Lenny Garamund Stables
Warning:
Black Ichor Scenarios include "soft" horror text and graphics.
It may not be suitable for children or the skittery to read.
Opinion of the writer: PG-13 material.
Reed Collins is planning to write a newspaper article for the Crooked Mile Crooked Mile Gazette. For cash or a favor he might be willing to hand over a copy of what he is found while reporting.
The Lenny Garamund Stables Lenny Garamund Stables is in southwest Crooked Mile. The stables were bought by his brother, Circle Founder, Jason Garamund Garamund. Lenny’s cart horses, very important animals who lived in Seasway, had no place to stay after the Six Year War, and Lenny had no money to reconstruct the destroyed family stables he inherited. The Crooked Miles Stable yards were well received by the growing community. They needed horse and buggy transportation to the train station and Bulkyard Port. New residents in Crooked Mile were commuters who did not own facilities to take care of cart horses. Nor could they afford them. Most of the miners and Newfaire employees who traveled by train walked or shared rides to the station near to Goose Valley Housing. Jason expected Lenny to make small payments per their contract. Once the debt was paid off, Lenny could buy more property and a home. But Lenny wasn’t interested in horses. He learned to loathe them while growing up at Seasway Resort Hotel. His parents decided Jason would be prepared with schooling experience to manage the seaside resort. Lenny, the “less bright” brother, was forced to manage the stables. It was a dirty job.
For the first few weeks, Lenny looked after the horses and stables in the Crooked Mile valley. Because he did not appreciate taking the long train trip to Newfaire, a friend who worked with him in Seasway, suggested he buy an automobile. Lenny was gone most days after buying the car. His favorite destination was the Red Lamp District, where he gambled and lost. Losses he could make up with the money he borrowed from this brother. In the meantime, the horses were rarely fed and allowed to graze in fields that were sprayed with crop insecticides. It wasn't long before Lenny confessed that he wanted to sell the "deadbeat" horses and the stables that consisted of two run down buildings and a fenced in paddock. No one wanted to buy the property, so Lenny and his friend came up with plan to get rid of his problems.
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