Read The Devil's Playground Online
Authors: Stav Sherez
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General
the surface of the culture. The bits that have filtered out. It’s
all fashion. Your friend in the photos was doing it for entirely
different reasons.’
‘Sexual?’ Van Hijn thought about the way the female
victims had been tortured. The time and care that had been
taken in their mutilation. It was a good bet that the perpetrator
had enjoyed himself and it made him wonder again
about Jake’s involvement. He remembered what he’d said to
Jon: either Jake was a victim of the same killer as those girls
or he was the killer himself.
‘Sexual is only a small part. That’s what almost everybody
thinks but it’s way deeper than that.’
What kind of man would do this to himself?’ Van Hijn
asked.
Women do it too, you know,’ she said, sharply. ‘You ask
what kind of man, but in most non-western cultures they’d
ask the opposite. In a lot of places it’s the norm.’
‘But this was someone who grew up in western Europe.’
She shrugged, as if conceding the point. ‘I don’t really
know is the answer, all I’m saying is that it’s perhaps not as
unusual or unnatural as you think. What I do know is that
this is many years’ hard discipline and study.’ She pulled
out a photo from the stack. ‘This man’s body is like the
Michelangelo of modificationists.’
‘Or the Jackson Pollock,’ he said, swallowing her earlier
comment with a grin.
She smiled. A wide, open, unaffected sweetheart of a smile.
‘Or the Jackson Pollock.’ She pulled out another of the
photos. Pointed to a small rippled bit of flesh from Jake’s
chest. It looked like satellite imagery of a mountain range.
‘See those marks?’
Van Hijn nodded.
‘Play piercing. The skin gets like that. Like old leather.’
‘Play piercing?’
‘Just making holes. The holes seal up and they do it again.
They’re not interested in the piercings, just the act of piercing.
Not many practitioners who’ll do that. I won’t. Too destructive.
People want to do it, they can do it themselves as far as
I’m concerned. There’s no skill in play piercing.’
‘So, it’s a whole different level.’
She nodded. ‘A whole different level.’
‘You don’t by any chance know of anyone in the city who
would do this?’
‘Most likely the man did it to himself. Otherwise try Rijn’s
in the Jordaan or Quirk’s by the Old Church.’
‘The Old Church?’ Van Hijn could feel his heart beat at
his ribs. Pressure in his ears.
‘His place doesn’t have a name but it’s below the Skull &
Roses tattoo parlour. You know where that is?’
Van Hijn nodded. ‘I didn’t even know there was a piercing
parlour below there.’
‘One of many things you don’t know, I’m sure.’
He was wondering how to answer her when the phone
rang again. Van Hijn reached for it. ‘Hello, Bone Palace
Piercings, can I help you? Mmmm? I’ll put you through to
the piercer, just hold for a second, please.’
He passed her the phone. She was smiling. She mimed
‘Thank you’, nodded once and took the mouthpiece. ‘Good
afternoon,’ she said as Van Hijn turned and moved towards
the window. He pulled back the screen a touch. The man
was still there, waiting on the other side of the street. He’d
been following the detective all day. Van Hijn thought about
taking a back door but there was no point. Better to find out
who it was. He turned, waved to Annabelle and walked out
into the rain.
Jon lit a cigarette, picked up the guide book and forced
himself to read the dry descriptions of architectural interest.
It was no good, the words didn’t mean anything. Didn’t
connect. He looked at the photos of gabled facades and saw
the scars on Jake’s cheeks. The receipts for human cargo so neatly written out. The men staring into the camera that will be their last witness on earth. The unavoidable persistence
of the past.
He put the book down. Rubbed his eyes and checked his
watch. The plane was taking off about now. The thought
made him smile. He stared out of his window, the small
sliver of canal that the view afforded, the milling, spilling
rush of people in the street below. He needed to get out. A
walk. The room was closing in.
The detective had mentioned where Jake’s body had been
discovered. Jon had found the place on the map. The only
spot of green in the whole area. Had to be that. Right by the
Old Church, smack in the heart of the red-light district.
Outside it had stopped raining and the dark sky had cleared
to let a smattering of stars through: tiny, bright points that
seemed extremely flimsy and dull as he made his way down
Warmoesstraat. He passed two bicycles chained together so
closely that he felt he was intruding on some intimate scene.
The streets were gradually filling up, teenagers, backpacked
and stoned, strolled around, cops, dealers, tourists lost or
scared. It amazed him how crowded the city could become,
how the small streets managed to hold everyone.
He’d been chewing painkillers all day and was starting to
become immune to their effects. It was as if a sharp knife
was being ground into his ankle every time he put too much
weight on it. He used his umbrella as a crutch, preferring to
get wet than risk the embarrassment of falling over. The
streets were still soaked and the pavements were pockmarked
with small craters and water traps.
Soon his mood was distracted by the bright flickering
neon and bustling streets of the red-light district. He stopped
in a coffee shop — the first one he came to that wasn’t shaking
with dance music — found a seat, a small table by the window,
watching everyone go by. He bought some grass and rolled
a joint. Tourists walking the streets stared at him and he
realized how he’d become a tourist attraction, safely pinned
behind the glass front of the shop, the strange feeling of
doing these things out in the open. He smoked the joint and
listened to the second side of the first Springsteen album
on the house system. To his left was a message-board.
Handwritten pieces of paper pleading for jobs, accommodation,
money, hung like discarded dreams. One of the pieces
had a photo on it. A young man, goateed, with long hair and
lost eyes. Jon squinted to read the text. ‘Please come home,
Carl,’ it said and the shakiness of the handwriting, the slop
and slack of the letters seemed to make it all the more
poignant. ‘Les has had a breakdown, Denise loves you.
Daddy forgives. Please come back to us. We love you.’
There was something there, in the language of public
facsimile, the syntax of cliche and nuclear family, that almost
undid him. He turned away. What had happened to him that
he could be so easily moved by such things? He stared back
out of the window. By the second joint, the whole place
seemed more comfortable, the pain had gradually subsided
to a gentle throb and he felt himself sinking into the barstool.
He still had no idea as to why Jake had come back to
Amsterdam or what had made him leave the shelter of a
warm flat. Had it really been because of his intrusion that
night? Jake was gone the next morning and it had been the
first thing Jon thought of. Or was that just the catalyst?
Underneath Jake’s polite manner, Jon had felt the rippling
of something much deeper and he wondered whether
Jake had come back here to purge that shadow self, or to
indulge it.
Sitting there, he began to feel paranoid, sensing that it was
not just coincidence that everyone in the place was of North
African extraction but him. Young men played pool and
smoked reefers, their faces sharp as daggers, others huddled
around tables, shrouded in serious discussion, their arms
agitatedly flapping about. He realized that it was one of the
few times in his life when he really felt Jewish, here among
people who probably would have stuck a knife in his heart
had they known. And he thought, isn’t it funny how being
alone in a strange city can make you detach from yourself,
make you see yourself in a way you never can when you’re
with a group of people, as if watching from across the room,
another vantage point, the obvious stranger.
He got up, not knowing whether they were staring at him
because they’d guessed or just because he looked scared. He
resented the fact that something so random as his faith could
leave him dead in a bar-room toilet, a knife in the heart, but
nevertheless he acceded to it and left, feeling their cold eyes
penetrating him even when he’d turned the corner and was
back in the melee of tourists and whoremongers.
He walked through the narrow, winding streets, aware of
the way his limp drew the same kind of looks that having
‘child molester’ tattooed on his forehead would have. Marking
him out as a freak. His money belt chafed at his stomach,
so full and bulging. He’d debated whether to leave everything
in the room. But he didn’t trust that. Better to carry everything
with you, feel it scratch up against your belly, know
it’s there.
He tried to make sense of the map but it was like a picture
drawn by someone on a very bad acid trip, all squiggles and
concentric circles that, on closer inspection, were irregular
as hell, an upside down fingerprint, and yet he felt a growing
certainty that he had to see the last place that Jake had lain.
Men sidled up to him whispering ‘Coka, Ecstasee’ in
strange and disturbing accents, sex-show barkers called out,
promising a night unlike any other, hustling here and there,
surrounding him with noise and light, dream and desire. The
steady flow of people shunting down the streets. The bright
lights spelling strange, incomprehensible, possibly compounded
words and those that just said sex and girls and
made everything clear.
He hadn’t been to Amsterdam since he was fifteen. A
two-week holiday with his parents that had felt like a prison
sentence. He couldn’t remember much about it apart from
the arguments his parents had all the time. It was the summer
before his mother’s death, when the altercations between the
two of them were fierce and frequent and no longer kept
hidden from ‘the child’.
He remembered the visit to the Anne Frank house, his
mother’s half-hearted attempts to teach him something about
his culture and history. His father’s scowls and impatient
foot tapping. It meant nothing to him then and even now, like for many others, Anne Frank existed in his mind only as an easy-to-swallow metonym for the Holocaust. A beacon
of light that illuminated all the horror.
Now, at the age of thirty-five, he felt like a kid on his first visit to Disneyland. The magic fucking kingdom. The garden of earthly delights. The place of dead roads, where leaving is
no longer an option and all dreams are accounted for and
fulfilled for the smallest of prices. Sex and drugs on the
surface and everything that congregates around them, the
bottom-feeders and vampires that buy and sell lives as if they
were prison cigarettes.
He walked around stunned, drawn by the procession of
delights as he turned through the winding streets of the
District, buzzing on weed and excitement. The closeness of
the streets held him, their illogical design intrigued him,
leading him further into its heart then looping around, always
back to the same place.
He stopped in front of a sex shop, drawn by the bouquet
of dildoes in the window, strange brutal things of all shapes,
colours and permutations, that seemed more like instruments
of torture than any kind of pleasure devices that he could
imagine. Not so unusual for Jon who, while enjoying girls
and fumbled moments as much as anyone, never really found
that sex was the great big thing that mitigated all the horrors
of life as everyone else seemed to think. Not to say he didn’t
enjoy it, he almost always did, it was just that it was nothing
special, no fireworks, no moving earth, none of the above.
It was eleven o’clock and the streets of the District were
packed and pulverized by strollers, drug dealers, husbands
holding on tightly to their wives, sneaking surreptitious
glances at the girls preening and pouting behind their
windows, businessmen and drinking buddies on a lost weekend
and cops walking their beat. Jon let himself flow with
the mass of people, unaware of where he was going and not
caring too much either, happy to be entertained for the time
being by the sights and smells, the movable feast of flesh
and neon that decorated the streets. There was a tightness
to the roads in Amsterdam that was entirely lacking in
London, a sense of clustered communality that he found
strangely comforting.
He walked along a narrow alley, only about three-foot
wide, with rows of windows on either side. He found himself
sneaking glances, too embarrassed to catch the eyes of the
women, avoiding the staccato beat of fingernails tapping on