MaMa, eBook/Paperback/Hardcover available now

MaMa, eBook/Paperback/Hardcover available now

There once was a dolly, with the face of an innocent little baby. She could eat and breathe through the hole in her mouth. Her single eye stared relentlessly, some would say malignantly, full of evil, watching, waiting . . . As the years rolled away, she waited in the attic to be picked up, cooed over, and set free to work her will . . .
Dorrie had lost her father, and was trying to adapt to her new surroundings. She found happiness in the attic, with her new-found dolly. Her mother, brother and sister seemed busy doing other things.  If she had better understood this life and death thing, she might have been concerned when her little doll began to move on its own. If only she had understood that her little doll might have a mind of its own, she might have wondered if the doll actually intended to set off a killing spree …

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Following her husband’s long illness ending in death, Elsea and her three children were left with no home and very little money. Her parents offered them a place to live. An old house outside of town that had been owned by their family for more than three generations. The house had been listed for sale for some time, with no takers. They happily moved in and began to enjoy their newfound security.

Elsea quickly made friends with bearded, handsome neighbor Corey, but she felt that it was too soon for a relationship. Corey began encouraging Elsea to take up writing. Stephanie began helping with household chores, while Tommy tended to roam outdoors. Meanwhile, five year old Dorrie, the quiet one of the bunch, began spending much of her time in the attic, playing with old dolls and toys that she found there. She grew attached to one doll in particular, with a smooth porcelain-like face just like a baby; and a mouth with a tiny hole so she could eat and breathe. But the doll had only one beaded glass eye—and it gleamed with mischief and evil. Dorrie really did not understand this talk of life and death, and could not understand at all why her Daddy was not coming home. Also, she noticed that sharing her breath with the doll, rubbing and talking to it, seemed to bring it alive. It certainly could move about on its own, and while that sometimes frightened her, she loved the little doll. She began working with other toys so they could move too.

Tommy was the one that began noticing thumps in the attic and other noises. He tried to explain to both his mother and sister Stephanie, but they did not believe him. He did not share what he knew with Corey, because he did not want to be seen as fearful of small things. So, he became the only one responsible for helping Dorrie deal with her creations. If only Dorrie could have read her sweet little doll’s thoughts . . . she would have run from the attic as fast as she could. For you see . . . her doll seemed to have killing in mind . . .

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