Jabba Bing isn't a made man-he's a middle manager with a talent for paperwork, a head full of borrowed mythology, and an unshakable belief that he's been chosen for something bigger. When a vague, possibly meaningless email convinces him he's been "activated" by a higher authority, Jabba does what any reasonable professional would do: he builds an organization around it.
From a recliner in a South Carolina trailer park, he constructs a full operational hierarchy-complete with personnel, territory, and strategic command-reframing everyday life as a criminal enterprise only he can see clearly. Sales reports become rackets. Neighbors become assets. A gas station clerk becomes logistics. And reality itself becomes negotiable.
As Jabba's system expands, the line between harmless delusion and real-world consequence begins to blur. What starts as structured imagination evolves into something with momentum, documentation, and just enough internal logic to be dangerous.
Darkly funny, sharply observant, and unsettlingly plausible, Middle Management Mobster is a story about belief, bureaucracy, and what happens when someone organizes their way into a reality that refuses to organize back.