This document appears to be a page from a manuscript or memoir submitted as evidence to the House Oversight Committee. It details a tense narrative scene where the narrator is confronted by an erratic male figure (potentially Epstein or an associate, though unnamed in the text) who accuses the narrator of a transgression involving a woman ('got the horns'), threatens to have the narrator killed or thrown out a window, calls the woman's mother, and ultimately resolves the tension by borrowing twenty dollars.
| Name | Role | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Narrator ('I') | Protagonist |
Caught in a compromising situation ('pants down'), threatened with death, makes a wisecrack to defuse the situation, ...
|
| Male Antagonist ('He') | Aggressor |
Threatens to throw narrator out a window and have him killed. Claims to have 'got the horns' (implies being cheated o...
|
| 'Her' (Unnamed Female) | Subject of conflict |
Implied partner of the antagonist; the narrator was caught with her.
|
| 'Her' Mother | Phone call recipient |
Called by the antagonist during the confrontation.
|
| Narrator's Mother and Father | Mentioned |
Used as part of a death threat by the antagonist.
|
| Name | Type | Context |
|---|---|---|
| House Oversight Committee |
Document source/footer stamp
|
| Location | Context |
|---|---|
|
Location of the confrontation, high enough to threaten throwing someone out a window.
|
""I guess I caught you with your pants down, didn't I?""Source
""What should I do, throw 'im out the window?""Source
""I got the horns," he yelled. "I gotta do something! It ain't manly!""Source
""I could arrange to have you killed while I was having dinner with your mother and father.""Source
"Then he borrowed twenty dollars, which we both knew I would never get back, but it was worth not being thrown out the window."Source
Complete text extracted from the document (1,090 characters)
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