SolMax Prison
Ajax paced around the small exercise court of the reception area, 50 feet beneath the cratered surface of the asteroid Pallas. The British had loitered in the capture area long enough to participate in war games, but on the return to Earth had stopped to turn him over to the SolMax guards, who took him into custody.
“Move up, convicts!” A guard got his attention with a shout, rapping his shock-stick on the clear plexi-glass door separating him from the others that have been taken in ahead of him. “You’re next.”
When the door slid open, the guard waved his baton toward the recesses of adjoining chamber and Ajax shuffled forward. As the door closed behind him, he could see three men waiting for him ahead; two were guards, one was dressed in a white lab coat. The biggest, ugliest one had a head that resembled a rotten squash and carried a scanning tool; when he lifted it and stepped forward. The name on his ID tag was Brawny.
“Spread your legs,” Brawny said in a soft voice that seemed out of place coming from such a beast of a man. He swept down each leg when Ajax complied. “Now strip.”
Ajax nodded and began unzipping his dirty, patched flight suit. He got it half way off before Brawny acted, lifting his shock-stick and giving Ajax a wallop; the blow landed just above the kidney on his right side and sent a wave of agony rushing through him. Ajax growled with pain and dropped to his knees.
“You listen to me, convict,” Brawny said quietly, intently, right into his ear. “When myself or any member of the staff gives you an order, you’re to carry it out immediately, not next feking week. When I say strip, you’d better move like you’re catching fire, are we clear?”
“Yes,” Ajax mustered as an assistant pulled him to his feet. “Very clear. Sorry, sir, it won’t happen again.”
“I’d advise against it.”
Once the pain subsided Ajax quickly complied. His clothes were bundled up and pitched into a chute as he stood naked before the three. It was good that the prison was overheated.
“Now put your hands against the wall,” Brawny said, using his shock-stick to point out the barrier in question. “Keep your legs spread wide.” He turned and jerked a thumb at Ajax. “He’s all yours, Doc.”
A man in a white lab coat snapped on latex gloves and stepped forward with an auto-injector, inoculating him with a multi-vaccine in silence. Brawny’s assistant came forward with a stack of clothing; seven bright-red, folded jumpsuits, seven gray t-shirts, seven pairs of half-socks, seven pairs of drawers… the only clothing Ajax would be allowed for the duration of his stay. The last procedure was a sweep with a handheld scanner for objects hidden in body cavities.
“He’s clean.” The doctor said and put the scanning device away. “Take him away.”
Ajax got to keep his boots. One jumpsuit fell out of the stack as the assistant shoved the pile into his arms, there was a bar code emblazoned on the front and back; the code that would take the place of his name.
“Get dressed,” Brawny ordered and Ajax hastened to comply. As he donned the undergarments, Brawny gave him a hard look, inspiring greater speed. “Always remember one thing, convict. I’ve got my eye on you.”
“Kinkaid, Melvin- let’s go.” A SolMax administrator called from where he was waiting, behind a one way revolving door at the far end of the chamber.
“Yeah, sure.” Ajax said as he left Brawny glaring at his back and pushed through the door. The administrator escorted him into the virtual courtroom where the holographic image of a magistrate, uplinked from his comfortable chambers on Earth, presided. Justice was quick, he was found guilty and given the mandatory sentence; eight years, all pending the reception of the condemning evidence that had been collected.
At the rear of a long column of other convicts, Ajax was led into a large room filled with various recording devices, all arranged in a circular pattern along the walls. As he followed the circuit, one machine took his retinal scan, another a sample of his DNA, a third took his picture-front, then profile. One man vigorously resisted the efforts to extract a blood sample.
“He’s going to the DeepCore.” Was circulated among the prisoners assembled for in-processing. After ten minutes of struggling, a medic with a strong sedative was called in and the in-processing continued.
Ajax and the others going to general population were lined up in front of the lifts that would take them to their habitation areas. The prisoners going to heavy security, further under the asteroid’s surface, were already being shuttled below in pairs. Only the lift marked “DeepCore”, the one that fell four kilometers to the maximum-security area, had no one waiting to take the long ride down.
A loud commotion at the rear of the line brought him back from his contemplation of what the bottom was like. Someone had broken free and was being subdued forcefully by the guards. The noise got closer with every heartbeat.
“No! You can’t take me down there! I’m as good as dead down there… do you hear me… dead!”
The wild prisoner who had resisted the earlier attempts at DNA scanning had come out of his drug-induced lethargy and was making life difficult for his guards, who had him hog-tied with a pair of carbon-fiber cuffs. The guards, fully outfitted in rigid Marine body armor and armed with snub-nosed assault rifles, carried the malcontent by both arms into the lift marked “DeepCore."
As the doors of the lift closed, Ajax watched the guards drop the man and jack a live round into the chambers of their weapons. He could hear the screaming protests as the lift began its four-kilometer journey, growing more and more faint as it sank lower toward the hell he imagined the DeepCore to be.
After several minutes, the doors to the DeepCore lift opened and the two guards stepped out, one holding a blood sodden-cloth to his face. The other dragged the lifeless form of the convict they had been charged with escorting behind him.
“What in the hell happened down there!”
The watch supervisor was the first one on the scene and he was angry; a casualty in the lift meant more data-work. The injured guard pointed at the corpse on the floor.
“This waster wouldn’t go.” The guard said.
The gleam of metal inside the lift caught Ajax’s eye while the guard related his story. There were aluminum shell casings scattered across the lift floor.
“What do you mean he wouldn’t go?” The supervisor said and waved over a pair of convicts wearing orange work-suits. They lifted the body at the head and feet and carried it out of sight. At SolMax, dead convicts were charitably incinerated.
“He wouldn’t go. We hit the halfway point and he went nuts, broke he restraints we had on him and attacked me… tried to claw my eyes out. We had to put him down, and by the way, they aren’t paying us enough to do this.” The guard took the cloth away from his face and pondered it with a look of disgust, giving Ajax a look at the deep, bloody furrows that marred the man’s forehead and cheek. Noone had it easy in SolMax.