‘Yes.’ ++++++++++++++++++
Van Hijn stood outside the piercing parlour and shook the
rain out of his hair. The light was on inside. No sounds, no
movement that he could discern. He tried the door. Locked.
He pulled out his gun and blew the lock, shielding himself
against the exploded fragments of wood and metal that spat
back at him. He looked behind him; the street was empty.
He shouldered the door and spilled into the room.
Dominic was laid out on the piercing chair, his head
drooping. Van Hijn had to look away, then forced himself
to look back.
A pool of blood had converged around the bottom of the
chair. Dominic was naked and it looked as if he’d been
pierced with fragments of a skyscraper. Or been caught in a
hurricane of shrapnel, white-hot and hissing. Bits of metal
protruded from his side, from where his liver was, curling in
strange shapes as they reentered his body lower down, one
in his thigh, the other through his genitals. His tongue hung
loose from his mouth and had been bisected by a sharp metal
rod that quivered with a faint blue electrical charge.
The detective checked his pulse, but it was just routine.
He looked away from the dead body, noticed the other door.
The gleaming padlock. He held his hand up to his face and
shot it off.
The light was so bright that it took him a couple of seconds
to focus on the shape of the piercer slipping across the room.
He fired one shot. Quirk went down. Van Hijn heard the
satisfying collision of metal and bone and watched as the
piercer’s ankle bloomed a sudden red.
He moved towards the man. Applied pressure to his
broken ankle. The piercer screamed.
‘Where are the films?’ Van Hijn shouted.
Quirk grimaced. Shook his head.
More pressure. The soft giving of flesh and cartilage.
Quirk shook his head.
Van Hijn handcuffed the old man to the radiator. He
called for back-up. Stood, caught his breath. Then explored
the room. It was tiled white. A strange, rotting smell sat
heavily in the detective’s nostrils. Once another piercing
room perhaps, before that a hiding place for Jews during the
war. In the centre of the room stood the Judas Cradle, solid
and monumental like a remnant of some forgotten empire
or a work of groundbreaking modernist art. In the corners,
other devices lay silent and occluded. Tongues of metal and
steel, leather and wood, spikes and clamps and shackles. He
walked across the floor, trying to breathe through his mouth,
saw the clogged drain, leaned down, felt his fingers slide
through the mulch, hair and skin and blood. He wiped his
hand on his trousers and looked up at the empty tripod, the
overhanging halogens.
He was drawn to the screen in the corner, like something
you’d find in a radiology unit. Gun-metal grey. He looked
behind and saw the video camera mounted on a tripod. His
heart boomed through his chest. But there was no tape
inside. Nothing at all. He felt the floor sliding away from
him as he stared through the camera’s eye at the centre of
the room, the Judas Cradle looming perfectly positioned and
focused in his field.
Van Hijn ran back into the room. Quirk was lying on the
floor, quietly moaning, holding his ankle.
‘Where did they go?’ Van Hijn shouted.
‘Go to hell,’ the piercer replied. His voice sounded as if
he was gargling stones.
Van Hijn walked up to him. Put his foot above the bullet
wound. ‘I’m not going to ask again.’
Quirk said nothing this time. Van Hijn applied pressure.