Stage 2: Notarization

Every adult debtor who arrives at the Slave Administration Center deserves it. The ones the admissions clerk feels sorry for are the children: it's legal for a custodial parent to sell a minor child into slavery, and many debtors do, though sometimes they end up at the Administration Center afterwards anyway. Children are processed at a separate unit from adults: the admissions clerk only deals with them here when there are walk-ins.

The bailiffs who dump this debtor in front of her are in a hurry to get back out to their vehicle: the debtor is drunk and he vomited in the back. They drop the man's possessions in front of her, and the man himself on a trolley - she insists: he's obviously in no state to walk, and she has to get him processed and into holding. After that he will be someone else's problem.

There are formalities that have to be followed, even if the debtor is unconscious. Fingerprints have to be taken. Retinal scans. She has to prop up one eyelid then the other. The man stinks. He's obviously some kind of lowlife, he'll probably be better off as a slave, kept clean, fed properly, and not allowed to drink or smoke. She reads the legal wording out loud, as is required, before she notarizes it. The man is now a slave.

Fitting the holding cuffs and collar on is actually easier when the slave is unconscious. Awake and aware, slaves often have to be forced to place their wrists, then their ankles, then the neck, in the machines that size them and fit them. The last machine that fits the holding collar is called the Guillotine. She doesn't know why: the brand name is GatesCorp.

The staff in Admissions will get rid of the slave's clothing. She doesn't have to. On the way back to her desk, she drops the bag of stuff emptied out of his pockets off at recycling. She enters his details into the system, and forgets him almost immediately.

*House*MD*House*MD*House*MD*House*

Warnings. Warnings. Warnings.

This story should have a lot of them. It's a slave story, so noncon can practically be taken for granted. If you don't like, don't read.

If you do read... well, so far the story's pretty tame. It gets worse. Some seriously nasty shit happens to House in the Slaves Administration Center: abuse, confinement, dehumanization, torture...

How could someone like House be made to be a slave? Not easily...