Read The Devil's Playground Online
Authors: Stav Sherez
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General
summer vacation from college, first day back, filled with
words and wonder and wanting to talk so much. A haemorrhage
had taken her in her sleep. And a week later, her father,
dead in a car accident, skewed and burned with his latest
lover on some god-forsaken highway in Idaho. A fearful
symmetry she was just beginning to grasp. As if that shot,
heard and seen twelve years before, had only now reached
its target, a long, slow and deliberate trajectory that had taken
all this time to come to its conclusion. And so: counsellors
and more counsellors. Lawyers and heavy doubt and sudden
wealth and through it all she couldn’t wait to get back to
college. To sink herself into paintings, into the dark canvases
and obdurate theories that promised to swallow the past. It
was the only thing that made her feel better, the swell and
sway of other people’s lives.
And was it really only the sun that made her think about
these things? Or something about yesterday, Wouter’s stumbling
phone call? Or was it the face of the dead girl that
stared out from her TV set that morning?
She saw the dog first. Then Dominic following behind, gently loping along as if he wasn’t already fifty minutes late, smiling when he saw her, though she’d seen that he’d
noticed her earlier, when she was looking at the dog. She
smiled back.
‘Sorry I’m late. I had something to finish. Lost track of
time.’ He stood beside her, blocking out the sun. His thick
Yorkshire accent dry. and sleepy. ‘Drink?’
She only then realized that she was sitting at an empty
table. ‘They do those super sickly sweet guava juices here?’
‘They do. I’ll get you one,’ he said, watching the curve of
her ankles as she crossed her legs. Sighing.
He started walking towards the door, then turned, as if
suddenly remembering something.
‘Oh, wow!’ she said taking the magazine from him. The
dark maroon gloss of the cover soft and sexy under her
fingers, the embossed letters (AnjAesthetics — a Periodical, slightly raised, reflecting back the overhead sun.
Dominic smiled, all was going well, he could feel it. ‘It
arrived from the printer’s this morning. And another
thing…’ He reached into his pocket. ‘I saw it secondhand,
cheap. Thought you’d like it.’ He handed the book
to her.
‘Oh my God, how did you know I wanted this!’
‘I saw you admiring it in the university bookshop.’
She felt herself go red. ‘But it’s just come out. It’s so
expensive.’
Dominic smiled. ‘I found it secondhand. It was dead
cheap.’
‘Thank you. That was so kind of you.’ She suddenly felt a
rush of affection, a deep fist in her chest. She grabbed his
hand, squeezed — it felt as though there were no bones under
the layers of flesh — said thank you again, kissed his cheek,
genuinely touched that he’d thought of her, though feeling
guilty too for never having done anything so kind for him.
As she waited for him to come back with the drinks, she
carefully opened the magazine. She loved its smell. The smell
of new things, of recent printing, paper and ink and oiled
machines. She saw her name on the masthead, ‘associate
editor’, she liked that, previously she’d only been a contributor
but Dominic had recently given her more of the editorial
work as he’d been so busy. It was their third issue. In small,
almost invisible lettering at the bottom of the cover were the
words ‘produced by the Revised Council of Blood’.
It was Dominic who had formed the group. She’d met
him during her second week in the city. He’d sat across from
her during seminars and, even that first time, she could not
ignore the way his eyes would settle on her as they scanned
the room, always looking away when she caught his stare.
And yet she liked him, despite his obvious and painfully
occluded attraction to her, or maybe because of it, she wasn’t
sure. When he told her about the Council she’d been thrilled,
there was something about its mystery, the way they met
weekly in a rented basement in the red-light district, the air
of being part of something secret. She knew it was silly, this
attraction, but she couldn’t help it. And the Council was
useful for her work. Dominic had formed it as a debating
group, to hammer out a theory of representation. A moral theory of representation. Of course they never agreed and she sensed that it seemed silently to frustrate Dominic that
they couldn’t come to a consensus. She knew it was the nature
of these things — language and theory showed everything to
be so slippery that even their own foundations were always
being put into question. She liked the fact they disagreed. It
was more exciting.
They looked at the impact of photo-journalism, the saturation
of atrocity photos, newspapers once full of breasts
and beaches were now routinely filled with mutilated corpses,
the inner workings of rape camps and dream-like cities made
of skulls. They wanted to know what this meant. How the
aesthetisization of images made them anaesthetic, drained
them of their power to shock and outrage.
Dominic firmly believed in the power of these images to
politicize. Suze, having seen people discussing wallpaper
shades over coffee-table books of the Holocaust, wasn’t so
sure. Charlotte had chosen to show something else. This was
what held her and the Council was a place where she could
discuss her ideas. The journal, subtitled Periodical, was an
organ through which they could publish essays or critiques
relating to their concerns. They printed 500 copies and
usually sold them all within the quarterly run at bookstores
and coffee shops throughout the city.
She saw that this issue was mainly devoted to a forty-five
page piece by Dominic entitled ‘The Seduction of the Banal:
The Utilization of (Imagery) in Life (is) Beautiful as Process
in Revisionist History’. He always used (seemingly random)
parentheses, except the word (is) which was routinely
enclosed and therefore put into question. She flicked through
the introduction, more parentheses, a sentence that she knew
she’d have to read three times to get the sense of, something
about the Italian film, a withering remark … she scanned
the rest, feeling the onrush of a mega-migraine. Forty-five
pages! She couldn’t believe it. There was something horribly
pretentious about it all. She hoped Dominic wouldn’t ask
her opinion.
She saw him navigating the door with the drinks, smiling.
She knew what he wanted from her and she knew, just as
surely, that it was something she could never give. He was
so different from Wouter and yet both were men with whom
she enjoyed moments but couldn’t envisage sharing a continual
stream of time with. She thought about what Moshe had
said. Even if he was right, and she was willing to concede
that maybe he was, even then, there was something about men who desired possession so much, with the attendant labelling and identification, surname and marriage certificate,
that made her skin crawl, not in any metaphorical sense, no,
like ants slowly inspecting your skin, that kind of crawl.
She could never be with Dominic and yet she couldn’t
help liking him, the way he always edged around his infatuation,
never coming out and saying it as American boys did,
keeping it, like a special locket, just to himself. It made their
relationship easier, for her at least. It kept the unspoken
hanging. And that was good. She knew he didn’t have many
friends in the city and she felt it necessary to make known
to him that he wasn’t alone. And she enjoyed his company,
his passion, especially when, momentarily, he would forget
that she was the girl he was in love with, and relax, be himself.
But lately she’d felt a new tension between them, as if the air
was suddenly charged. There was something in Dominic’s
face she hadn’t seen before, a tightening, a resoluteness that
worried her. He’d begun to miss meetings.
‘How’s the work going?’ He placed the drink beside her,
sat down.
She jumped, smiled, annoyed that he’d caught her
unaware. ‘My work?’ She put the glass to her lips. She’d been
so lost in thought she wasn’t sure what he was referring to.
‘It crawls along. Like most things.’
Dominic nodded. But they both knew they weren’t here
to talk about that.
They sat and sipped their drinks, each unwilling to break
the silence, to utter her name, the dead girl.
Suze had seen it on the morning news. She didn’t fully
understand the fast-talking presenter but her face and name
needed no translation. She felt her stomach drop through
the floor, the room spin around her. She’d immediately called
Dominic. She’d needed to talk but now, as they sat staring
at the unburdened tourists that strolled past, she didn’t know
what to say. That yes, death had finally affected her so? That
yes, it had taken the murder of someone she knew? That all
they talked about in the Council was a lie?
‘I’m so sick of it all.’ It came out of her, a surprise, and
she looked to see if Dominic had heard but, oh god, he had
and was now looking worried and anxious.
He put his hand on her leg. She tried not to jerk back
though her body’s natural reaction was exactly that. She
couldn’t say why his touch should have that effect on her,
that it was only an innocent gesture, a measure of reassurance
gladly given. She froze as his hand rested upon her knee,
trembling slightly, trying not to show what she felt.
We have to carry on.’ He smiled but she could see that
he was just as nervous about the position of his hand as she
was. ‘It doesn’t change anything.’
She swung her legs away. ‘It changes everything, Dominic.
She was just a dead girl until today. Today she’s someone we
knew.’ She felt herself shaking but understood she would
have to control it in front of him.
‘It’s just a coincidence,’ he said, trying to sound calm,
inching his hand towards her again.
‘Nothing is a coincidence,’ she replied.
Beatrice had been a member of the Council. No one had
seen her for a few weeks. Everybody thought holiday, no
one believed murder. Not until this morning when the police
had finally revealed her name, splashed across countless
newspapers and TV sets in the faint hope that it would yield
some further clues and in the safe knowledge that it was
what the public wanted.
Suze moved back. ‘You can’t think that.’ She edged her
chair further back. ‘You know what happened — how can
you say it was a coincidence?’
*You think it was because of the Council? The work she
did?’ He leaned forward, bridging the space between them.
*You think it wasn’t?’
Dominic shook his head. A headache was crawling its way
up his neck. ‘Stupid, dumb luck, or bad luck. People aren’t
killed for writing articles, discussing theories.’ He tried to sound reassuring.
She looked at him. His eyes steadfastly refused to focus
on hers as always, bounced up and down until they found a
neutral point to rest upon. She didn’t believe a word he said.
‘The TV talked about how she was killed.’
‘She’s not the first,’ Dominic replied, thinking back to the
preceding victims, their faces paraded. Their faces always
with us.
‘She was someone we knew.’ She thought this plain fact
was enough to explain itself.
‘And that makes it different?’
She looked at him; as usual she couldn’t read the signs.
Was he teasing her? Or being comforting? ‘Yes, that makes
it different. It’s no longer a set of words and I know that’s
the point, Dominic, but…’
‘You don’t sound like you believe that any more.’
She noticed that he was grinding his foot into the floor,
small violent circular motions.
‘I’m not so sure what I believe any more. I know that I
can’t talk about all this horror, look at these kind of images,
discuss and debate them. Not in the same way. I can’t look
at them. The idea of it makes me sick. We were just playing
around. I feel it’s my fault she’s dead.’
‘Your fault? Don’t be stupid, Suze.’
‘I’m not being stupid.’
Poor boy, she thought again, the more comforting he tried
to sound the more patronizing he ended up being. She
quickly scolded herself for always thinking the worst. His
intentions were good and that was the main thing, had to be.
When they reported the second victim I wanted more,’
she said. ‘I told myself this is it. A serial killer. Right here in Amsterdam. That particular method of killing. I thought this
is what we need. Horror. A wake-up call. Something more
than cartoon violence, something more than images on the
screen. I read the papers every day, wanting more, another
victim, a death more horrible. You understand? I couldn’t
believe how it tied in with everything the Council was talking
about. I thought this would make people realize the horror
of what they routinely take as entertainment.