Every Man a Menace (10 page)

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Authors: Patrick Hoffman

Tags: #Fiction, #Thrillers, #Crime

BOOK: Every Man a Menace
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Because they’d both been stationed in the south—Semion at Nahal Oz, Isaak nearby, at the Re’im base—they had often met to drink in the intense way of young soldiers. When they finished their service, Isaak had gone to South America for a few years. It wasn’t until Semion landed in Miami that they reconnected. They’d always liked each other, but they could just as easily have gone through life without ever seeing
each other again. Semion was a child of immigrants, an immigrant himself. Isaak had been born in Israel, to an upper-middle-class family in Haifa. Semion had once summed it up by pointing out that Isaak, as a young teenage boy, had
had a fucking scooter.

Differences aside, the two men got along, and their partnership worked well. Isaak tended to the clubs—he was better suited to handle payroll, insurance, licenses, the staff, and all the day-to-day paperwork that came with running multiple businesses—and Semion took care of the drugs. Isaak let him handle things exactly as he wanted, and the clubs provided the perfect way to launder the money. On occasion Semion felt resentful for having to share his drug profits, but in those moments he reminded himself that it was Isaak who had first come up with the shipping company, Isaak who had known Moisey, and Moisey who had introduced them to Nana and Fariq.

There were no bombs, no war, and half-naked women as far as the eye could see. They took trips to Jamaica, the Bahamas, Brazil. They were living the good life, a sunny Miami American dream, and yet Semion Gurevich wasn’t exactly happy. He was lonely. He wanted a family.

And then he met Vanya Rodriguez.

He found her at Ground Zero, the first club they’d opened. Semion, feeling drunk and dull, had been sitting with Isaak and a man named Jimmy Congo and a few of their other friends. Jimmy was telling an endless story; Semion, his
shoulders tense, was finding it hard to focus. His eyes drifted toward the bar.

She was wearing red heels and a white dress:
A sail filled with wind,
he thought. He’d sniffed some Molly and drunk vodka, and the combination had made him poetic. She held a clutch in her hand, and he instantly imagined what it contained: The lipstick—
to be that lipstick, and gloss those lips.
The credit cards, an ID card with her address—
she lived somewhere, owned a bed, towels that she dried her nakedness with, sheets that she slept on.
She had curly brown hair, tan skin, and could have been almost any ethnicity—Latina, Italian, Jewish, Arab. Semion felt a magnetic pull. He smiled.

She stood near a few other girls, but they were a blur to him now. He stared at her with his head dropped to the side. A strange feeling opened in his chest, something like fear mixed with happiness, mixed with the high from the drugs. After a moment he realized his mouth was open. He had to force himself to look away. This was a new feeling.

Eventually, the woman drifted closer to his table. He poured more vodka into his glass, dropped in a single ice cube, swirled it around, and drank. He noticed Isaak staring at him. The music was incessant; Semion wished that the DJ would make the song stop, that he could spend a moment in silence and appreciate this woman. He looked over and the DJ, meeting his gaze, pointed at him and grinned.
You’re the man.

What was it about her? He watched her laugh, watched her throw her head back. She was beautiful, of course, but
that wasn’t it—there was something more. The moment, there in the club, felt predetermined. It felt arranged somehow. In an effort to compose himself, he drank more.

The man sitting next to him, a loud Russian, was making a joke—something about a dog wanting meat. The other men laughed. Semion smiled at them, raised his glass. “Cheers,” he said.
Cunts,
he thought.

He swallowed his drink and turned back to her.
Now,
he told himself.
Now.

She turned toward him and met his gaze for what felt like an endless moment. He tried to smile, felt foolish, clamped it down, raised his eyebrows, fixed his mouth into its best shape, and—without even knowing what he was doing—gave her the same two-fingered
come here
gesture that the Russian man had used on him a few years earlier.

The effect was not the same. She simply looked away. He turned his head back toward his friends and wiped at his face.
Stupid, ugly face,
he thought. Then, recognizing the negativity of the thought, he willed himself to stay positive:
No, no, no, a king, a king, a Jewish king, a gentle Jewish king.
He licked his lips, looked at Isaak for help.
A tall king, a rich, tall king.
He tried to turn back to her, but he felt himself wilting, felt himself becoming depressed.

When he turned to look at the woman again she was walking straight at him. Time slowed; he took a deep breath and steadied himself to stand. He gave his nose a final wipe and saw that her shoulders were moving to the music. He looked at the white dress, studied the face, studied her walk, her collarbones, her hips.
Remember this
, he thought. She was a few steps from him now, within reach, and he knew
he should smile, but instead he acted cool, shifting his eyes to the group of women she had just left. The beat from the speakers matched his heart.

“Hey, bitch!” she said, in accented English, walking right past him.

Isaak had been sending a text message, but Semion watched as he looked up, saw the woman, shook his head slightly, smiled, and said, “Oh, shit.” He held his arms open to her, and she stepped into them. They exchanged kisses on both cheeks. Then, the greeting done, his arm still draped over her shoulder, Isaak turned her toward the group. Semion looked away. He forced a look of boredom on his face before turning back.

“E’rybody in the club gettin’
tipsy
,” said Isaak. He let his arm fall from her shoulder. Semion stared. Suddenly the woman stepped toward him with a serious look on her face and held her hand out like an American businessman.

“Hello,” he said, his face frozen. “I’m sorry, your name?”

“Vanya,” she said. “Vanya Rodriguez.”

Semion felt himself sway on his feet. He looked at Isaak for help, a sign, anything, but his friend was busy talking to the other men again.

“And your name?” she said.

“Semion Gurevich.”

“Simon?”

“Semion,” he said. He realized he’d missed his chance to kiss both of her beautiful cheeks.
Do I have dandruff?
he wondered.
Am I going bald?

“How do you know him?” he asked, nodding toward Isaak.
Does my breath smell?

“I met him here,” Vanya said. “Two nights ago!”

Two nights ago?
thought Semion.
They’ve fucked. I’ll kill him.

“You’re Brazilian?” he guessed.

“I am. I’m from Rio.”

“You guys dating?” he asked, cupping his hand over his mouth, yelling over the noise. He looked her in the eyes. A wave of depression had washed over him.

“No, stupid, you crazy?”

They were standing next to each other, and, in order to hear her he had to lean in. Their shoulders touched and stayed together for a moment. Isaak turned and motioned at Semion, pointing toward the back office and touching his nose. Semion waved him off. He asked if she wanted a drink, and she said, “Yes, a vodka Red Bull.” Her accent made it sound like
hedge bull.

Semion went to the bar and got two drinks. Normally, women didn’t make him nervous, but now he found himself unable to come up with a line of conversation. She looked like a normal Miami girl, but he could tell she wasn’t. He imagined her asking him what he was interested in, and he planned a vague speech about wanting to produce films, then cursed himself for stupidity.
Films, no, stupid, you want to help children. You want to produce films about helping children.

When he returned to her she was applying lipstick, tilting her head back and using a small mirror. She turned, looked at him, and licked her lips.

“I have to go in five minutes,” she said. “It’s my girlfriend’s birthday.” She nodded vaguely toward the door.

“I’ll come with you.” He felt, suddenly, as if he was on firmer ground.

“It’s not that kind of party,” she said. She touched his arm, took a sip of her drink, stood on her toes, and looked around the club. “You guys own it?” she asked.

“Yeah,” he said. “We own five clubs in Miami.”
Stupid, don’t brag.

She shrugged her shoulders.

“Move the party here!” he said, licking his lips. His time with her was ending already. He could feel it.

She turned and looked him in the eyes. “Text me later,” she said. “Maybe, I come back.”

She gave him her number. He entered it into his phone and showed it to her when he was done. “Right?” he asked.

“Not I-A,” she said. “Y-A: V-A-N-Y-A. Ciao.” She leaned in and kissed him on the cheek. Then she walked away.

Semion found Isaak with their friends in the office upstairs. “Who is she?” he asked in English. Then, switching to Hebrew, he said, “Did you fuck her?”

Isaak had been bent over the desk sniffing Molly. He looked up, smiled, shrugged, and said, “No.”

Semion took a moment to analyze his friend’s body language. The shrug bothered him. He asked again, this time without words. He simply raised his eyebrows and stared.

Isaak smiled again. “No. No. No,” he said. “Don’t worry. She’s yours and yours alone. She’s probably a fucking virgin.” The other men laughed. “Fuck,” he said. “Have some.” He motioned at the powder on the desk. “Have some!”

After cursing the men in his mind, Semion walked to the desk, took the rolled-up hundred-dollar bill from his friend, bent his head, and breathed one of the lines of powder into his nose. It hit the back of his throat, and he tasted it in his mouth.

“The last Brazilian virgin,” said Isaak. The men laughed again.

The night felt transformed after that. Semion found himself loving all of the people in the club. He moved around, greeting everyone. Women flirted, and he flirted back, but that’s all he did. His mind was on Vanya, and he kept checking the time on his cell phone; he had to give her at least an hour before he texted. But each time he looked, only a minute had passed.

After an hour, he sent her a short message:
You coming back?

She didn’t respond. And even though it took a heroic amount of self-control, he didn’t text again. He was satisfied. He liked a challenge.

At five in the morning, after checking his phone for the hundredth time, he took two Xanax, drank a seltzer, and lay down on his bed.
This is my life,
he thought.

When he woke up—at noon—she was there in his mind already, the first thing he thought of: her face, her lips, her hair. He picked up his phone, convinced there would be no messages, and saw that there was one:
Sorry sleepy. Xo.
She had sent it at 6:14 a.m.

We have a doorman,
he thought.
I could ask if Isaak had any visitors.

Two days later he took her out to dinner. He’d spent the day at the gym, the tanning salon, the hairstylist. He’d gotten his eyebrows shaped, his back waxed. He’d bought a new shirt from Sartori Amici. A nervous dread filled his stomach, but he vowed to fight it. In his apartment, in front of the mirror, he stood for a few minutes turning and looking, squinting and pulling his face into different shapes.
I will smile,
he thought.
I will act excited.

They met at his favorite sushi spot.
You like Japanese food?
he’d asked.
I love it,
she’d texted. He knew the chef and called ahead.
Nothing spared,
he’d said.
The best, the best, the best.
The chef had laughed.
Fins and scales?
he’d asked.
Yes, fins and scales,
Semion had said.

She arrived ten minutes late. He had waited for her out front, and seeing the way she held herself as she came walking around the corner made Semion feel stooped over. He fixed his posture and suffered through a sudden wave of pessimism:
This can only end in pain,
he thought. He felt dizzy as she approached.

She wore a yellow dress this time. They kissed on both cheeks; he lingered, maybe too obviously, and noticed the scent of gardenias. He looked at her face, saw a small scar on her forehead.
I love you,
he thought.

“You like Japanese?” he asked again, wincing at having repeated himself.

They sat at a table near the window, a small candle between them. The chef, a man who appeared on magazine covers, came over personally with their first dish. After setting it down he bowed to Semion, rubbed his shoulder, and said, “Welcome back, Mr. Gurevich.”

Semion felt himself flush with pride. He hid it by rubbing at his face like a tired businessman. The chef gave a minute-long explanation of the dish to Vanya, who listened with shiny eyes.

They ate course after course of expertly prepared fish. When Vanya said she liked oysters—“I love the way they taste like the beach,” she said—Semion had the chef bring her a dozen. She tilted the shells to her mouth and slurped them up.

The food kept coming, and she told endless stories in a singsong voice. Semion, unable to think of anything to say, felt thankful that she had decided to carry the burden of the conversation.

“I’m sorry,” she said. “I talk so much.” She mimicked a puppet with her hand. “Da-da-da-da-da.”

One story, in retrospect, stood out. It was the only one she told him about her family.

“I’m not rich, you know,” she said. “Most of us here, in Miami, Brazilians, are rich. Not me. When I was a child, we lived in a favela—you know—
Jacarezinho
,” she said, sounding out each lovely syllable. “I had a sister, a little baby sister, who got in trouble with a group, and one of them tried to be in love with her, but she already loved a different boy. And the man—he’s a scary man; he had the long fingernails—he yelled at her in public, and she cut him with a knife in the stomach.” She laughed after that, and put a whole piece of sushi into her mouth. She shook her head while she ate it.

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