Read The Devil's Playground Online
Authors: Stav Sherez
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General
had he afforded it? He must have had money. It seemed
important that he should know. That if he could understand
the old man’s last movements, it would all make sense. There
was no promise of absolution, Jon understood that, but there
was the reassurance of maybe knowing why and, perhaps,
that would be enough.
He knew that he would go to Amsterdam to identify
Jake’s body. Work and the project could go to hell. He had
committed himself already. When he had invited Jake in,
he’d started something that he now knew he had to finish.
To forget about him would be just another layer of distance,
another way to mitigate the world, another failure to follow
through. Using work as an excuse was weak and undignified.
The idea of not even calling Dave to tell him was strangely
thrilling, like skipping class or stealing an unrequited kiss,
and the more he thought about it, the more he knew it was
the right thing to do. And he thought about his mother too,
how it would be a way to show her the kind of man he’d
become.
As he drove, buoyed by newfound resolution, he couldn’t
get the image of Jake’s scarred and torn feet out of his head.
He had guessed it was some disease, from living on the
streets, but Jake had been out there only three weeks and
besides that didn’t explain what he’d seen in the bathroom.
He’d checked the bin the next day. Felt repelled and sick
when he saw the bloody tissues. Relief that the old man
hadn’t slaughtered him in his sleep. Awareness of what could
have happened. And what about the cries that he heard
through the walls some nights, assuming it was the old man
fighting demons in his sleep? Now all these things became
magnified, craving meaning and yet refusing to yield any.
Perhaps he hadn’t wanted to realize how different they were,
how different we all are from the people we pretend to
be. He went over everything that Jake had said, trying to
remember a telling detail, something that would open things
up, explain, make sense of, but all he could think about was
Jake’s face, the soft lines etched around his mouth, the
straggly beard, the way he always wanted three and a half
sugars in his coffee — so specific, Jon thought, and laughed,
remembering how he too had once been like that until those
things, one day, just didn’t seem to matter any more. He lit
another cigarette, flipped over the tape of Flying Shoes and
pressed down on the accelerator, enjoying the little sliver of
pain that wound around his ankle as, below him, the motorway
vaulted the city, past the red brick ugliness of the BBC
building, empty basketball courts and the grey columns of
council estates towering like accusatory fingers pointing up
at the sky.
‘The fuck-up’ they called him. Whispered in corridors and
lunchrooms throughout the department. In the eyes of his
commanding officers and the unspoken reproaches of the
young recruits. In the stories that people tell to ease the
tension before a bust, department legends, cautionary tales
dragged into gossip, gradually stratifying into myth.
But Van Hijn was used to worse. This was just the latest
in a long line of events that had gone only slightly wrong,
had at some point sheared away from their original intentions
and taken shape as something much less explainable let
alone excusable. He wasn’t sorry that he’d killed the man.
Sometimes you were given a chance and you had to take it —
how many more women would he have mutilated? — but he
was sorry that it had been the wrong man, that this fiend was
still on the loose.
But finding the old man had been a break. A sudden flash
of hope in the darkness of the case. A shift in patterns.
Experience had taught him that it was these changes that
would eventually yield meaning, clues, perhaps even resolution.
That he had been given a singular chance to, if not
erase, then at least make up for the events in February. The
ones that earned him the sobriquet of ‘the fuck-up’.
Detective Ronald van Hijn had been the star pupil of his
year at the police academy. Even the other students, usually
so resentful of these things, had to demur to his obvious
brilliance in all fields of police work. His teachers had
predicted a bright future, there were whispers of city commissioner and mayor even and, on his graduation, everyone
agreed that great things were in store.
It seemed more than a lifetime ago.
As he sat in his office waiting for the Englishman, he
wondered about where it had started to go wrong. What had
happened? He unlocked the bottom drawer of his desk and
took out a joint that he’d prepared earlier in the men’s toilets.
He was supposed to be giving up. But hadn’t he said that at
least once a year for the last ten years? It didn’t matter. This
year he was going to do it. He was getting older, things were
starting to go wrong and he wanted to stack the odds as
much in his favour as he could. The cigarettes would have
to go too, but those were harder, almost a necessary part of
the job sometimes, he thought, placing the joint back into
the drawer, allowing himself to feel a moment’s virtue from
this small denial.
The phone rang. It was Captain Beeuwers.
‘Ronald. What’s this I hear about an Englishman coming
to see you?’
Damn. So someone had told him, leaked the news in hope
of future appraisal, a remembered payback. ‘I called him,’
was all he said, wary not to let slip anything more.
The captain was breathing heavily, as if he’d just come
back from a gruelling run. ‘Ronald, there’s really no point in
you interviewing him. Let Zeeman do it. There needs to be
some continuity.’
He hated how his first name was used to patronize him.
His father’s son. Still. ‘That’s why I thought it’d be best for
me to do it,’ he replied, trying not to let his anger show, not
to give Beeuwers the satisfaction.
‘Pass it over to Zeeman, Ronald. I promised him this case.
You do that and I’ll make sure the board awards you the full
pension, not the discriminatory one.’
Van Hijn leaned back in the chair. The captain was
unusually eager to get him off the case. It had been partly the
captain’s vote that had prejudiced his pension appeal. He
thought about it. Drop the case and triple the settlement.
Enough money to go to America on. Retire early. Enough
not to have to worry.
, . ‘Well, Ronald. I need a decision now,’ the captain said,
” breathy and urgent.
‘Goodbye, Captain. I’ll see you at the hearing.’ He
slammed down the phone. Tried to take a deep breath. He
could feel his nerves twitch, his body humming and snapping
with crackle. The drawer rolled open. He took out the joint,
lit it, cursing his weakness, exhaling into the waiting grille of
the air-conditioner.
Sucking on the warm smoke he remembered the night of
his graduation, twenty years earlier, him only twenty-seven
then, drunk with the recognition, the backslaps and the sheer
wonder of a whole life still ahead. He’d spent the night with
his lover, Elizabeth, telling her of his plans, how he could
fast track through this and that division, the whole intricate
career path that he’d devised for himself so rigorously and
seriously.
He almost coughed on the smoke when he thought about
Elizabeth. She’d been his girlfriend since the first week of
the academy and he’d loved her with a more insane rush and
intensity of feeling than anyone before or since, the kind of
whirlwind that swallows you only once in your life and which
you spend the rest of your time trying to recapture. They’d
married a week after their graduation and had decided to
take their honeymoon in California, a place neither of them
had ever been to, but whose allure, through movies and
media, had gripped both of them since childhood.
They never went.
Jan van Hijn, Ronald’s father, had been dead twenty-two
years; a hero of the war, a fearless anti-Nazi and freedom
fighter in city legend. Van Hijn had walked through the
police academy forever in the old man’s shadow. People
looked at him and noted the facial resemblance to his father,
strangers in bars would tell him stories about his dad and
everyone treated him with a certain respect which he had
grown comfortably accustomed to.
And then the article had come out. Published in Der Stern three weeks after his graduation. The article that brought to light newly discovered documents relating to dark deeds that
took place in occupied Holland. Correcting the false Anne
Frank-fostered belief that the city was good to its Jews,
detailing how it had the lowest rate of survival in Europe,
only one in sixteen ever made it back from the East or stayed
undiscovered in rotten basements. The article that named
his father, Jan van Hijn, as the Gestapo’s most acclaimed
collaborator in the Low Countries.
The facts were irrefutable, backed up by facsimiles that
held his father’s signature, a shaky, familiar hand that also
inscribed his son’s books with little quotations, and Van
Hijn, feeling sicker and sicker, had read the piece listing the
people his father had betrayed, the Jews wrenched out of
hiding places and shot or burned alive in their synagogues,
the resistance leaders given up.
He tried to remember his father and he couldn’t reconcile
what he read with the man he knew and yet there was no
way to deny that everything they said was true. That he had
been both the man that Ronald thought he was and the man that they accused him of being.
That was the hardest thing to grasp, not that he did what
he did during the war, any man is capable of that, not even
that his legend was what it was, these things happen, Van
Hijn thought. No, the single greatest problem that he faced
was that his father had been both these men; a loving and
generous parent and, at the same time, a seller of men’s lives.
People had started gathering outside his house after the
article came out. A swastika had been crudely spray-painted
on his car. Gangs of neo-Nazis sent him letters and offers of
money trying to recruit him to their cause. ‘Blood Will Out’
they often wrote, he was his father’s son and they too saw
great things in store for him.
Elizabeth couldn’t take it. Her mother had been a Dutch
Jew who had somehow survived Auschwitz. The fear of
what was inside her husband was too much for Elizabeth
and she left. He felt betrayed by her, by his father and by the
friends who had stopped calling and who now exchanged
only perfunctory greetings with him each morning at work,
somehow unable to break the lines of continuity that had
been drawn. The fact that he hadn’t known about his father
did not seem to matter. His father was dead, they couldn’t
hang him for his crimes, and so they turned to his only son
and exacted their revenge on him.
The years passed and people forgot like they always do.
But Van Hijn hadn’t and he still felt bitter at the way things
had turned out; it wasn’t so much the promising career at
Interpol that he missed, as her, Elizabeth. The way she would
make him coffee in the morning and light his cigarette or a
half-turn in the late-summer light that would leave him
breathless. The way she smiled when she knew he was lying,
the little looks and nuances that had been made unavailable
to him after her departure.
He stared at his hands. Old and gnarled now though he
was only just past the midway point of an expected life. The
nails torn and scuffed, the skin dry and cracked. Once he had
been proud of his hands — Elizabeth had called them a
musician’s hands — but time had left its mark on them just
as surely as on everything else. He made a note to get some
moisturizer later, to try to care about these things. He stared
at his cheap wristwatch. The Englishman was late. He
shuffled in his chair. Looked at his notes, the photographs
of the dead. He had felt something, squatting down in the
rain, staring at the old man, something he’d not experienced
for a long time: a little shiver and rush of blood, the coming
together of disparate lines. He knew he didn’t have much
time left.
He checked his watch again. He was looking forward to
getting home. A package of videos and CDs had arrived that
morning but he hadn’t had time to open it. It was better to
have something to come back to. He spent most of his
evenings watching videos, preferring the passivity of screen
people to their real counterparts. He collected and taped
films and music with a passion that had been excised from
the rest of his life, and his flat was collapsing under the
weight of shelving units that held everything from the dark
glare of Robert Mitchum to the astounding, inflamed beauty
of the young Shirley Maclaine. He especially liked the films