(Originally written in 2013)
I have always been fascinated by costume parties and masquerade balls. I have found a note of the mysterious when people congregate in one place, all dressed and appearing to be something or someone they are not. Of course, this friendly deception is done all for the sake of fun and amusement. But in this story, a young party-goer will find nothing fun or amusing when she encounters a strange and small man…
“The Small Man”
A
Michael Jackson Horror Story By:
MJsLoveSlave
(Featuring
Cameos by Marlon and Jermaine Jackson!)
Los
Angeles, California
September,
1985
As
a soft, classical piece--composed by of Mozart, but played by someone
born in the twentieth century--spilled from the small radio affixed
to the wall, a young woman sat before a lighted vanity, putting the
final touches of make up to her face.
She
was a stunning woman, with a fine brown complexion, slanted, dark,
and deep set eyes, beneath pencil thin brows. Cascading over her
smooth shoulders was long, thick black hair, that had been
painstakingly curled and picked into place, almost as sort of a dark
halo around the woman.
Her
face, quite attractive when bare, now was made up in a becoming way:
white and metallic silver shadow frosted her eyelids, off set by the
black liner and mascara, a smattering of dark raspberry blush applied
to hollows of the cheeks to make the bones stick out more, and
leaning into the mirror for a closer look, she was painting her
small, pouted mouth, with strokes of a bright red, glossy
lipstick.
She
was distracted from her own beauty by the meek and timid
knocking.
“Camille?
Camille, are you decent, Dear?”
Came
the sweet, almost musical voice from the other side of the closed
door.
A
contented smile came to the woman’s face and she chuckled to
herself as more knocks were placed.
For
the last two years, Camille Dufrense had lived in the same condo with
her boyfriend, Michael Jackson.
He
could have rightly barged into the bathroom at will--Lord knows he
footed all the bills--but he was a gentleman. He scarcely ever
entered Camille’s private bath without knocking first.
“Come
in, Darling…” She called and picking up a powder sponge was
dabbing her nose with it.
A
moment later, the door cracked and a lovely creature slipped
inside.
Michael
Jackson, a tall, fairly slim and gangly man, leaned against the
doorframe, and reflected in the mirror behind Camille.
Michael
was beautiful in his own right, with a skin tone that matched that of
his girlfriend’s perfectly. His hair, jet black and arranged in
short, glossy curls, a few falling into his eyes, bounced as he moved
from side to side.
Even
from where she sat, Camille could tell Michael was wearing his own
cosmetics--kohl around the eyes and bright red blush on the
cheeks.
He
never left the house without it and even in bed she rarely saw his
natural skin glow without his blush.
His
taut, lithe body was hidden by a blue velvet robe.
Oddly
enough, his feet and skinny legs were covered by hunter green
tights.
“Camille,
I was wondering if you’re almost done putting on your face…” He
announced starting to stride over behind her. “We still have to get
dressed and drive out to Beverly Hills to get to Marlon’s
house.”
Again
Camille smiled.
Michael’s
older brother, Marlon, who was very fond of throwing parties for
absolutely no conceivable reason, perhaps there was a bit of Gatsby
in him, was giving a costume party at his estate that night--though
Halloween was over a month away.
(And
they had RSVP’d almost a month ago for the festivities.)
“Yes…”
Camille turned and started to beam at Michael. “You know perfection
takes time--”
She
stopped abruptly, when she noticed that Michael was not returning the
beam. Instead, he appeared to be frowning.
“What’s
wrong?” She questioned, her small lips pushing out with
misunderstanding. “Don’t you think I look pretty?”
Longs
hands were shoved into the pockets of his robe and Michael groaned
loudly,
“You
look gorgeous, Camille, you always do, but…” He hesitated and his
dark eyes met hers for a moment. “But, we’re going as Peter Pan
and Wendy to the party, Baby.”
When
her face showed she still didn’t understand her error, Michael
elaborated.
“You’re
done up like you’re going as Iman to a photo shoot. Wendy is
supposed to be like, an adolescent or teenage girl. She wouldn’t be
as made up as you are--”
“You
mean you want me to take my make up off?” Camille, gasped aghast at
the notion. “Do you realize it took me forty-five minutes to look
like this?”
“Well--”
Rising
up and placing hands on her hips, she continued,
“And
I’m not a kid or teen, Mike! I’m twenty-five! It’s already
enough I have to simper around Marlon’s party in a nightgown. Let
me keep my face as it is! I‘m going to be at a party with all our
friends--I can‘t go around with a bare face! It‘s….it‘s
inhuman!”
Camille
would have rather died than gone around their crowd looking pale and
sallow with no color or accent to her face.
A
cool, smug smile came to Michael’s pointed face as he looked down
on the lovely and dismayed one scowling up at him.
“Even
if I ask, you won’t take it off, will you?” He wondered, and
stubbornly, Camille shook her head.
“Fine…”
A long arm was draped around the woman and her forehead smooched
lightly. “…I’ll take a ‘sexy’ Wendy with me to the party,
then!”
Pretending
to be angry, though she had won the battle, Camille continued to
frown, as Michael continued pecking at her face, before his lips
collided with hers, sweetly.
“I
just hope no one tries to steal you away from me…pretty young thing
like you…” Michael murmured between smooches.
Camille
couldn’t stay angry, real angry, at him for long anyway. It was
impossible to.
But
if only she knew who would try to steal her away.
Three
Hours Later
Beverly
Hills, California
“…There’s
something strange, in the neighborhood…Who ya gonna call?
Ghostbusters! …”
Marlon
Jackson’s grand and palatial estate, a soaring and sweeping, white
Italianate structure, was a hotbed of activity that unseasonably warm
Fall night.
All
through the home, and spilling out into the expanse backyard, were
over a hundred attendees, all wearing some form of costume, from a
woman, dressed as a gorilla and carrying a Barbie doll--obviously
King Kong carrying Fay Wray--to a man dressed as President John F.
Kennedy--after the gunshot, with half his brain oozing out the large
wound in back of his head.
Camille
was having a pleasant time, dancing across the front foyer, packed
with people, and sampling various appetizers as handed out by
waitresses dresses as French maids. And from time to time, winking at
the other males whose eye she happened to catch.
But
she wasn’t going to flirt, she was intensely loyal and faithful to
Michael.
Also
he was nearby.
A
few feet from her, Michael Jackson conversed with two of his
siblings--he had eight others in all--Jermaine and Marlon.
Jermaine,
who was notorious for changing partners like he changed drawers, had
come as Casanova, a just characterization if there ever was one,
dressed as an eighteenth century gentleman with a white powdered
curly wig and heavily powdered face. For effect, every so often, he’d
drop a pair of silky panties out of his pocket.
A
pink and gold brocade suit and crisp white blouse covered his tall,
chunky body.
(Already
a scuffle had broken out between two of his girlfriends who happened
to run into each other during the fete.)
The
host of the party, Marlon Jackson, a man who always had a loud laugh
coming out of his mouth, was a pirate.
A
bit shorter and thicker of body than his siblings, Marlon was
costumed, as a pirate.
He
wore a ruffled, gold silk shirt, tucked into black spandex trousers,
with patent leather knee-boots, all of which hugged his muscular
frame. A gem-studded patch covered his left eye. A large, gold hoop
dangled from his left ear and reflected the light, like his golden
saber, hanging from his hip by a leather belt.
Jewel
encrusted rings--all real--glittered as Marlon, talking about
something in an animated fashion, was waving his hands around.
It
was a good party, a good mood and Camille was prepared to party until
the sun came up--as such shindigs did go on until the last patron
stumbled on home in a drunken stupor.
As
Camille paused, watching her boyfriend, now hooting boisterously with
his brothers, she got the sudden feeling that she, herself, was being
watched.
Tearing
her gaze from her Suntanned Peter Pan, she began to look around to
see just who was watching her.
Near
her were several couples, but all were engaged in their own
conversations, speaking and looking only at each other.
It
took several moments, but Camille was able to locate the source of
her creepy feeling.
A
few yards away, leaning in the open doorway, leading off into the
formal living room, a man stood.
He
was a small White man, not really a midget, but much shorter than the
general population milling about him. He had a strange, pale face,
with large, wide and darting green eyes and short, dark hair, that
was a bit tousled. He wore an ill-fitting light brown suit and held a
fedora in one hand.
He
amused Camille the moment she saw him, because he reminded her of
some old film actor…she just couldn’t call his name.
Raising
a hand she waved at him and he waved back.
What
a strange, small man indeed.
“Caviar
and crème cheese canapé, Ma’am?”
A
voice questioned and mildly startled, Camille saw that a waitress had
come up to her, balancing a large, silver platter in her hands.
“Yes,
thank you.” Camille partook of a treat and as the woman moved on,
looked to the door for the small man.
He
was no longer visible.
Still
curious as to the name of the actor he was portraying, she sauntered
over to Michael, who remained clustered with his brothers by the
winding, spiral staircase leading up to the second and third
floors.
“…I’m
glad I could make the party…” Jermaine was commenting, sipping
from a flute of champagne. “…cause I’m taking off for Fiji
tomorrow. Going on vacation….”
“HA!”
Marlon screamed with laughter and gave Jermaine a playful push. “You
ain’t fooling anybody man! Vacation my round black ass! We know you
got a girl there--you got a girl everywhere! Don’t forget, you owe
me for that Chinese urn your two battling babes broke earlier
tonight!”
“Hey
man,” Jermaine took another drink. “You knew you were doing wrong
inviting Amanda and Shelly here in the first damn place! It’s your
fault they got into it over me! I don’t owe you shi--”
“Can’t
believe anybody would get into it over you.” Michael tossed his
head, hair bouncing.
“You
know what, Michael, fuc--”
“Hi,
Boys.” Camille interrupted Jermaine, knowing that once he got wound
up, it would be hours before his long-winded self would clam up. Or
say something that caused Peter Pan to become a grown man knock the
powder out Casanova’s wig.
“Hey,
Baby!” Michael instantly had an arm around her and was tugging her
close. “I hope you don’t feel abandoned, we were just shooting
the breeze.”
“Man
talk!” Marlon grunted and his plump lips were parting in a bright
smile. Jermaine merely drank more.
“No,
Honey…” Camille patted at Michael’s soft chest. “I wanted to
ask you something--Who was that little guy we watched in that horror
film the other night?”
A
frown crossed Michael’s face as he pondered. “You mean that
movie, “The Mad Hands”?”
“Yes…who
was that funny looking guy in it?” Camille repeated, her own mind
scrambling,
“I
heard of that film.” Marlon interjected. “Y’all and your old
ass movies--that actor is Peter Lorre.”
“That’s
it! Peter Lorre!” Camille clapped her hands happily. “Who’s the
guy that came dressed as Peter Lorre, he looks just like him!”
Taking
an appetizer off a passing tray, Marlon popped into his mouth and
shrugged,
“Hell,
I don’t know; I invited half the people here and the other half, my
wife invited. Might be someone she knows.”
“Where
is Carol?” Camille inquired, ready to go find Marlon’s spouse, if
she didn’t bump back into the small man herself.
“Um…”
Marlon mumbled and rubbed at his chin. “Lord, I don’t know. I
haven’t seen her since I popped the first bottle of bubbly, two
hours ago. She’s somewhere--we kicked off the party in the rose
garden out back, she might be there...”
“One
of these days, you’re gonna lose that woman and not find her!”
Michael cackled and scowling Marlon snapped,
“Aw,
shut up and go find your damn shadow, Peter Pan!”
Kissing
at Michael’s rouged cheek, Camille excused herself.
Making
her way through the house, and dodging a partier who was vomiting in
the kitchen trashcan, she made her way out to the backyard.
The
party was even wilder outside, than in.
Several
people were flopping around in the marble rimmed, liver-shaped pool,
and a woman, completely nude--not Carol though--went running by
whooping it up, four men, dressed as the Marx Brothers giving
pursuit.
It
then dawned on Camille that Carol could be anyone there, as she had
neglected to ask Marlon just who or what his wife was dressed up
as.
Was
she a female pirate, or something else like a princess or a fairy or
a fencer?
Starting
around the pool, she began looking at every Black woman she passed,
hoping to find Carol.
After
squinting at a half-dozen women, and not discovering the elusive Mrs.
Jackson, only a line of imitation Diana Rosses, Camille saw a
welcomed sight.
Up
ahead, and waving at her again, was the small man.
“Hey,
wait!” Camille called and started towards him.
Much
to her chagrin, the man turned and began pacing away.
There
was no true rhyme or reason why Camille suddenly felt compelled to
pursue this man.
She
was not attracted to him in any way, as he was small, and quite ugly,
and she had marvelous Michael whom she was more than pleased
with.
But
the small man piqued a rare interest in her, and she wanted to meet
him.
That
is, if she could catch him first.
She
completely circled the pool trying to reach that strange creature and
almost shrieked an obscenity when she lost track of him a second
time.
This
was starting to get ridiculous, now.
How
could she lose such a distinctive looking person?
Resigning
herself to the idea that she would never know who he was, and could
not seem to locate Carol for help, Camille started back into the
house to find Michael and spend the rest of the evening with him.
At
least she knew where she had left her boyfriend.
Coming
to where the spiral staircase met the foyer, she was dismayed to see
Michael, Marlon and Jermaine were no longer there.
“Damn
it all to hell!” Camille gasped to herself, pounding a fist into
the palm of her hand.
Was
she doomed to spend the entire party alone?
Passing
the spiral stair, something just barely caught her
attention.
Standing,
about a dozen steps up and in the first curve of the staircase, was
the small man.
This
time, instead of waving, he appeared to be beckoning Camille.
Wiggling a finger at her to come and join him.
Glancing
around, and wanting to avoid a full-blown scandal, she saw that no
one was watching her, and advanced up to the man.
Standing
that closely to him, Camille was surprised to see that she stood a
good foot taller than him.
“Hello.”
She greeted him with a smile, and for the first time all night, he
grinned, revealing tiny, weirdly crroked white teeth.
“Hello.”
He had a light, brisk British accent.
“You’ve
been a hard guy to catch all night…I must say, I do like your
costume very much. It’s very simple. You make a great Peter
Lorre--you look exactly like him.” Camille giggled.
“Costume…?”
The small man echoed and was crumpling his hat in his hands. “You
are very beautiful, Miss…”
Camille
was quite used to being complimented, and took it as normally as
discussing the weather when getting a bit of praise.
“Thank
you, I’m Camille Dufrense, and you are?” She introduced
herself.
“Timothy
Alastair.” The man nodded, hat turning to a mess of felt in his
hands. Was he that nervous to be speaking to Camille? Or was her
beauty unnerving to him?
“Well,
it’s very nice to meet you. Who invited you, Marlon or
Carol?”
Timothy’s
green eyes sparkled,
“Why,
Carol did.”
“Oh,
Carol did--and how do you know Carol, Timothy?” Camille was feeling
at ease with this odd little guy and leaned against the banister
carelessly.
“Carol
and I work together.” Timothy replied, moving closer to her.
It
was a simple benign statement, but one that struck Camille
strangely.
Carol
Jackson didn’t work.
She’d
never needed to. She came from an old, well-moneyed Southern family,
and had married into a well-moneyed West Coast one when she took vows
with Marlon.
Carol
was a woman who’s only work was to remain slim, pleasant and pretty
for her man.
She
didn’t need to work!
Camille
gazed down at Timothy, who was so close to her it was becoming
indecent. She could smell pipe tobacco on him plainly.
“Are
you friends with Carol?” Timothy asked, a sleepy, half-lidded look
coming to his eyes as he leaned yet closer to Camille.
“Yes…”
Camille instantly aware of his sordid intentions, stiffened.
“Her
husband’s brother is my boyfriend…if you’d please…”
Putting
her hands up, Camille gripped Timothy’s tiny shoulders to push him
away. He was too close for comfort, and Michael, once he got a few
snifters into his thin body and system could be as fiery as a bull
with red before its eyes if he saw someone on the make for his
girl.
As
she touched Timothy, she was keenly aware that he was cold.
Colder
than any person she touched in her life.
Colder
than anyone should have been on that balmy night, in a house spilling
over with bouncing, dancing, drinking bodies.
She
stared down into those green eyes, eyes that were sharply piercing
her own brown ones. Eyes that seemed to be staring beyond her face,
and were peering off into her soul.
Eyes
with a gaze as cold as the body in which they were fixed.
And
then everything went black.
Every,
single, solitary light bulb illuminating Marlon Jackson’s home and
property, all, at once, blew out.
Bathing
everything within the iron gates surrounding it in sheer
blackness.
“I’LL
BE GODDAMNED!”
Came
Marlon’s panicked cry a few rooms over, carrying above the din of
surprised shrieks and intoxicated chuckles.
“A
FUSE MUST HAVE BLOWN! CAROL! CAROL! CAROL ANN!”
Marlon’s
voice passed under Camille as he went running through the mass,
hunting his wife and the fuse box.
After
a few moments of quite loud cursing between the host couple--Marlon
had finally found his wife--the lights came back on and the pop music
resumed blaring.
And
Camille nearly came to leaping over the banister.
The
small man was gone!
Timothy
Alastair was gone.
Camille’s
hands remained out, where she had been gripping his shoulders, but he
was no longer under her grasp.
She
held nothing but air.
Where
was he? Where had he gone? The staircase was made of pure marble;
anyone walking up or down made clear noise. He was gone and she had
heard NOTHING! How was that even possible?
“Camille?”
Room
spinning, the confused woman turned, and saw that Michael, dressed as
that resplendent boy who refused to grow up, was mounting the stairs
to her.
“Baby,
are you alright?” He questioned coming and wrapping his arms around
her, and went to peck her forehead.
“Camille!”
He gasped, eyes growing large. “You’re trembling! What’s the
matter? Were you afraid of the dark?”
Hugging
her lover tightly, Camille hoarsely begged,
“Please…please
take me home now! I want to go home now!”
Seeing
just how stricken his girlfriend was, Michael nodded and took her
hand. She cherished the loving warmth of his meat hook, after
touching that cold small man.
“Oh…okay,
Sweetie. We’ll go home. I’ll take you home.”
She
just wanted to get out of there.
And
put as much space between her and the small man as humanly
possible.
One
Week Later
“…which
one of these do you think will go best with grey slacks and a white
shirt?”
At
the gentle inquiry, Camille looked up from the magazine she was
flipping through.
Standing
at the end of the couch on which she was draped on lazily, Michael
stood, holding a belt in each hand.
One
was about an inch thick and encrusted with pave crystals the other
was much wider, and resembled a prize fighter’s belt, featuring
several moldered starbursts, and was a gleaming silver plate.
Setting
her magazine down, Camille replied,
“I
like them both, but what’s the occasion?” She couldn’t recall
them having an outing that afternoon.
“It’s
not for me--it’s for Marlon.” Michael informed her. “Carol’s
parents are in town and they’re having dinner at some place in the
Hills. Anyway, he wanted to borrow one of my belts to offset the
look.”
“Oh--the
simpler one, if it’s for the ‘rents.” Camille snickered as the
doorbell began to chime.
“Okay.”
Michael nodded, tossing the larger belt onto an armchair and
proceeding to the door, where he allowed Marlon in.
Marlon,
already dressed for dinner, thought it was barely three in the
afternoon, as he faced a long drive back into Beverly Hill from Los
Angeles, breezed into the room in his loud and exuberant way.
“Hey
Mike! Damn, that belt is perfect! Hi Camille!” He announced, taking
the belt from Michael and waving.
“You
came a long way for a belt.” Michael commented as Marlon stood in
the front hallway, in front of the full-length mirror and began
looping the belt around his slender waist.
“I
know, but you always have the best junk just laying around. And
besides, I don’t see the Parkers that often, since they live in New
Orleans. I like to always make a good impression when I see
them.”
Marlon
explained, pulling a small comb from his pocket and ran it through
his own thick black curls and picking at the thin mustache gracing
his top lip.
“Yeah,
I hear that. Seeing the in-laws would worry anyone.” Michael
chuckled, as Marlon continued primping.
Camille,
a silent spectator from the couch, opened her mouth and had spoken
before she intended to,
“Who
is Timothy Alastair?”
“Huh?”
Both brothers distracted, hummed in unison.
She
repeated the questioned.
“I’ve
never heard that name before.” Michael blew off the inquiry and
went to say something to Marlon, when Marlon, lock of hair still
tangled in his comb, wandered from the mirror and over to the
couch.
Looming
over Camille, he stared at her, his light eyes full of strange glow
Camille had never seen in them before.
“How
on God’s green earth do you know the name Timothy Alastair?” He
whispered, eyes growing larger.
“I
met him at your party last week, he was the little guy I saw that was
dressed as Peter Lorre.” She glanced at Michael, who seemed
clueless, then back to Marlon.
“Why?”
Taking
a seat beside her, Marlon still held his comb in his head.
“You
met a man at MY party, and he said his name was Timothy Alastair?”
His voice became even lighter in his incredulity.
“Yes,
Marlon!” Camille insisted eyes blazing. “Why don’t you believe
me?”
“Because…”
Marlon finally got his comb free of his hair and tossed it on the
wicker coffee table.
“Because,
Timothy Alastair is the man that owned my house, before Carol and I
bought it.”
“Oh…”
Camille sighed. “You invited the former owner to your party. That
was nice.”
“No
it wasn’t.” Marlon shook his head and all his carefully tended
hair flew.
“Timothy
Alastair is dead.”
Camille
went cold all over and was struck speechless.
“Marlon,
what are you talking about?” Michael pushing his discarded belt
aside, it falling to the floor, sat in the armchair.
Turning
to gaze on his brother, Marlon said quietly,
“Just
what I said, Timothy Alastair is dead…” Head lowering and
starting to fiddle with his hands, Marlon started to explain.
“I
never told anyone this, but when Carol and I bought that house, about
ten years old, we got it cheap. Real cheap. Much cheaper than what it
was worth. That house, when we bought it, was worth fifteen million
dollars, but we purchased it for less than a million.”
Throwing
his head back, Michael joked casually,
“You
got that humungous place for one-fifteenth of it’s worth? What
happened? Someone get murdered in there?”
The
grin left Michael’s face when Marlon bobbed his
head,
“Yes.”
Staring
back down at his hands, Marlon continued solemnly,
“My
house was originally built in 1931 for a wealthy playboy as his
bachelor pad.” His eyes drifted to Camille,
“Timothy
Alastair. He’d made his money on Wall Street and jumped ship
shortly before the stock market crash in 1929. Anyway, Timothy played
the field before sinking some of his money into a modeling agency. In
1934, according to the realtor, he fell in love with one of his
employees, a model named Carole Sinclair…
Camille’s
head buzzed at the fact. The small man said he had worked with Carol.
Not Carol Jackson, but another Carole entirely!
“…They
got married shortly after. But it seems Timothy refused to give up
his playboy ways and had numerous affairs. In 1945, it reached a
head. Timothy got one of his mistresses, a young woman, half his age,
pregnant, and announced to Carole he wanted her gone. He wanted a
divorce and wanted to marry and bring his younger woman into the
house…”
Marlon
sank back into the cushions of the couch.
“Well,
Carole agreed to leave, and the divorce papers went in. Timothy
married the second woman, I think her name was Jobyna, and they
settled in. About three months after it all, Timothy and Jobyna were
getting ready to leave on a delayed honeymoon. They were both in the
front hall when the doorbell rang. Thinking nothing of it, Timothy
went and flung the door open. And was immediately shot by Carole, who
had come wielding a shot gun. Timothy died right there. Jobyna died a
few feet away, trying to make a run up the stairs…she was six
months along…Carole then went and phone the authorities. She spent
the rest of her days doing a life sentence in prison…”
Michael,
Marlon and Camille all sat quietly, the story sinking in.
Michael,
still skeptical finally spoke,
“You
mean to tell me…tell us…that Camille saw the ghost of a guy that
got killed--over ten years before you were even born? Do you hear
yourself?” He gasped shaking his head, his disbelief clear on his
face.
“Michael!”
Marlon fixed his gaze on his sibling. “I’ve seen a picture of
Timothy Alastair. He was a man of short stature, and he did bear one
hell of a resemblance to that Peter Lorre guy. And Camille did say
she saw a Peter Lorre look-alike at my party. I don’t know anyone
that small, neither does my Carol when I asked her about it.”
Marlon
turned back to Camille and what he said next did nothing short of
shock her.
“I’ve
also seen Jobyna Alastair. Though it was unconventional at the time
because people were backwards and pig-headed, Timothy, though he was
White, married a Black woman. And if I squint hard enough at you,
Camille, I can see Jobyna. Different decade, different make-up,
different hairstyle, but the face is there.”
“Oh
my God!” Michael, put his hands to his face
Camille,
horrified stared off into space.
What
had she seen in Marlon Jackson’s house?
Had
she really encountered a ghost?
A
ghost that was drawn to her because she resembled his second,
murdered trophy wife?
A
trophy wife he was riddled with bullets for?
Camille
never did find out the answer.
Nor
did she ever attend another party on Marlon Jackson’s property ever
again.
If
she again ever ran into Timothy Alastair, the small man, or the
spirit thereof, who knows what might have happened to or become of
her?
I
have always been fascinated by costume parties and masquerade balls.
I have found a note of the mysterious when people congregate in one
place, all dressed and appearing to be something or someone they are
not. Of course, this friendly deception is done all for the sake of
fun and amusement. But in this story, a young party-goer will find
nothing fun or amusing when she encounters a strange and small man…
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