Steven was the youngest judge ever appointed to the Circuit Court. The job would involve travel to the five outlying counties in the circuit, and that meant he would be away from his beloved Marina for two weeks out of each month. Not optimal for their marriage, but the Circuit Court appointment was only for three years and if all went well he would then almost certainly be promoted to the Main Court bench.
* *
Steven sighed as he put down the prosecution's brief. Were they serious? The brief included the infamous "Special Restrictions Form," which could temporarily suspend a prisoner's constitutional rights.
Already legal challenges to the Form were starting, and Steven was glad that this test case had been assigned to him--involving shocking events that had allegedly transpired at one of the outlying counties in his Circuit.
The prosecutor argued that the recently legislated Special Restrictions Forms were a mockery of justice. She argued it was unbelievable that in modern civilized society a prison Warden could use a one-page Form to strip a man of all his rights. It was a clear abuse of power--including sexual abuses of power, as in the multiple allegations summarized in her prosecutor's brief.
Personally, Steven agreed with her. But his legal training had taught him not to use his subjective reactions in reaching his decisions. The law had its own logic.
The prosecution's list of witnesses, Steven noticed, contained the name of another judge, Robert "Bobby" Fields, currently on an unexplained leave of absence. Until Steven's appointment, Bobby Fields had been the youngest judge in the state. In light of some of the strange rumors about Bobby's private life swirling through legal circles, however, Steven wondered if Bobby shouldn't be testifying for the defense instead.
The air in Steven's chambers seemed warmer than usual, and he rose from his chair thinking to open a window before remembering that they had all been sealed when the building's new heating and cooling system had been installed. He didn't like it, as not being having access to fresh air whenever he wanted made him feel, paradoxically, a bit like a prisoner rather than a judge.
He returned to his desk.
* *
Steven frowned as he turned to the defendant's documents. On top was a list of "hired-gun" expert witnesses, headed by the infamous Dr. Brantley. In Steven's opinion, Brantley was a suspect human being. Yes, he was a highly qualified psychiatrist--but one who seemed always to find justifications for the darker things human beings did to each other. The mere sight of his name seemed to bring an alien smell to the air to Steven's judicial chambers.
The defense attorney's brief referred to Brantley's latest scholarly article--"Incarceration Power-Submission Therapy as Exemplified in the Person of 'the Warden,'" by B.H. Brantley, M.D., Ph.D., published in The Journal of Psychiatric Jurisprudence, cited as directly on point. He scrolled the text down his computer screen and read the first highlighted passage:
"It is inaccurate and simplistic to dismiss 'the Warden' as the stereotypical, corrupt law officer. We would better view him as a sort of therapist who uses the penal system to provide therapy for men whom he judges would benefit from it."
Steven took a deep breath and moved on to the next highlighted portion:
"It has been our observation that many of today's urban, professional men have devoted too much time to artificial careers. Such careers have diminished their capacity to engage in traditional masculine work--with their hands, outdoors, and using their physical bodies.
"Modern artificial man has also come to rely upon fancy food and drink, rather than healthy basics"--Steven glanced at the iced mocha lattΓ© on his desk-- "and to enjoy wearing unnecessary fashion."
That hardly seems fair, Steven thought. Good clothes were necessary in the legal profession. Especially now that he was a judge, his spending the extra few thousand dollars for new suits, one for each day of the week, was entirely justified. It lent dignity to his person and his higher position.
"Such a man has become almost feminized," Dr. Brantley's report continued, "in coming to value accessories and even scents and hair products."
Well, Steven granted, his fingers unconsciously touching the smooth silk of his tie, I didn't start liking that fancy hair conditioner until Marina gave me some for my birthday last year.
"Overall," the report summarized, "many men have become less than fully developed. They have neglected to create a well-rounded life-style or to develop their fully masculine potential."
Ha. Who has time for all of that? His daily hour of workout at the gym was about all his schedule allowed. Still, the comment stung Steven's pride. Was something perhaps lacking in his life?
"At the same time they are aware that other men have not been so self-restrained and have realized their full male potential."
Steven wondered who these fully male men were supposed to be. He knew plenty of masculine men in the legal profession and in the city more generally.
And what of Brantley himself--wasn't he just another nerd intellectual with a string of fancy degrees? Then Steven remembered that Brantley was ex-military, having served overseas, and that he'd put himself through medical school while working nights for the Sheriff's department in one of the nearby counties.
Another highlighted passage:
"For the less-fully developed males, however, the self-recognition of the gap between the two types of men typically operates at the subconscious level. Deep down, they often harbor an almost pathological need to submit to some ruthless authority, to undergo experiences that are totally beyond their control. Paradoxically, it is for them a liberating experience, as they are forced to break through their limitations."
Steven felt a bead of sweat materialize suddenly on his back. He shifted in his chair and felt it trickle down his spine.
"Such men may seem--to the untrained eye--to be happy in their careers and their marriages. They have the conventional satisfactions of good pay, a nice home, social standing, and erotic pleasures with their wives.
"And yet they feel, in the right circumstances, powerful urges that threaten to overtake their minds and bodies. Particularly when they are (a) outside the reach of conventional civilization and (b) in the presence of fully male men."
Steven granted that there was an internal logic to Brantley's line of argument. But surely that could only apply to a tiny percentage of men. And certainly not to normal men such as himself. His eyes scanned to the next highlighted portion:
"Part of the Warden's training is to develop a knack for spotting such men when they first arrive at his prison. Initially, of course, all new arrivals are required to strip down and submit to a cleansing shower. The lesson proper then begins with a subsequent nude search (including a cavity search). The new arrival's reaction to his nudity and the cavity search are carefully monitored."
Steven squirmed in his chair.