Jens Lapidus - Easy Money

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Easy Money: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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I looked at him and nodded. “Tough day,” I said.
He shrugged. “Me, too,” he said and pulled onto the expressway. – DENNIS LEHANE
It worked. It happened. It cohered. He did it-he made white horse. – JAMES ELLROY
From one of Sweden's most successful defense lawyers comes an unflinching look at Stockholm's underworld, told from the perspective of the mob bosses, the patsies, and the thugs who help operate its twisted justice system.
JW is a student having trouble keeping up appearances in the rich party crowd he has involved himself with. He's desperate for money, and when he's offered a job dealing drugs to the very crowd he's vying for a place in, he accepts it. Meanwhile, Jorge, a young Latino drug dealer, has just broken out of jail and is itching for revenge. When JW's supplier gets wind of Jorge's escape, he suggests JW track him down and attempt to win his trust in order to cover more area in the drug circuit. But JW's not the only one on Jorge's trail: Mrado, the brutal muscle behind the Yugoslavian mob boss whose goons were the ones who ratted Jorge out to the cops, is also on the hunt. But like everyone else, he's tired of being a mere pawn in an impossibly risky game, and he's seeking to carve out a niche of his own. As the paths of these antiheroes intertwine further, they find themselves mercilessly pitted against one another in a world where allegiances are hard-won, revenge is hard-fought, and a way out of it all is even harder to come by.
Fast and intricately paced, and with pitch-perfect dialogue, Easy Money is a raw, dark, and intelligent crime novel that has catapulted Jens Lapidus into the company of Sweden's most acclaimed crime writers.

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“It becomes some sort of status, but in the long term it gets pretty annoying for them, since they become more visible, and that isn’t something they want,” said Lena Olofsson, criminal investigator working with Project Nova.

The heavy criminals are organized in unified networks and they specialize in different types of crimes. Conflicts can arise when different gangs compete for the same market. “There is a code of honor that has led to confrontations between different gangs, for example the Hells Angels and the Bandidos MC. Even the so-called Yugoslavian networks have had internal conflicts. Right now, the problems are especially big in southern Stockholm.”

Young People Seek Out the Gangs

Recruitment to the criminal gangs is large. It is common that the more experienced criminals plan, while the younger ones, the so-called chips, actually carry out the crimes. Sometimes the older and more experienced members participate as “mentors.”

37

They met up in the Sollentuna Mall. Jorge felt at home there. Indoor streets, the usual stores: H &M, the Systembolaget liquor store, B &R Toys, Intersport, Duka, Lindex, Teknikmagasinet. And the ICA supermarket. Jorge remembered how the food he’d bought there’d fallen to the ground when he was jumped by the Yugos. Then he remembered all the times he’d shoplifted there as a kid.

Jorge’s fear of being recognized returned. It’d happened once three weeks ago, right here in Sollentuna. The danger zone for Jorge, highest density of people who recognized him. That time, he’d been there to meet a guy who dealt for him. In the stairwell of the apartment building on Malmvägen, a woman’d walked past who knew Jorge’s mom. She’d tried to joke, yelled at him in Chilean slang: “Jorgelito. You been tanning in Africa?” He’d ignored her. Kept walking out of the building, with his panicked heart beating faster than a drum ’n’ bass rhythm.

Told himself, It’s cool. I’m way down on the 5-0’s lists by now. I’ve changed my appearance. I’m a different guy. She was the first one in months who’d actually recognized him.

They each bought a Coca-Cola at a bodega: Jorge, the prostitute from the brothel in Hallonbergen, and her sidekick, a dude Jorge hadn’t seen before.

The dude: an enormous Sven-six eight, at least. His chest was three feet across and there was no difference between the width of his neck and his head. Doubtful if the guy could walk without his thighs rubbing, friction between Black Angus beef shanks.

“This is Micke,” the girl said.

Jorge wondered if the giant was her boyfriend or her pimp. Didn’t dare ask. He was ashamed that he’d paid her for sex a week ago. The real question: Was he ashamed ’cause it was embarrassing or ’cause it was wrong?

Jorge raised an eyebrow. Signal to the chick: What’s with the guy?

The girl understood. Said, “Chill. He just wanna come along. See nothing happen to me.”

“Is he gonna listen to everything we’re saying, or what? Can’t have that.”

The dude answered with a shriller voice than expected. “Relax, twiggy. I’ll just walk a few feet behind you.”

Shady as hell. Why’d she brought this guy? J-boy didn’t take any risks. J-boy knew what could happen when you let meatheads out of your sight. He said, “You can keep close, but you gotta walk in front. So I can see you.”

The giant stared him down. Cracked his knuckles. Jorge ignored him. Said, “If she wants the cash, you’ll do what I say.”

The chick okayed it.

They walked out of the mall. Through the sliding doors. Toward the park. In silence. The giant always twenty or so feet ahead.

Jorge: happiest dealer in town. Tricked the popo grande. Clearly, cockiest cocaine coup ever. Plucked that NK bag with blow right from under their snouts. Booked it-pigs were wheezy geezers-swung himself down from the bridge, and jumped. Landed in the snow on Långholmen. Foot fixed the fall: flourishing feat. Almost lost it when he realized Långholmen was an island. Then he thought, Sweden is a wonderful country. There’s winter; there’s ice. He made his way to the south side of the island, toward Hornstull. Ran over the ice. It was thin, but it bore him. He ran between the houses lining the water on Bergsunds Strand. Came out on the other side, by Tantolunden. All clear. He hailed a cab at Ringvägen.

The second-best thing about the whole deal: They might have a hard time pinning anything on Mehmed. Hopefully, they couldn’t prove that he’d been in possession of cocaine. On the other hand, Big Brother usually managed to prove what Big Brother wanted to prove. They’d been caught with their pants down, claro. Usually, they switched out the cocaine for something else, kept the authentic gear as evidence. But this time, they’d let Mehmed drive off with the real stuff. Probable reason: They knew that someone was gonna test the shit and they wanted to get at the true bad boys, the higher-ups. Losers-J-boy wasn’t an easy catch.

The only piss on his parade: How’d it gone down?

The most probable answer was that Silvia, the courier, had fucked it up. Maybe she’d answered all wrong in customs. Maybe there’d been dogs. Maybe-terrible thought-someone’d tipped them off.

He didn’t give a fuck right now. The blow was his/Abdulkarim’s. At least three million kronor gross on the street. Stockholm’s boroughs were theirs for the taking.

Jorge and the chick were approaching the wooded area. The giant stayed up front. The snow lay thick, beautifully white. The path was well sanded. Jorge, with slippery sneakers on his feet, was grateful for the park service’s diligence.

She turned to him, made it clear she was ready to talk.

“Good that you came,” he said.

“It cost.”

“Of course. What we agreed on.”

“Yes. Where I start?”

“Why don’t you start by telling me your name?”

“Call me Nadja. What I say?”

“Start from the beginning. How’d you get here?”

She didn’t gush, told her tale in few words. Jorge thought, She’s pretty. That special something remains: She was playing hard-boiled, while at the same time there was something she wanted to say. He could tell. She was easily persuaded. Too eager. The first time he’d met her in the apartment brothel, she’d told him that Mr. R. spread a Hugo Boss scent. Jorge’d checked it out with people who knew. It was correct. Radovan loved Hugo Boss. Everything Boss-suits, shirts, coats. Aftershave.

How could she know Rado smelled like Hugo Boss? Only two answers. Either someone’d told her, but that was improbable. Or she’d met him up close.

Possibility number two made her into Jorge’s most interesting lead yet.

There was something she wanted to say. He was impressed by her courage.

She told him how she’d come to Sweden from Bosnia-Herzegovina six years ago. Eighteen years old. Raped four times by Serbian militia during her early teens. Applied for asylum here. Lived in a refugee camp outside Gnesta for two years. Thought she’d known what the word bureaucracy meant from her home country. Now she really knew what it meant. Life sucked. She took Swedish for Immigrants classes two hours every day. She was talented. Learned quickly. Other than that, she spent her days sprawled on a bed. Watched shopping shows and matinee movies in a Swedish she didn’t yet understand. Once tried to go shopping on her own in Stockholm: her two thousand kronor a month-one thousand after she’d sent money home to her family in Sarajevo-wasn’t enough for zilch. Never did that again. Stayed in her room. Slept, watched TV, listened to the radio. Near the edge of apathy. Thought only money could save her. One night, a neighbor on her hall at the camp asked if she wanted to smoke up. The feeling: the only nice experience she’d had since the time before the Bosnian catastrophe. It continued like that: They gathered in the neighbor’s room a couple of times a week. Just sat. Smoked. Relaxed. The downside: The need for cash flow became desperate. She stopped sending money home. Hardly helped. Her debt grew. The solution came through the same neighbor, who did it herself-let some guy come to her room once a week or so, gave him a hand job, sometimes sucked a little. Made a couple hundred kronor. Later that night, they gathered in the neighbor’s room again. Built bigger roaches. Took deeper hits. Forgot all the shit.

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