Read The Devil's Playground Online
Authors: Stav Sherez
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General
of hours until he stopped thinking, until all that existed
was the road ahead of him, the music in his head and the
metronomic ticking of the car’s engine.
He ended up in the West End. He parked the car, spent
an hour in HMV, browsing blankly through the shelves,
returning with a couple of CDs under his arm.
But he didn’t feel like getting back in the car. Didn’t want
to roll up the windows, drown out the world, keep moving.
Suddenly that was the last thing he wanted to do. He took
his tape machine and several tapes that were lying around.
He left the car there, aware that it would be towed away first
thing the next morning, and walked into the quivering mass
of Piccadilly Circus.
He walked slowly, watching the young backpacked tourists
standing still for photos, smoking and playing bongos, strolling
around bedazzled by coke signs and speeding buses,
black taxi snakes winding down Regent Street, coffee bars
on every corner where once pubs used to stand filled with
chattering happy people, stopping for a few minutes in the
warmth and light provided, filling up on the smell of coffee
and fresh cigarette smoke before heading back to their lives,
cramping into tubes and standing on buses, keeping hold,
never losing balance, traumatized and pulverized by the time
they finally reached home.
He stopped in a pub off Oxford Street whose walls were
dark with cigarette smoke and exhaled lives. His ankle felt
much better. Almost back to normal. He drank a couple of
whiskies now that he no longer risked being breathalysed
and went back out into the late-evening rush, watching a
group of women, beautiful and elegant as they crossed his
line of vision, smiling and giggling. He felt so damn jealous.
Why can’t I be that happy, that carefree, even some of the
time? And as he walked past them he made a vow to try not
to think of all the things that were missing. That was always
the first, irreversible step. That, and thinking things would
only get better. That was why the women were laughing.
They existed only in the moment.
He turned back and headed for them. They were waiting
at a light. He grabbed the redhead who was standing nearest
to him and kissed her. He thought she would wrench herself
away, kick him in the balls, scream rape — but she didn’t do
any of these things. The light had changed and her friends
were beginning to move away.
he could feel her warmth pound through him
The lights changed again and they uncoupled, .
‘I’m going to tell him when he comes back.’ Suze slumped
back into the soft embrace of the sofa.
“You can’t.’
‘I’m sorry, Dominic, I have to. I can’t stand it any more.’
She got up, reached for her cigarettes on the table. ‘I just
have to. It can’t go on like this.’
“I don’t think it’ll be of benefit to either of you,’ Dominic
said, creeping slowly into his corner, trying somehow to get
a hold of this situation, understanding he was failing.
‘With all respect, I don’t really think it’s any business of
yours.’ She regretted having come.
He leaned forward. She could see the muscles around his
mouth twitch as if they were pulled by invisible cables. She
felt a shiver. ‘If only you knew, Suze.’
‘Knew what?’ She was so exasperated by the little teases
that she’d once found romantic. Now it seemed to her that
he enjoyed the obfuscation and mystery, somehow got off
on the power of things untold.
“I don’t think I can tell you, Suze. I’m not sure you’d
understand.’ He leaned back. Bill brushed by him and settled
at his feet. ‘Especially if you’re going to talk to Jon.’
She stared at him and for the first time she felt frightened.
She sensed that there was something terribly wrong
about the room, the smell, the cramped lighting, something
she just couldn’t place. How well did she really know
Dominic?
She’d come over to his flat with a bottle of wine and a bag
of grass, needing someone to talk to, having spent the last
day under the bedcovers, trying to think of all the ways she’d
fucked up, or of how she’d do it differently if it was hers to
do again. Jon walking into the museum, her seeing him. The
truth from the beginning.
But it didn’t help, this constant chewing over of what was
already done and she’d called Dominic, asked if she could
come round. At first it sounded as though she’d woken him
from some monstrous Rip Van Winkle slumber — he was so
far away he sounded like a radio signal lost in the ether — but
he’d quickly got himself together, said, sure, come round.
Yet there was something in his tone that almost made
her not.
His place was a mess but she didn’t care. She snuggled
down on the sofa and began drinking, knowing that this was
the only way she could really say what she felt. And though
she knew it was probably the wrong thing to do, she’d told
him about Jon, watching his reactions like a lab assistant
peering into a microscope.
He hid it well. But not really well enough. She told him
how they’d just met a couple of weeks ago and how she was
really missing him. She told him of the fight they’d had
though not why it had occurred. Sex was something she
didn’t feel comfortable talking to Dominic about, but everything
else she told him. And she found that in the telling a
deeper desire was revealed, as if she’d held back from
accepting it these last few days, afraid of where it might lead.
She spilled out her heart, spilled a bottle of wine on his carpet, told him she’d never really felt like this before, apologizing all the time for her state, for the carpet and for coming round at such an ungodly hour.
He had to listen to all this, saying, no really, it’s no hassle,
no, the stain won’t even show, it’s perfectly okay, slowly
numbing himself with wine. Every so often he disappeared
into his bedroom, coming out a few minutes later, his face
ashen. She wondered if she was doing the right thing, something
was very wrong here, but now that she’d started she
felt she needed to finish.
And then she’d mentioned Jake. That Jon was here looking
for the reasons behind the old man’s death.
“I was so scared, Dominic. I didn’t say a thing. That we
knew Jake, nothing. He showed me his picture and I pretended
that I’d never seen him before. I was so surprised at
my willingness to enact this deception. I was so scared.’
‘Why, Suze?’ He looked at her, knowing then that she
would never be his, that their lives were destined to pass by
each other, touching only at the periphery.
‘Why? Jesus, Dom! Jake’s dead. Doesn’t that mean anything
any more? Two people from our group are dead. The
same fucking killer. Doesn’t that scare the shit out of you?
Make you think?’ She looked at him but he was gently
stroking the dog, his eyes hooded and downcast. “I just
couldn’t tell him.’
‘Because you wanted to fuck him?’
‘Dominic!’ She felt like punching him. ‘No, that wasn’t
the reason at all. I just liked him, you know, I thought perhaps
there’s something here. I haven’t felt that for a long time.
Yes, Wouter had just chucked me — I wasn’t even thinking
about that. He just looked so helpless that day, I had to save
him from the security guards. And everything, at first, was
so easy with him, so untroubled. And when he mentioned
Jake, it was too late. I knew that if I told him, yes, I knew
Jake, all about the Council — then those things would always
stand between us. They would be there from the very start.
This is how it begins. You know that. Nothing would proceed
as normal. Everything totally fucked up.’
But you knew it would come up.
You couldn’t have
thought you’d keep it hidden from him for ever?’
She shook her head, she could tell that he was enjoying
this. ‘I just thought if we had a couple of weeks to get to
know each other, then I could tell him. And it wouldn’t
matter so much. I didn’t want our first few days together to
be stained with that. I don’t know why he’s so obsessed with
finding what happened to Jake, he knew him even less time
than we did, but I could see that it was something that would
pull him down. And I didn’t want him to know what had
happened. Our involvement in all this.’
Why?’ Dominic tried to appear as cool and collected as
he could though inside he felt a terrible ripping. He could
feel his heart thumping away and he was scared that Suze
would hear it. He thought about what was in the other
room and how he’d saved it just for her. How it was all just
for her.
‘Because there can only be sorrow in it. For him. For all
of us. You know, I’m not very good at gauging people
usually, but with Jon, well…’
‘Are you scared of what he might find?’
‘I just don’t want this relationship to fuck up, not this
time, and I know if he started digging around, uncovering all
those ghastly skeletons, well, I don’t know if that’s the Jon I
want to be with.’
‘Then don’t mention it. Don’t mention anything to him.’
It would be better that way. Better for her and better for his
purposes too. Things were moving fast and he didn’t need
anyone disturbing the flow. Not until the weekend. Then
everything would be different.
‘I have to, Dominic. I have to do it before he finds out
for himself.’
She got up, went to the kitchen, kicked past the doggy
bowl, empty film canisters, data CDs and ashtrays that
littered the floor and poured herself some more wine. ‘The
ironic thing is I don’t even know anything,’ she said, spilling
some of the wine on her shirt, little roses arcing towards
her breasts.
‘Maybe you know more than you think.’ Dominic smiled,
exposing the dark hole of his mouth. He passed her a recently
rolled joint. She took a deep drag and felt her lungs sizzle.
The room began to spin. She’d thought it was weed but she
could taste the crack on her tongue and she took a deep
breath to stop the spin of the room. She felt herself losing
control.
‘What the fuck are you talking about? I wish you’d just be
clearer. You knew Jake better than anyone else. You introduced
him to the Doctor. I always knew there was something
wrong there. I was so stupid not to see it. It was only when I
heard about Beatrice and then I tried to deny it, to deny that
we were in any way involved — but it’s no use. You can’t
deny things. You can’t keep them hidden. I’m such an idiot
for thinking I could but I think I’ve learned now.’
He snorted. ‘Even if it means Jon will never speak to you
again?’
She wanted to say that she wasn’t sure if he ever would as
it was. After that terrible fight, when they were both not
themselves and yet somehow managed to show more of
themselves than they had previously. But she didn’t tell him.
Didn’t want to see the subtle smile of satisfaction that would
suddenly appear on his face and just as quickly be erased.
‘Even if it means that,’ she said.
He moved towards her. She was drunk, didn’t see it
coming. Before she knew it his head was resting on her lap.
She was too far gone to try to move away. She began to
stroke his hair. ‘What happened? Dominic, please tell me.’
His head moved slightly but remained on her lap. ‘I wish
I could, Suze, I really wish I could. Next week. Next week
it’ll all be over.’
She hadn’t expected him to say anything and so she was
not disappointed. She knew that he had introduced Jake to
the Doctor. But perhaps, she now saw, perhaps there was
more to it. She understood that the Doctor had created a
terrible schism in the group in the few meetings he’d
attended. Something, she now thought, they would not
be able to repair. They’d found it shocking for a Jew, a
camp survivor, to talk the way he’d done and yet, when
researching the Charlotte work, she’d come across similar
testimonies — not many and often under-emphasized, existing
in appendices or in miniature at the bottom of the page
as part of a footnote — of others who felt a certain sympathy
with the Germans. She’d heard about the Stockholm Syndrome
but this was different. This put into question everything
they believed in as a group, for if witnessing such
horror only made you a part of it then what was all their
work for?
She felt his hand, cold and smooth, reach under her skirt,
his head still as a stone on her lap. She tried to move, to slide
ever so slightly out of his reach but his hand kept creeping
up, raising goosebumps on her legs.
‘Dominic,’ she said, looking down at him, frightened now,
as his hand rested upon her panties and he swivelled himself
up from her lap and in one swift move placed his lips upon
hers. She could feel his tongue probing her mouth and she
put both her hands on his chest and pushed him away. He