Read The Devil's Playground Online
Authors: Stav Sherez
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General
sometimes and say things, things that no longer came out in
his voice, but that of his father’s. He hated how he could
trace his most hidden prejudices and gripes directly to him.
It scared him how strong the influence was, how biological,
how inescapable.
‘My father gave up on me when the magazine folded. I
think in some way he thought I’d failed him.’ He felt the
need to say it, to make at least this clear. ‘He thought I was
being too sensitive. Didn’t see any place for that.’
‘Sounds very much like my father,’ Jake replied and they
both laughed, releasing the tension in the room, feeling
closer, at least in Jon’s mind, than since the wet handshake
on that first day.
‘What was your father like?‘Jon asked after a few minutes
of silence had elapsed punctuated only by the hiss of slowly
burning tobacco. Now that Jake had begun, he didn’t want
him to stop. And he wanted to know who this person
was. Sleeping in his flat. Making strange sounds at night.
Accepting everything with a weary shrug.
‘One monster father is pretty much the same as another.
Your comments were very familiar.‘Jake smiled and it was a
smile of revelation and conspiracy. Jon found it vaguely
threatening.
“You see,’ Jake continued, ‘the interesting story about my
father takes place only after he’s dead.’
Jon poured the last of the scotch into Jake’s glass and
went to the kitchen to fetch some more. It felt good to be
making drinks for someone else, good to have to ask them,
how many sugars do you take, how strong do you want it?
All the little inanities that he’d thought he could live without.
Stupidly thought that until, in an empty flat, one night, he .
realized that it was those very things that made life worth
living.
In the next room, Jake put on a CD and Jon heard the
first notes of Coltrane’s ‘Ascension’ squawk their way out of
his speakers. The room filled with a dense, tight-knit caterwaul,
seven or eight instruments screaming and wailing simultaneously,
circling around an empty chord, a missing centre,
like a flock of lost birds, frenzied and furious, smashing into
each other in the massive sky.
‘My father had a lot of money. He’d worked in food
importation, made his fortune, floated the company and
retired to the country.’ Jake’s voice settled, the terse clip of
his phrasing evened out. Jon leaned forward on the sofa,
wanting to show his attention, even in this most obvious and
empty of gestures, but he also felt the need to at least try to
close the physical space between them, the gulf of carpet
and air.
‘He died of stomach cancer last spring. I can’t say I was
sad. I’d lost my mother many years before. I hadn’t seen him
in years. We were not close nor had we ever been. I got a call
from the family solicitor. I was the director of a consultancy
company. What sum my father might have left me was of
no concern but the lawyer said that the main part of my
father’s testament consisted of a letter. That intrigued me. It
wasn’t like him to put things in writing. He always believed
the spoken word superior, more trustworthy than that which
was written.
‘I went to see the lawyer. This was about six months ago.
He handed me an undistinguished brown envelope, said it
was my father’s last wish that I should have it. I thanked him
and left, not knowing that what I carried under my arm that
day would turn my life upside down. I didn’t even read it
until the next morning.’
‘What was in it?’ Jon asked, caught up in the old man’s
tale, the lull and roil of his voice. That special feeling of being told something privileged, intimate, that comes across in the
whispered end of sentences and the outbreath of thoughtful
pauses. He wondered how something that could fit into an
envelope could also ruin a man’s life.
‘Ten badly typed pages. That’s all there was. The old man
must have done it himself. It started with an apology. Before
the fact. That was just like him. He then wrote of his business
interests in 1940, importing food from the continent into
England, how he’d set the company up five years earlier with
an old colleague from Oxford, a Dutch Jew by the name of
Kuper. The two of them had developed the business into a
considerable success by the time that Kuper’s wife, Martha,
gave birth to a son in September 1940.
‘The war was on. Disturbing news was leaking from
Germany and Austria about the mistreatment of Jews. In
Austria they had hounded them down, taken away their
businesses, their passports, and paraded them through the
streets of Vienna. You must have heard about what happened
there?’
‘Not really. I was never that interested in history,’ Jon
replied.
The old man gave him a brief look of such disdain that,
for a moment, Jon saw the man Jake must have once been.
It was fleeting, only a glimpse, but it scared him. Jon wanted
to say something, to make up for his ignorance but he could
tell that it would be wasted, that the old man wouldn’t fall
for cheap platitudes, tawdry excuses or feigned apologies.
He felt totally stripped in front of Jake as if each lie he told
would come cascading out, trilled with neon and noise, as
obvious as a waterfall in the desert.
Jake seemed to be assessing something privately. He stared
at a point two inches above Jon’s head, then his eyes dropped
on to Jon’s and he continued. ‘They stripped the old people
naked and made them do callisthenics in the middle of the
streets while the good citizenry threw eggs and shit at them.
They forced them to clean the Vienna pavements with toothbrushes
and tongues and urinated on them while they did it.
These weren’t the exceptions, this was the norm. Unlike
many other Jews of that period, Raphael Kuper heeded these
early warning signs and, when the first deportation of Jews
from Amsterdam took place in February 1941, he arranged
for his English partner, John Colby, to take his newborn
son, Jakob, away from all this horror. He knew that he would
probably never see his son again and that he was giving him
up for ever, but the alternative was even worse.
‘Colby managed to escape on a fishing boat with his wife
and landed in England where they claimed the small baby as
their own.’
Jake took another cigarette, seemed to draw on it for ever
before he resumed as if the story had somehow depleted
him. ‘So his letter ended. At first, and I think for at least a
couple of days after having read it, I believed it was a joke.
One last cruelty delivered by him before his death. That
would have been just like him, dying and passing on this
disinheritance to me.’
‘You didn’t know you were adopted?’ Jon blurted out.
It was so strange. He could not imagine what that would
do to a person. To suddenly have their history torn apart
like that.
‘No, it was never mentioned nor alluded to. I always
sensed that I was different but I never knew that I really was.
The realization was, at first, like the feeling of being sucked
in by this incredibly powerful drug. My whole sense of
identity had been built around my father, my position in
English society; Cambridge, where I laughed at Jew jokes
along with all the other British anti-Semites. My past had
been irrevocably wiped. Worse than that, it had been shown
up as a lie.
‘I never went back to my work. It wasn’t me any more,
that suit, that office. Actually, it never was, but somehow I’d
tricked myself into believing that it was my heritage, my
rightful destiny and so I did it. But that no longer worked. I
was nearly sixty, my colleagues were thinking about retirement
villages and all-day golf but I felt as if my life had just
started. I sat in my office and stared out of the window. I
delayed calls and cancelled conferences. I couldn’t reconcile
who I now knew I was with the person I had grown up as.
There was a gap between the two that threatened everything.
I sat and stared at my office walls. Counted the lines on the
wallpaper. It was as if the things that had mattered before I
read the letter meant nothing now, as if it had all been levelled
by some massive explosion which killed Jake Mk 1, leaving
only the scattered pieces of Jakob in its wake.
‘I went to Amsterdam. To the Jewish Museum there, the
JHM. Almost lived in that place. I spent four months in
those rooms trying to find out if it was true and when I knew
it was, I came back here. I spent days walking this city that
I’d grown up in, finding it totally unfamiliar now, as if I was
a tourist, here for the first time, untethered and afloat. I
couldn’t go back to the world, Jon. I don’t know if you
understand … but that was no longer possible. The streets
were a different world. An easier place to hide, to not care,
to give up on things. I felt as if my whole life had been a
practice run for this moment, a long-winded dress rehearsal
with no real purpose or end.’
‘How long had you been on the streets?’
‘Three weeks.’
‘Why did you agree to come here?’ Jon asked. It confused
him. He wanted to know what had driven him to this, though
he understood how easy it was to let go, to disappear, how
seductive its promise was.
‘Because I’m weak.‘Jake rubbed his hand on his forehead,
his wrists poking through the thick ring of shirt. ‘Because
there’s a story that needs to be told. That only I can tell.’
‘What story?‘Jon asked.
‘You’re not ready yet.’ Jake shook his head, smiled. ‘Not
yet.’
That was the last time he had seen him.
No, it wasn’t.
He just didn’t want to think about the other.
Later that evening, after they’d both gone to bed, Jon had
awoken with a tight pain in his stomach, as if it was shrinking,
clenching in on itself like a fist. He’d pulled himself out of
bed and stumbled to the toilet. He opened the door. Jake
stood with his back to him, head down, shirt off. His back
was covered in scars. White breaks in the pink folds of skin,
zigzagged and broken. Jon took a deep breath. Saw the dark
stained tissues on the floor.
‘Jake,’ he cried out. ‘What’s wrong?’
But the old man ignored him or hadn’t heard. He stood
immobile. Jon could hear a low droning sound coming from
his mouth and his head was swaying slightly from side to
side. He stared at the scars. The separate lines touching and
interlocking like fingers. He turned and closed the door. His
heart pumping hard. The pain in his stomach gone. And
when he went back to his room he made sure to lock the
door.
By the time Jon awoke the next morning Jake was gone,
his bedding neatly tidied in the corner and the CDs and books
that he’d used back in their proper places. The computer on,
the day’s news glaring at the empty room. There was no note
but Jon knew that Jake had gone for good. The arrangement
of the linen had a finality to it that made him catch his breath.
He feared that the previous night’s intrusion had caused the
old man’s flight, cursed himself for not having knocked.
He turned the computer off. Picked up the pillowcases
and sheets and put them in the washing machine. He didn’t
want to look at them, but couldn’t help himself and when
dark, cracked patches confirmed his fears he shoved them
into the machine and slammed the door shut. He rushed to
the toilet. Washed his hands. Used soap, shampoo and body
lotion until the smell was totally gone, only pine fresh and
morning azure now.
That had been only a week ago, he thought, as he turned
the car around at the far end of the Western Avenue and
headed back towards the city. One short week. And what
had happened in that time? What had happened to Jake?
Had he found some new clue to his real inheritance? Or
something else?
He felt a deep unrest in his stomach. A clawing and tearing
that made him feel nauseous. He’d wanted Jake to stay. He
was relieved that he’d gone. Jake’s presence had been difficult
and yet that had somehow made it feel more worthwhile,
this whim, this whatever you wanted to call it that he was
doing. He wondered what would have happened if he hadn’t
walked in on him. What the hell was the old man doing,
those scars? The story had been only a beginning. And he
wanted to know more than ever, now that it was too late.
There was something about Jake. Something about the
old man’s silences, his words ‘it’s a botch’, his tired and
unrested hands. He reminded him of his mother in some
way but there was also a darker resemblance there, the
shadow of his father, somehow tempered beneath the beard
and borrowed clothes.
He tried to understand the chain of events. It was easier
than thinking of what was gone. Had Jake known he was
going to Amsterdam the morning he left? Before that? How