Read The Devil's Playground Online
Authors: Stav Sherez
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General
I was torturing him or something?’ he said to Van Hijn.
‘They always scream, you know.’
Van Hijn lowered the gun. Another stupid mistake. It
seemed that he was making more and more of them recently.
His stomach was trying to claw its way into his chest. He
saw a door behind the piercer. A closet? Instrument cupboard?
He noticed the thick new padlock on the outside,
smelled the heady mix of ether and ammonia that saturated
the room. ‘You Quirk?’ The old man nodded grudgingly. ‘I
need to ask you some questions.’ The piercer looked so
much like William Burroughs it was disconcerting and he
found it hard to meet his gaze.
‘It can’t wait?’
‘No.’
Quirk put down the clamp. Walked towards the detective.
Van Hijn gave him the photos. The old man looked at
them. Shook his head.
‘Never seen him before,’ he said, his accent breaking
through for the first time. Been here a long time, Van Hijn
thought, almost undetectable. ‘Look again,’ he said.
‘You think I’m blind? You think just because I’m old I
can’t see?’ He threw the photos at Van Hijn. The detective
let them flutter to the floor.
‘No, I just don’t think you looked closely enough. Pick
them up and look again.’
Quirk stared at him. It would go either of two ways, Van
Hijn knew, and his hand slipped back down to his gun just
in case. The moment hung between them. And then Quirk
bent down, retrieved the photos, flicked through them again.
‘No.’ And gave them back.
There was not much else Van Hijn could do. The old man
was worried about something, that much was certain, but it
could have been any shabby secret. ‘Thank you for your
time. I’ll be back,’ he said.
‘I’m sure you will, detective.’ The old man’s smile was as
thin as a paper cut and just as unpleasant. ‘I’m sure we’ll see
each other again. Now if you’ll excuse me I have work to get
back to.’
As Van Hijn left the room, he counted his steps.
Outside, the rain seemed to have got worse. He pulled out
his small torch, flicked it on, relieved to see that it was
working. Groups of men passed him heading for the window
girls. Even in this weather, Van Hijn thought, as he circled
the building twice.
Yes, there was definitely something wrong. Something
that didn’t add up.
He circled it again, counting his steps this time.
The basement he’d been in seemed to be smaller than the
perimeter of the first-floor premises. Impossible, he knew.
He paced around again just to make sure. Same number. The
ground floor was stretched out about ten feet longer and
five foot wider than what he’d estimated the basement area
to be. Even if he’d been slightly mistaken it wouldn’t account
for the disparity.
Of course he knew all about them. Hidden rooms were a
part of the city’s legend. There was even a house you could
visit that hid a whole Catholic chapel behind the swivelling
occlusion of its fireplace. And of course the much-visited
Anne Frankhuis, many more throughout the old quarter,
priest-holes and last resorts, the small cramped refuges of
the hunted and hated.
He walked through the rain, buzzing on the new information,
heading back towards his flat. A video, Woody Allen
perhaps, something to take his mind off the day, to ease
the welcome respite of night. Wipe the whole thing clean.
Something to make up for all the horror he’d seen on that
computer screen.
The piercing parlour would need to be staked out, the
architectural incongruities reported, but that could wait until
tomorrow. Tomorrow was a monster, flashing its teeth,
gaping and hungry and he wanted to put it off for as long as
he could. He knew that he had to get hold of those films.
That the key to the tramp’s murder lay there, and more, for
he knew that all these deaths were linked. He thought about
Jon and what he was hoping to find. Whether he’d find it,
and if he did, would it be what he thought he was looking
for. Or just what he’d been running from.
They caught up with him three blocks from his flat. He was
so distracted that he didn’t notice them until it was too late.
Too late for his gun too as he felt his wrist being pulled away
and then the clear, sickening sound of it breaking, the pure,
hot dagger of pain that shot through his body. The rest
became a blur as he landed on the cobblestones and felt the
needles piercing him. He furiously scrabbled about, trying to
protect his side with his hands but the needles still found
their way in. There were always gaps to be exploited, prodded,
entered. He could hear laughing and what sounded like the
pitter-patter of his blood trickling on the stone. He tried to
stand but found that there was nothing left in his legs. The
pavement swallowed him, hard and cold and wet. The stars
twinkled unnoticed above and eventually he was left on his
own, the crumpled form of a man, leaking, dimming, falling
into the black night that he’d spent so long running away
from.
‘Use the clamps.’
‘Do you want me to?’
‘I just said so, didn’t I?’
‘Okay.’ He reached over and picked up the plastic pieces,
almost like office stationery he thought, and placed them
gently on her nipples. Then he kissed her, pulled her bottom
lip out with his teeth and bit down on it, not hard enough
to draw blood perhaps, but hard enough to draw a moan
from her.
‘Let them snap shut,’ she said.
So he did and watched her nipples whiten and the skin of
her breasts warm. ‘Twist them,’ she cried out as he was
fucking her and he did, enjoying the way she moaned and
writhed under the pain. ‘More,’ she said and he dutifully
twisted them again, watching the small drops of blood escape
the plastic and dribble down her breasts.
‘Tell me about Beatrice’s mum,’ she said, getting out of bed
and slipping a Richmond Fontaine CD into the player.
‘No.’ Jon stared out of the window. The visit with Mrs
De Roedel had left him drained. He couldn’t really explain
the rush of feelings he’d had in that antique house and wasn’t
in any mood to try.
Suze sat up on the bed. ‘What do you mean, no?’
‘I mean, I don’t want to talk about it.’
‘Why?’
‘Why? Because I don’t want to.’
‘Fuck, Jon.’ She got up off the bed, cranked the music up,
way up, turned away.
‘What’s the matter with you?’
‘With me? I just wish you’d tell me more. You keep
everything so close to your chest, you don’t ever tell me how
you feel.’
He got up, exasperated by her tone, by the things she
wanted from him which he found so hard to surrender. ‘I
don’t know how I feel, Suze, not really. I put it into words,
it’s something different, no longer what I feel.’
She snapped her head back towards him. He could see
she was crying. ‘You’re just like my parents.’
‘I’m not your parents.’
‘No, but you close yourself off like they did. After that day, they never said what they felt.’
‘Perhaps it scared them too much.’
‘All the more reason to talk about it.’
Jon got up, moved towards her, took her hand, felt it limp
in his. ‘Sometimes talking just disfigures things.’
She pulled her hand away. She felt unreasonably angry
and she knew that it had to do with Beatrice’s father’s death.
Dominic had sent him the photos after all. That stupid boy.
Killed him almost as surely as someone had killed Beatrice.
She spat out a piece of tobacco from her mouth. ‘Excuses. I
heard them all through my adolescence. Mom, Dad — they
never said anything, let the silence devour them, they never
thought about what it was like for me.’
He felt a terrible sadness in her words, a world that was
closer to his than even she thought, and he took her by the
waist and pressed himself so close to her that their mouths
were unable to speak, to do more damage.
Want to do some mushrooms?’ she asked later.
‘Mushrooms?’ He hadn’t done mushrooms since he was
sixteen and they hadn’t left any pleasant memories, being
sick, yes that was it, no transcendental visions only the cold
hard kiss of marbled reality.
‘Let’s do some mushrooms and go out on the town.’
‘But it’ll be hell, it’s Friday night.’
‘All the more reason.’ She pulled the sheets off her and
moved towards him, ‘C’mon, Jon, let yourself go, have some
fun.’ She grabbed his cock which was semi-hard and began
playing with it while he thought about all the bad things that
could happen to him if he took mushrooms on a Friday
night in Amsterdam.
‘It tastes like shit,’ he said, sipping the foul lukewarm tea that Suze had made, unable to quite believe he was doing this.
He wondered if he was still trying to impress her in some
way.
‘Just hold your nose and down it, if you don’t like the
taste.’ She drank her mushroom tea, then lit a cigarette.
Upended a wrap of white powder on the CD case. Chopped
it with a credit card into two lines. Richard Buckner was
singing about distance, love and alcohol. ‘This’ll get us
started.’ She bent down, snorted the line, handed Jon the
rolled-up note, watched him do the same. ‘We’ve got about
half an hour of normality before the ‘shrooms kick in, how
do you want to use it?’
He tied her up. He was so sick of it. It took all the
spontaneity out of sex, this endless preparation, this setting
up and marking off. But he didn’t want to argue, afraid of
what schisms it might yet open up between them. And he
kept telling himself it was nothing, just rigmarole, something
he should be able to accept. He tied the final knot, looked
down at her. She was smiling.
‘I want you to rape me, Jon.’
He stared at her, not sure he’d heard right. ‘What did you
say?’
‘I want you to go out, come back in. Pretend you’re a
burglar. Come upon me like this. I want you to fuck me, Jon,
rape me.’
He pulled back, swung to the side of the bed. ‘You’re fucking
crazy,’ he said. He could feel the coke running through his
blood, the sense of power and decision it gave him.
‘Jon, please.’
‘No. There’s no fucking way, Suze. This is already too
much. I hate doing this. I do it for you but it takes a lot out
of it for me — but that, what the fuck, are you crazy?’
‘Don’t you think most women have a secret fantasy of
being raped? Every woman adores a fascist, the boot in the
heart, the brute leer, didn’t you ever read that one?’
‘No, I didn’t and maybe they do, I don’t know. I just can’t
do it, Suze, might as well ask me to burn you. How do you
think we can go on after that?’
‘It’s only a game,’ she said.
‘It’s never only a game.’ He got up, turned the CD off.
Leaned down and untied her arms. ‘I’m going out. I need to
be alone.’
‘But the mushrooms. You can’t go out alone, Jon, not
with all that inside you.’
‘You think it’s any better here, tying you up, having you
pleading with me to rape you? I think I’ll take my chances
outside.’
The street was like a river of bodies, merging and coupling,
flowing slowly down towards him. The faces were all blank
like the discarded early sketches of a painter, half-conceived
souls that oozed through the alleyways and across the canals
as he tried to swim past them.
There was a strange smell in the air, heavy and chemical, and every cigarette he lit tasted of meat. He felt ready to burst, to hit anyone who got in his way, who tried to fuck with
him. He didn’t know where he was going, didn’t care. He
moved out of the way of a pack of elderly tourists marching
towards him with all the power and precision of a Paulus
Panzer attack. His nausea had disappeared and the early
feelings of disorientation replaced by a warm fuzziness that
felt like something better. Even the pain in his ankle had
finally gone.
Everyone was eyeballing him. Everyone looked mean. Hate
filled their eyes and had etched their faces into grotesque
grimaces like gargoyles he’d once seen in France. He concentrated
on the buildings, trying to understand where he was,
what he was doing. He felt sharp twinges of pain and he
wondered whether his liver was about to go or whether it
was his kidneys or his blood that was wrong. He tried
smoking some more cigarettes but they still tasted of meat
and after a drag or two he had to throw them away. A man
turned to him and began saying something but it sounded
like the voice of the teacher from a Peanuts cartoon and he
tried to relay to the man that this was so but he’d forgotten
where his mouth was.
The buildings were falling down. Obscuring the sky as they
huddled together over the dwarf streets. Everything went
black as the melted habitations formed a canopy over him.