Read The Devil's Playground Online
Authors: Stav Sherez
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General
in motion.
‘What happened at the end? How did you escape?’
‘I didn’t escape. There was no escape from that place, no earthly
escape that is. By the beginning of January 1944, the Red Army was closing in. On the seventeenth they entered Warsaw. We knew that
they would be in the camp in a few days. The orders were to
evacuate. To evacuate and to destroy all evidence. That morning I
accompanied Dr Werner as he went into the infirmary and performed
his final duty at the camp. The patients looked at us with a strange expression as he shot them in their beds. They did not know the
Red Army was but miles away. Those that could walk were gathered
together by the Kapos and would follow them to Germany, there
were still camps there, work that needed to be finished. I suppose I was one of the lucky ones they thought they needed back in the
West.
‘We marched across huge deserts of snow, stretches of white
dotted with the dark smear of bodies. All the way there were bodies, Jews shot on the marches, those that weren’t strong enough to make it. There were thousands of corpses on that road, twisted and frozen in place.
‘We passed the skeletons of villages and towns, bombed and
burnt, as we headed towards the border. Smoke billowed and twisted from the black hills. Not much had been left to stand. The churches were gone, their spires, brick and rubble strewn on the streets,
everything pocked and cratered like a moonscape and I knew then
that I was seeing the new Europe, that below me lay the future and that something would rise from this rubble, something new and
tainted.
‘We met with others, sometimes marching with them at night
through dangerous territory. I remember one morning the most
amazing sight. Me and my companions were coming down from a
low set of hills and we could see a march in the distance, a group of twenty or so small figures, holding hands, walking two by two, slowly making their way through the snow. We climbed a ridge and viewed
them through our binoculars. They were all Mengele’s twins, what
was left of them. They had broken out and were marching themselves to freedom. No one said anything. The Germans let them pass.
The next day I was on a train bound for Buchenwald. I was there
until the Americans liberated it. All hell broke loose that day. Young American soldiers, eighteen and nineteen, came face to face with
the piles of bodies that the Germans hadn’t managed to burn, with
the living who were not really living any more. They went berserk.
They cried and cried and hugged those that were still alive. Can you imagine that, Midwestern farmboys putting their arms around Jews,
crying wildly? Well, that’s what happened, at least, at first. Then they went round and hanged any Germans they could find. They got the
prisoners to pull out all Germans that were pretending to be Jews, their fat faces hiding behind the striped burlap. The Americans let them torture them for days. Their screams filled the nights. It was a horrible scene. I was held in an internment camp for several days
where they questioned me, processed me and then they let me go.’
‘Was that when you wrote the book?’
‘No. I moved to a small village near Munich. There was never any
question of going elsewhere. Germany was where I was born, where
I received my education. I could not go to Israel, the United States these were as foreign to me as the South Sea islands. I was a German, a Jew, yes, but always a German too.
‘I set up a practice and, when the old doctor died, I became the
town’s doctor. I was Dr Kaplan. No one ever commented on the fact that I was a Jew. No one talked about the recent war. There were many things that were left unspoken in those years. I lived there through the fifties, watching the country grow back, the buildings going up, memories fading away or consigned like unwanted toys to a dusty attic somewhere. I was bored practising medicine in a small
town. I had to deal with coughs and flu and children’s diseases. You can imagine how it felt after being in Auschwitz. I saw that my life was gently petering out and that I would have to do something about it, something wildly unusual, or be dragged down. So I began writing the book. I would write between patients and at night in my small
house. It took me three years.’
‘Let me tell you a final story … you know people sent me a lot of correspondence in those days after the book came out and one thing I remember to this day. I got this letter from an Israeli. He had fought in the war of independence, ‘48. He told me the guns that the Israeli army used to keep their statehood were all stamped with swastikas
and iron crosses. Wehrmacht guns were going cheap in Europe I
guess, but the point is the State of Israel was won with Nazi guns, the same guns that had been used to kill the nation of Israel.’
The image blacked out and the CD stopped. Jon tried to
access it to see if there was anything else but that seemed
to be the end of the recording even though it obviously
wasn’t the end of the conversation. He punched the monitor
screen, glad of the pain that spread around his knuckles.
He then lit a cigarette and thought about what he’d seen,
thought about the Council involvement and, most of all,
about Jake.
Jon had found it disturbing not seeing Jake’s face, just
hearing his voice off-camera, cool and academic. He had
wanted to see the old man’s reactions to the Doctor’s speech,
thinking maybe that would help him understand. What was
the purpose of this? Did Jake see Kaplan as some lost,
missing father? Someone who had gone through all the
horrors that Jake had himself escaped? Did Jake merely want
to record the vile old man’s reminiscences or was he trying
for something more? Jon would never know. And who was
the third person who filmed the event, the ghostly presence
behind the camera, silent and unwavering? Jon had his suspicions.
He
smoked another two cigarettes and drank half his
bottle of duty free. He punched the wall a couple of times.
When he was sufficiently drunk, he began going through all
his Grateful Dead CDs, opening each case to see if there
was another TDK left by Jake, another ending to the tale.
He spent all night going through his discs, leaving them
scattered, uncased, on the floor, but all he found was his
hangover, and in the morning he packed his bag, put Jake’s
two discs into it and ordered a black cab to take him to
Heathrow.
‘A small hole was punctured on a temporal latitude marked
1945, and through that hole rushed the black future, curving
around on the horizon like a boomerang and then threading the
present.’
— Steve Erickson
29
‘You were lucky, very lucky.’
The face smiled down at him. He tried to move but found
that his arms had been strapped to the bed. His mouth felt
dry and rancid, his body soft, his mind unclear.
‘Nothing important damaged, just surface wounds. Looks
a lot worse than it is.’
The doctor smiled. Van Hijn tried to smile back but he
couldn’t move his mouth. He watched the doctor walk away.
Tiredness overcame him and he fell into a restless and
haunted sleep.
He awoke in the middle of the night. He couldn’t breathe.
He pressed the button for the nurse but no one came. He
heard far-off screams from another ward, the rattling and
scrape of metal beds being wheeled along the grey corridors,
muffled voices speaking behind doors and the ever-present
bleeping of the machines that he was connected to, like a
facsimile of his heart.
At some point his arms had been freed, or perhaps they
had always been so and earlier he just couldn’t move them.
He slowly and carefully touched his side where he’d been
punctured, but all he could feel were the rough edges of the
gauze that covered most of his abdomen. He noticed that his
stomach was flatter than he remembered it. Small pleasures
indeed.
‘Nurse, I need some cheesecake.’
The nurse looked at him as if he were a child who’d just
asked to see the Wizard.
‘It’s three in the morning, detective.’
‘I need cheesecake,’ he repeated, trying to sit up, but he
felt everything drain from him and he collapsed into the bed.
‘The doctor will see you in the morning,’ she replied,
turned, and left.
He didn’t think about what had happened. Not at first.
The last thing he remembered was making his way to the
flat. Next, he woke up in the hospital. They told him that
he’d been attacked on the street. Stabbed with a small dagger.
He’d lost some blood. No organs were touched. The doctor
said it was a miracle. Van Hijn the human sieve. He knew
what he’d have to face when he went back to work, the
catcalls and jokes, he was used to it by now but that still
didn’t make it any easier.
‘Hi.’
He looked up. It took him a few seconds to focus. Another
few seconds to recognize her from the first piercing parlour
he’d been to. Annabelle. So different out of her white smock.
She looked elegant and beautiful as she placed the flowers
beside his bed.
‘I read about it in the papers, thought you might appreciate
some company.’
He tried to smile and this time almost succeeded. It hurt
but it was worth it. He knew that it would take too much
effort to talk. He wanted to tell her how happy he was to see
her, to see anyone, but nothing came. She sat with him,
holding his hand. They watched the day collapse outside.
She read to him from a James Sallis book that lay by his bed.
It wasn’t his and he had no idea how it had got there but he
was content to listen to her soft voice, to watch her face
darkening in the twilight. He fell asleep to her words.
‘Detective.’
He awoke to the pit bull-like visage of his commander,
Beeuwers, a stout and solid man, immovable as a stone
monolith and with about the same sense of humour.
*We caught some kids. Junkies. Stiletto blade on them.
Your blood type. Thought you’d be happy to know.’
‘It wasn’t kids,’ he managed to say.
Beeuwers shook his head slowly. Y^ou don’t even remember
where you were when the attack happened, detective.
Don’t worry, we have them in custody.’
‘It wasn’t kids.’ He tried to get up, felt Beeuwers’ hand
like a weight settle upon his shoulder. ‘Who found me?’ he
gasped.
The captain smiled. ‘One of Zeeman’s men. Lucky for
you. Blood was leaking out pretty fast from what the doctors
said.’
Van Hijn remembered the phantom that had been following
him the last few days. ‘You fuck.’ He groaned. ‘You had
him tailing me, didn’t you? All this time?’
Beeuwers stared at him like a parent trying to make a child
understand something very, very simple. We had to make
sure that the case was being investigated in the proper way,’
he said.
Van Hijn wanted to scream. All the information he’d
collected, the leads and dead-ends, all this had been typed
and handed to the captain, laughed over in meetings. Discussed
and filed. He was glad that he hadn’t put his real ideas
down on paper.
Beeuwers smiled, so sincerely that Van Hijn knew he was
in for some bad news.
‘You’re off the case, detective. You need to rest, recuperate
for your hearing. We have something less demanding for
you. I’m sure you’ll find that Zeeman will continue ably
enough.’
Van Hijn stared at him. Wishing he could get up out of
the bed and strangle the fucker.
Beeuwers patted his shoulder. ‘Not my decision. Higher
up. They don’t think you’re getting anywhere. They don’t
think it’s good for you, this case. You know they still hold
February against you.’
‘The man was guilty,’ Van Hijn said but he knew it was
futile. All the decisions had already been made, stamped and
double stamped, and approved and, as a courtesy, they were
telling him.
Beeuwers nodded, enjoying the scene tremendously. ‘Perhaps
next time we should let the courts decide that.’ He put
one hand, thick and meaty as a prime piece of steak, on Van
Hijn’s shoulder, squeezed it, not a friendly squeeze but full
of grip and irritation and ire. ‘Take a few days off. Relax.
Forget about all this. We have some good men on the
case. Go away some place, Ronald. Wait for your hearing
somewhere else.’
‘I don’t want to.’ He felt utterly helpless, like a small child
in the shadow of his father, lying in bed, hardly able to talk,
unable to move. He knew that this was it. That somehow
the attack had only justified their opinions and that the
pension hearing would not go well. He closed his eyes. Tried
to remember Annabelle’s face. He heard Beeuwers talking
but he no longer listened to what he said. Finally the chief
grunted something and the door slammed.
Then darkness came, and with it, at last, silence.
3°
Climbing the four floors up to her apartment rather than
waiting for the lift had been a bad idea and it took Jon a
couple of minutes to regain his breath before ringing Suze’s