Continuation of the collection "Intake of human slave material".
Almost two days had passed since the riverboat had left the slave-hunting company's outpost. Since then, the servant had steered the watercraft with the human cargo on board through the almost insurmountable thicket of the Southeast Asian jungle, which could only be crossed via the many tangled waterways. More than four hours ago, she had arrived in the outskirts of Big City, the largest concentration of human life south of the equator. Almost 500 million more or less unfortunate creatures now lived in this giant biotope and you could buy pretty much anything you wanted for money - legal or illegal didn't really matter. In order to satisfy the enormous and rapidly growing demand for free labor, but also to satisfy the eccentric and sometimes perverse desires of the richer inhabitants, a center of the slave processing industry had grown up in Big City very early on. In the meantime, the corporations based here were among the most influential representatives of female slavery in the world, and for some specialized products, such as industrial working slaves or human field work animals, they held a virtual monopoly.
Continued in "the slave processing industry (2)".