The Sleepmaster
"Time for bed,
Stephen!"
Mom's words floated up
the stairs and found Stephen working on a
baseball player he was modeling out of clay.
"Just ten more
minutes, Mom! Please?"
"Ten minutes it
is, and not a moment longer young man!"
Stephen returned to
shaping the bat his figure would be holding.
Time passed quickly.
A shadow fell over him
and his mother's stern words had their desired
effect.
"Now, Stephen!
Your time was up five minutes ago. I don't want
you starting school this year with bags under
your eyes!"
"Right!" he
said as he hurried off to the bathroom for the
ritual face washing and teeth brushing. Returning
with his pajamas on, Stephen turned back the bed
covers and climbed in for what he knew would be a
long sleepless night.
"Click".
The bedside lamp was
off. His eyes adjusted to the darkness. The
full moon was shining through his window and
casting moonbeams across his covers. His thoughts
of school, a new teacher, and a new schedule were
not pleasant ones. He always felt uneasy at the
beginning of a new school year.
As he lay in the
darkness his mind began picturing what the
following day might bring. He saw other students
laughing at him for dropping his books or going
into the wrong classroom. These visions gave way
to thoughts of a bully stealing his lunch money
or picking a fight.
As he turned on his
side, Stephen tried to think about more pleasant
things. He imagined the baseball player coming to
life and being his best friend, teaching him all
about the game, and going with him to the other
kids' houses. He thought about how jealous they
would be. Then he relived the moment that summer
when he had made an impossible catch and won the
game against the team from Oakridge. Sounds of
cheers were ringing in his ears and he could
still feel the hands of his teammates slapping
him on the back and their excited voices as they
told him what a great catch it had been.
Now lying on his back,
Stephen didn't think he would ever go to sleep.
It seemed as if he had been lying there for hours
and yet, when he looked at the clock with the
lighted dial that sat on his nightstand, he saw
that he had only been in bed for half an hour. He
sighed.
The moonlight on his
covers seemed to have become a little brighter.
Stephen figured it was just another trick his
mind sometimes played when time seemed endless.
Restless, he turned on his left side and faced
the wall.
"What seems to be
the problem?"
Stephen opened his
eyes, sat up, and looked around. Had someone said
something to him, or had his mind invented a
voice? In the moonlit room he didn't see anything
unusual.
"I've done
everything I can to help you sleep but it doesn't
seem to do any good. Don't you think you could
learn to relax a little?"
The voice was faint,
but sounded like it was coming from the foot of
the bed. Surely, this was his imagination! He
didn't feel scared; the voice didn't sound
threatening.
"Where are
you?" whispered Stephen. "I can hear
you but I can't see you. If you don't show
yourself I'm going to turn on the light!"
"If you do I'll
disappear. If you close your eyes and breath
slowly you might be able to see me. Go ahead, try
it!"
Stephen closed his eyes
and took a few deep breaths and then slowly
opened them as the air in his lungs quietly
escaped. As if looking through a piece of gauze
he could barely make out the form of a tiny man
dressed in an old-fashioned suit and a stove pipe
hat sitting at the foot of his bed.
"I think I can see
you now," said Stephen. "Who are you
and what are you doing in my room?" Stephen
looked around to see if he could make out the
forms of any other night visitors. Only his
stuffed animals and a few figures he had made
could be seen in the moonlight, looking down on
him from their usual places on the bookshelves
that lined his room.
"My name is not
important," the man said, "but if you
must call me something you can call me Arthur.
I'm here because you are having such a hard time
going to sleep and it is distracting me beyond
belief!"
"I don't
understand," said Stephen. "Why do you
care if I sleep and, more importantly, why are
you here?"
"All right,
perhaps it would help if I started from the
beginning rather then the middle. I've been
watching kids for hundreds of years, helping them
get some sleep when it looked like they needed
it. You, though, are impossible. I whispered in
your ear for an hour trying to get you to relax.
All the old methods just didn't seem to work.
I've only allowed myself to be seen by a few
other kids over the years. Tommy Edison was one,
Micky Mantle another."
"Is sleep all that
important?" asked Stephen. "It seems
like someone here is over-reacting a little and
it isn't me, if you know what I mean!"
Arthur rose to his feet
and began pacing back and forth. "If you
don't sleep, you don't dream," he said,
waving his hands above his head. "If you
don't dream, you don't get ideas. Getting ideas
can make the world a better place, and that's
what it's all about. Besides, sleeping clears the
head and gives you a clean slate to start with
each day. It's so important that over a thousand
of us have been assigned to watch just the kids
in this country. My job is extremely important
and I do it with pride. You were threatening to
break my record tonight. I couldn't let that
happen, so I made it possible for you and I to
have this little chat. There's a safeguard built
in so you won't remember any of this when we're
done. Deep down, though, below your active
thinking level, you'll remember."
As Arthur talked,
Stephen watched him walking back and forth on the
foot of the bed, and was entranced by the small
glowing footprints on the bedcovers that faded
away after a few seconds.
".....different
technique if you don't mind."
"What?"
Stephen asked. "I'm sorry I must have been
day-dreaming."
"That's cute, kid.
I'll have to remember that one for the annual
convening. I was saying that I'd like to try a
different technique with you and see if it works.
How about it? Are you willing to give it a try?
Nothing painful, I assure you. Strictly
mental."
"Sure, let's try
it," Stephen said. "For all I know, I'm
dreaming now."
"Wouldn't that be
nice. Here's what I want you to do. Get in the
position you're most comfortable with and breath
deeply, letting the air out slowly."
Stephen lay on his side
and took a deep breath, letting it out as
directed.
"Now, I want you
to pretend your feet are made of stone. They're
so heavy you can't move them. Close your eyes and
concentrate."
After a short while,
Stephen actually began to feel that his feet were
two rocks attached to his ankles.
"Now it's your
legs that are the heavy weights, then everything
below your waist. I want you to continue with
this until everything from your neck on down is
immovable."
Stephen did as he was
instructed, and by the time he reached his neck
he was very tired and relaxed.
"All right, kid,
the next one's your eyelids. There's no way you
can open your eyes."
After a few moments
Arthur knew that his task was finished. Stephen
was asleep. A small smile appeared on Arthur's
face as he gently faded from the foot of the bed.
All that remained were two glowing footprints
bathed in moonlight.
In a twinkling, they
were gone as well.
There was a knock on
the bedroom door. "Stephen, you're going to
be late if you don't get up soon!" The sound
of his mother's voice awakened him.
"Did you sleep
well, honey?"
"Sure did, mom! I
feel great! I was so tired I didn't even dream.
When does the bus get here?"
Jon C. Gilbert
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There once was a
land where mermaids sing, and man-eating
dragons breathe fire. Where Unicorns used to
run on the wind, and a magician didn't need a
squire. Where centaurs ruled almost supreme,
and Pan's kin would tend the flock. Where
Pegasus would dance on the clouds, and the
most powerful bird was a roc.
A magical land
where good was the silent hand that held the
destinies of all. But one day evil powers
took over, if you are to save the land you
can't stall. To save the land you must keep
the land in your imagination heart and soul,
to call upon that strength to save its
extinction and to keep it as a whole.
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