Read The Devil's Playground Online
Authors: Stav Sherez
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General
a koan throughout his thirties: why had his father done it?
Had he done it because he was a weak man, a coward who
realized that collaboration was the only safeguard? Or was
he just ruthless? Maybe he didn’t care about the Jews, maybe
he saw in it only a way to attain power, to climb to the top
of the pole? Van Hijn was tormented between the two,
between the idea of his father as a gudess collaborator and
the idea of him as a machiavellian schemer. Which was worse
ethically? To do something out of fear and cowardice or to
do it out of greed and ambition?
He saw the old man was back. Though ‘old man’ was an
incredible understatement. Van Hijn was sure he’d never
seen anyone that ancient. The man looked far more of a relic
than most of the objects on display.
Van Hijn showed him his badge.
‘I was wondering what you were looking for,’ the man
said.
‘You were watching me?’
‘I was. Eating my lunch and watching people go round.
You were looking for something, I think, not a tourist.’
Van Hijn felt slightly taken aback. He’d assumed a doddering
fool when he’d seen him. Didn’t expect to have the
tables turned on him.
“You’re surely too old to be sitting here doing that,’
he said.
The man laughed, a slow descending release. ‘Too old?
What, you think it’s better I sit at home and stare at the
wallpaper?’
‘Forget it,’ Van Hijn replied, taking out the photo of Jake.
He placed it on the table in front of the man. Moshe took
the photo gently in his hands. The detective watched him
smooth thin, brittle fingers over its surface.
‘I read about it in the newspaper. Very sad.’ He put the
photo back down as if holding it for too long was somehow
wrong.
‘So you knew him?’ Van Hijn suddenly felt a surge of
adrenalin. That old familiar feeling.
Moshe nodded. ‘I don’t know how well you could say I
knew him but, yes, he used to come here a lot. Often we
talked.’
Van Hijn moved closer, sat down on the chair by the man.
What about?’
Moshe shrugged. What do old men talk about? Our pains,
the things we missed, fear. What else is there?’
What was he doing here?’
‘Looking for his family, at first. Then he used to come
and help out.’
‘Help out?’
‘In the archives. We have many manuscripts, unlabelled
texts, unknown footage — we don’t have the resources to
hire anyone to catalogue it. Jakob helped with that. He used
to come almost every day. We’d talk for a bit, smoke a
cigarette or two, drink coffee and then he’d go down to
the basement and watch all those films and videos. Sorted
through documents we had.’
‘Films? What was he up to?’ Van Hijn moved closer to
the old man.
‘Up to? Why do you think he was up to something? I
think it is obvious why he would want to do that, no?’
Van Hijn nodded though it was not all that obvious
to him.
‘You know, when he first started coming here, I asked
myself the same question. He didn’t look Jewish. Came every
day and just wandered round staring at the displays. At first
I thought he was one of those people.’
What people?’
The old man looked at him, a sad and elegant face, Van
Hijn thought, unscathed by age or life. ‘You know there’s
nothing we can do. We set up the exhibition to remind
people, to leave a memory of those that are gone. But we
cannot control who comes and sees it. Many come from the
other side. They too appreciate the way we’ve handled things
— but you can see it in their eyes. Pride.
‘They see the exhibition, the constantly running films of
the transportations from Westerbork, the dark rust-smeared
trains that clawed their way across Europe to Auschwitz.
They read the statistics, the lists of the dead and they feel a
warm glow inside. It is like church for them. They watch
with pride and awe as handsomely dressed officers corral the
streaming mass of people into the cattiecars, appreciating
the logistical genius of the whole thing, the scale and purpose
of it. They see the museum as a shrine to a better time. For
them these are the artefacts of their glory. You can see it in
their eyes. And what can we do? We can’t stop them. Can’t
only allow Jews in here.’
‘And Jake?’ Van Hijn didn’t like the direction in which the
conversation was heading.
‘At first I thought he was one of these people — to my
shame.’
‘And you have no idea why anyone would want to kill
him?’ It was the old stock question and it felt tired and
useless as he said it.
Moshe shook his head. ‘Not more than anyone else,’ he
said. ‘Do you mind if I keep the photo?’
Van Hijn saw the man’s left hand, wiry like a bird’s foot, gently resting on the photograph. ‘Of course,’ he replied.
Moshe smiled, took the photo and placed it in the breast
pocket of his shirt.
‘You know, someone was asking about him just yesterday.’
Van Hijn had got up, ready to leave. He snapped back, sat
down. ‘Tell me.’
‘British. Quite young, very polite. Asked about him. I
didn’t say anything of course. You can never tell who you’re
talking to.’
Jon.
Van Hijn felt a smudge of irritation. So, he hadn’t listened.
Had gone ahead and tried to investigate. They read three
detective novels and think they can do better themselves.
And yet, he also felt a curious appreciation. He hadn’t
thought Jon would go against him, had believed him too
weak, too stuck in his own problems. This new information
made him smile, not quite sure exactly why, but smile none
the less.
‘One has to be careful. Especially these days,’ Moshe
continued. He stared up at Van Hijn. A pause. ‘I assume
you’re aware of the films currently up for auction? That
you’re investigating this?’
Van Hijn shook his head. He had no idea what the man
was talking about.
‘Maybe it is something that would be worth your while
checking out?’
What films?’ He got closer to the old man. Tried to
control his breathing.
‘These things, you know, there’s always rumours they
exist. No one believes them and yet they do at some other
level. Well, it seems this time they’re true. Someone’s put up
for sale on the Internet 49 reels of concentration camp
footage; 8 mm.’
‘Real?’ It felt as if the chair couldn’t contain him.
‘Apparently so, though my knowledge is limited.’
Van Hijn stared at the old man. It all came rushing in.
Nine months of fruitless leads coalesced around this point.
Finally he had more than a feeling, more than a hunch. The
snuff films were out there and he wondered, had he set this
in motion? It was almost too symmetrical. He realized that
until this moment he hadn’t really believed it himself, the
theory about snuff, had only accepted that it explained more
than a serial killer. But now he felt the cold, dryness in his
mouth, the uncontrollable heartbeat. He leaned forward.
‘Okay, okay. You want to follow this up. Go here.’ Moshe
took out a small pencil and wrote an address on the back of
a museum welcome card. ‘Go and see these people. They
know more about this than me. It is what they do.’
Van Hijn took the card, looked at the address, South
Amsterdam, placed it in his pocket. ‘You’ve been very helpful,
thank you.’
‘No need to thank me. You find these films, make sure
they don’t get into the wrong hands, it’ll be me thanking
you.’
He got home just before the rain started again. His head
buzzing with the things that the old man had told him. He’d
had a sudden attack of nerves on the way out, wondering
whether Moshe had recognized him — his photo had
appeared in countless newspaper articles after the Der Stern piece. It wasn’t just paranoia and he hated feeling guilty for something which he hadn’t done or even had knowledge of.
He decided not to think about it. To think about Jon instead
and what he really knew about Jake. Whether he’d told him
the whole truth. What was he doing here and had he actually
gone back on his flight?
Van Hijn could now see that there were layers and layers
to this case, stretching back to the first murder, layers whose
existence he’d only just been afforded a glimpse of and yet
which had possibly defined the shape of events so thoroughly
as to have wiped out their own traces.
He was dying for a joint. Something that would stop the
tangle of thoughts. He nearly went for it but then recalled
the toffee cheesecake that he’d bought that morning; sweet
sticky toffee, dark, almost loamy chocolate, crispy pecans
and thick, sugary cream. That would be better, he decided,
though over the last few weeks he’d begun to feel his waist
pushing up against his trousers and he knew that substituting
cheesecake had its own pitfalls.
And then he remembered the box set.
He’d been too tired to open it yesterday. Had forgotten
about it during the course of the day. Now he felt a giddying
sense of excitement as he picked up the heavy grey Amazon
box and ripped open the packaging to reveal the Harry Smith Anthology of American Folk Music box set.
For the last ten years Van Hijn had developed a growing
obsession with early American folk and country music, dark,
scratchy voices from the twenties and thirties. Those massive
box sets produced by the Bear Family, chunks of history,
bound and annotated, complete and chronological, a riposte
to the history he himself knew, the fragmented nonsensical
blur of the past.
There was something about the music of that period that
seduced him, something about the quality of the recordings.
The crackles and surface noise like history snaps, situating it
in a time before magnetic tape. It was music that sounded as
if it came from a totally different world, saturated with tales
of murder, adultery, crime and soul-selling. Often sung by a
lone voice over minimal accompaniment, it embraced a
certain darkness and narrative sensibility that made it quite
unlike anything else. It was music that scared him, left him
shivering sometimes. Music that had to be played in the dark.
Alone.
There was something about the dip of oblivion when the
needle drops down, Dock Boggs’ haunted voice pleading, Oh Death, Please spare me for another year of the impossibly high, lonesome sound of Roscoe Holcomb singing ‘Omie Wise.’
He had in fact stopped listening to most other forms of
music, finding them all lacking the depth and substance that
he found in early American folk music. These CDs were
like spaceships jetting him off to other worlds, distant and
different from his, worlds of stark brutality and compromised
choices; whalers, coalminers, bank robbers, murderers, union
men, adulterers and yet, sometimes it seemed as if this
tradition and these songs were nothing but a blueprint for
his day-to-day work, for the moral composure of the early
twenty-first century.
He lay back on the sofa, drink in hand and listened to the
first CD. Every now and then he would exclaim ‘Fuck!’ or
‘Yeah!’, if there was a particularly choice turn of phrase or
vocal quirk that caught his heart. Does this make up for all
the shit I go through? Does this make it all worthwhile, even
the things I saw today, he asked himself, and pouring another
whiskey, just as Mississippi John Hurt launched into
‘Frankie’, he thought, yes it does. Yes it does.
Because it has to.
The room was strangling him. Boxing and battering him. But
it didn’t move. He knew that. It only felt as if it was crushing
the space slowly, surely, contracting and compacting until it
would reach his body. The view was no good. It was too
small and too dark. The rain covered up the sky. The room
became every room he’d ever inhabited. Each one getting
smaller, darker. A life lived in small rooms. A life barely
lived.
Rooms of rage and rooms of gloom, where the ceilings
hung down like an overattentive mother, rooms filled with
doom and headaches and the fear of going out, of leaving
your room, rooms full of sleep and bad memories and the
solitary sound of your heart exploding in the emptiness.
He was waiting for his credit card. The replacement.
They’d assured him it would be there in the morning. It
wasn’t. So he sat and waited, and he understood that this
was a test, the last attempt of gravity to pull him back to
London, which itself sometimes resembled a small room
with many dark corners. But if this was a test, he was
determined to pass it, to fight the lustrous pull of an easy
life, a quiet life. And it somehow seemed easier, here in this
city, with its canals and constant rain, its strange layout and
soft feel, easier to fight all that, to step away from it.
The card arrived just after lunch, though of course he
hadn’t had anything to eat having waited all morning and as