Read The Devil's Playground Online
Authors: Stav Sherez
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General
He looked at the photocopy, smudged and folded many
times in different directions, in and out of wallets and pockets,
scarred and tattered as Jake’s body had been.
‘Maybe you’re some kind of mathematical genius, maybe
you can see what it is.’
Jon looked at the string of numbers
827723167
‘A combination maybe?’
The detective sipped his coffee. ‘I wish it was that simple.
We’ve had the number run through some serious computers,
trying to find out any pattern or relationship to a conforming
set of numbers, but came up with nothing, or with so many
results and possibles that it means the same thing.’
‘I’m sorry I can’t be of any help.‘Jon pushed the scrap of
paper back across the table. He felt his chest tighten, felt
himself useless again. Crosby sang in the background about
how he almost cut his hair.
The detective handed the slip back. ‘You keep it, maybe
you’ll think of something. I’ve got so many copies of the
damn thing anyway. Don’t know if it’s of any relevance at all.’
Jon took the paper and folded it into his wallet, his new
wallet. He wanted to tell the detective about his pickpocketing
but it seemed so self-pitying.
‘I read about Beatrice’s father’s suicide this morning,’ he
said instead, thinking about Suze and what she’d told him
about Beatrice. Thinking how everything here comes back
to death.
‘Terrible. Things like that, shit.’ The detective rubbed his
forehead, speared a chunk of cheesecake and chewed on it
hard. ‘Somehow he’d got hold of photos of his daughter.
The press, no doubt. If you’d seen what had been done to
that girl, Jesus, Jon, much worse than anything you can
imagine, much worse than Jake, they all were. Christ, I just
wanted to rip the heart out of the motherfucker who did this
to her. I can’t believe they gave him those photos, no parent
should ever have to see that.’
‘I thought you experienced this kind of thing day in day
out,’ Jon replied, enjoying the detective’s outburst. He was
usually so laid-back.
‘We see a lot of homicides, a lot of people shot or strangled
or poisoned for money or for love or for lack of love or for
a million other reasons. I can understand that. I can take it
in as part of my normal routine, it makes sense to me on a
big scale, it can fit into the way I view the world. Then
something like this comes along, every victim more disfigured
than the last, as if he’s gearing up for something and
Jesus, you know he didn’t even rape her. He had her for
three days, did everything he could to her while she balanced
on the point of the cradle, burned most of her skin off, cut
holes and marks into her flesh — fuck … you know, this
girl, Beatrice De Roedel, she had so much going for her,
twenty-six years old, everything ahead and then some beast
comes and takes it all away … just because he can and
because that’s what he enjoys.’ Van Hijn was shaking. He’d
spilled coffee on the table and it was racing towards the edge
where it trickled down on to the floor. Jon could swear he
could hear every drop as it splashed the tiles below his feet.
‘You still think it’s the same people? The snuff makers?’
‘Yes,’ the detective looked pensive, ‘but maybe I’m wrong.’
He stared up at Jon, wondering how much he should tell
him, still unsure of the Englishman’s involvement. Did he
know about the Nazi films?
‘Why?’ The spilt coffee irritated Jon. He wanted to wipe it
off but couldn’t face reaching over the detective. Why didn’t
Van Hijn notice it?
‘Things have changed. I thought the girls had been butchered
for the sake of filming it. I still believe this. I think the
evidence refutes every other possibility. I thought your friend
was a victim of the same perpetrator. I still do, but things
are more complicated.’
‘How?’ Jon asked, feeling the pulse in his fists, oblivious
now to the coffee and the gauzy air around them.
Van Hijn shrugged. ‘There’s a collection of Nazi films up
for auction at the moment. You know anything about that?’
Jon looked at the detective, unsure what to say. ‘What
kind of films?’
‘From the camps - Auschwitz in particular, I think. You
could call them snuff films but that seems somewhat of an
understatement.’
‘And Jake, you think he was somehow tied into this?’
What would Jake have been doing with such films? How
would he have got hold of them? The museum? Jon’s mind
reeled.
‘There are two possibilities here. One, that these films are
indeed what they purport to be and that Jake discovered
them in the basement of the museum. Somehow others
found out that he possessed them and killed him for them.
This, I consider the less likely version. I don’t think those
films are real. I think they were made right here in Amsterdam,
this year. They needed Jake, used him in some form
and then disposed of him. I am sure that we will identify
Beatrice and the others once we can get hold of these reels.’
He arrived early at the Paradiso. Way too early. He sat,
nervously excited, like a teenager on a first date, drinking
scotch and trying to calm his nerves, alternating between
thinking how ridiculous it was to feel like this and following
the surge that shook his chest when he thought of Suze.
What Van Hijn had told him was still rattling around in
his head. Those numbers. The talk of films. It didn’t make
any sense and neither did the snuff disposal theory that the
detective was espousing. Jon was becoming more and more
sure that Jake’s murder hadn’t been random. Something had
made him go back to Amsterdam, a place that had held only
bad memories for the old man.
His thinking was distracted by the fact that Suze was late.
She’d said ten o’clock and it was already quarter past and he
was beginning to feel stressed, aching for a joint to calm his
nerves but not wanting to appear too stoned when she
arrived.
Three middle-aged men came on stage. They sat down and
picked up their instruments. Two of them had unspeakably
distasteful mullets, short and severe at the front and rolling
down to soft, trussed perms that spread evenly out across
their shoulders. They began to play what sounded like a very
bad translation of Irish folk music, guitar and bouzouki reels,
ham-fisted instrumentals, the three of them skipping in and
out of time with each other, then segued smoothly into a
medley of Toto and Boston covers.
‘Jon!’
He turned around and there she was, resplendent in a
maroon dress that stopped just above her knees. He felt his
heart skip a beat, his palms go clammy.
‘I’ve been looking all over for you,’ she said.
‘Been sitting here all the time.’
‘Shit, this isn’t the right hall, I forgot to tell you to go
upstairs. The concert’s up there.’
‘You mean we don’t get to see these guys perform?’ He
smiled, the tension now dissipating.
‘Unfortunately not. The Handsome Family are just starting
up, c’mon.’
They went out of the hall and up the stairs into a much
smaller, more intimate room, loosely filled with expectantly
whispering people. They stood next to each other, close but
not too close, every now and then brushing up against
shoulder or arm, then quietly retreating.
Jon pulled a ready-rolled out of his pocket and lit it, letting
the smoke sit deep in his lungs before exhaling. He hadn’t
wanted to get stoned before she got here but now he didn’t
care. He knew how much he needed it, how much he needed
to be here with her. He felt his whole body gripped by the
smoke, relaxing and expelling all the nervous tension that
had built up during the day.
The band came on and began to play their mournful
music, a deep, lonesome sound, rich with the American
vernacular, playing strange early-century instruments over
the faithful tap of a drum machine. Charley Patton and
Jimmie Rodgers slipped in and out of the programmed heart
of the beat merging decades in a single sad chord. The singer
sang of dead poodles and suicide attempts, incarcerations in a mental institute and boys stoning swans to death. A Rohypnol George Jones on a country death trip. His wife
played the autoharp, its weird angles and ancient resonance
not lost on the people watching, her beautiful, sad eyes
setting the whole scene on fire.
Jon looked at Suze as she stared at the band, enthralled.
He noticed the way her ears looked, the round dimpled
nuzzle of her flesh. He so much wanted to kiss her and felt
frustrated that he didn’t have the courage to just do it. Right
here and now.
And yet, as the music washed over him, he felt such a
tremendous surge of possibilities. The moment when it all
comes together in terrifying clarity, a feeling whose familiarity
had gradually slipped away from him over the years and he
was amazed to feel it here, in this small room, above and
enclosed from the pulsing city below.
That evening she took him back to her flat and they sat on
the sofa talking about stupid things, pointless things, full of
drink and dope, a radio channel emanating cocktail jazz in
the background. He didn’t make the moves, was too scared
or too stoned or something. She had to initiate it, edge
towards him, and then, all of a sudden, he grabbed her and
she saw the surprise in his eyes and then felt him move
himself against her, his lips, warm and moist, pressing against
hers and then everything went black, black and soft and
beautiful.
Afterwards they sat on her balcony and watched the sun
come up over east Amsterdam. The slow gathering of people
in the square, the setting up of cafe tables and shop awnings
spread to shelter from the rain, the restful motions of ordinary
life.
Suze watched him from the corner of her eye. He was
quiet, which was fine by her, she hated men who, after sex,
could do nothing but talk and talk, about the most mundane
things usually, thinking that sex somehow bonded them in a
way that allowed them to bore her with their lives. Jon just
sat and stared at the street, smoked cigarettes, and she
appreciated the way he seemed to know when silence was
more sexy than sound.
They spent the next few days in each other, floating
through the streets of Amsterdam, eventually ending up at
her flat every evening. Wild days full of disarray and promise,
first flushes and unexpected thrills. Days of talking and
talking and walking through the streets and yet more talking.
Days full of history and days where only the moment existed.
She took him around the city, showed him the houses
along Prinsengracht and explained what the gables and curlicues
signified. She told him the history of the city, its establishment at the place where Dam Square now stood, where
the Anabaptists were burned at the stake in 1576, its mercantile
foundations and autonomy from Church and rulers,
money the only governing factor, leading to tolerance, the
welcoming of Inquisition-fleeing Jews, the proto-capitalist
freedom of the free market, leading also to portraiture and
still life instead of the agonized Jesus that writhed and
squirmed on altarpieces from northern Germany to the
dwindled tip of Italy. Rembrandt and the Golden Age, the
decline into decadence and loss of empire, the dark days of
war, hunger and betrayal, the post-war Amsterdam squatters
and hippies, Provos chanting nonsensical Dada poetry, the
sharp crack of billy-clubs and free bicycles, civil rights and
the commercialization of criminality.
They sat in coffee shops and talked for hours over a single
cup. They went to movies that neither would have ever
thought they’d want to see, did stupid things - all these
moments that suddenly take on new meaning when shared,
like laughing at bad films together or at the way people
marched like cattle out of the trams and into the glass-fronted
office buildings that welcomed them like the doors to a
slaughterhouse. A whole new world revealed only in conspiratorial
closeness.
They talked about poets they both liked, finding each
other’s tastes so similar that it was uncanny; yes Lowell and
Cummings but Berryman and Eliot too and don’t forget
Jarrell’s crazy rhythms or the restless, unstoppable energy of
Pound.
‘I can’t believe it,’ he said when she mentioned how she
spent days reading biographies, sucking up the facts of these
poets’ lives as if it were the only nutrient that would sustain
her. ‘I used to love reading all that stuff too,’ he said.
She looked at him. ‘Yes. Berryman selling encyclopedias
door to door, Joyce passed out in the gutter, Eliot and his
breakdown, Pound in his Pisan cage. I love all that. I used
to read their biographies and it made me feel somehow
better.’
‘Better because their lives were so much worse than yours?’