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Chinook
by George Hosier - May 11
Chupacabras
Alaska is a beautiful place, and I wouldn’t live anywhere
else, but the arrival of the annual spring mud bog always
complicates my barn chores. It’s grueling enough to have to master
the sports of long distance swimming and a professional mud
wrestling just to reach the barn alive, but this year the
paranormal activity among my livestock has been giving me
additional stress. Let me elucidate.
I have 20 acres, 13 acres of which is field. A field just doesn’t
look right without a crop growing in it or livestock grazing on
it, so I naively decided to acquire a horse and a few goats. The
really spooky part is that a month ago I had exactly 4 goats—a
tidy, manageable quantity. Today I have 7, but by the time this
column goes to press, the size of my herd may very well have
exploded exponentially.
Don’t get me wrong. I like goats. They give me milk, cheese and
goat berries. They attack any brush that attempts to trespass onto
my field. They also eat any of the neighbors’ dirty laundry that
blows off of their clothesline and into my mud bog. This saves me
the time and embarrassment of having to return the neighbors’
prodigal underwear. As a way of saying thanks, I try to keep my
goats well fed. But about the time I thought they were starting to
get pleasantly plump, I began discovering that at random times,
within a matter of literally minutes, my fat goats were becoming
skinny again! Boom! Just like that.
That’s not the most unsettling part, though. Not only are they
performing a mysterious instantaneous weight loss thing, but each
time one of them shrinks, I wind up with extra animals! Not big
fat healthy ones, mind you, but tiny, little, scrawny things. I
don’t know where they’re coming from. At first the supernatural
connection didn’t occur to me, and I took them for some sort of a
dwarf or pygmy breed. Now, I suspect far worse.
The first time I realized there were more bodies in the barn than
normal was while I was examining Ruth, my gentle Toggenberg, to
determine how she had lost 30 pounds since morning feeding. As I
was trying to coax her to eat some grain, I almost stepped on what
I thought was a damp bundle of rags. Upon closer inspection, I
screamed like a woman to discover it was a goat-like
leprechaun/creature/entity/thingy! It lay in the straw beside
Ruth, like it thought it belonged there.
As little as it was, my first impression was that it must have
crawled in under the fence, but I quickly revised that theory when
it became clear that the being didn’t seem to be very good at
walking. In fact, when I attempted to shoo it away, it took a good
ten minutes before it ever managed to stay on its feet. It would
get its front end up, but when it tried to get its back legs under
it, it fell forward on its nose! Then it would get its rear in the
air, but the front legs couldn’t get traction.
When the puny little creature finally did stand on all fours, it
was weaving and wobbling like a wino on a binge. Then the thing
took a single, tentative step and toppled onto its nose again. You
talk about frustrating! I was nearly frantic with worry. The
trespasser was obviously diseased. In fact, it was in such bad
shape that both of its horns had fallen off! I already had one
sick goat. I didn’t need another—especially one that didn’t belong
to me. I just wanted to get the stunted aberration away from my
healthy stock and Ruth, poor girl.
I was not inclined to make physical contact with the stranger, for
fear of contracting mad goat disease or something. However, it
broke my heart to see Ruth bravely trying to chase it away by
repeatedly spanking it with her tongue. I knew that eventually I
would have to pick the creature up and physically remove it.
As I was summoning my resolve to touch it, the unthinkable
happened! It attacked Ruth! Boldly and shamelessly it plunged its
fangs toward her unprotected underside, and with blood-curdling
slurping and grunting sounds began viciously savaging my best
milker’s valuable and vulnerable udder. In that instance, I felt
the hairs on the back of my neck leap erect. A cold sweat trickled
down my back.
Was this the terrifying chupacabra; that paranormal apparition of
Latin American legend and worst nightmare of Mexican goat farmers
everywhere? Ignoring the danger that I might be abducted to a
mother ship, I leaped to the rescue. With a desperate yell, I
snatched up the little monster and dove for the door.
What happened next will live forever in my nightmares! From just
behind me erupted an unearthly ear-splitting shriek. It was raspy,
quavering and full of unbridled rage. Before my heart could
extricate itself from my Adam’s apple and resume beating, I felt a
sharp blow from behind that knocked me face first into the mud
bog.
I rolled into the fetal position, arms thrown up to protect my
face, ragged hyperventilated breaths tearing at my lungs, heart
thrashing around in my chest like a 3-pound grayling. I knew that
death was upon me. I squeezed my eyes tight and waited for the
chupacabra to devour me. The quavering shriek continued,
persistent and very close, but I felt no more pain.
With great trepidation I allowed one eye to squint partially open.
Ruth was standing over me, a shred of the seat of my pants
dangling from her left horn. Between quavering shrieks, she was
nuzzling the chupacabra that I had dropped in my terror. Clearly,
the thing had bewitched her. I felt blindly about in the mud until
my fingers closed on a broken pitchfork handle. Trying not to
attract attention, I slowly tightened my grip. Ruth and the
chupacabra watched me suspiciously.
Then my chance came. The evil little interloper attempted to
disembowel Ruth again. Ruth swung her head around and nuzzled it,
no doubt pleading for mercy, or at least a quick death. For the
instant, neither of them was looking at me. Coiling myself like a
lion, I sprang to my feet, brandishing my makeshift weapon.
At least I attempted to. Embarrassingly, I had lain quivering in
the mud bog so long that it had quietly sucked me into its oozing
embrace. I was stuck like a fly in molasses. When you’re in a
vulnerable position like that, I’ve read that you never want the
enemy to see your weakness, so I assumed the most intimidating
expression I could muster and in a ringing tone of authority,
barked out, “Help! Somebody please heeeeeelp meeeeee!”
It was a tremendous relief to hear my wife respond. She had just
arrived at the mud bog, her curiosity aroused by all the strange
sounds.
“What on earth are you doing, George? I certainly hope you don’t
thing you are coming in the house looking like that…OH! A baby
goat! Isn’t it precious? Ruth, what a good mama you are! Yes you
is!”
I shouted a warning. “Gaylene, stop kissing that thing. Put your
hands on your head and slowly step away from the chupacabra.”
She gave me a weird look. “Yeah, whatever, Mr. Rolling-around-in
the-mud-when-you-are-supposed-to-be-doing-barn-chores. Why didn’t
you tell me Ruth had her baby? Is there only one?”
“A baby? Oh, a baby! A little baby goat. Yeah, isn’t it a barrel
of monkeys? Cute as a curtain, that one. You know, Darling, I was
so overcome with the miracle of new life, and the wonder of its
delicate trusting nature, that I became weak in the knees and
collapsed blissfully into this soft bed of mud here. Uh, not to
interrupt your cooing and cuddling session, but when you get a
spare minute do you think you could help me out of this mud? I
think I’m still sinking.”
You know how women are. Some facts are just too harsh for them. I
learned a long time ago, that it’s better to cater to their whims
and fancies than to try talking cold, hard logic to them. She
still thinks the creature is a baby goat.
I’ve decided not to push the issue for now. It seems that the
chupacabra’s enchantment has convinced even Ruth that it is her
newborn goat kid. So far, the udder wounds seem to be superficial.
Evidently the chupacabra has taken a liking to milk and is
actually drinking more of that than Ruth’s blood, so Ruth’s okay
with it, and my wife is okay with it. The only one that isn’t okay
with it is me.
The writing is on the wall. Each week, the imposter summons more
of its kind, and another fat goat goes skinny. I think they’re
settling a colony in my field. The human race is doomed. Skeptics
cannot be reasoned with, however. My only hope is for undisputable
proof that will convince my wife before it is too late. I know
what to do. I’m sleeping in the barn these days with camera and
shotgun at the ready. I want to be there when my Billy goat goes
skinny.
As soon as he does, I’ll take a picture of it and show my wife.
Then I’ll shoot all the little chupacabras with the silver bb and
garlic clove shot shells I’ve loaded. Finally I’ll send the
picture to the National Enquirer. When I get rich from my
brilliant photojournalistic coup, I’ll buy a real farm without a
mud bog. Then I’ll grow old, happily breeding a fine line of
champion sasquatches.
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