Supermax 201: Fast One
CONFIDENTIAL
From: kim.nguyen@sb8.sf.ufp
Stardate: 56131.5
To: james.lane@oig.sf.ufp
Subject: Inspection of prison ship USS Lilienthal at 61 Virginis II
Deputy Assistant Inspector General:
1. On Stardate 56123 I inspected the Federation prison ship USS Lilienthal NCC 53660.
2. USS Lilienthal is a converted starship, Oberth-class. It was commissioned on Stardate 05330, and remained in service for thirty-five years. It was decommissioned on Stardate 40665, and placed in long-term storage at the Starship Maintenance and Regeneration Center, in orbit around 61 Virginis VIII.
3. It was recommissioned as a prison ship on Stardate 55245, and is presently stationed at the Sundancer Penal Colony, in orbit around 61 Virginis II. The decision to recommission the Lilienthal (along with a second Oberth-class vessel, USS Le Verrier NCC 53636) was made after the construction of additional sub-surface prison housing units was temporarily halted. (See Appendix A).
***
Three months after I came on board, the Commandant decided it was safe to let me out of protective custody and put me in the
Lilienthal’s general population.
I had mixed feelings about this. On the one hand, I was the only prisoner in protective custody, down in the ship’s brig on Deck Four, which made it a lot like solitary confinement. On the other hand, I was pretty sure the Orion Syndicate wasn’t ready to forgive and forget after just three months. I’d tricked the local syndic into murdering his lieutenant, and then ratted him out for the murder. That’s why he was deep underground, in Unit Zero, and I was up in orbit, on a prison ship
But I guess nobody cared how I felt. One day, after the evening meal, Chief Guzman just showed up at the doorway to my cell, lowered the force field, and said, “Pack up your
mierda, Jaffar. We’re moving you to gen-pop.”
So I packed up my shit, left my cell, and followed him down the corridor to the turbolift.
My new cell was up on Deck Two: at least they weren’t putting me in the dorms, down on Three. I stood and waited, with my bundle of bedding and personal items in my arms, while the Chief tapped his combadge. “Guzman here,” he said. “Open Door Two-Twenty-Three.”
The door slid open. I stepped inside. The door slid shut, and that was that.
My new cellmate, a Markalian, was lying on the top bunk. Like all Markalians, he looked like a man-sized and man-shaped iguana. His skin was thorny and scaly, and a spiny dewlap hung from his chin. The back of his bald, earless head had stripes, like some kind of poisonous reptile. He’d been reading a padd when the cell door opened, but now he was looking at me. He didn’t blink.
“Hey,” I said.
“Hey,” he said.
I looked around, put my bundle down on the floor by the bottom bunk, and started unpacking. My cellmate went back to reading. “My name’s Jaffar,” I said.
“Pak,” he said.
I had put the fitted bottom sheet on the mattress, and was flipping out the top sheet when it hit me: Pak, the Markalian? “I’ve heard of you,” I said.
“Yeah?” he said, up above.
I started making hospital corners, like they taught us in the Academy. “I heard you knocked over a Ferengi casino ship,” I said.
“Yeah?” he said. Then, when I laid out my blanket, he said: “I heard you’re a snitch.”
I stopped what I was doing, stood up, and looked him in the eye. He looked back, impassively. “You heard wrong,” I said.
Our little stare-down continued for a moment. Then, he broke eye contact and started reading again. “Okay,” he said.
I went back to tucking in my blanket. Truth to tell, I was a little relieved. Hopefully, now that we’d both growled a bit, and sniffed each other’s butts, and marked our territories, we wouldn’t have any more problems.
When my bed was made, I lay down, stared at the bottom of Pak’s bunk, and waited for lights out.
It seemed like a long wait. It always does.
***
4. USS Lilienthal has been extensively refitted for its current mission. Its warp drive, armament, and long-range sensors have been removed. Its internal-security systems have been upgraded, and the bridge on Deck One has been modified to serve as control centre.
5. The crew quarters on Deck Two have been removed: each double-occupancy crew cabin has been replaced with two double-occupancy prisoner cells. The two cargo bays on Deck Three have been converted into prisoner dormitories, each capable of housing fifty prisoners. The captain’s and first officer’s quarters on Deck Three have been converted into six single-occupancy segregation cells, while the brig on Deck Four now serves as a protective-custody unit.
6. Additional crew quarters for Starfleet Security personnel have been added to Deck Four.
***
18:58…18:59…19:00 hours. The lights went down. I sighed: finally. I sat up, opened my paper sack, and started eating my dinner.
Pak had already washed, gotten undressed, and gotten back into his bunk. Up above me, I heard him say: “Jaffar.”
“Yeah?” I said.
“What are you doing?” he said.
“Eating,” I said.
There was a pause. Then: “Are you
trying to get us in trouble?”
Damn, I thought. I should have explained earlier. “I have special permission to eat in my cell at this time of year,” I said. “For religious reasons.”
Another pause. “How did you manage that?”
I glanced upward. “Weren’t you here, then?”
“I guess not,” he said.
“Huh,” I said.
So I told him.
***
It all happened about a year ago, I said, when I was down on the planet, in Unit Seven. Security was tight. It wasn’t long after someone had murdered a friend of mine—an inmate named Bunny. It’s a long and messy story—and by the time it was over, three more people were dead, including two correctional officers.
If I remember correctly, I went to see the Alpha-Shift Supervisor on the twenty-eighth day of Sha’ban.
The Alpha Supervisor was a Vulcan—Officer Tomak. Tomak had been promoted after the Unit Supervisor, Commander Sinclair, committed suicide. He was standing in the Tower, one hand behind his back, the other on the handle of his stun baton, scanning the security monitors. He looked like a statue. They don’t call him roboguard and superhack for nothing.
He didn’t look at me when I approached. He just kept scanning the monitors and said: “What do you want, Jaffar?”
I said: “Ramadan starts the day after tomorrow.”
He finally looked at me. “Ramadan,” he said.
“The Muslim holy month,” I said.
“I see,” he said. He waited for a second. “Is that all?”
“Well, no,” I said. I told him how devout Muslims fast during Ramadan, touching neither food nor water from sunrise to sunset.
(Of course, the sun doesn’t rise or set over Supermax: the prison is deep underground, on the dark side of 61 Virginis II, which is tidally locked with 61 Virginis. But I was pretty sure that lights-on to lights-off was an acceptable substitute.)
Anyway, as a devout Muslim, I would be fasting for thirty days, and I wouldn’t be able to eat in the Mess Hall at meal times. I asked to have some food brought to my pod after lights out.
He stared at me without blinking. “You are not a religious person, Jaffar.”
“That’s not true,” I protested. “I’ve always been a good believer.”
Actually, I’m a lousy believer. A devout Muslim prays every day. I only prayed when my wife—my ex-wife, Kalila—came to visit. But I’d recently spoken to Kalila over subspace, and she’d reminded me that Ramadan was coming soon. I’d forgotten.
Tomak continued to stare. “You have never fasted before,” he said.
“My wife has been a good influence on me,” I said.
Tomak’s face was expressionless, but I could tell he didn’t believe me. Finally, he shook his head. “No,” he said. “You will take your meals in the Mess Hall, with the rest of the prisoners, at the appointed times. No exceptions.”
I said: “This is a violation of my religious freedoms. Those freedoms are guaranteed by the Federation Charter.” I couldn’t remember exactly which Guarantee that was. I made a mental note to look it up.
He said: “You must have religious faith to have religious rights. I have made my decision. The answer is no. Go back to the common area.”
I said: “I want to appeal your decision to the Unit Supervisor.”
Tomak nodded. “You have that right.” He tapped his combadge and called Lieutenant-Commander Norng, who had also been promoted after Sinclair’s suicide. I was in luck. Norng would see me right away. Officer Stott escorted me to the Unit Supervisor’s office, and I made my appeal.
Norng didn’t even wait for me to finish. “Forget it,” he said. “No way.”
“Why the hell not?” I said. “This is a violation of my Charter rights!”
He said: “The Mess Hall is closed by lights-out. I’m not going to reopen the kitchen just to cater to some so-called Muslim.”
“Use the craplicator in the hack’s mess,” I said.
His flat Southeast-Asian face twisted into a sneer. “You’d like that, wouldn’t you?” he said. “A correctional officer serving you food from the officer’s mess? Forget it, god-boy. You want to fast, go ahead and fast. But we’re not serving you meals in your pod.”
“I can’t do that,” I said. “I’ll starve!”
“Not my problem,” said Norng. “Appeal denied.”
I said: “I want to see the Commandant.”
I made an appointment to see the Commandant, Captain Manning, the next day. By then, I’d had a chance to re-read the Federation Charter in the Library. I did my best to convince Captain Manning that refusing my request would violate my religious freedoms under the Charter. I even quoted the Thirteenth Guarantee.
The Commandant shook his head. “No. Sorry. You’re forgetting that not all the Guarantees are absolute. The Reasonable Limits clause allows us to place some restrictions on some Charter freedoms. That includes religious practices.”
He leaned back in his chair and spread his hands. “We have almost as many belief systems here as we have prisoners, and I don’t have the resources to accommodate everyone. It’s hard enough just meeting everyone’s dietary requirements. The Federation Supreme Court has ruled that we’re allowed to restrict a prisoner’s religious freedoms, so long as these restrictions are reasonable and apply equally to everyone.”
“So long as we’re all oppressed equally,” I said.
He scowled, leaned forward, and said: “This isn’t a monastery, Jaffar. It’s a
prison. Was there anything else?”
I stood up to leave. “You haven’t heard the last of this,” I said. “I’m going on a hunger strike, starting tomorrow.”
Captain Manning picked up a padd off his desk. “Enjoy yourself,” he said. “Guard, take this prisoner back to his unit.”
That afternoon, I used most of my remaining allowance of subspace time to call the Federation News Service on my home world, Minaret. I explained to them that I was going on a hunger strike starting tomorrow, the first day of Ramadan, as a protest against the Sundancer Penal Colony’s refusal to recognize my religious rights and freedoms. Either the Commandant would grant my small request, or I would starve to death,
insha’Allah—as God willed. God is greatest.
I started ostentatiously abstaining from food and water the next day. I also started praying regularly, much to the amusement of my Caitian podmate, M’rorr, and many other prisoners. I didn’t care: praying helped take my mind off how hungry and thirsty I was. I would drink some water at night then start all over again the next day, fasting and praying. I wasn’t sure how long I was going to last, but I was going to give it my best shot.
On the morning of the third day, Norng came to see me while I was praying. “Jaffar,” he said.
“Just a minute,” I said: “I’m praying.”
He stood there, fuming, until I finished. “Yes?” I said innocently.
“It’s breakfast time,” he said. “Get your ass down to the Mess Hall.”
I shook my head, and said: “Sorry, Norng. I’m fasting. I’m also on a hunger strike, remember?”
He said: “Get down to the Mess Hall, or I’ll have Dr. Taylor force-feed you.”
I said: “You’re going to force-feed me for fasting in accordance with my
religious beliefs?”
He glared down at me. I could tell he was itching to practice his Muay Thai, with me as the practice dummy. I just knelt there, on my prayer rug, and waited.
“Damn you,” he said, finally. “Get down to the Mess Hall, or I’ll put you in Solitary.”
I chuckled. “You can’t put me in Solitary for following Islam,” I said.
He put me in Solitary.
I kept fasting, and praying, but it was getting pretty tough. Then I got word from a friendly hack that my case was causing a stir in the Federation media. Minaret’s representative had even mentioned me in the Federation Council, denouncing this latest example of religious discrimination by the UFP’s secularist majority.
I shrugged. Then he told me that I’d received a message from my wife. I had very little subspace time left, so Kalila kept it short, text-only. It said: PROUD OF YOU. LOVE YOU. KALILA.
I prayed and fasted even harder after that. After another couple of days, the Assistant Commandant, Commander Hagen, came to see me in Solitary. “If you don’t start taking nourishment,” she said, “we’re going to put you in Isolation.”
I didn’t laugh, this time. “You can’t put me in the
Tank for following my
religious beliefs!”
I should have known better. They put me in the Tank. Not for long, but long enough. I was ready to give up. I had mentally composed a press release, begging God and everyone else to forgive me for breaking my fast under torture. But they gave up first.
Here’s what happened. I was the only Muslim in Supermax. Still am, in fact. But when a couple of Pentecostals in Unit Eleven found out what was going on, they went on a hunger strike too. Pretty soon, followers of other faiths, in other units, were joining in as well. They sat around their Yards all day, fasting and praying their different prayers, demanding justice—for me. Weird.
This mass hunger strike brought a lot of unwelcome attention to the Sundancer Penal Colony. The representatives of every religious world in the Federation were making speeches in the Federation Council. From Ringstone to Zhen-Shan-Ren, from Deseret to New Graceland, believers across the UFP were complaining about systemic discrimination.
Finally, when the ambassador from Bajor inquired about my case, the Federation President decided enough was enough. The President leaned on Starfleet Command. Starfleet Command leaned on Vice-Admiral Golovko, at Starbase Eight. And Vice-Admiral Golovko leaned on Captain Manning.
The Commandant let me out of the Tank, and told me that if I stopped my hunger strike he’d allow me to eat in my pod after lights out, until the end of Ramadan. He was going to review the policy, he said, but this was purely an act of grace. I was a Starfleet veteran, after all—even if I had gone astray and deserted to the Maquis. But if I tried a stunt like this again, he was going to force-feed me, or just let me starve to death. I believed him.
I spent a couple of days in the Hospital, letting Dr. Taylor feed me through tubes—after lights out, of course. When I got back to Unit Seven, there was a lot of back-slapping and congratulating. Way to go, Jaff, they said. Fight the power. Even Death-Head the Cardassian was impressed. He told me so himself.
That night, after lights out, Officer Gleeson brought me my first meal in a week. I could hear the other inmates jeering as he walked across the Yard: “Room service!”; “Waiter!” By the time he got to my pod, his face was red.
“Here’s your goddamn dinner,” he snarled, throwing a paper sack at me.
I said: “Thanks, Gleeson.”
“Asshole,” he said, and walked away. Appearances are important in the Big Time.
I’m not sure what I was expecting: combat rations, maybe. But when I opened the sack, there was real food inside: a sandwich, carrot and celery sticks, some fruit, and a bottle of juice.
Good deal, I thought.
Then I checked the sandwich. Ham and cheese. Har har.
“Hey, M’rorr,” I said, to my cellmate. “You want some ham?”
“Why?” he said. “What’s wrong with it?”
“Nothing,” I said. “It’s a religious thing.”
That was the best meal I’ve ever had in my life. When I was done, I slipped the packet of contraband out of the paper sack and under my clothes. Then I crumpled up the empty sack, threw it in the wastebasket, cleaned my teeth, got undressed, and got into bed. Once I was under the covers, I put the packet in a safe place
I wasn’t sure what it was. Drugs, probably. Whatever it was, it was in great demand. Like I said—security had been tight since those murders and suicides a little while back, and the flow of contraband had slowed to a trickle.
We’d have to be careful. I couldn’t do this too many times. The other hacks would be watching me. But I figured Gleeson could safely make a few more deliveries before the end of Ramadan.
I felt pretty smug. This would earn me some serious credit with the Fleet. I might even get a promotion. In addition, I’d struck a blow for the rights and freedoms of religious believers across the United Federation of Planets. And on top of all that, I figured I was scoring some big points with my wife, and with God.
A man can do anything if he’s properly motivated.
***
7. USS Lilienthal currently houses 96 inmates. They are supervised by 35 Starfleet Security personnel working in four shifts: 24 junior correctional officers (COs), 6 senior correctional officers, 4 shift supervisors, and 1 temporary unit supervisor. A permanent unit supervisor had not yet been appointed when I conducted my inspection, but I was assured that the colony’s administration was actively looking for an officer experienced in starship operations as well as corrections.
8. All ship systems are operational, and security procedures appear to be more than adequate. Crew fitness reports are satisfactory, but crew morale is low: the COs regard assignment to prison-ship detail as administrative punishment, though I was assured by Commandant Manning that this was not the case. The ship has been populated with comparatively low-risk prisoners, and there have been no serious incidents to date.
9. I do, however, see a number of potential problems.
***
I was done eating my supper. I crumpled up the empty sack, threw it in the wastebasket, cleaned my teeth, got undressed, and got into bed.
“That was nice work,” Pak said.
“Thanks,” I said.
“Are you still in the Fleet?” he said.
“No,” I said.
“Then why are you fasting, this time?” he said.
I thought about that. “I don’t know,” I said, finally.
“Is your wife coming to visit?”
My throat tightened, and my chest felt heavy. “No,” I said. “We’re divorced now.”
“Sorry,” he said.
“Don’t worry about it.”
“Well,” he said. “See you in the morning.”
“See you in the morning,” I said. But I didn’t fall asleep.
Not at first. Not for a while.
***