Read The Devil's Playground Online
Authors: Stav Sherez
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General
had to admit to himself. But as he got older he was becoming
less and less tolerant of these people and the way they interfered with his work. Their foolish belief that they could learn
something in observing death. Their hunger for tragedy.
He lit a cigarette, postponing things for at least another
few minutes. He managed to smoke it a third of the way
down before the rain got to that too.
The man lay face-down between two sets of bushes in a
small hedged-in space, a pinprick of green amid the purples
and blues of Amsterdam’s red-light district. Van Hijn took a
deep breath that tasted of diesel and sweat and approached
the body.
The dead man wore a dirty brown overcoat, once expensive
perhaps but now rubbed and lined with street debris,
mud and rain. Blue jeans that were no longer blue but a
shade Van Hijn had never seen before, somewhere between
stone white and the colour of sea mist in late Ruisdael. No
shoes or socks.
Van Hijn knelt down and had a closer look. He felt the
cheesecake coming up and had to turn away, take a deep
breath of wet air, before he was able to continue. He cursed
the fact that he’d put a new battery in his beeper that morning.
Should have just let the damn thing run out.
There was something wrong about the man’s feet. The
dark and callused skin. The white flash of scars running up
and down, disappearing into the cuffs of his jeans. Van Hijn
took a sharp swallow of air, felt it crease into his stomach — not just another dead tramp then, but something else.
He looked back down. Took note. Small black spots that
he knew would prove, when measured, to be the exact
diameter of a cigarette end. He took out his pen and used it
to lift the trouser cuff. The marks continued up the man’s
hairless leg. Van Hijn remembered the body of the girl they’d
recently found near the Heineken factory. A similar pattern
of marks had decorated her body too. And there were others,
as every newspaper reader in the city knew, a whole row of
faces and mutilations stretching back nine months. His hand
was shaking. The pen clattered to the ground. Another one
then, he thought, and lit a cigarette to cover the smell that
was coming off the corpse and still his shaking hands. The
ninth so far. A man. The first time the killer had chosen
a man.
Van Hijn noted the position of the body. Its relation to
the shrubs that surrounded it. To the tiny park that it lay in
and the shadows of the Old Church beyond. He sketched
out the crime scene in a small notebook and then leaned
down once again, braced himself, and turned the body over.
He’d expected someone older from the withered state of
the feet, small husks wrinkled and torn, but the man lying
on the ground was only in his early sixties. Maybe younger.
Van Hijn drew back. A flutter of something echoed through
his chest, rumbling palpitations whispering: this is it, the
quirk, the crack and shift that would mark the break in this
case. A man. An old man this time. Maybe now they would
believe him.
He looked down. The white beard which had been
smeared across the man’s face by the rain held in it an
assortment of leaves and twigs, the wind’s things. The man’s
eyes were closed and his skin was blue.
He put his gloves on, stretching his fingers to loosen
the latex and carefully undid the buttons on the dead
man’s coat. A warm, dark smell came from underneath the
cloth, a smell of basements and stagnant water. He searched
for a wallet, some identification, but there was nothing. The
inside left pocket, the one covering the heart, had been
cut out.
It was when he pulled the coat back together that he
noticed the book. A tiny glint of white peeking from the
outside pocket, almost totally submerged in that brown funk.
He cautiously pulled it out, brushed some of the dirt and
leaves away. He called over one of the policemen and asked
him to hold up his umbrella while he studied the book.
It was an old Faber edition of Pound’s Selected Cantos. Worn, ribbed by water damage, it seemed as dead as the man on the ground. Van Hijn carefully opened it. He felt a slight
surge in his belly. On the inside front cover he saw a name
and a phone number. He could just make them out although
the rain had smudged the ink.
The number wasn’t local. The name wasn’t Dutch.
He flicked through the rest of the book, feeling the wet
bend and droop of the pages under the rubber skin of his
glove. On the third page, sunk halfway down, was a plain
white bookmark, a string of numbers written on it by a shaky
hand. They didn’t seem to mean anything but they were too
precise, too neatly spaced to have meant nothing, an idle
doodle while waiting for the phone to ring or the train to
pull in.
He forced himself not to think about these things. It was
too early. Nothing had any context. There was no point in
speculating. Evidence had to be gathered first, sifted and
comprehended.
He jotted the two sets of numbers down in his notebook,
then called over for an evidence bag and sealed the book
and bookmark away. It was time for others to take over. The
ones who would study the dirt with magnifying glasses. Spray
chemicals and fill test-tubes. Photograph the scene before
clearing it away. He could already see them making their way
towards the enclosure in their white boiler suits and plastic
gloves, the forensics team, setting up borders, marking their
territory like a ragged troop of Arctic explorers.
There was nothing else he could do at the scene. Some of
the younger officers were whispering, their eyes flicking in
Van Hijn’s direction every now and then.
He knew what they were saying. He’d heard it ever since
the canal incident; at the station, in a bar, passing on the
street. The whole gamut of Dirty Harry jokes. At times, it
seemed as though the whole of Amsterdam knew. Yet, it had
never reached the papers. The man had been given a cheap
burial. No one mentioned that he’d been killed by mistake.
The fact of his crimes was enough to keep things quiet and
discreet. The whole thing was buried. Elections were close
and bad publicity was bad publicity. No one wanted that
kind of thing to besmirch the department as a whole. They’d
struck a deal: a quiet transfer, a pension hearing, a desk — the
prospects of a belly, a bad back and endless cups of cheap
coffee awaited him.
‘Detective. I’m surprised to see you here.’
Van Hijn turned and saw Captain Beeuwers approaching,
shaking off the rain like an annoyed dog, trailing young
fresh-faced replacements in his stream.
‘I got the call,’ Van Hijn replied, wishing he hadn’t,
wondering how much of the film he’d missed.
‘That’s all fine, but you’ll hand the case over to Zeeman
now that he’s here.’ The captain’s eyes seemed to shift over
Van Hijn’s face, as if scanning for any weakness, ready to
target.
Van Hijn smiled. Perhaps it was just as well he’d had to
miss the film. Perhaps this little encounter would be worth
it. ‘I’m still the one in charge until the transfer comes
through,’ he said.
The captain’s face seemed to freeze almost as if someone
had pressed a button. ‘A deal was made, and besides, we
don’t want you going off all half-cocked again. It doesn’t
look good for the department.’
‘The man wasn’t innocent,’ Van Hijn drily replied. He
knew he was falling for the captain’s bait but every time it
came up he felt the need to explain himself anew.
Beeuwers spat into the rain. ‘He wasn’t the guy we were
looking for. You seem to have forgotten that. We can’t just
go out shooting people hoping that, after the fact, they’ll
turn out to be guilty of something. Everyone’s guilty but not
everyone deserves to be gunned down in the street. He was
only a rapist. There’s no death penalty for rape.’
‘There should be,’ Van Hijn replied, remembering that
peculiar, yet vaguely familiar smell, unsettling somehow,
when they entered the dead man’s flat. And how the man
with him, a uniform, started vomiting and collapsed on to
the floor almost immediately. Not that you could really tell
what constituted the floor. That was the thing. The man had
wallpapered his whole flat with porn, torn from magazines,
jagged edge of flesh overlapping flesh, creating monstrosities
and freaks unbelievable and disturbing. A tableau like something
from the tormented mind of Hieronymous Bosch. But
it wasn’t just the walls. That wouldn’t have made the uniform
so sick, nor given Van Hijn a dizzying nauseous headache
like the constant spinning after stepping off a fairground
ride. No, it was the fact that everything had been wallpapered.
All the surfaces had been meticulously covered with porn:
the ceiling, totally covered, the chairs and the tables and the
table legs, the phone, the whole border and back of the TV,
everything but the screen. Within a couple of minutes Van
Hijn had lost all sense of perspective and depth. The room
seemed to pulsate, the floor to float. He reached out for
objects that turned out to be much further away than he
anticipated. Eyes followed him around the room. A woman
with six legs and thirteen breasts seemed to smile. And he
remembered the keepsakes that the rapist had mounted on
a porn-splashed altar, the reason for that smell, all thirty of
them, tagged and dated, with names and small photos
attached to each. They had to carry him out of there.
Van Hijn snapped out of the dark tangle of his memories
and stared at Beeuwers. The rain made him look like a piece
of discarded furniture. Van Hijn stepped forward and leaned
into the captain’s sweating face. ‘This is my case, always has
been, since the first body and I’m not going to let your goon
take over. I don’t care what the fuck you think about it.’
‘In that case you’ll find your transfer coming sooner than
even you anticipated, I assure you.’ The captain tried to smile,
to show him that yes, he was still in control, but he couldn’t
make it, his lips refusing to rise. He knew that the detective
had got the better of him this time. He would have to do
something about that.
Van Hijn winked at the captain. A faint smile, barely
discernible in the rain. He turned away before the captain
could answer. He didn’t care. There was nothing left to lose.
He hit the streets hard, his feet splashing the puddled rain,
his head hunched down, fists stuffed into his pockets. The
dialogue with the captain had angered him more than he’d
realized. Hadn’t demoting him been enough? Yet, there was
always this tendency to push home the further humiliation,
to consolidate the gain and destroy the enemy. He shouldn’t
have been surprised, or only at his own naivete perhaps.
He could go back to the cinema, catch the last hour of the
film, pretend he’d been there all along. No, somehow he
didn’t think that was going to work today. He could still see
the man’s scarred feet and the way the passers-by had
wrestled with each other to get a glimpse of the body before
it was carried away. His mouth felt dry and bitter, his head
heavy. He stopped at a cafe, ate two pieces of chocolate
pecan cheesecake, too fast, and stared at a poster advertising
a forthcoming fashion show. The redhead looked at him
from its surface, smiling, saying, who cares about all that and
what does it matter anyway? When the sugar hit, he felt his
whole body relax, deflate and soften like an old sponge
soaked in a bath. He smoked a cigarette and headed back
to the station, back to life and to the phone call that he has
to make.
This is how it begins. With Jon staring out of his window at
the space where the tramp once stood. Wondering where
the old man was. If he would come back again to this spot.
If he would come back at all.
He turned to the empty room, bare except for the clutter
and murmur of the accusing computer, the deadline looming,
the work still undone. His mind was filled not with paragraphs
and grammar but with thoughts of Jake, the short
snap of time they’d spent together, the meagre two weeks
that the old man had stayed in Jon’s flat. The aching throb
of the space where someone used to sit.
Jon stared at the flickering screen of the computer monitor,
the impossibly complex rendering of a man’s body
overlaid by meridian lines snaking and spiralling like telephone
cables connecting the parts, keeping the system in
flow. He could feel a headache’s claw creeping up the back
of his neck, spreading wider, like a ratcheting of the skull,
and he closed his eyes and saw Jake’s face once again, the
straggly beard and high forehead, the eyes wide and alive,
and he forced himself not to think of these things, squeezed