"Melanie," Rosenbaum said,
"he stated that you would eventually believe in that moment.
Do you?"
"Sure. After the second time I saw him, I really started to
come around. It was that or else consider the possibility of
being insane. Do crazy people know they’re crazy? I
don’t think so. So I figured that it had to be real."
Melanie sat calmly in the chair, composed, blue eyes studying the
psychiatrist.
He studied back. "Did anyone else ever see this man?"
"Hell no. Like all good hallucinations, he’s invisible
to everyone but me. I found that out the second time I saw
him…"
*****
I was in the shower. I have this great
shower curtain—a celestial pattern that says "Twinkle
twinkle little star" all over it. I used to just have this
bubbled glass door, but I got to be really uncomfortable with it
after a while…I mean, I really gained a lot of weight…
Anyway.
I was minding my own business, soaping up my hair, and the next
thing I know, someone’s singing outside the shower. Jareth.
"Twinkle, twinkle little bat, how I wonder what you’re
at, up above the world you fly—"
I opened up the curtain, saw him standing in the bathroom, and
freaked, though not quite as badly as I had the first time.
I started screaming.
My mother opened the door. Nothing quite like Mom to the rescue,
you know? Well, she was expecting to see me being hacked into
pieces by some drain-crawling monster, I’m sure, and there I
was standing in an empty bathroom, yelling about nothing at all.
Nothing she could see anyway.
"What’s going on?" she demanded.
"I…It was…you don’t…he…"
"She can’t see me," Jareth said lightly.
"She…huh?"
"Can’t see me."
The implications here were obvious. If I was the only one that
could see him…maybe that meant he was a hallucination.
Which, since I hadn’t imbibed any mind-altering chemicals,
also meant that I was possibly insane.
My mother was not amused. "Mellie, what’s the
matter?"
"Spider," I blurted out. "Scared me. Sorry."
She shook her head. "Was that all?"
I nodded.
"Geez, Mellie. Is it gone?"
"I guess so."
Jareth nodded approvingly. "That’s right. Just act
naturally."
I gaped at him, shocked and dismayed. I wasn’t to the point
where I could be angry yet.
Mom shut the door and left me alone. I stayed looking out of the
shower at Jareth.
"What are you doing here?" I finally whispered.
"Just checking up on you. Can’t a Goblin King check up
on his Listians?"
It was a line straight out of your average visitations, and I got
cold suddenly, cold all over under the hot shower water.
"No," I answered. "No, you can’t because
you’re not real."
"Your lack of faith is becoming more disturbing by the
minute."
"Don’t you understand that if she can’t see you,
it means I’m crazy??"
"That is the talk of a non-believer if I ever heard it.
There’s a perfectly good explanation for why she can’t
see me."
"There is?"
"I don’t want her to." He leaned on the sink, his
elbows on the porcelain, legs stretched out. Relaxed and elegant
as ever. And here I was, naked in the shower.
I closed the curtain and stood under the water, the shampoo
running out of my hair. "Alright. Maybe you’re real and
maybe you’re not. I don’t care."
"Yes you do."
I ignored that. "But if you are, you could at least have a
little decency and leave me alone while I shower."
"Why? Are you really so modest?"
"Yes!"
The curtain suddenly opened and he peered curiously into the
shower. I clamped my mouth down over my first-impulse squeal of
offense and slammed the curtain shut.
"You’ve nothing I’ve never seen before," he
said loftily, his voice drifting over the curtain. "You
needn’t be so prudish."
"But…I’m…" I was frustrated and
irritated with him. He was baiting me. "I’m not!
It’s just I don’t want you to see me."
"Why not? What’s wrong with you?"
"In case you haven’t noticed, I’m a whale," I
hissed.
He peered back through the curtain, paying my furious glare no
heed. "I hadn’t," he said dryly. "Whoever
told you that you were?"
"No one." I shut the curtain again.
"It’s that lout boyfriend of yours, isn’t
it?" he said.
Now this had gone too far. "What did you just call
Brian?"
"He’s really a dreadful person."
"He is not!"
Jareth was silent.
I finished my shower and turned off the water, figuring he must
have left. But when I peeked out, there he was, leaning on the
sink still, eyes downcast, thoughtful.
"What?" I demanded. "What is it? Why don’t
you leave?"
"Because," he said. "I’m trying to help
you."
"My mother thinks I’m nuts. Some help."
"I’ll tell you something, Melanie. If you were
psychotic, someone would have noticed before now. If I’m
your only delusion, you’re probably doing alright."
Now that made sense. I didn’t like it…but it made
sense.
He leaned over, took down a towel, and handed it to me, looking
absently at the floor still. "Melanie…"
"What?" I was drying off in the shower, not about to
set foot outside.
"I’ll be back again soon."
I sighed relief. "You’re leaving?"
His hand came into the shower suddenly and took my hand, as if he
could see me all the time through my shower curtain. He pulled my
hand out and kissed it lightly. "Oh, fair maiden, never
believe that I have left you alone. I shall return very
soon."
"That’s what I’m afraid of."
He was gone after that for a week.
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