An October in Libreville

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So It Begins

It is early autumn, cold, October 1919. The world is recovering from war and the Spanish Flu. In national events, President Wilson suffered a stroke recently, and we have entered those last glorious months before the introduction of Prohibition. Scant weeks from now the Palmer Raids will visit mass deportation of leftists and radicals, part of the ongoing strife between the working class and the elites (represented in part by the likes of Willard Arthur Crump in the microcosm that is Libvil). The Libreville Sanitarium has just opened its doors for business, there's a new club opening downtown off what the locals call "Jazz Alley", and the mayoral elections are nigh. Oo-ray, oo-rah, the Roaring Twenties are upon us, friends!



Miles Cressbeckler has a busy day ahead of him. Today, he must train another set of delinquents to work his print shop on Earle Street, boys hailing from St. Regina School. Mild anxiety fills him as he reflects on the last group, considering if it isn't too soon to start taking on new charges. The police had certainly bought into the story that the miscreants had simply wandered off, and, though Cressbeckler was the last one to see them, it wasn't unheard of for such boys to simply skip town for weeks or months at a time.

"Ah crud, what a mess," he groans, stepping in a pile of chewing gum, ruining his new leather shoes.

"And how!" answers a passerby, gone before Miles can look up. Anger fills him. An indignity beneath the Cressbecklers, one that would have to be punished.

He rounds the corner, fuming, just in time to hear the chapel bells as St. Regina lets out for the day. A well-built ox of a man ushers out a pack of cheaply appointed boys through a side door; he is Mr. Bradley, the Physical Education Teacher, a man of little other than stern and unhappy expressions.

"Here is Mr. Cressbeckler, you boys. Don't talk back to him, now, and get going with him! You remember: better to work than to rot!" Bradley growls, his red face pinched. There is an air of disapproval about him.

"My thanks, Mr. Bradley," Cressbeckler offers distantly, his mind still on that damned gum. It was probably one of these very boys. Well, they'd get what was coming soon enough.

"Cheap labour for local business, a reduction in youth delinquency in the community. A work draft rather wasteful spending on jailing them," Adam Cressbeckler had told his fellow councilmen and the mayor. No-bid contracts for his own were, naturally, included in the offing, with Miles being the largest beneficiary.

Power and privilege. Miles Cressbeckler is confident. He is the boss and these boys will do as they are told or face... punishments. Indeed, Cressbeckler could even sympathize with them and their doings, as he was a scroundrel of a boy once too (though not so foolish as to have been born poor), but he doesn't like to think back on that. It makes it easier to lighten up on them, to not press the little brat's noses to the grindstone as hard as is necessary.

There's much work to do. Books to be leather-bound...


The kids have fallen into order after a few hard spankings and punching one in the belly who tried to be the "Labor leader". These socialist brats. Lets see how they feel when they're parents are deported to the crap hole they came from. Miles felt a wonderful electric rush of power. He towered over these little drones. He was the master. Its good to be king.