The shack never refused. It just sat there in the tall grass, patiently waiting for the next roll.
Lose, and you shrank. Slowly at first—an inch, a half-inch. Your coffee mug felt wider. Your keys seemed unfamiliar in your palm. Lose twice, and your own dog wouldn’t recognize you. Lose three times, and you’d be living under the floorboards, sewing yourself clothes from cotton balls, speaking in a squeak too high for human ears to catch. size game shack
And somewhere inside, in the dusty dark, a pair of dice tumbled across old bone— click-clack, click-clack —a sound like the world’s smallest thunder. The shack never refused
Nobody remembered who built it. Some said a physicist who’d gone feral. Others said a carnival barker who’d learned the wrong secrets. But everyone knew the rules: you walked in, paid no money—just a hair from your head and a drop of your spit—and the shack played a game with you. Slowly at first—an inch, a half-inch
Most folks in Littleton learned to stay away. But every so often, a teenager dared another. Or a farmer, fed up with a bad harvest, thought being bigger might help. Or a lonely woman, tired of being overlooked, thought being smaller might make her disappear for real.
They called it the Size Game.