Read The Devil's Playground Online
Authors: Stav Sherez
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General
a fullness and depth that you were previously unaware of.
He looked at the TV but the football was over, he’d missed
the final score. There was a straggly, skinny, tired-eyed labrador on the screen, head hanging down, droopy jowls, something
terribly wrong with its legs and, even with the sound
off, Jon knew this was an animal charity ad.
And then he began to cry. Looking at the dog, feeling as
if the whole building was caving in on him, it was something
so unexpected, something that he couldn’t stop. He felt
palpitations rumble and rage through his chest like a rattling
train, he tried to catch his breath, his eyes stinging with tears.
The next time he looked up the news was on. Fires raged,
people screamed and fell to the ground, pride and dignity a
luxury they could no longer afford. He turned it off, stubbed
his cigarette, burning himself in the process and grabbed his
car keys.
He was drunk. He knew this because his ankle didn’t hurt
that much. Over the limit. He got into the car and tested his
foot against the pedal. It seemed okay. So what if they
stopped him? So fucking what?
Jake was dead.
He’d thought he could help him. Thought that taking him
in might mean something. Jake’s death felt like a negation of
all that he’d tried to achieve, a lightning bolt from above if
you were a religious man.
He missed Jake, more than he ever thought he would a
stranger, someone off the streets. He missed him like one
misses a dream lover whose perfection is only an index of
the dream and whose disappearance when waking leaves you
emptier and sadder than any flesh and blood woman ever
could. That strange, quiet man had upset every story Jon had
made up to explain him and he now understood how it is
we look back on things we miss, things that are never
apparent in their moment but exist only in reflection, a messy
stirring of memory and desire.
He drove up on to the Westway, the great concrete snake
that straddled the west of the city, vaulting across housing
estates and parks, heading into the black occlusion of
night, Townes Van Zandt on the stereo and London passing
invisibly by.
In the dark cramp of the car he blamed himself for not
having given Jake more money, though he’d tried once and
the old man had just refused in that polite yet inarguable way
of his. But he should have been more insistent or perhaps
just sneakier, slipping it into Jake’s clothes when he wasn’t
there. But what would that have achieved? Was money really
the problem? He didn’t think so. Jake had never asked for
any, even when he was out on the street. At first Jon had
thought the old man was still holding on to whatever dignity
was left but now he realized that Jake had made it back to
Amsterdam and that he’d had money all along.
He clung to the idea that the detective had made a mistake.
That it was some other man lying extinguished on a slab
somewhere. He wondered if he would have to go to Amsterdam
just to ascertain for himself whether Jake was actually
dead. Did he really want to know? Maybe it was better to
leave the possibility open.
But he knew how remote that was, knew that there was
no doubt about it and perhaps the only real surprise had
been the Dutch detective.
That and the location of death.
Amsterdam.
But even that wasn’t really a surprise.
No, not at all.
At the time, he’d thought it was just a story, a way the old
man used to get a point across.
Amsterdam. The place where Jake was born.
It had a seductive symmetry to it, Jon admitted, but was
that all?
He hadn’t thought about it again, not in the intervening
period, and so the question of whether Jake had told him
the truth was one that he’d never asked, but which the Dutch
detective had nevertheless answered.
Jake had been in the flat a week. He spoke little and always
kept his room tidy and clean. He spent most of his time in
there, reading, writing, Jon never knew. After the awkwardness
of the first night Jon thought it would get better, but
the old man stayed the same, accepting food and drink with
a nod or a shrug but rarely saying anything apart from the
most basic syllabic units, no and yes. The space between
them seemed further than the few metres of carpet broken
by black coffee table.
Jon had tried to engage him, pull him into dialogue, but
Jake had said nothing. The silence made Jon uneasy. He put
on music to fill it. He played the old man CDs, asked him
what he thought, did he like this one or that one, but Jake
didn’t answer and Jon fumbled with another CD so as not
to drop into awful silence again.
He spent more time outdoors, avoiding the silent accusation
that hummed through the flat. He started to wonder if
he was losing his mind; perhaps asking Jake to stay had been
the breaking point, the first unreasoned act that would bring
down the deluge. He forced himself to go back to the flat,
entered its unwelcome space, Jake lodged in his room like
some autistic monk. He checked to see if anything was
missing then made the old man coffee and tea, not sure
which he’d prefer. He hid things from Jake, then, in spasms
of guilt, put them back in their places. He’d told a few friends
and they’d laughed at him and somehow that had reaffirmed
his initial act, for it was in their disapproval that he saw the
glint of the good he was doing, or at least thought he was.
Those first few days the only thing Jake ever said apart
from yes or no was, ‘It’s a botch. It’s all been a botch.’ He
said it several times, perhaps thinking Jon out of earshot, a
steady rhythmic canto repeated to himself, the window, the
stale and empty air, and Jon never knew whether Jake was
talking of his life or of something else.
‘It’s my birthday today.’
Jon stared at him, stunned. It was more than he’d said all
week.
Jake stood in his bathrobe wrapped tight, always wrapped
so tight, Jon noticed, and smiled.
‘I thought it would be a good day to go for a walk.’
Jon tried to say something but the words stopped in his
throat. He nodded, unwilling and unable to utter anything
lest it destroy the moment.
They walked through Hyde Park, watching the skaters and
ducks gliding by, the cold precision of September that made
everything look as if it were in hyper-focus, carved discrete
and sharp by the icy, brittle air. They didn’t say anything,
nothing much, Jon tried to mention the good weather but
the old man just smiled that smile of his, impenetrable as
a slab of granite. They walked back to the flat as the rain
began to cloak the sky. Listened to a Grateful Dead concert
from November 1973. It was the one thing they had in
common and though Jake changed the subject every time
Jon mentioned a certain show, there was something there,
some memory of a different time. Jake nodded along to
the November 7th ‘Dark Star’ and commented on the
recording.
‘I always had a bad one,’ he said. Jon looked at him, unsure
what to say. ‘Lots of hiss and tape generations. This sounds
clean.’
‘You should hear the remastered Cow Palace show from
‘76.’ Jon moved forward, encouraged.
Jake nodded. ‘Yes, that’s a great one. Haven’t listened to
any Dead for a long time. I feel like a different person now.
Different from the one who used to listen to all this. It’s
strange.’
Jon had caught Jake checking out his CDs one evening.
His first thought was that the old man was going to take
them and sell them. He was appalled by how quickly the
thought had appeared. He made a vow to be kinder to Jake,
to not lock his bedroom door as he had been doing the past
few nights, stealthily, carefully turning the key so that it
wouldn’t echo down the empty hall. To stop watching Jake
as if he was a thief. He tried not to think about these things. But they came. Especially late at night, lying in bed, in the dark, when he heard the floorboards creak and the careful creeping of tired feet.
When the music was over they sat in silence, staring at the
floor. Sometimes Jake seemed in another world; though his
eyes were open they were scanning some wider horizon than
the room afforded. It made Jon feel uneasy in his own flat
and he picked up a book, something to distract him from
the silence.
‘When was the last time you were in a synagogue?’
Jake asked, making Jon flinch, the book dropping from his
hand to the floor. It was the first unsolicited comment
from the old man since that morning. He couldn’t remember
when he’d last been. How did Jake even know he
was Jewish?
‘I don’t know,’ he replied shifting in his seat. ‘My father
was never a religious man.’ He glanced down. Jake’s eyes
bored into him. It was as if he were a machine that had been
running on standby only now switching to normal power,
unleashing its potential.
Jake frowned. *We are all religious, one way or another.’
He took a sip of scotch. ‘You liked your father?’
‘No,‘Jon replied, surprised by Jake’s aggressive tone and
by this intensely personal probing. He looked so serene from
the outside and yet his voice trembled with a dark and
ruinous sonority, a bitter, heavy sound that seemed to fill
every space in the flat.
The neither. Mine was a bastard.’
He stayed on the Western Avenue watching the dull suburban
houses roll by like flimsy backgrounds in a B-movie.
He remembered the sculpted tone of Jake’s voice, the sound
of country boarding schools and old universities, so incompatible
with the man’s beard and borrowed clothes. The way
he’d opened up that evening. And he thought about the way
their fathers’ deaths had changed their lives irrevocably.
Jon stared at him. He’d never talked about it to anyone.
He was scared of people’s prejudices. The things they
wouldn’t say. ‘Yes,’ he eventually answered, somehow feeling
that it was easier for such intimacies to creep out between
total strangers. ‘Removed the ethnic stain of Rieglbaum and
replaced it with the terse gentility of Reed. He said it was
something that I shouldn’t talk about. He always made me
ashamed of the fact.’
‘And you still are, I see.’ Jake shook his head, gently.
Jon didn’t answer. He lit a cigarette. Hid behind the smoke.
*You have much yet to discover.’ Jake looked at him,
smiled and Jon thought there was a lot of pain in that smile
— pain, but also a measure of kindness that he was not used
to seeing. His mother had smiled like that.
‘I don’t think these things matter so much any more.’ He
wanted to say something, to show Jake that he had his own
beliefs, his own opinions.
Jake laughed, a forced, strangled sound. Jon looked away.
“You don’t think they matter? You’ve lived in a room all
your life, what would you know? They don’t matter until
they do and when they do they’re all that matters.’ He lit a
cigarette, letting the words hang in the air. He didn’t expect
Jon to reply. He continued, his voice hoarse with smoke, but
calmer now. ‘Those were very different times to be Jewish
in, before the war … before they knew what happened.
Very different. You cannot imagine.’ Jake marked every
punctuation stop with a firm drag on his cigarette, exhaling
the smoke with the next sentence. Jon wondered exactly
what the old man meant, but he didn’t ask him to elucidate,
fearing that Jake would think him slow or stupid, an unworthy
conversation partner, and fold back into the box of silence
from which he’d so recently sprung.
‘I suppose so,’ he replied, though he wondered how
different they really were. His friends were all Christians but
here, in the presence of a Jew, he was most uncomfortable
and he felt ashamed that it should be so.
‘So, what about your mother?’ Jake asked.
‘She’s dead.’
‘I’m sorry.’
‘Not your fault.’
‘Still.’
Jon’s cigarette felt dry and tasteless as the memories rolled
inside his head like an endless ocean of sorrow and anger.
He hated himself for wishing it was his father who had died
on that grey, faceless street. That useless, prosaic death. And
yet he knew that, given the chance, he could have made that
choice without blinking. He blamed him for sending her out,
for her death. It disturbed him how Jake brought all that up.
It made him angry that he still cared.
Yes, he’d inherited that at least. His father’s anger which
had shaken his world with all the power of any monster or
demon that he could have imagined. And now it was inside
him, this anger, breathing through him, as if in some tangible
way his father’s soul had migrated into his, corrupting it with
its bile and hatred. He would flare up like a struck match