
The Unspecific Deity be praised for all your kind words and offers of assistance. Another goat would be much appreciated. I trust you, dear correspondent, are aware that only a female goat will serve my purposes. I shall do my best to ensure that your good deed will not go unrewarded in this world.
Until I take receipt of Suki II I am at the mercy of the local people. On the first morning I rose late - though still in the dark, as Mount Misery casts a terrible day-long shadow over the entire valley. My
miserations of the previous evening dispersed by the deep sleep I had enjoyed and my natural positive
disposition returned, I resolved to start my life in the new world with a freshness of spirit. Unfortunately my
goatless status cast me at the mercy of my fellows, so I set out to the nearest dwelling to see if I could borrow a cup of milk or a chunk of bread to break my fast.
As I approached the house I was struck by the flimsiness of its construction. The building appeared to be made of some unnatural substance; it was enveloped in a material as smooth as sandpaper but most unbecoming in appearance, which puzzled me no end as their appeared to be a surplus of decent timber in this land. The wind, which had again whipped up,
veritably howled through the gaps in the dwelling, emitting a displeasing cry that brought to mind my beloved Suki's cries for
ministration. Then a dog sprung at me from I know not where, a
vicious bullet-headed brute that was obviously kept only for its threatening appearance and unsocial behaviour. As its teeth sliced through my rude garments and into my leg, a characterless shout rang out from the crude structure,
berating the hound for its actions. The dog took no notice of such a feeble display of husbandry and continued to worry at the sinews of my disintegrating calf.
I say, I ventured, is it possible that you could emerge from your dwelling and remove your
sentinel from my bleeding
appendage? Your verbal instructions seem to have little effect.
After what seemed an eternity, during which the recalcitrant canine continued to gorge on my second favourite body part, the door
swung open and the owner of the voice materialised in the doorway, a full-figured vision of humanity sunk to such depths of
dissolution that it was impossible for me to sex the creature. A remnant of rolled parchment hung loosely from one side of its mouth as it struggled through a small mountain or large hill of drained
receptacles towards me, its progress further impeded by an ill-fitting sack of a nightdress and monstrously fluffy footwear. It burbled yet more incomprehensibility at the hound. This verbiage had the same effect as its previous effusions.
Do you think, I addressed the hulk (not knowing where to look, unsure of which was the more distressing sight - this perversion of the Unspecific
Deity's handiwork or my diminishing leg), you could manfully intervene and
detach the assailant? My words had sparked a flash of something novel in the resident's deep-set eyes, a glimmer of something (intelligence? comprehension?) that had not been experienced before, and it lumbered forward, grasped the dog by its truncated tail and began to pull. The result of this action was more pain and less leg. Realising that it was up to me if I wished to continue a bipedal
existence, I executed a manoeuvre I sometimes applied to Suki when she got a little frisky and plunged my thumbs into the beast's
eye sockets. With a pitiful yelp its jaws disengaged, the dog dropped to the ground, spun a semi-circle on its round behind, then righted itself on four legs and sped away in an erratic trajectory, here and there colliding with the array of vehicle parts, limbs of children's toys, kitchen utensils and general effluvia scattered about the place before hurtling into a shed.
Charity, to which I am no stranger, would dictate a sympathetic response to my dilemma, yet instead of offering words of apology or queries as to my
well being, the stranger began to utter a series of justifications for its animal's assault. From what I gathered - which was only every other word, as their flat tone and insistence on elongating each vowel beyond reason, inventing
tripthongs beyond the imaginings of the most learned linguist, battered my delicate ears - the beast's decision to sink its teeth into a questing Brethren was a form of expression, like painting with watercolours or tooting a tin whistle I surmised, that it should not be denied. Apparently, this same desire to allow the animal to achieve its fullest potential denied the use of an attachable chain or the construction of an enclosure. While I marvelled somewhat at the elaborate lengths people will go to to justify their laziness, my aching leg interfered with my desire to argue the point so I dragged myself home, projecting over my shoulder at the receding blob the meanest looks I could muster in my agonised state.
I spent the rest of the day in my rude hut, stale tack in hand and Suki on my mind. Dr
Mugg had supplied me with a small dose of opiate before I left. Knowing how I relied on its analgesic effects following the unfortunate incident with my once-betrothed father's mechanised pitch-maker, he handed over a
small vial, assuring me that the pharmacopoeia in the land to which I was about to venture was very meagre. It is so poor, he added, that the locals are reduced to relieving the pain of everyday existence by rolling up wild-growing grasses in the pages of their holy books, setting them on fire and ingesting the resulting clouds. Most popular of all, he said, leaning over with a conspiratorial gleam in his occluded eye, is a local beverage so utterly lacking in flavour and palpable effect that vast
quantities need be consumed. Then, realising that they have just consumed an improbable amount of this vile swill, the locals are so disillusioned with themselves that they
viciously assault one another in an orgy of self-disgust. The most self-loathing of these
swillers will coat the streets of their town with their stomach's contents, advertising their abject nature in a twice-weekly ritual.
Upon hearing this I resolved to guide the poor souls back towards clean living. But this would have to wait for another day, I mused as I downed the vial's contents. I must have fallen asleep for I could hear the plaintive cry of Suki as clearly as if she was in her customary position atop the table, awaiting her daily rubdown. Sitting up in my bed, I looked about the darkened room for my
goatly companion. I called out for her, using our pet name only she would recognise, but she did not approach. Her cry continued, so I stumbled from my cot and dragged myself over the rough floor. Her voice, however, did not arise from the house, but from outside. Slithering to the window I peered out. The moon was full, but still no Suki was visible in the illuminated landscape. My eyes, following the lead of my ears, were directed to Mount Misery, which retained its darkened
mien in the lunar light. What I saw on its miserable slopes filled my heart with terror. For there, silhouetted against the moon, was not just one but a whole company of horned goats in ghastly chorus, mockingly bleating my lost Suki's tune.