Meyer Lansky (
recognize_an_opportunity) wrote in
poly_chromatic2013-03-16 08:46 am
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Entry tags:
9th Opportunity :: Action/Video
[Meyer doesn't always take a day off work. In fact, this is his first day off since the casino opened. That's why, on this lovely afternoon, he's wandering a little aimlessly now, cigarette in hand, looking for something to pass the time that isn't work.
For awhile, he wanders around the area by the fountain, occasionally stopping to sit down and write something down in a tiny spiral bound notebook, then standing up and wandering again. After awhile, though, he seems to get bored, and turns on the video to ask a question -- or rather, make a proposition.]
I'm going for drinks. Does anyone want to come?
[It may be a bit early in the day for drinking, but it's his day off -- this is what people do on their days off, right? With that question posed to the entire City, he strolls off in search of a bar that has relatively inexpensive and plentiful alcohol.]
For awhile, he wanders around the area by the fountain, occasionally stopping to sit down and write something down in a tiny spiral bound notebook, then standing up and wandering again. After awhile, though, he seems to get bored, and turns on the video to ask a question -- or rather, make a proposition.]
I'm going for drinks. Does anyone want to come?
[It may be a bit early in the day for drinking, but it's his day off -- this is what people do on their days off, right? With that question posed to the entire City, he strolls off in search of a bar that has relatively inexpensive and plentiful alcohol.]
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[He shrugs, nearly spilling some of the wine as he pours some more.]
... are impulsive.
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[Apparently he's now inebriated enough not to mind swearing in front of her, which he'd generally consider somewhat impolite.]
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That's one I still remember in French. "Va te faire foutre!" I think one of my life goals will be to tell people to go fuck themselves in every language.
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[He'll have to remember that French one. Not that he has a huge purpose for speaking French, but it's useful knowledge.]
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[She repeats it a couple of times to make sure she's saying it properly, then starts giggling again.]
I sure hope there are no Italians at the next table.
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Or French people.
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[She takes another large swallow and refills both their glasses. She's completely lost track of how much she's drank by this point, and is fairly certain she's drunk. It's been a good while since it's been to this extent.]
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[He's pretty sure he should stop drinking at some point soon, but he's not sure why he thinks that. Maybe it's the fact that he has to really concentrate on not knocking over the glass as he picks it up for another sip. He doesn't normally drink to excess -- he's too much of a control freak to do so.]
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[His very existence is probably an insult to the Russians, too.]
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[She makes a strange gesture with her hands as she says 'the future' as though it's some mystical thing. She's so used to being fifty years behind most of the people here, it's still quite a novelty to her.
It's also the first time she's had to explain the cold war, and she's doing it while completely drunk.
She sits up a little, getting into storytelling position.]
So after the war-- There was another war, the one I was involved with, in the 40s. And Russia was on our side, but after the war there was us and them as the big military powers. And Russia's completely communist, so that was kind of a problem, especially when you've got most of Europe having been ravaged by the Nazis and Russia like right there next to it. They got most of Eastern Europe, and we gave as much aid to Western Europe as we could to try and contain the spread of communism, and we've been in a war with North Korea for the last two years and everyone in the States is scared that everyone else is secretly a communist and so we're all checking for reds under the bed and the government seems to think it's fun to harass citizens and accuse them of being Soviets for no reason.
[She sounds rather bitter there. She also realises she's not making much sense.]
The whole idea of the free market and American capitalism is an insult to them. I'd like to think not only do I support that, but I'm a damn good example of individual freedom you only get in my country.
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The Nazis did what to Europe?
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They completely fucked it over. Like, things had been really bad in Germany after-- [after Jimmy's war, she's about to say, and stops herself. It's strange how quickly she's adopted that mentality, his war and hers, but they do seem to be the only people here that had gone through those wars, experiences unlike any other that had ever been fought, and really understood them.] --after the first war. There's pictures of people taking wheelbarrows full of money just to buy a loaf of bread because inflation was that out of control, it was crazy. And I guess when it's that crazy people jump to extremes in a way that they otherwise wouldn't, and I guess they did get the economy under control and stuff because they were so damn efficient but--
[She pauses, suddenly feeling extremely awkward as she remembers that she's explaining this to a Jew. It's almost as though she's completely sobered up. As flippantly as she's talked about both World War II and the Cold War so far, she really can't with this.]
They built death camps. And they rounded up and killed six million Jews.
[She's silent for a moment, staring at her hands.]
We got 'em in the end, but... it never should have happened.
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I see.
[For a few more moments, he's quiet, pouring himself another glass of wine, taking a long sip from it, lighting another cigarette from the remnants of the one he'd just been smoking, and then he looks up at her. His expression is almost completely blank.]
And here I thought things were already bad enough in Russia.
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The pictures that came out of those places... Whatever you think hell is like, it's worse. And I know things were bad in Russia then, and I don't mean to trivialise anything your family went through either. ...Or mine.
[She adds that almost as an afterthought, the Flint side of the family is still something quite distant to her, although since she'd been forced to confront other aspects of it thanks to the House Committee, she'd been thinking about it a lot more again. The Fleigs - they'd changed it to Flint on arriving at Ellis Island - escaping the pogroms in Lithuania, the hopeful immigrants to America. She wished she could identify with it more.]
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I'll see it all for myself soon enough.
[Truthfully, he has no idea whether he'll be alive in twenty years to see the next war and the devastation that comes out of it. That's not something he thinks about, or at least, tries not to. Being confronted with the future does force you to consider where you'll be when that future happens, however.]
What my family went through was no better or worse than what any other family went through in that time and place. Yours included, I'm sure.
[He can afford to be stoic about it now. New York hadn't been ideal, not by a longshot, but it had been far, far better than Grodno ever had; even when he'd been very young he'd known that.]
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You'll be safe in America, just make sure you don't get any idiotic notions about going over and helping out like I did.
Yeah, but that doesn't make it right. I'm just glad you got out of there.
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[That whole... not actually an American citizen yet thing? Yeah. He finally notices the wine on his trousers and dabs ineffectively at it with a napkin, shaking his head.]
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[Regardless of whether he's pleased by that information or not -- he is, with the caveat that he hopes he's both alive and not in prison -- he's confused as to how she'd know it.]
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[There's a long pause as his brain finally catches up to what she means by that.]
You've heard about me in what context?
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