Coffee House Clone
by
Christopher Morgan
New York City. Arlington Penitentiary, Cell 5A
July 5th, 2066
Adam awake to a sharp
buzzing as his cell door slid open. A
burly jailer dressed in a slick black uniform stepped into the cramped confines
of the jail cell. Adam rubbed the sleep
out of his eyes and moved to sit up, but the jailer placed a slender black rod
across his chest, on the end were two tiny metal prongs that could discharge
any voltage up to your normal house power supply, a mere 500V.
"I want you on your feet, buddy, but nice and
slow," the jailer said, giving the word want and slow the New York twang
that Adam was just getting used to. "Or I'll zap your sorry ass for
disobedience."
Adam gave a world weary nod , though not in the least bit
tired - he never seemed to be, no matter how much sleep he had, be it five
hours or fifteen. He rose from the cold
hard slab that had been his bed for the night and asked, "Is my lawyer
here?"
A short bark of a laugh.
"No lawyers are needed for this kind of matter. Now just walk on out that door and walk
straight ahead, I'll be right behind you. You're going to the panel for your
hearing." The man slapped the rod
into his palm a few times to enforce his personal no-questions-asked policy,
his bushy eyebrows drew tight around his brown eyes. "And keep quiet."
The silent march to the hearing was long to his hungry body,
a clinically sterile, whitewalled corridor that stretched off into the infinite
beyond, thick metal doors to cells lined their walk and dotted here and there
were humming security cameras. This
penitentiary was mainly for long-term offenders but was also used as an
overnight rest stop for thus awaiting trial, to take pressure off the already
overcrowded police stations and courtrooms.
The judicial system in America had rapid legal proceedings now - a
criminal was tried and convicted in the space of a day, then was sent for a
stint in one of these massive cinderblock lockups on the outskirts of the city
or released back into the wild.
They were approaching a t-junction in the corridor and
straight ahead was another secure steel door but this one had a green light
above it. A quick glance to both his
left and right, revealed roughly fifty more of his kindred, some lights red,
most were green though.
"Stop right there!" barked the jailer and Adam
froze in place. The huge man passed him
and typed four digits into a keypad, always keeping a wary eye on his
prisoner. The doorway suddenly whooshed
open to reveal the panel. Four austere
people, who - at first glance - appeared genderless, sat around a wide glass
table that dominated the room. They all
stared at Adam, their mouths in thin tight lines and their eyes in narrowed
slits, looking like the front line of soldiers in an offensive.
"Go on," prompted the jailer, tapping the rod
against the base of Adam's spine. He
stepped into the room and the door came down with the same whoosh, sealing then
in tight. The guard had not entered and
there was a buzz as the door locked, and Adam imagined that the light outside
turned red. As he took a few steps
closer, towards a plastic-glass seat he saw that the panel comprised of two
severe-looking women and two pink-faced overweight men.
"Please take a seat," said one of the harshly
featured women, her candy-apple red hair was twirled up in a bun and held in
place with a golden needle, a pair of horn-rimmed glasses matched the hair
accessory.
"Hearing in session," said one of the fatter men,
obviously to some hidden recording device.
Adam obliged, then noticed his dishevelled shirt wasn't
tucked in and shoved it into his pants when the first fat man spoke, his jowls
dancing from side to side.
"Your name is Adam Parlowski, is it not?"
He cleared his throat and looked up as he adjusted his
tie. "Yes it is."
"You are aware of the crime that you have committed that
has brought you here today, are you not?" asked the second severe woman,
her intense brown eyes scrutinised him like he were a laboratory rat being
dissected under the microscope. Her
voice was higher than the other woman's, and perhaps just an octave short of a
voice enhanced by helium.
"Yes," Adam replied, wanting nothing more than to
forget the awful incident, it was bad enough knowing what he did, but they
didn't have to tar him with a criminal record into the bargain. Couldn't he at least be allowed to express
anger at what he had experienced? Or
was that not politically correct? Was
that being inconsiderate?
"And what is that?" spoke the first fat man again
his ruddy jaws jiggling again. The
other man watched on quietly, waiting to hear the admission of guilt.
He breathed through his nose patiently. "Inflammatory language, i.e.
profanity. Speaking out against the
establishment, and more than likely, breach of the peace."
All through the night Adam had thought about what he had
said, or shouted rather, from atop the dustbin in some alley of downtown New
York City and he felt the same way now as he did then.
The panel members exchanged looks; their expressions went
from bewilderment and perhaps near amusement to stern coldness. Finally, they all turned back to face him
with a singular questioning frown etched across their brows.
Then the second rounded man spoke, but the words that spilled
from his pink lips didn't make a whole lot of sense to Adam. He waited for a few moments then asked the
man to repeat his crime...the words "expressly forbidden",
"violation of regulations", and "genetic material", merged
together into a confusing alphabet soup in his mind...they couldn't be saying
what he thought they were saying. They
simply couldn't be telling him that.
In that moment of realising the unbelievable, Adam screamed.