Read Trafficked: The Terrifying True Story of a British Girl Forced into the Sex Trade Online
Authors: Sophie Hayes
âHide it
where
?' I whispered, closing my fingers around the bag and glancing nervously towards the door.
âShove it inside you.' He pushed me towards the bedroom. âAnd lock the fucking door.'
At that moment, a voice shouted â
Carabinieri!
' and I fled into the bedroom, closing the door silently behind me.
Fortunately, the two policemen didn't come into the flat, and for the next 10 minutes I sat, uncomfortably, on the bed, listening to the muffled sound of their voices and longing to light a cigarette. I couldn't make out what they were saying and Kas wouldn't tell me afterwards why they'd come. But when he eventually kicked the bedroom door and told me to come out, he was laughing, although his voice sounded contemptuous as he said, âFucking stupid bastards. Who do they think they are? Do they think they're going to catch
me
? They're
never
going to catch me! Fucking peasants, riding around in their police cars thinking they're so important.'
On another night, he made me sit in the kitchen and cut out little squares of plastic to wrap up a huge batch of cocaine. He reminded me â unnecessarily â about cutting
off my nose if I even so much as sniffed in its general direction, and then he went into the living room to watch television.
Although it was a simple enough task, my palms were sweating and I was in a state of high anxiety, as I always was whenever Kas told me to do anything. But I was still taken by surprise when he came into the kitchen, snatched the scissors out of my hand and, pressing the tips into my cheek, shouted in my face, âHow stupid are you? Have you got sawdust in your head?'
I blinked and cringed away from him. But instead of hitting me, he picked up a piece of plastic paper from the table and cut out a square â which was almost identical to the ones I'd been making, except just a little larger. Then he grabbed me by the hair, wrenching my head back so that my neck twisted painfully, and held the square a couple of inches in front of my eyes as he said, angrily, â
This
is how you do it. This is not hard. How can you not be able to do this? Were you brought up by peasants?'
âNo!' I wanted to shout back at him. âI was brought up by people who weren't drug dealers and so never asked me to cut out little squares of plastic paper to wrap up cocaine.' But instead, I said quietly, âI'm sorry. I didn't know. I haven't done this before.'
Kas's erratic, volatile temper was one of the most frightening things about him, and I was constantly trying â almost always unsuccessfully â to anticipate when and why he might fly into a rage, which meant that I was in a
permanent state of anxiety. One minute he'd be okay â although it was rare for him to be actually calm and uncritical â and the next he'd be out of control, hitting me and shouting at me that I was stupid and that he didn't know why he bothered with me at all.
I still don't know if it was all a carefully calculated act to make me frightened of him â which it did â or whether he was actually mentally unstable. But it certainly seemed that almost everything I did was wrong, and even really minor mistakes â things that most other people would have considered too unimportant even to bother commenting on â seemed to send Kas into a frenzy of fury.
One day, he told me to pack away in a suitcase some clothes I didn't need, and as I knelt on the floor folding T-shirts and sweaters, he sat on the bed talking in Albanian on the telephone and watching me. There was always a knot of fear in my stomach and I was constantly checking and double-checking everything I did, trying to deflect his next explosion of anger. But I was most nervous of all when he was watching me, although, on this occasion, there didn't seem to be much to worry about when all I was doing was putting clothes in a suitcase. I was wrong, though, and he suddenly came flying across the room, shouting, âIs
that
how you pack a suitcase? What kind of woman are you? How are you ever going to have a family? How could you have children and be a wife? You can't clean properly, you can't cook properly, you can't even fold clothes and pack a suitcase properly. Do you think it's all
right just to push socks down the sides like that? Well,
do
you?'
It felt as though my whole body was shrinking and as I cowered away from him, I glanced up just as he reached out his hand, grabbed a fistful of my hair and pulled me to my feet, screaming at me, âYou fucking snake! How dare you look at me sideways like that with your sly, disrespectful eyes? That's the way Albanian peasants look at people. How
dare
you disrespect me? How fucking dare you?'
Then he dropped me abruptly on to the floor and as I tried to cover my head with my arms and curl my body into a protective ball, he started kicking me viciously. He was like a furious, snarling animal â and all because he didn't approve of the way I'd pushed a pair of socks into a suitcase and then looked up at him as he approached me from the side.
They say that just before people drown, they stop struggling to keep their heads above water and become almost calm, and that was how I felt at that moment. Whatever I did, however hard I tried, it seemed to make no difference and I was completely weary.
Kick me
, I thought.
Kick me as much as you want if it makes you happy
â because I knew that Kas had finally broken my spirit and I'd given up.
But, instead of kicking me again, he almost ran out of the room, and I was still lying on the floor with my eyes closed and pain radiating into every part of my body when he came back a few seconds later, carrying a gun. Dragging
me up by my hair, he shoved the barrel of the gun into my mouth, crushing my lips painfully against my teeth, and said, in a quiet, cold voice that frightened me even more than his shouting, âNever,
ever
, look at me in that way again.'
I was whimpering and terrified, although part of me wanted to shout back at him, âGo on then, just do it. Pull the trigger. Why would I care?'
And then he took the gun out of my mouth, pushed me towards the bathroom with a force that sent me sprawling across the floor, and said, âNow go and clean yourself up.'
Kas always told me what to wear every day, and that night he'd chosen a white mini-skirt, skimpy pink top, short zip-up jacket and shoes with stiletto heels. And by the time I was dressed and went into the living room, his mood had changed completely. Putting his hand on my shoulder, he turned me round and said, âLook at you! You are so beautiful, woman! All the men queue up to be with you because you are so amazing. Everybody wants to know you. Let me take your photograph.'
So I stood there, confused and disorientated, while he took pictures of me and told me, âYou are my girl, my special little mouse.' And then he sat down on the sofa, pulled me on to his knee and stroked my hair as he said, âYou are my special girl and I shouldn't have done that to you. I'm sorry, but you make me so angry. If you just learned to do what I tell you and didn't disrespect me, you wouldn't ever be in trouble. But you always make mistakes.'
Again, he knocked the side of my head with his knuckles as he added, âI don't want you to make mistakes. I want you to be a good girl, so that I don't have to be angry with you. I want you to do things properly, and then I won't have to shout at you anymore.'
I sat on his knee, crying and wishing with all my heart that I
wasn't
so stupid and that I could learn not to get things wrong all the time, while he stroked my hair again, wiped the tears from my cheeks and said, âAh, you're like a little dog, with your big, sad eyes. I don't want to see tears in your eyes anymore. I don't want you to cry.' I put my arms around his neck as I whispered, âI'm sorry. I'm
so
sorry. I don't mean to be bad. I don't know why I'm so stupid or why I always make mistakes, but I
promise
I'll be better. I won't get things wrong anymore.'
Although everyone kept telling my mother, âSophie's fine. You should just relax and be pleased she's enjoying herself,' she couldn't shake off the feeling that something was wrong. She told herself it was just because she was missing me and because it had been so out of character for me to decide not to come home in the way I'd done. But she wasn't convinced and she felt worried.
Before I'd gone to Italy, my mum had told me that if ever anything went wrong and I needed her help but couldn't speak openly on the phone for any reason, I should ask her, âHow's Auntie Linda?' One day, when I'd been in Italy for a few weeks and was talking to her on the phone, telling her for the umpteenth time that everything
was fine â and then biting my lip to stop myself bursting into tears â she interrupted me and said, âDid you want to ask about Auntie Linda?'
I knew what she meant and I wanted more than anything in the world to scream â
Yes!
' down the phone at her, but Kas was standing right beside me and although he couldn't hear what she was saying, I was terrified of making him suspicious or angry. I think, too, that I was so ashamed of what I was doing I didn't see how I would ever be able to tell my mother the truth. So I said, âI'm okay. Stop worrying about me. Everything's fine.' I reassured her again that I was having a great time in Italy and then I said âGoodbye', as cheerfully as I could, and handed the phone to Kas.
âWhat was your mother saying to you?' he asked, still holding it in his outstretched hand and watching me with his eyes narrowed. âWhy did you have to tell her not to worry?'
My heart began to thud. Perhaps he
had
heard what she'd said after all and if I didn't tell him the truth, he'd fly into a rage. But if I did tell him, I'd have to think of some plausible explanation of what she meant, and my mind was already shutting down because of the fear.
Somehow, though, I managed to keep my voice level as I said, âOh, it was nothing. She thought I sounded as though I had a cold and she was just asking if I was all right.' Then I shrugged and added, âYou know what mothers are like â they always worry about things like that.'
Kas continued to look at me steadily for a moment and then he said, âOkay. But make sure you tell her you're eating properly and that everything's fine.'
In fact, I did have a cold that day. I was barely eating, standing night after night in the freezing cold and sometimes in torrential rain, and so run down that there was rarely a day when I wasn't ill in some way. But it didn't matter how ill I was, I still had to go out to work. There was just one night when Kas let me stay at home. I was exhausted and I'd had a horrible feeling all day that something really bad was going to happen if I went out. So I told him I had terrible stomach pains, and although he shouted at me, eventually he said, âRight, stay in the bedroom and sleep. I don't want to see you looking at the television. If I see you even move, you can't imagine how much trouble you'll be in. You've cost me money, woman, and tomorrow you're going back to work, however ill you feel.' But he didn't need to warn and threaten me because I slept for almost 24 hours, and I would have stayed asleep every day and every night for a week if I'd had the chance.
Sometimes, Kas would wake me up during the day and tell me to get dressed because we were going out â usually to buy me new âworking clothes'. He always told me what to wear, and in the daytime it was tracksuit bottoms, trainers, a jacket and a cap, with my hair tied back and very little make-up, because keeping a low profile was very important to him, and his main aim was for no one to notice us.
So one day, when we were driving somewhere and I looked up just as a police car drove slowly past us, he waited until it was out of sight and then smashed my head sideways against the window.
â
Why?
Why would you look at the police?' he shouted at me. âAre you trying to draw attention to us? Are you trying to get me into trouble? I've got fucking cocaine in this car and if I get caught, it will be your fault, and then what are you going to do? You're going to be stuck here all on your own with no one to look after you. Is that what you want?' And I felt really angry with myself for having looked at the police car without thinking about the consequences.
There were so many times when I was frightened of Kas, so many times when a knot formed in my stomach and my heart pounded in my chest as I waited for his reaction to something. One of the worst times of all was the night he decided I was cheating on him.
It was almost half past 5 on a Sunday morning, I'd been out since 8 o'clock on the Saturday night, and I was just about to start the long walk back to the flat when a car pulled up beside me. Although numb with exhaustion, I decided to go with just this one last client, but as soon as I got into his car, I realised he'd been drinking. My heart sank: drunk guys always took forever and I knew Kas would be expecting me back. And then my phone rang.
Of all the things I was frightened of â and by this time there were almost too many to count â not answering the phone when Kas rang was perhaps the most frightening of
all. From the very first day, he had instilled in me the need to answer his calls immediately, and even when I did, he would threaten me and swear at me in Albanian for being so slow to respond. So it didn't matter who I was with or what I was doing, I would scrabble to reach my phone with my heart racing.
âWhere are you?' Kas shouted. âYou get your arse back here â
now!
'
âI've just got into a car,' I whispered. âIt's the last one.'
âFifteen minutes,' he said. âYou've got fifteen minutes and then I'll come looking for you.'
Fifteen minutes later, the man still hadn't finished and my phone rang again.
âWhere the
fuck
are you? I'm worried sick, going out of my mind thinking something's happened to you. You could be fucking dead for all I know,' although he sounded angry rather than concerned for my safety.
âI'm coming. I'm coming,' I told him. âIt's just ⦠I won't be long.'
Five minutes later, while the man was still grunting and fumbling and trying to focus through his drunken haze, my phone rang again.
âWoman, are you fucking with me?' Kas's voice roared in my ear. âYou see what I'm going to do to you now! I'm on my way and I'm going to fucking kill him and then I'm going to kill you. You are fucking dead, woman.'
I started trying to push the guy off me, telling him, âYou've got to go. Go!
Now!
'
âWhy? What's wrong?' His speech was slurred but he must have recognised the urgency in my voice because he moved back quickly into his seat and sped off almost before I'd had time to clamber out of his car.
As I stood shivering at the side of the road, I could hear the intermittent screech of tyres as Kas's car sped down the winding hill from his flat, and when he pulled up beside me, he reached behind and flung open the back door. I bent down to get in, and he grabbed me by my hair, dragging me to the middle of the seat. Then he banged the door closed, swept the car in an arc across the road and drove with one hand on the steering wheel and the fingers of the other entwined again in my hair.
âWhere
is
he?' Kas screamed. âWhere is the motherfucker? I'm going to fucking kill him.'
I'd lost count of all the times I'd seen him in a rage, but never before had he been as furious as he was then.
âI don't know what you're talking about,' I whimpered, clutching my head with my hands to try to stop the hairs tugging painfully at my scalp.
âI know you're fucking cheating on me!' he bellowed. âHow dare you disrespect me in this way?'
âI'm not. I didn't do anything,' I sobbed. âPlease, I promise.'
âYou're risking everything.' He banged my head again and again on the back of the seat until it felt as though my brain was crashing against the inside of my skull and I thought I was going to pass out. âI could get caught by the
police coming out here to look for you. I'll find him and I'll kill him. What sort of car is he driving?'
But he didn't wait for me to answer. Lifting me up by my hair, he dragged me along the seat until I was half-sitting, with my body twisted away from him, and then he started punching me, turning away occasionally to glance at the road.
By the time we arrived at the flat there was an intense, hot pain in my back and shoulders and it felt as though every muscle had been ripped apart. Kas told me to sit on the sofa and when he stood in front of me, I shut my eyes and waited for the moment when his fist would crash into my face. But, instead of hitting me, he leaned down towards me, smoothed and straightened my hair and said, in a quiet, almost normal, voice, âShow me how much money you've got.'
I handed him the wad of notes and he sat down on the chair beside the sofa to count them. Kas always counted the money himself, sorting the notes one by one and placing them in neat, orderly piles of hundreds, fifties, twenties and tens on the table in front of him, all in the same orientation and with their corners smoothed. He'd be angry if I'd been given any five-Euro notes â âThe money used by peasants' he called it, spitting out the words with disgust â and one night he went crazy, shouting at me and hitting me for handing him some coins. âWhat sort of person pays for sex with coins?' he shrieked at me. âAnd what sort of person accepts them?' So I always dreaded this moment.
On this particular night, however, although I held my breath as I always did, I'd been working for at least nine hours, so I knew there was enough money to satisfy even Kas. But suddenly he was on his feet again, screaming at me, âYou cheating bitch! How many times have I told you: do not cheat on me; do not steal from me. Do you think â¦'
It was like being trapped in a horrible, illogical, never-ending dream, where nothing made sense and everything that happened was unexpected and inexplicable.
âI didn't cheat on you,' I cried. âI didn't steal any of the money. It's all there. Everything I've earned tonight is there.'
âDon't you dare to interrupt me.' Kas spoke slowly in a voice that was cold and full of threat.
Again, I shut my eyes and held my breath, waiting for him to hit me. But this time he left the room and came back a few seconds later holding a knife in one hand and a broom in the other. I watched as he dropped the knife on to a chair and unscrewed the brush head from the broom. Then he picked up the knife again and stood, towering above me as I cowered on the sofa. In a dangerously pleasant voice he said, âSo. I'm going to let you choose. Which one do you want? The knife or the stick?'
âI didn't do anything wrong,' I whispered. âPlease, Kas, I â¦'
âThe knife or the stick?' he repeated more loudly, bending down and pushing them both into my face.
âThe stick,' I snivelled, and as he threw the knife on the chair and raised the stick above his head, I dropped on to the floor, locking my arms around his leg and pleading
with him, âPlease,
please
don't do this. I
promise
I didn't do anything.
Please
â¦'
The handle of the broom crashed down just once on the back of my skull and then came flying past my head as Kas threw it on the floor and shouted at me, âLook what you've made me do now â and all because you wanted to screw someone else.'
âI didn't. I didn't do anything wrong,' I sobbed. But my voice was barely audible. Reaching out my hand to feel for the edge of the sofa, I managed to drag myself to my feet and stagger into the bathroom just in time before I was violently sick.
When I came out of the bathroom, my head was still spinning. I felt dizzy, almost as though my mind had become detached from my body and I was watching myself from the outside. And Kas was still in a fury. Grabbing me by the hair with the fingers of one hand, he yanked me towards him, and as he did so he used his other hand to punch me with such violent force that he sent my body smashing against the wall.
I was more scared of him than I'd ever been before, not least because I knew how easy it would be for him to kill me â either deliberately or inadvertently â even though I hadnât done anything wrong. And although I didn't realise what had happened until much later, that was the night he cracked my shoulder blade.
My body was already covered in bruises from all the other times he'd punched me and bashed my head repeat
edly against the wall. But the pain in my neck, across my shoulders and down my arms was the worst I'd ever experienced. When he eventually waved his hand at me in disgust and told me to go to bed, I had to sleep in my clothes because I couldn't raise my arms high enough to take them off.
I was never allowed to count the money, but I did keep a rough tally in my head, so that I knew how many more customers I needed before I'd earned at least the minimum that he expected me to make every night. I'd stopped keeping the money in my boots after the first week because I was afraid of being kidnapped or of someone trying to steal it from me â and would push 50 Euros through a little hole I'd made in the lining at the back of my jacket and put the rest in a plastic bag, which I'd bury in a hole in the rough ground behind the petrol station.
One Saturday night, I worked constantly until six in the morning â at one point there were three cars lined up, all regular customers waiting for me â and I knew I must have earned a small fortune. Kas had a couple of friends staying with him, and when I got back, they were all asleep and the flat was in darkness. I hated the men being there, particularly because I knew they had no reason to care about me and that anything could happen. So I crept into the bathroom, opened the plastic bag of money, counted it and then pulled off my coat, pushing my hand through the slit in the lining and pulling frantically at the material as I searched for the notes I must have put in there and then
forgotten about. And then the voice in my head shouted
No!