Continued from "the slave processing industry (17)".
The extensive washing in the two wet cells was always a strenuous task - for both the staff and the prisoners. The workers had the advantage that they were trained and skilled in this task and were therefore able to cope with the strain very well. In the case of the human material that was to be fed into the slave processing process, there was also the exceptional psychological situation of facing an uncertain future full of hard work, degrading activities or even sexual exploitation - one of the dark sides of society in the 22nd century.
The brown-skinned specimen had been lathered up like an object with a scrubbing brush and then hosed down with ice-cold water. It had struggled violently, thrashing about obsessively for half an hour - as best it could, as it was hanging by its arms from a rail on the ceiling and its legs had been obscenely straddled with a spreader bar. The procedure was very similar for the olive-colored female. All the energy had been drained from these future slave girls and once they had been removed from the ceiling railing, they could no longer stand on their feet. For such purposes, stretchers and special wheelchairs were available to cart the wet sacks to the next processing station, the medical preparation station.
Only the third submissive little sweetheart had cooperated in her own way during the cleaning of her cute body and had already been rewarded for it. As this specimen did not appear to pose any danger, the processor assigned to it dispensed with a means of transportation and simply slung the processed material over her shoulders and carried it away. To outside observers unfamiliar with this hidden world of slave processing, this caravan of servants clad in full-body protective rubber garments and the dripping wet, completely unclothed and hairless creatures that barely resembled human women might seem strange and disturbing. For the thousands of servants who were employed and owned by the company, it was a daily routine.
Continued in "the slave processing industry (19)".