by Steve Lee
Kill Switch
Chapter 01
Chapter 02
Chapter 03
Chapter 04
Chapter 05
Chapter 06
Chapter 07
Chapter 08
Chapter 09
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
The Story Continues…
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Free Stuff – Black File 01
Free Stuff – Angel of Darkness extract
Angel of Darkness Series Information
About Steve N. Lee
Copyright
Chapter 01
Like playing Russian roulette in slow motion, waiting for death tortured Catalina. Even though she had accepted the end was coming, she could still do nothing but wait for it to creep up and surprise her one day. Her mom joked it was God’s worst ever practical joke. Cat wished she could be so lighthearted about it too.
To shield herself from the rain, Cat held her tourist map of Krakow over her head as she scurried across the cobbled square dotted with bedraggled pedestrians.
Town Hall Tower loomed over her. Yesterday in the sun, the two-hundred-foot Gothic structure had looked majestic with its arched windows, stone lions guarding its entrance, and warm, cream-colored stone contrasted with red brick. Reminding her of home, the architecture had given her a welcome glow.
Today, with storm clouds sitting on its spire, the shadowy tower oozed foreboding. And that made her ache for home so much it hurt. Except, after what she’d done, there was no place she could call home.
Her rain-drenched canvas shoes squelching, Cat tramped down yet another narrow street of dull red, blue and gray medieval buildings. Four days ago, she’d had a home, a career, a future. Then they’d traveled here and become all but destitute. Hell, she hated this city for what it had done to her and her mom.
Goddamnit, she couldn’t think like that. She had to stay strong. After all, she wasn’t the one dying. Though that would make it a million times easier. No, it was her mom – the only person in the world who ‘got’ her.
In an antique store window, Cat glimpsed a gold-framed mirror.
She cringed. “Oh, God.”
Her eyes were puffy from all her crying. Her usually flowing brown hair hung a straggly mass. And her skin… As gray and lifeless as the cobbled streets. Hell, she looked fifty-seven, not twenty-seven.
She huffed. Her cosmetics had gone along with everything else. Everything. Their entire world had been packed into that car.
She trudged into yet another hotel. In a walnut-paneled lobby, red armchairs sat before a stone fireplace with a crest chiseled into the chimney breast depicting three castle towers above an eagle.
Cat looked down at her clothes. Utterly soaked, her white cotton top clung to her breasts as if she’d come to audition for a porn movie. Great.
She bumped into someone.
A woman glanced up from texting, blond hair cascading over her shoulders and red lips pouting like in some cheap fashion magazine.
Coming as second nature, Cat apologized. “Imi pare rau.” Oh, damn, she had to remember to speak Polish, not Romanian. “Er… Przepraszam.”
The woman winced a smile and strutted toward the exit.
At the reception desk ahead, a sullen woman with her hair in a bun stared at an LCD monitor.
Cat drew a deep breath, then strode forward, shoulders back, head up, trying to shake off all the earlier rejections. In her mind, she rehearsed the Polish speech her mom had prepared, but with each step, her pounding heart battered the words, making them harder and harder to pronounce.
The receptionist smiled at Cat with all the warmth of a fishmonger looking at a dead cod. In Polish, she said, “Hello.”
Cat replied in Polish, “Hi, do you, er… er… have any work, please? I’m – I’m, er, willing to do anything.”
All Cat needed was just enough to pay their extra costs while they waited to see if the police recovered their car. It wasn’t like she was asking for charity. Hell, no. Just a chance.
“No, sorry.” The woman returned to her monitor without another word.
“Thank you.” Cat squeezed out a smile and then slouched away.
That was the ninth rejection that morning and the thirty-sixth in all. But she couldn’t give up. Staying here was eating into the money they’d scraped together. If she didn’t replace it, they’d never get to England. And they had to get there. Had to. If her mom didn’t receive the treatment she needed… Hell, Cat would sell her goddamn soul to get the money if she had to.
A café sat across the street, decorated with cheerful greens and yellows, its sidewalk tables empty because of the rain. She tramped over.
Inside, the aroma of fresh pastries enveloped Cat. A chubby guy waltzed past her carrying a plate piled with enough delicacies to feed a family, crumbs on his lips from the bite he’d already taken.
Cat’s mouth watered. Having had no breakfast, she yearned to splurge, but knew she’d hate herself afterward for wasting money. Trying not to look at any food, she joined the line behind a skinny guy sending a tweet.
As the line dwindled, Cat reached into her canvas purse and gently held her four-leaf clover in its plastic pouch. She had a good feeling about this place. Yes, this was the place where she saved her mom.
At the counter, she spoke Polish to a middle-aged woman with a strawberry-shaped nose.
“Hi, do you have any work, please? I, er, I’m willing to do anything.”
“Yes,” said the woman.
Cat gasped. “Yes?”
But then the woman spouted more Polish at her.
Cat caught a couple of words she understood, but they meant nothing out of context. She gawked wide-eyed.
The woman frowned, then repeated what she’d said.
Cat swallowed hard. “Er…” They’d only had time for her mom to prep her on a handful of phrases. After all, how much Polish did she need to wash dishes or mop floors?
A bead of sweat trickled from Cat’s temple. She looked at the nearby customers, hoping someone might somehow come to her rescue. A girl chewed gum, staring at her phone; an old lady rooted in her pink purse; a handsome man in a suit caught her eye but looked away.
Her heart hammering, she grabbed the only chance she had – she asked if the woman spoke English. “Czy mowi pani po angielsku?”
The woman waved Cat away and went back to her work.
No! Cat needed this job. She called out, “Anything. Please.”
The woman shook her head without even looking at Cat.
Cat tottered toward the exit, feeling like she’d been sucker punched. She’d had a chance. And then blown it. How was she going tell her mom?
Wobbly from the unending upset, she rested a hand on the table near the door to steady herself. Her breath shuddered as she struggled to control her emotions. She failed. As if someone were balling it like a sheet of paper, Cat’s face scrunched up and tears rolled down her cheeks.
Something brushed her hand on the table, so she glanced down.
The texting blonde from the hotel had pushed a napkin across to her.
Cat
nodded her thanks, then dabbed her eyes.
With a sigh, she gazed out into the unforgiving rain, then shuffled outside. She peered along the street for other opportunities. Okay, so who was going to make her feel like crap next?
Behind her, someone spoke in English. “Miss?”
Cat ignored them, it never registering that someone was actually talking to her.
A hand touched her shoulder. She jumped and whipped around.
Beneath a black umbrella, a man with wavy brown hair and gentle blue eyes smiled at her – the handsome man in the suit from the café.
He said, “You look for job?”
“Yes. Why?”
He held his arms wide. “I cleaner job have.” The rain momentarily fell onto his navy suit, which had obviously been tailored for him.
After all the rejection, she was unsure whether he was being kind or playing a cruel joke. “A cleaning job for me? Really?”
“We are charity, so is small money, but for you, really, I have job.” He handed her a business card with the name embossed in gold. “Jacek Grabowski.”
“Catalina Petrescu.” Beaming, she shook his hand. “Thank you. Thank you so much.”
“You welcome.” He smiled warmly. “You Hungarian? Czech?”
“Romanian.”
“Oh, Romanians wonderful people. Very wonderful.”
He held his umbrella out to share it. “Please.”
Cat grinned. He had manners and work, and could speak a language she understood. After all the bad luck they’d suffered, finally, some good luck had come their way. And thank God – that man from their consulate hadn’t yet returned her call and they were burning through their money fast.
As she ducked under his umbrella, knocking came from the café. She peeped around him.
The blonde woman rapped on the window. When she caught Cat’s eye, she shook her head vigorously. Cat checked over her shoulder to see if the blonde was gesturing to someone behind her. She wasn’t. How odd.
Jacek said, “You want see job?”
When she didn’t immediately reply, he said, “If no, is okay.”
“Yes. Yes, please.” She wasn’t sure if she was doing the right thing, but she needed money to get them to England, to get her mom the treatment she needed, to get the chance to enjoy a few more months together, maybe even years.
“Ah, good. So come” – he gestured down the street – “I have car.”
Cat shrank back. This guy was a godsend, but no way was she getting into some strange man’s car, no matter what he was promising.
He must have sensed her unease. “You have phone?”
“It won’t work in Poland.”
“Please.” He held out a cheap lump of gray plastic with a tiny screen. “Phone friend, phone mother, phone father. Tell you safe with Jacek Grabowski here.” He pointed to the address on his card in her hand.
From his appearance, she’d expected him to have a flashy smartphone, but like that mattered. She took his phone.
Her hostel was a hovel, but at least the clerk spoke English. Cat left a message for her mother, saying she’d call again in one hour with news.
“Is good?” Jacek said, taking his phone back.
“Wonderful.”
“Okay cokey, then we go.”
They set off. As he passed a round green trash can, Jacek nonchalantly tossed something in. Cat didn’t see what, but it clanged as it hit the metal side.
Minutes later, while chatting, Cat looked out of the car window as they cruised through rain-drenched backstreets. Gone were the hordes of tourists and the magnificent architecture. Here, people trudged along as if the air was heavier and squashed them into the ground, while the buildings were so gray, they looked like the rain had washed all the color out of them.
Finally, Jacek parked outside a gigantic four-story slab of concrete. Car-sized graffiti tags plastered the building’s walls, smashed windows bled darkness, and patches of the exterior crumbled to the ground.
“This where is my addict charity.” He pointed to a doorway in the middle, next to a derelict store plastered with flyers.
“Come,” he said, clambering out. “I show job.”
Cat followed. “How many women are you helping now?”
“Er… for drink maybe five. For drug, I think three.”
After he spoke into an intercom, the door unlocked. He ushered her into a corridor. Ahead, a staircase doubled back on itself, so she couldn’t see the upper floor. Rock music drifted down from upstairs.
“You see – to clean.” Jacek pointed to the carpet of brown swirls. It was so dirty it was hard to tell where the pattern ended and the filth began.
“Uh-huh.” Though burning would be a better option.
“To clean.” He waved at a mottled black patch on the wall.
As they ascended the stairs, a stench like a men’s locker room greeted Cat. At the top, a shaven-headed man lounged at a reception desk watching music videos on a laptop. Another man sprawled over a green sofa with a pizza box resting on his immense belly.
Anxious, but wanting to be friendly, Cat smiled. “Hello.”
No one replied.
Jacek guided her into a hallway where discolored paint peeled off the walls due to damp. Along either side were five treatment rooms. All the doors were closed except the two at the far end. Cat thanked God she wasn’t a patient here with such awful accommodation and unfriendly staff. Still, if you had an addiction, poor help was better than no help.
Whimpering came from behind the second door on the right, like a tiny girl crying herself to sleep. Except, the tone of voice suggested it was not a child. A junkie suffering withdrawals, maybe.
Jacek entered the last room on the left and flipped the light switch. Under a low wattage bulb, the room hung in gloom.
“So maybe you clean and if good, is job yours. Yes?”
Cat gawked at bedding so stained it looked like someone had emptied a pot of goulash over it, a sink caked in grime, and a carpet so dirty she couldn’t tell its original color.
“Great.” Nothing would stop her making the money to save her mom.
“Okay cokey. Then—”
A gruff voice thundered down the hall.
“Oh, is Artur, big boss,” said Jacek. “I must to go.”
He left, shutting the door behind him.
Cat heaved a breath. She’d wanted work, but so much of it? She tramped to the closet to look for cleaning supplies, but it was empty. Neither were there any under the sink or the bed. Okay, she’d ask Jacek.
She marched to the door and reached to open it, but stopped dead.
There was no handle.
She checked the floor to see if it had dropped off. No. What the…?
Clawing her fingertips into the tiny gap between the door and the frame, she pulled. The door didn’t budge.
She braced herself. Heaved.
Her right index fingernail broke low down. She cursed, then sucked her fingertip.
Now what? She’d feel like a fool if she called for help only to find there was a knack to opening the door she’d been too stupid to spot.
She heaved again.
It was shut tight.
She knocked on the door. “Jacek, I’m sorry, but the door is stuck.”
No answer.
Okay, this was getting a little weird now. She glanced around at the room. The hairs stood on the back of her neck at being trapped in here much longer.
“Jacek.” She called louder. “Jacek, I’m stuck.”
Nothing.
Her heart pounded and she felt giddy as adrenaline surged through her body. She wanted to get out of here. She needed to get out of here.
Cat hammered her fist on the door. “Jacek!”
Even if he’d left, there were at least two other men. Why was no one helping?
She banged harder. Shouted louder. “Help. Please. Help.”
Finally, footsteps pounded down the hall. A gruff voice muttered in Polish.
/> She heard the handle at the other side turn. The door swung open.
A stocky man glowered at her. With wiry red hair and stubble on a weather-beaten face, he looked like an old seadog.
It wasn’t her fault she’d gotten trapped, but if he was the ‘big boss’, she better apologize to ensure she kept this job.
“I’m very sorry, but the door—”
His fist smashed into her face.
She crashed over backwards, cracking her head against the floor.
On her back, she stared up. Tiny lights twinkled in her blurred vision.
For a moment, she couldn’t think where she was or what had happened. The lights faded and the place came into focus. She tried to push up, but her arms gave and she fell back. As if she was drunk, the room spun and sounds slurred.
Her head so fuzzy, like a bystander, she watched the shaven-headed guy and the one with the huge belly grab her by the arms. They hauled her up.
In Romanian, she said, “Thank you.” Unsteady on her feet, she clutched the two men holding her and said, “Sorry, I’ll be okay. Just give me a minute.”
They held her suspended. Seadog grabbed her chin and twisted her head about, studying her.
The fog in her mind started to clear. Someone had punched her. Why? She hadn’t locked the damned door.
Seadog said something in Polish, then mauled her left breast.
With her arms pinned, all she could do was twist to try to stop him.
He slammed a fist into her gut.
She slumped forward, wheezing. Pain exploded in her stomach as if she’d been shot.
What was happening? Why were they doing this? Questions whirled in her mind.
She stared at the door. The open door. Pushing with all the might in her legs and arms, she made a run for it.
But they had her fast and clawed her back.
Seadog barked more Polish. The men holding her threw her onto the bed. Shaven Head grabbed her wrists and stretched out her arms over her head; his friend grabbed her ankles and pulled her legs out straight.