Authors: J. A. Redmerski
Arthur Hamburg emerges from the fountain room with four men in suits and all attention turns to him.
The man looks even older than he does in his photo. And heavier. I estimate he must be in his late sixties, average height but not quite six-feet tall and no less than three hundred pounds, most of it in his stomach and cheeks. As he stands there at the head of the room with his henchmen at his sides, I don’t see a simple overweight man of mature age, I see an evil man who is going to die tonight. It’s all I can think about: he’s going to die. And I’m going to be there to witness it. Suddenly, my insides lock up, my chest constricting, my stomach a hard knot, and I feel like I can’t breathe. I suck in air through my parted lips and let it out very slowly through my nostrils. Calm Sarai. Just remain calm.
I didn’t think it would affect me this way, knowing a man’s fate, practically controlling whether he lives or dies simply by having the knowledge that he doesn’t have. But despite the anxiety I feel as the reality of the situation catches up to me, I don’t regret coming here. I may not know what Arthur Hamburg has done to deserve death, but I trust in Victor’s words and I know that he is far from innocent or we wouldn’t be here.
Arthur Hamburg addresses his guests, thanking us all for coming tonight and he carries on and on about superfluous things to which everyone nods and agrees and smiles and offers their own input. And he makes jokes to which he laughs at before anyone else, but they always laugh too, because it would be rude not to, of course. Even I find myself chuckling lightly at a joke that everyone else seems to find funny and that I really don’t.
Victor moves me around to stand in front of him, pressing the back of my body against the front of his. His mouth explores my bare shoulders, his hands rest on my hips. But the affection is brief, just for show, and his attention is back on Arthur Hamburg, who I notice in
that short timeframe singles us out with his gaze fixed on us from across the room. I can see the deliberation in his eyes, the sudden shift in his demeanor. After a few more announcements, he wraps up the small talk and leaves everyone to mingle and enjoy themselves the way they had been doing before he came into the room.
Next thing I know, he’s walking straight towards us.
Victor
Arthur Hamburg shakes my hand as I introduce myself and Izabel.
“My assistant tells me that you encountered a problem in my restaurant last night.”
He knows very well that it was the two of us. He watched us from that private room of his, listened to our interactions at the table through the tiny microphone situated inside the table centerpiece.
“Yes,” I say with a nod. “Forgive me for saying it, but I believe a change in the way your management hires your staff is in order.”
Hamburg smiles to cover up what he’s really doing: studying me and Sarai, getting a feel for us more than he already had at the restaurant, imagining us with him in his room. He could care less about the incident at the restaurant or being sued. That has nothing to do with why he invited us here.
“Are you from L.A.?” he asks.
“No,” I say, pulling Sarai closer to me with one arm around the back of her hip, my hand resting near her pelvic bone. Hamburg’s eyes stray to see it there. “Stockholm.”
He looks intrigued.
“You don’t sound foreign,” he says.
I respond by saying in Swedish, “I am fluent in seven languages.” And then I repeat it in English, so that he understands.
He nods with an impressed smile. Then he looks to Sarai.
“And what about you?”
“She is from New York,” I answer for her.
Sarai keeps quiet this time.
Hamburg turns to me again and asks, “Is she your…,” he searches his mind for the safest way to ask the question.
“My property?” I say for him, letting him know that it’s perfectly acceptable to talk about otherwise taboo things. “Yes, she is. And for the most part, she enjoys it.”
He raises a bushy graying brow. “For the most part?” he asks inquisitively. “What does the rest of her think?”
He glances at Sarai, a faint grin at the edges of his aged lips.
“The rest of me has a mind of my own,” Sarai says as Izabel.
I sigh and shake my head, brushing my fingers along her hipbone. “Yes, that she does, I admit,” I say. “I prefer a woman who puts up a fight.”
“So, you’ve already been down the other road, I take it?” Hamburg asks and I know he’s referring to full submission, owning a woman who will do anything and everything she’s told without cracking the slightest expression of discomfort or refusal.
“Once,” I answer. “I am content with Izabel, regardless of her mouth sometimes.”
Hamburg watches her more closely now, as well as me. He likes both women
and
men, after all. And he also likes women who put up a fight, like Izabel. The only difference is that the ones he’s enjoyed were forced here against their will.
Suddenly, Hamburg raises his chin proudly and says, “I would very much like to speak to you privately. In my suite. If you’re interested in lucrative offers. You
are
interested in lucrative offers, aren’t you?” He smiles and wets his lips briefly with his tongue.
I think on it a moment, playing with his head, letting him know just by the look in my eyes that I’m interested but I’m not desperate.
“I am willing to hear the offer, at least,” I say.
His eyes light up. He turns to the man in the suit beside him, whispers something in his ear and turns back to us as the man takes the glass elevator up to the top floor.
“Walk with me,” Hamburg says and the two of us follow him toward the elevator.
Hamburg tells us about the construction of his mansion while we wait for the glass elevator to make its way back down empty. And he rambles on about how much money he has put into it as if to covertly explain to me that he can spare whatever my price. I can sense Sarai getting more nervous as we rise toward the top floor. At one point, she clutches my hand and I glance down to see her delicate fingers tangled in mine. I squeeze her hand gently, letting her know that I’m here and that I’m going to do everything in my power to keep her safe. I glance over to see her eyes and right now all I see is Sarai looking back at me, the brave but anxious and complicated girl that I’ve grown very protective of.
We walk down one massive hallway where out ahead is the entrance to his room, intricate and overdone like the rest of the house. Two men in suits stand guard outside of it. Each of them, like the ones downstairs, carry guns hidden beneath their clothes. But I don’t. Not this time. Because I know Sarai and I will be checked before we’re let inside and to find one on either of us, two wealthy but otherwise simplistic individuals that have no reason to be carrying firearms, would change Hamburg’s initial assumptions about us. He might feel threatened and change his mind about letting us inside.
We stop at the entrance and I raise my arms out at my sides to let one guard pat me down.
Sarai does the same, but isn’t so quiet this time.
“Is this really necessary?” she hisses while the other guard pats her down.
“Sorry, my dear,” Hamburg says as he pushes open his suite doors, “but yes. Can’t be too careful.”
When the guards find nothing, they step aside and just before Hamburg closes the three of us off inside his room he says to the guards, “You may go. I’ll need a bit of privacy for the next hour or so.”
The two guards nod their acknowledgment and leave their post outside his room.
Sarai
The second the large double-doors lock behind us, I feel my heart sink into the pit of my stomach. But I shake it off and do my best to retain my Izabel Seyfried façade.
As I’m letting my gaze sweep the vast room I’m surprised at how fast Arthur Hamburg gets right to the point.
“I will tell you what I’d like and give you the opportunity to name your price.” He gestures for Victor to sit down in the nearby leather chair.
Victor sits and I find myself being left to stand here alone.
The masks have come off now that the two of them are alone together in the privacy of this room. Arthur Hamburg is no longer the disgustingly charming man he pretended to be out there in front of everyone. No, he’s the evil, sick bastard that Victor was sent here to kill. He’s no longer looking upon me as a guest of his mansion who deserves a glass of champagne and respect; I’m merely a pawn in his sexual game who isn’t worthy of his eyes or his conversation anymore. Only Victor is worthy of such luxuries. Victor is the one he wants. I see that now. But there’s so much more to it than I know. And it takes no time at all for the rest of it to unfold.
“What is it that you want?” Victor asks calmly, cunningly.
He rests his back against the chair and props his left ankle on the top of his right knee.
Arthur Hamburg takes the matching chair across from Victor, a devilish smile slides across his harsh features.
“I like to watch,” he says. “But none of that missionary position bullshit.” He pauses and adds, “You fuck the girl, every now and then do what I ask you to do to her and then afterwards, if you’re up to it—and for extra money—I’ll get on my knees in front of you.”
He grins and for the first time since I walked in here, his eyes skirt me.
While I’m secretly having an anxiety attack, Victor ponders it for a moment, making it seem as though he’s taking the offer into consideration.
Victor glances at me.
“No way,” I say right on cue. “He’s disgusting, Victor. I don’t agree to this.”
Victor stands up and casually takes me by the elbow.
“You’ll do what I tell you to do,” he says.
I shake my head back and forth, looking between them, trying not to break character, but finding it more and more difficult to achieve.
I can do this
, I tell myself as the loud pounding of my heart rises over my voice in my head.
Victor won’t hurt me. In any way. I have to believe that.
Why doesn’
t he just kill the pig now? I don’t understand…
With my elbow still clenched in his hand, Victor turns to Arthur Hamburg and says, “Fifteen thousand,” and Hamburg’s face lights up. “And it’ll be another fifteen if I let you go down on me.”
I feel my eyes widening in my skull.
“It’s a deal.”
“No,” I say and try to wrench my arm free, but then Victor narrows his eyes at me and I give in.
“Bend over the table,” Victor says.
What?...
He looks at the heavy square marble table to my right, moving nothing but his eyes.
“Now, Izabel,” he demands.
Oh my God…
Hesitantly I step over to the table and lay my stomach and chest across it from the waist up. Already I feel the air in the room brushing against the fabric of my panties. I swallow hard.
Victor comes up behind me and raises my short dress the rest of the way over my butt, resting it on my lower back. One of his hands squeezes my cheeks.
“Make her cry,” Arthur Hamburg says from the chair behind me. “I have things you can use if you’d like.”
“I can make her cry without them,” Victor says, pulling my panties down and letting them fall around my ankles. I gasp uncomfortably as I’m exposed. “But I might use them still. It’s been a while since I really hurt her.”
Arthur Hamburg makes a strange noise I’ve never heard before. “Oh yes, I’d very much like to see that.” He smacks his hands together and adds with creepy delight, “How small is she? I have a rubber bat.”
I freeze against the table, his comment sucking the breath right out of my lungs.
Are you fucking kidding me?
I’m ready to kill him now. He could be my first kill. I’m ready to do it!
My hands begin to shake underneath my chest.
Stay in character, Sarai…no matter what.
Then suddenly, as if we’re no longer in the room with this sick fucking bastard, I feel Victor’s fingers slide into me and I’m instantly wet. I gasp sharply, the warm breath emanating from my lips coats the marble table inches from my face with moisture. I watch it appear and disappear with every rapid breath I take.
“Spread your legs,” Victor instructs.
At first I don’t, but when he wedges both hands between my thighs and forces them apart, exposing me fully, I don’t fight him, I just grapple the edge of the table with my fingertips and straighten my back.
My mind struggles with the wrong in this. I know it’s wrong and disgusting because that man is sitting there watching this happen. But the other part of me, the part that is starting to block Arthur Hamburg’s presence from my mind entirely,
wants
Victor to have his way with me. I try to shut my eyes and picture only Victor in the room and it works a minute or two until I hear Arthur Hamburg’s voice again.
“Yes, she’s very pink. Very small,” he says and I grit my teeth.
Victor begins to stall.
“You know,” he says, “maybe you could show me what you have. I’ll fuck for a little bit first, open her up some, and then—”
“Say no more,” Arthur Hamburg says with a sadistic smile in his voice.
I hear him get up from the chair and then his dress shoes tap against the floor as he walks by. I see his pants have already been unbuttoned, his shirt untucked sloppily about his grotesque stomach. He’s already been touching himself. As he approaches what looks like a large closet, he stops about mid-way and turns back to Victor. He seems to be contemplating intensely until he says, “Would it be OK if I allowed my wife to watch with me?”
After a momentary pause, Victor answers, “An extra person wasn’t part of the deal.” He mulls it over. “But I suppose that would be alright. Is she downstairs?”
“Oh good,” Arthur Hamburg says, rubbing his fat hands together. He continues onward toward the closet, opening both enormous doors to reveal a walk-in bigger than an average bedroom. “No, I keep her in here.”
Huh? You
keep
her in there?
Sensing that this has gotten more than just Victor’s attention, I look up just as he walks past me. Having no idea what he’s doing, I’m not sure if I should stay like I am, or do what I’d rather do and stand up to let my dress drop back over my ass. I wait it out a few more minutes.
“Don’t be too shocked when you see her,” Arthur Hamburg says. It looks like he’s punching in a series of numbers on a silver keypad in the wall on the inside of the closet. “In a way, my Mary is just like your Izabel.”
“Is that so?” Victor says stepping into the closet with him.
Another massive door breaks apart from the wall inside the closet to reveal another room.
“Yes,” Arthur Hamburg goes on. “Though she’s much more submissive than yours.”
Then I hear a loud
thump
and a
bang
as the two of them disappear somewhere inside the hidden room. I scramble to pull my panties up and run across the space to see what’s going on, nearly tripping on my way there because of the heels.
“Victor!”
“Get in here, Izabel, now!” I hear him shout and though he called me Izabel, I know by the urgent tone in his voice that he’s speaking to me as Sarai.
Once I make my way past the tall shelves inside the closet and burst through into the hidden room, I’m shocked and confused by what I see, unable to form thoughts much less words. Victor has Arthur Hamburg pressed face-first against the wall with a tie wrapped tightly around his thick neck. His face bulges over the restricting fabric, his skin turning dark red and purple. A woman lies on a cot next to the wall wearing a long, see-through white cotton gown that has been soiled by urine and blood.
“In the closet,” Victor says, pressing his body against the struggling man, “there’s a briefcase on the floor with a gun inside. Get it.”
I nod rapidly and run back into the closet behind me to search for the briefcase, finding it in seconds. I take the gun out and rush back inside the room.
He frees one hand and I give it to him.
Victor shoves the gun against Arthur Hamburg’s temple and releases his body. He gasps for air, making desperate choking sounds as he tries to regain control of his breathing. Then Victor pats him down, checking for weapons. When he’s satisfied there are none, Victor reaches into his pants pocket and pulls out a pair of rubber gloves and tosses them to me, indicating for me to put them on.
I do so quickly.
“Now here are how things are going to happen,” Victor says to Arthur Hamburg. “Unfortunately, you get to live. If it were my choice, I’d of killed you last night at the restaurant, or any other Friday night before that. But you get to live.”
What. Is. Going. On?
I can’t wrap my mind around this unexpected turn of events.
“If you didn’t come here to kill me,” Arthur Hamburg says, his voice shaking with fear but laced with amusement, “then what the fuck are you here for? Money? I’ve got plenty of money. I’ll give you anything you want.”
Victor shoves Arthur Hamburg onto the floor and keeps the gun trained on him. Sweat is pouring from the man’s face and neck, soaking his white dress shirt. Then Victor reaches inside his hidden suit jacket pocket and hands me a small yellow envelope.
“Open it,” he instructs.
As I’m doing that, Victor turns back to him.
“The death will be ruled as a suicide,” Victor says and I’m growing even more confused. “She left a note signed by her hand. All you have to do is wait one hour after we leave to call it in.”
“What the fuck are you talking about?” Arthur Hamburg snaps, despite a gun being pointed at him.
I can’t decide who to look at more, the sick man on the floor or the poor woman lying on the cot.
Suddenly she looks up at me with sad, weak, tormented eyes and a chill runs through my body.
“Victor we have to help her.” I start to move toward her.
“No,” Victor says. “Leave her be.”
“But—”
“Remove the contents of the envelope,” he interrupts.
I take out a folded piece of paper first, trying to grasp the feel of it through the tight rubber gloves sealed to my hands.
“Read it,” he says.
Carefully, I unfold it and look down into the pretty handwriting in a blue ink flourish. And as I begin to read the letter aloud, I start to feel queasy and my heart hurts.
My Dearest Husband,
I can’t do this with you anymore. I’ve shamed my family, our children, we’ve shamed ourselves, Arthur. I don’t love you anymore. I don’t love myself. I don’t love anyone because I can’t. I haven’t been able to feel a valid emotion in twelve years of the thirty I’ve been married to you for. I can’t live like this anymore. So many times I wanted to seek help, maybe get on medication. I don’t know, but after so long, after years of wanting to get help I started not to care.
I am so sorry that you had to see me this way. I’m so sorry that I couldn’t come to you for help. But I didn’t
want
help. I just wanted it to end.
And that’s what I’m doing.
I’m ending it.
Goodbye, Arthur.
Sincerely,
Mary
The man can’t take his eyes off his wife. His flabby chin vibrates as he tries to hold in his tears. But I still don’t feel a shred of remorse for him. Not only because I’m still struggling to figure out why this has happened, but because I know he’s a sick man and doesn’t deserve remorse.
“Why are you here?” he asks, his husky voice shuddering.
Victor looks to me. “Give me the SD card,” he says.
I pull the tiny square card from the corner of the bottom of the envelope and place it into Victor’s free hand. He holds it up to Arthur Hamburg wedged between his thumb and index finger.
“All of the information on this card has already been transferred to my employer. The names on your extensive client list, the locations of your underground operations, the video evidence that your dear wife recorded that you knew nothing about. It’s all here.” He throws the SD card onto Arthur Hamburg’s chest. “If anyone comes looking for me or Izabel for the death of your wife and it’s not ruled a suicide, all of that information will be released to the FBI. We are to walk out of here unharmed and as welcomed as we were when we walked through your front doors. Is that understood?”