Out past the rusted grain silos and the crooked welcome sign that read “Littleton—Population: 42,” there stood a shack. No bigger than a two-car garage, its roof patched with tin and tar, its windows glowing a faint, sickly amber.
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. size game shack
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. Out past the rusted grain silos and the