'Your name is
Jonathan Wheeler, you're thirty-three, you're married and you work as
an administrator at the local university.' Dr. Wallace read the file
of his patient aloud as he sat opposite him. He had shaggy, unkempt
hair that skirted the shoulders of his three pound suit, leaving a
small mound of dandruff that was as clear as chalk on a blackboard.
His tie was undone as if he was wearing it not as a tie, but as a
medallion. He looked like he had not shaved for a month as a messy
beard grew out of his chin wildly. His most distinguishing features
however were the huge bags under his eyes.
'That's right. I'm
only working there temporarily because I want to be a full-time
writer. A stupid idea, I know, but everyone has to have a dream,
right?'
'Of course. So, Mr.
Wheeler, what can I do for you?' Dr. Wallace took out his notebook
and pen and looked directly at Wheeler.
'No, I don't think I
can do this.' Wheeler rose from his chair and headed towards the
door. He stopped when the doctor called after him.
'Why did you come to
see me then?'
'For a start, I
don't think you'll believe me and I need you to or else I'll end up
in a straitjacket.'
'Not necessarily.
Your story may be a common one.'
'Oh, it isn't.'
Dr. Wallace
signalled with his hand. 'Mr. Wheeler, far be it from me to make a
snap judgement in light of us only having a minute's
acquaintanceship, but you seem to want to get something off your
chest. May be you need someone impartial to discuss this with and if
so, I'm your man. Besides, if you didn't wish to talk about it, why
did you come in the first place?'
'To borrow your
terms, it was a “snap decision.” I always feel so useless asking
for help.'
'Everyone needs help
sometimes, even we humble psychiatrists. Of course I can't force you
to confess your worries, but remember patient and doctor
confidentiality; nothing will leave this room.'
Wheeler sighed and
sunk back into the green leather bound armchair opposite the doctor
as if he wanted to be swallowed by it. 'I might as well, I've nothing
better to do.'
'Good. Now please,
tell me what's on your mind.'
Wheeler leaned
forward towards Wallace and lowered his voice as if he was concerned
about an eavesdropper. 'Before I begin, I want to stress that
although I want to be a writer, I am not a fanciful person. I keep
the wild ideas to fiction. I don't exactly revel in the same insanity
in real life.'
'Insanity?'
Wheeler laughed. ' I
guess that's a dirty word to say in a psychiatrist's office, huh?'
Dr. Wallace smiled.
'Relax. I may be a psychiatrist, but I am still human. Forget about
insane asylums, men in lab coats and other ideas that come with the
stigma of my profession and just talk to me, man to man, about your
problem.'
'Well I keep seeing
this thing, a figure.'
Dr. Wallace began to
take notes. 'A figure? Could you elaborate?'
'It's hard to
describe. The thing that haunts me is as undefined as a stick man. It
appears to be relatively humanoid but everything is off about it.'
'Off?'
'Yeah. Its bald head
is too round, its arms are too long, its legs are too thin and its
shoulders are too broad. It is always cloaked in shadow as if it were
a living silhouette independent of a source. I look at it from
different angles, yet my perception of it never changes.'
'What do you mean
exactly?'
'Take last Monday
for example. I was at the shopping centre buying a birthday gift for
my wife. In the process I had to walk over a bridge on the first
floor that connected the mall to the car park...'
'Yes, I know it.'
'Yeah. Well, as you
know, it overlooks the plaza where the smokers converge. It was
rather cold so I rushed to go back indoors but then I saw it. This
was the truly weird thing though, Doc, because the figure wasn't in
front of me or behind me; in fact, it wasn't even on the same level
as me, it was right down there in the plaza. Now when we see someone
from above, we may see a bird's eye view or a skewed angle of them
depending on our position, but with the figure I could see it as if
it were in front of me. It stood there dead straight. It was not
physically possible for the figure to appear to me at that angle from
the height I was.'
Wallace was taking
notes. He raised his head at the silence and said: 'Carry on, Mr.
Wheeler, I am listening.'
'I withdrew into the
mall and it was there again as if it had teleported.'
'What then?'
'I just carried on
with my shopping, but my head was always looking over my shoulder.'
'I admire your
bravery.'
'Yeah, you expect me
to be scared of it but this is the main point of my problem. It's not
fright, not any more. It's annoyance. I just want that thing out
of my life.'
Wheeler got up out
of the chair and started pacing around the office. There was little
room, so he settled with walking around in a circle. 'Quite a
premise, huh?'
'When did you first
see this figure of yours? It might help in finding out its purpose.'
Wheeler stopped
pacing and stood still. He looked straight into Wallace's eyes. 'I
wish I could remember. I know intellectually that it's been a few
years and yet I can't fight the feeling that it has always been there
with me.'
'How does that
work?'
'I have clues that
it was recent. For example, I know for a fact that I was an adult
when I first encountered the figure, but at the same time my heart is
telling me that it must have been with me since birth but I never
noticed it.'
'You seem to notice
new things through adult eyes,' Wallace suggested.
'It seems that way.
In my childlike state I must have seen the figure as wishful
thinking; an imaginary friend come to light, perhaps. As a child any
thing's possible, it's only when you're an adult that you criticise
life and realise that fairytales are just fairytales. Beyond this
theory though, I can't remember if the figure was actually there
during my childhood and I realised it was there as an adult or
whether it appeared recently.'
'So let us say that
this figure's been with you for a while, it must have tried to
approach you.'
'Believe it or not
it hasn't. When it appears it always maintains the same range of
distance from me from ten yards to, around I would say, fifty yards.
It looks like it's observing me.'
'Well, have you
tried to approach it?'
'That's almost a
silly question. I've tried every time but it's useless. It's like
trying to chase after the sun on the horizon. No matter how fast I
run, it is always the same distance away from me but it doesn't seem
to move. I yell after it but it never responds.'
'How would you say
it does move, then?'
'I don't know, it's
hard to explain.' Wheeler sat back down in his chair and placed his
chin between his thumb and forefinger. 'Sometimes, as I said earlier,
it seems to teleport from one place to the other, but on different
occasions it recedes into the background like someone's shadow.'
'May be it is your
shadow.'
Wheeler laughed. 'Oh
Doctor, do you think I'm so foolish? I'm not the sharpest knife in
the drawer but I know what I see and it is not my
shadow.'
'I'm
sorry, Mr. Wheeler, but in the process of unravelling your mystery we
have to eliminate every possible explanation, even the obvious ones.'
Wheeler nodded, took a deep sigh and relaxed in the chair which made
an audible creak.
The two had sat in
silence for a considerable amount of time. Wallace was fiddling with
his pen while reading his notes while Wheeler stared at the ornaments
that adorned Wallace's office. Something in particular had caught his
eye: a jade Buddha statue. Wheeler chuckled, 'You a religious man,
Doc?'
'Hm?' Wheeler
pointed at the statue and Wallace followed his finger point. 'Oh! Not
really, no. I just have that as decoration.'
'It looks peaceful,'
said Wheeler.
'I'd imagine it
would.'
'I'd love to be a
statue,' said Wheeler, breaking the awkward silence.
'Really?'
'Yeah, sounds weird
I know, but I could just sit on a shelf and relax and observe. I
wouldn't care if I were forgotten and I was collecting dust because
I'd be in peace.'
'Yeah... Forgive me
if I sound harsh here, Mr. Wheeler, but if this figure doesn't
approach or harm you, why are you here? You could simply ignore it,'
said Wallace fetching the statue down from the shelf and giving it to
Wheeler, 'or, you could model yourself on our little friend here.
Relax, meditate and put it out of your mind.'
Wheeler smiled and
examined the figurine, 'I guess my story has fascinated you, huh?'
'Every story my
clients tell me intrigues me, but yours is one of the oddest I've
heard.'
'So you believe me,
then?' Wheeler asked.
Wallace looked away
from Wheeler. 'Truthfully? I'm not sure yet. It may yet still be a
bad dream.'
Wheeler scoffed and
put the figurine on the table, 'I knew you wouldn't commit that
easily. That isn't the most of my worries though. If the figure just
affected my perspective on life I wouldn't be here because I'd phase
it out as you suggest, but it's destroying my relationship too.'
'How so? Does Mrs.
Wheeler see it?'
'I wish she did so
we could talk about it.' Wheeler looked around as if he were
confessing to a pastor. 'Claire and I haven't made love for as long
as I can remember because it was always there, night after night.'
'What, in your
bedroom?'
'Yes! You have no
idea how unnerving it is having that thing stand
at the foot of your bed. How do porn stars cope with having people
watch and film them?'
Wallace chuckled,
'I'm sorry, I didn't mean to laugh. So its presence affects your
performance?'
'Well wouldn't it
yours?'
'Erm...'
'Doctor, you seem
like a man of the world so I'll spare you the embarrassment of
telling you every sordid detail but I used to sleep with my wife.'
'Used to?'
'That's right.
Claire was getting tired of my complaining so she threw me out of the
bed and I haven't been back in there since. She thinks I'm having an
affair or, worse, she thinks I'm impotent.'
'I'm sorry.'
'She hardly speaks
to me now. We weren't exactly a model couple to begin with, so this
nonsense has put us on the edge.'
'Haven't you tried
to discuss this with her?'
'Of course but she
never listens. It's gotten so bad she's locked me out of our bedroom,
so I sleep in the spare room now. As you can imagine it's small with
just the bare essentials in it but it suits me down to the ground.
Any thing's better than hearing Claire's nagging. The reason I tell
you this is not for sympathy but because, as you can guess, the
figure still haunts me in there. A lot of the time the figure doesn't
seem to be in the room with me.'
'How is it affecting
you then?'
'The bed is
underneath the window and the window is protected from the night by
some Venetian blinds. The street lamps behind it obviously illuminate
the window so it is never truly dark in there. It's not ideal being
underneath this dim light, however you become accustomed to it.'
'Granted.'
'Any way, after a
week's peaceful sleep where nothing untoward happened, I went to bed
the following Sunday. I wasn't too tired so I decided to write a
little. After a while my page became dark and I became shaded by some
sort of darkness. I thought that may be the street lights had short
circuited so I thought nothing of it at first. Eventually, a small
light managed to break through the darkness so I could finally see
what its source was: a huge shadow which extended from the window
onto my wall and when I say “huge”, I mean it. Its head was as
round as a football while the monolith of the body was latched onto
it. It was the first time in a very long while that I was scared of
it.'
'Hmm, I can imagine.
Surely this can't be the same figure though. You yourself had said
that the figure seemed like the size of a regular human, not a
giant.'
'It was a shadow,
therefore the figure was probably a few yards away and its shadow was
stretched on my wall. I'm no scientist, but that'd be my guess, any
way.'
Wallace frowned and
nodded. 'Oh, I see. Does it ever come into the room?'
'Not to my knowledge
but it's the expectation of it that afflicts me. I can't count the
sleepless nights I've had, eyes closed but conscious, aware of its
presence. I try to forget about it but the clock always seems to tick
louder and more regular as if the ticks were running away from the
tocks. Then the ensuing silence sounds as deafening as a pneumatic
drill.'
'You do look rather
tired.'
Wheeler pointed to
his eyes as if he wanted to stab them with his index fingers. 'Tired?
Look at these! Bags so big I could hide a body in them!' Wheeler put
his finger in the corner of his eye and scooped out flakes of rheum
that dyed the tip of his index finger green. He put his finger in the
air for Wallace to see.'This tired enough, Doc?'
Wallace flinched. 'I
see your point, Mr. Wheeler.'
Wheeler wiped his
finger on his trousers leaving a trail of green refuse. Wallace
squirmed at the sight and looked at Wheeler. Wallace continued, 'So
this is why you've come to see me?'
Wheeler took off his
tie and mopped his sweaty forehead. He then pocketed it and undid his
top button, 'Hot in here, isn't it?'
'Open the window if
you like.'
Wheeler
opened the blinds and his slanted eyes became full. His mouth was
open like a yawing hippopotamus; his jaw shivered, drenching his suit
in dribble. 'It's here! Right in front of me!'
'What?!'
Wheeler signalled to Wallace and beckoned to him to join him at the
window.
'It's
there, can't you see?'
Wallace
was temporarily blinded by sunlight. He squinted. 'No, I just see the
street.'
'But,
it's the other side of the window pane, you can't even see the street
as he blocks the view!'
'You
said it always kept its distance from you!'
'It
did but now it's here, right in front of my face!' Wheeler opened the
window and bellowed: 'Hey, you! You have been hounding me for too
long now! What are you and what do you want from me?' The shoppers
below looked up at Wheeler and started gossiping amongst themselves.
Wheeler stood on the pane. 'Answer me!'
'Now,
Wheeler!' Wallace tried to restrain Wheeler but Wheeler shook free.
'Nothing
to say? You've ruined my life! My wife hates me, my mental state is
crumbling and I have to see a quack! Well, I'm going to kill you, I
don't care what happens to me, I just want you out of the remains of
my life!' With tears in his eyes and a trembling body he outstretched
his arms and pounced. Wallace had been trying to grab Wheeler's legs
but he was gone.