But I will rise to your challenge. The famous six word story has at least two characters, the baby and the person who obtained and is not selling the shoes. There is also change. There was a perceived need for shoes, and now that perceived need is no more. That is enormous change. This is all due to the fact that the entire story is not contained in the six words.
It is an outstanding execution of minimalist story telling. But it supports the argument in favour of the need for character. The story is not really about the buying and selling of shoes. It is about the desire of the character who bought and sold the shoes and what change has occurred for that person.
Yeah, but all of that is implied, not actually featured. And now above FifthView and Heliotrope are discussing the narrator, and the reader, as characters in the story? And that's after topics like the "setting" as the character, and now the backstory is the character?
It's getting to be a little much.
Doesn't the character have to have some kind of role in the story to qualify as a character?