Day 17: 32”
The sunlight woke me up, something I wasn’t used to
seeing. I had always been an early riser for most of my life, or had
the shades and blinds drawn down enough to make the room resemble the
nighttime. Jessie liked to open the shades as soon as she woke up.
She told me it helped her to wake up and see what type of weather was
going on so she would know how to dress. Thoughts of watching her
dress swirled in my mind as I lay staring straight ahead, blinking
sleepily as my eyes adjusted to the glaring sunlight stabbing into
the room.
My nose picked up the smell of bacon permeating the room as
the empty side of the bed let me know that not only was Jessie up,
but she was making breakfast. Turning over on my back, I stared at
the ceiling, the smell of the food she was cooking mixing with her
perfume that had become a part of the sheets. I stretched my legs
and my arms overhead, knowing full well what had probably happened
again during the night since I had not gotten any smaller during the
daytime yesterday. I actually preferred when it happened during the
night, but I had gotten used (oh, my gosh, really?) to the tingle and
slight loosening of my clothes that accompanied what was happening to
me. As I sat up, sure enough, I could feel the shorts a little
looser around my middle. A very subtle difference, but I knew it
nonetheless. I guess some small part of me always hoped they would
actually have become tighter to signal this was over; that I was
starting to grow again as promised. Swinging my legs over the bed, I
let them slide down off the bed and land on the floor. As I did, I
had to have one hand grab the band of my shorts to keep them around
my waist. I sighed looking at the expanse of the bed in front of me
and the size of Jackie’s silken red robe laid gently my side of
the bed. I ran my hand down across it, loving the silky feel, fully
aware in how much larger it appeared to be than what I was used to.
More than an inch. I knew it. The process of what was
happening to me is starting to accelerate, just as they had said. As
I walked to Jessie’s chest of drawers, I looked for subtle
differences that became more obvious to changes in the room I was so
used to. It was hard to really notice, until you came to an item
whose size you were accustomed to on a daily basis. It was then that
how much smaller I was became blatantly recognizable. Such was the
case with the chest of drawers the top of which I normally kept my
wallet and change in a little brass dish Jessie insisted I use was
there for me to use every day. That became less and less possible as
my height decreased to where the top was no longer accessible, much
less visible to me. Not that I needed to carry a wallet and change
like this anyway I thought.
Leaning over and pulling on the brass handle, I gently tugged
open the drawer, stepping backs a little to peer inside. Inside, on
the left, were a stack of three to four pair of different colored
shorts all neatly folded. She had told me two days ago that she had
bought the next smaller size. This was something I had become
accustomed to as well, every other day it seemed, out (shrinking, not
growing) what I was wearing. I reached in and took a pair out,
ungrasping what I was wearing and slipping it off. Briefs I didn’t
worry about anymore because I refused to wear children’s tighty
whities. Saying this had made Jessie laugh but when she saw I didn’t
think it was very funny, she had apologized but through an impish
smile. Pulling them on and satisfied (but still a little miffed that
they now fit) I walked back to the bed to get the t-shirt I had been
wearing before bed. Before I had met Jessie, it would have been on
the floor with my shorts (I always slept that way). But since we
moved in, I always found it neatly folded on the bed, as it was now.
Picking it up and pulling it on, the difference in side was again
noticeable. The bottom hung just a little below my waist.
I walked over to Jessie’s full-length mirror and gazed
at my reflection. This is something I did every morning now where
before I had never done. I dressed in the closet and groomed my hair
before leaving for class, but now it had become my morning ritual.
Jessie had noticed and had cleverly placed a yard stick next to one
of the arms that held the mirror, taping it in place. She hadn’t
really said anything to me, but I knew what was going on with me had
become to fascinate her as the inches kept coming off of me. In the
first couple of days, she asked me how much I thought I had lost and
I always mumbled I had no idea. She had proudly installed the
yardstick on the seventh or eighth day and she had insisted that I
stand next to it on the first Saturday morning. I had hemmed and
hawed about it, slightly embarrassed I suppose. To tell the truth, I
think I was a little angry that she was practically forcing me to do
it. I will never forget the look on her face when she was standing
in front of me, looked at the mark on the yardstick and realized that
not only was I noticeably inches shorter than what I should be, she
was staring directly into my eyes exactly the same height I was. Her
mouth had fell open and she had slightly giggled and whispered, “It’s
really happening just like they said, isn’t it.” I had
quickly stepped away from the yardstick. That was the first definite
realization of what was happening. It had felt like someone had
punched me in the stomach. In the next few days afterward, Jessie
had not mentioned the yardstick. I think she must have seen the look
on my face, perhaps panic-stricken, or whatever, but she had never
asked me about it since.
As I looked at myself in the mirror,
nothing really seemed changed which was calming enough. Sure, my
t-shirt was slightly oversized, but the relative size proportions of
things reflected were not so clear. It wasn’t until I moved
around the room and stood in proximity to things that made my change
in size so apparent. Staring at my reflection, I knew that soon, at
the rate the process was accelerating, Jessie wouldn’t need to
buy anything for me, clothing wise. I would probably just wear the
t-shirt for a while until it too became too cumbersome to wear. I
imagined that for a few moments, pictures of toddler clothing, with
silly animals or such nonsense soon fitting me and the idea of Jessie
rummaging through racks silently choosing what she thought would fit
me and what she would be thinking as she chose. After all, she
wouldn’t be buying it for a child, but for her boyfriend who
would at that point certainly stand in size far below her waist.
Would she have a secret smile on her face as the salesclerk marveled
at a particular shirt commenting, “Oh, this is cute.”
Would she realize as she passed the toy section beyond the children’s
clothing, past an aisle full of dolls. Out of curiosity, would she
go down that aisle and stare at the packages of doll-clothing,
searching through the columns until she came to a few that would work
for Ken. Would she reach up and take one down and then imagine that
I would actually fit into it. And that if I did, that her boyfriend
would now be small enough to fit into the palm of her hand. Her
boyfriend would be doll sized eventually, she would think.
Doll sized.
Looking down the length of the mirror toward my feet, the
sheer eventuality of it sent a quick pang of fear through me. A
queasy sensation filled my stomach as I realized that if this kept
going (and obviously it would, just like they said) I would no longer
be able to see my reflection because I would not reach the glass.
Eight inches tall.
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