Read The Devil's Playground Online
Authors: Stav Sherez
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General
cigarette slowly burning between his fingers. ‘Are you sure
the 49 reels are in there?’
Jon nodded. ‘That’s what Dominic said. Did you find the
Doctor?’
‘No. I found something else though.’ Van Hijn wiped the
rain from his eyes. ‘The room where they killed the girls. At
Quirk’s piercing parlour.’
‘The alarms are off.’ The rain was so loud that she had to
shout to get their attention. She was standing by the door,
looking at the still camera above her, its dead eye recording
nothing. “I think they’re in there already. Moshe never forgets
the alarm. Not once in all the time I’ve been here.’
Jon looked at the detective. Van Hijn pulled out his gun,
held it at his side. ‘I’ll go in first. You two follow me.’
Suze gave him the key. The detective took a deep breath,
steadied the shaking of his hand and unlocked the door. His
stomach winced and wailed.
‘The light’s on your left,’ Suze said.
Van Hijn crawled slowly through the dark until he reached
the switch. Behind him he heard Suze lock the door, the
storm muffled behind the thick glass. He pressed the button
and the light snapped on.
Suze screamed.
They were holding Moshe underneath the huge, dangling
Torah at the centre of the room. The woman had her hands
around his neck while the man was pointing a gun in his left
eye. Blood ran down from Moshe’s thin, white hair and
settled on his grey lips.
Van Hijn aimed his gun at Karl, keeping his eye on the
woman to his side. ‘Put the gun down,’ he said. ‘Put it down,
now. There’s nowhere to go from here. The police are on
their way. Put it down and no one gets hurt.’
The man laughed. ‘Why should no one get hurt?’ he said,
in English this time. ‘Where’s the fun in that?’ He poked the
barrel of the gun further into Moshe’s eye. ‘Drop your gun,
detective.’
Van Hijn stared at the man holding the gun, watching the
twitch on his face, his dilated pupils. He looked towards Jon
and Suze. They were staring at Moshe.
It was up to him.
If he gave up his gun, he knew that there was no way out
for any of them. These maniacs would surely think nothing
of shooting them here. And Moshe was so old, over a
hundred at least, had to be, Van Hijn rationalized, lucky to
have another year in him. He knew that he could kill both
of them before they could turn their guns towards him or
Jon and Suze. He knew that this was the right thing to do in
the circumstances. That it was the logical thing. That whatever
life the old man had left was nothing compared to the
rest of them. He looked back at Jon and Suze; their
expressions hadn’t changed. He cocked the gun. Saw Karl
move his head, attuned to the sound, cocking his now too.
‘Last fucking time,’ he shouted at the detective.
Van Hijn considered it once more. Then threw the gun
down on the floor. Kicked it over towards the man.
‘Good decision.’ Karl said, signalling to Greta to pick it
up. He lowered his own and grabbed Moshe’s shoulder,
threw him down on the floor.
‘Should have died sixty years ago with the rest of them,’
he added, taking the gun from Greta, inspecting it. Suddenly
his arm flicked open like a whip. The gun pointed
at Van Hijn. The room exploded with the noise of the
shot. Jon watched the detective go down. Falling to the floor screaming.
Karl stood motionless in a cloud of smoke. He pointed
the gun at Suze and Jon. ‘Don’t move towards him.’
They stood there, dead still, afraid to move a muscle, to
even breathe.
Jon saw Van Hijn on the floor, his hand around the hole
the bullet had made. The detective had been sick and was
breathing heavily and unevenly. He clutched his stomach,
and Jon could see that he was biting his lip. Small droplets
of blood leaking from his mouth.
‘Greta, check his pockets for a phone. You two.’ He
pointed the gun at them. ‘Come with me.’
Jon stepped forward and in front of Suze, a last stupid
measure of defence. The sight of the gun made him quickly
back away.
‘You work here, don’t you?’ Karl took out a pack of
cigarettes and offered Suze one.
Suze shook her head, saw the pack smeared red with
Dominic’s fingerprints.
‘I’ve seen you here.’
She
nodded, not knowing what else to say. Looking at
Jon, hoping he wouldn’t do anything stupid.
‘Room 435. Take us there.’
Suze nodded. Pointed towards the older part of the
synagogue.
‘No, you first,’ Karl said, then turned to Greta. ‘You stay
behind. Keep an eye on the policeman. I don’t think he
should be any more trouble but keep an eye on him anyway.’
‘You want me to finish it?’ she asked.
Karl smiled. ‘No. Let him suffer a while. I have other plans
for him.’
Greta stared at Karl, nodded stiffly. ‘No problem,’ she
replied.
Suze led the way, Jon shuffling behind her, gun at his back,
Karl breathing heavily at the rear. She unlocked the door
that led to the basement, the storehouse, the place of dead
ends, forgotten and unclassified history. She appreciated the
irony of Dominic hiding the films down here, where they
mingled easily with all the other artefacts. She’d never spent
much time in room 435. It was where Jake had buried himself
for days, sitting in that small, air-conditioned room, picking
films and spools randomly from the mess, all the time, she
now knew, searching for the Doctor’s face.
They arrived at the dark wooden door, the small plaque
that told them this was the right room. She could hear
Karl breathing in sharp, staccato gasps, excitement flowing
through his blood. She wished he’d have a heart attack and
die right there. Wished this was all…
The pistol hit her in the jaw and sent her flying against the
wall. It felt as though a car had crashed into her face. The
wall bounced her back and she saw Jon reaching out for her,
then the gun pointing at him. She fell hard on the floor,
swirling in blackness and nausea that drowned her.
‘She kept her end of the deal, what the fuck are you doing?’
Jon screamed. Staring into the barrel of the gun, the cold
and cracked smile of the man behind it.
‘Exactly. Who needs her now?’ Karl said, extracting a joint
from his upper pocket, keeping the gun steady. Jon watched
as he lit it, heard the frantic sputter and spark as it caught
and smelled the heavy, acrid fumes. He saw Karl’s eyes like
pinwheels expand and shine. Sweat started pouring down his
forehead as he took another drag. ‘Open the fucking door,’
he snarled.
Jon turned the handle. The door wasn’t locked. Inside, it
was dark and smelled of damp chemicals, mouldy films, old
books, history discarded and boxed up. The walls were lined
with filing cabinets, deep, high and black. Next to them were
piles of brown boxes, taped up and wedged wherever space
allowed. Karl pushed past him and into the room.
This was his chance. He could escape now. But he couldn’t
save Suze. She was lying on the floor, unconscious. He could
save himself but not both of them.
‘Finally,’ Karl said, then turned and pointed the gun at
Jon, motioning him to enter the room. Too late now. Too
late to do anything but obey.
He watched as Karl ripped open the first box he came
across. Saw a look of horror and frustration spread across
the German’s face. Then rushing to the next box, ripping
open the cardboard, shouting in German, then in English,
shouting fuck, Christ, damn and a hundred other imprecations
at God, ripping open more boxes, pulling out reels and
reels of film with his hands, loose and messed up, looking
like black octopuses in his grasp. He threw them against the
ground. Took a long drag off the joint that made it sizzle
wickedly in the quiet of the room.
‘Where the fuck are the films?’ He turned to Jon, his
complexion the colour of an elastic band stretched so tightly
that it becomes transparent for a brief moment before snapping.
‘Tell me where they are.’
Jon looked at him. ‘In here,’ he said, then added,
‘somewhere.’
‘Fucking Christ!’ Karl sputtered and pulled out another
handful of films. ‘Start going through them.’ He was screaming
now. ‘We’re not leaving until we find the right ones.’
‘But there’s thousands here.’
He pressed the gun into Jon’s face. Jon could taste the
oily metal and smell the gunpowder. He nodded, turned and
opened another of the crates. He looked inside. Maybe a
couple of hundred reels, quite a bit of loose film, some video
cassettes - and that was only one crate. There were another
forty or fifty in the room and he couldn’t help but smile at
Dominic’s guile. Hiding the films here, where they would
merge with all the others, a Herculean task to find them,
necessitating going through everything, hours and hours of
work, days and months, a whole lifetime if he’d scattered the
films in different boxes.
He watched as Karl frenziedly undid reels and held them
up to the light, trying to spot what was on them, then
throwing them back down in disgust. He knew that this
would be the only chance he had. That this was it and if he
fucked up, he’d get shot, killed. Dead.
But he didn’t have too many hopes either way. The man
would not find what he was looking for. Even if he did, he’d
kill them all. There was no doubt about it and that made
Jon’s decision easier. No, no more time for discussion, Jon
told himself, no more time for fear.
‘Here!’ he shouted. ‘I found them. They’re here!’
He had his face buried in one of the boxes at the far
corner of the room. He heard Karl make his way towards
him. He draped himself over the crate, so that the other man
couldn’t see where his hands were.
He felt in his jacket, yes there it was - so glad he’d
forgotten to empty his pockets that morning. He heard the
man nearing, smelled the heavy cocaine funk of his breath.
‘They’re here. All of them,’ he said as Karl approached,
turning quickly when he estimated the man was almost right
behind him and let loose with the mace, pressing down so
hard on the nozzle that his thumb would be bruised for days
to come.
At first there was nothing, just Karl’s quickly comprehending
face as he tried to step back, the joint dangling
stupidly from his lips. Then it all exploded. A fine white mist
that sent Jon reeling backwards. Karl’s face disappeared in
the fog. Jon could feel the spray claw into his eyes and choke
his chest but he continued spraying, hearing the man scream.
Orange flames began dancing around the joint, covering
Karl’s face with a kinetic Catherine wheel spark and flash as
he reeled backwards, holding his throat, the gun clattering to
the floor, heaving, wet sobs wrenching his chest.
Jon felt as though knives had been pushed slowly down
his throat, he felt like being sick, felt suffocated. His eyes
were being scratched from the inside by rats. He leapt forward,
landing on the writhing German, picked up the gun
and began to hit him with it. He breathed in the smoke and
fury. His eyes almost blinded. He smashed the gun into the
man’s jaw, heard it crack. Smashed it down again, hitting the
floor, sending pain reverberating through his hand. He threw
the gun down and used his fists. He was still punching, puke
dribbling down his mouth, his eyes red and streaming, when
Suze came into the room, picked up the gun and pulled
him off.
‘Enough!’ she shouted, horrified by his stare, his wild eyes.
His smile. ‘No more,’ she screamed and this time Jon heard.
‘It’s over.’
He got up, began to cough and puke, fell on the floor, sat
there watching Karl’s still body as Suze smiled, the gun in
her hand, by her side. ‘Over. All over,’ she said and there
wasn’t anything he could add to that.
‘Not tonight, Jon.’
‘We’ve got plenty of time,’ he said, booting up the
computer.
‘It’s New Year’s Eve,’ she replied. She didn’t really mind.
In fact, was as eager to watch Jake’s last CDR as Jon.
He turned from the humming machine. ‘Exactly,’ he said
and walked over towards the kitchen. ‘Kind of fitting, don’t
you think?’
He took the bottie of Maker’s Mark and a couple of glasses
off the worktop. ‘Once we’ve seen the film, we can start to
leave it behind.’ He poured two large shots, wondering if
such things could ever be left behind. He understood that
he was not the same person he’d been before Amsterdam
though if Suze or anyone else were to ask him to detail these
changes, he wouldn’t be able to. Yet there was something
different in the ordinary things, in just waking up, or sitting,
waiting for the sun to expire — something that he wanted to
hold on to. ‘I just thought it would be good to do it this
way,’ he added and handed her the drink.
Outside, the noise of the crowds was deafening. It had