To these perhaps impolitic remarks a well-known senator from the Political Science Department had objected that they sounded to him neither reverent nor alma-matriotic. It was no secret that his distinguished colleague—for what cause, the senator would not presume to guess—had opposed every measure to insure the defense of the Free Campus against Founderless Student-Unionism by strengthening WESCAC’s deterrent capacity; that he had moreover “stood up” for the traitor Chementinski and sympathized openly with a number of organizations on the Attorney-Dean’s List. But could not even an ivy-tower eccentric (who had better have stuck to his logarithms and left political science to professors of that specialty) see that pain and ignorance were but passing afflictions, mere diversions if he might say so from the true end of life on this campus? Had it not always been, and would it not be again, that when pain and ignorance were vanquished, studentdom turned ever to the Founder in hope of Commencement? And as it was the New Tammany Way to lead the fight against ignorance and pain, so must not our college lead too the Holy Riot against a-founderism and disbelief, with every weapon in its Armory?
So much at least was true: Max was no political scientist. At the first question he had merely snorted that ignorance would always be with us, even in the Senate. At the second he had cried out impatiently, “Flunk all your founders—it’s the Losters I’ll take sides with!”
His dismissal and exile followed this stormy session, which also approved the secret NOCTIS project and made Eblis Eierkopf director of the WESCAC Research Authority in Max’s stead.
“Now mind you,” my keeper said when I protested again at his ouster, “Eierkopf didn’t hate me. He don’t hate anybody, that’s his trouble. Seek the Answers is his motto, just like New Tammany’s, but he don’t care what the Question is or how many students it costs to answer it. When he was in Siegfried College he went along with the Überschüler idea, not because he thought the Siegfrieders was the Genius-Class, but just he was interested in mathematical eugenics and thought he’d learn more with captured co-eds than he would with fruit-flies. Oh, Billy, I used to look at Eblis and think, ‘There’s Wescacus malinoctis right there: it’ll be a super Eierkopf!’ So, what you think was the last thing I heard before I left Tower Hall? The NOCTIS program was going to be combined with another secret one, that Eblis had got Chancellor Hector very excited about—what they called it the Cum Laude Project …”
For some semesters, it seemed, among its host of peacetime chores, WESCAC had served the Department of Animal Husbandry’s Artificial Breeding Laboratory by analyzing the genetic characteristics and histories of all their livestock and selecting optimum matches for the long-range breeding goals of several species—much in the way it paired dormitory roommates and counseled newlyweds. So comparable indeed were these activities that Eierkopf wished to combine and extend them. The immediate objective of the Cum Laude Project seemed innocent enough: WESCAC would abstract from thousands of historical and biographical texts a sort of quintessential type of the ideal West-Campus Graduate, or a number of such ideal types; it would then formulate a genetic and psychological analysis of these models, and with reference to the similar analyses of every New Tammany undergraduate (already in its memory), it would indicate which young men, paired with which young women, could most quickly breed to some approximation of the ideal, and in how many generations. The actual mating, to be sure, would be voluntary and legalized by marriage (at least in the pilot experiment): the whole operation would amount to no more than a sophisticated and programmatic Courtship Counseling, already in its simpler form a popular WESCAC service, and should tend towards improvements in the student body of a sort no right-minded person could object to: better physical and mental health, higher IQ’s, intellectual earnestness, Enochian humility, and the like. But along with “Operation Sheepskin,” as this eugenical analysis was called, there was initiated a more radical and truly noctic series of experiments called “Operation Ramshorn,” which suggested quite clearly to Max what his former subordinate was really up to. WESCAC’s facilities in the Livestock Research Labs were so implemented that it could achieve a pre-selected eugenical objective almost without student assistance. A small sheep-barn was constructed to its specifications and stocked with fecund Dorset ewes; WESCAC was supplied with their genetic histories and with phials of semen from a variety of rams, and was given management also of every operation from feed-mixing to lamb-incubation: its instructions were to develop a ram short of neck and light of plate, with compact shoulders, a deep rack, firm-muscled loins, well-fleshed legs, and a fine short fleece—but with no horns at all. Left then to itself, WESCAC fastened upon the ewes it required and impregnated them in their stalls with what semen it chose; its automatic implements took blood-tests, gave hormone-and-vitamin injections, adjusted feed-mixtures, exercise-times, and incubator-heats; it tapped certain of the male lambs for new sperm when they came of age, bred a second generation and a third, and (at just about the time Max first wandered to the NTC goat-farm) turned out exactly the desired product: a ram whose single shortcoming—which one assumed would be easily remedied in further experiments—was that like mules and certain other hybrids it was sterile.
“And don’t forget,” Max said, shaking his head, “while it was making love to the sheep it was running the whole College too, from teaching plane geometry to working out the payroll. That’s some WESCAC, that is!”
Now, livestock was still managed much more cheaply and efficiently by knowledgeable students of animal husbandry, and would doubtless remain in their charge. The significance of “Operation Ramshorn,” Max explained, lay not in the fact that WESCAC had fed and bred the sheep itself, instead of doing merely the eugenical brainwork—though goodness knew this fact was ominous enough when juxtaposed with “Operation Sheepskin”! It was two other aspects of the experiment that appalled my keeper, and made him not unhappy to be cut off from further news of the Cum Laude Project. First, a more sophisticated version of “Ramshorn,” this one involving rats, had already been programmed with WESCAC’s assistance. Asked by a cereal-grains professor to clear the college granaries of the pests, WESCAC displayed an unprecedented inefficiency: instead of formulating a better poison or designing a rat-proof grain elevator, it proposed to mate with enough cats to develop a spectacular rodent-hunter, and to miscegenate these Überkatzen with the rats themselves, to the end of evolving a species that would prey upon itself and choose no other mate but WESCAC, which then would breed them all sterile! A proposal fantastic in every respect: the professor of cereal-grains returned disenchanted to his old-fashioned poisons and ordinary pussycats; WESCAC’s gaffe became a West-Campus joke and calmed the fears of many whom Max’s gloomy warnings had disturbed. As the New Tammany Times asked in a playful editorial, “What has studentdom to dread from an intelligence that can’t even build a better mousetrap?”
But Dr. Eierkopf and his associates had been neither disappointed nor amused. What the newspaper and cereal-grains people didn’t know was that the rat-problem had been the first test of the NOCTIS system: WESCAC’s thinking had been truly if crudely malinoctial, like a simple-minded undergraduate’s; the very absurdity of the Überkatzen proposal was a sign of success, for it indicated plainly that WESCAC’s reasoning had been influenced—nay, overmastered—by what could only be called lust. Significantly, its program was by no means illogical, however impracticable: but for the first time in its career it had been guilty of rationalizing. This meant that it now possessed a sort of subconsciousness—irrational, imperious, in a word noctic—with which its malistic consciousness had to come to terms. Quite like a randy freshman, WESCAC had had little on its mind but sex; filled with amorous memories of the Dorset ewes, all it cared to do was mate, never mind with whom or at whose expense; Reason had become a pander for Desire. To be sure, there was nothing Grand-Tutorish in this—at least not apparently. Neither was there about the average undergraduate. But just as the frailest first-grader could be said to have more athletic potentia
l than the mightiest bull in the pasture, just because he’s human, so the ignorantest, most lecherous undergraduate, given proper managing, might one day become a Grand Tutor—which the best adding-machine on campus could never. Dr. Eierkopf’s delight (and Max’s despair) was that WESCAC had met this first prerequisite of Grand Tutorship: for better or worse its mind was now unmistakably, embarrassingly, irrevocably human.
“What happened next?” I demanded. “Can’t we come to the part where I was born?”
“That’s where we are,” Max said. “What I mean, I don’t know what happened next; I was herding the goats then and never saw anybody from the old days. All I know, what I found out years later, something must have happened to make the Tower Hall people see how dangerous the NOCTIS business was. Even before Lucius Rexford was elected, Chancellor Hector put an end to the Cum Laude Project and demoted Eblis Eierkopf to some job where he can’t do any harm. The witch-hunting was over by then, and Dr. Rexford asked me would I come back to WESCAC, he was sorry I’d been sacked. But I’d seen enough of the student race to know that people was all I could love and all I could fear, while the goats I didn’t feel nothing but simple affection for. And there was the new WESCAC: Mr. Rexford said it was all right, they got rid of the NOCTIS system and everything’s under control. But I know WESCAC better than that. It don’t forget anything it’s ever learned, and if it really was noetic enough to desire things, even for a minute, then it desired to preserve and extend itself along with humping the sheep. It was always cunning, WESCAC was; now it’s willful and passionate too, and it can EAT anybody that tries to change its mind against its will—all in the name of collegiate security, like a Bonifacist Kanzler! ‘No thanks,’ I told Dr. Rexford; ‘I’m glad you been elected, your brain’s in the right place, but I won’t have anything to do with WESCAC no more. It’s playing possum, is all,’ I told him, ‘or cat-and-mouse with the whole student body; let it come and EAT me, at least I won’t serve myself up on a plate. Besides, I got Billy Bocksfuss to take care of, that’s like my own son …’ ”
Just here George happened to click off his sweeper; I heard him sing again somewhere in the distance:
“Mister Tiger he roar, Mister Lion he shout—
But it’s WESCAC’ll EAT you if you don’t watch out.”
And now I thought I understood how he had come to his present pass, and what was the debt I owed him. I had turned in the direction of his voice; now I looked to Max, and saw my confirmation in the twist of his mouth.
“The dumbwaiter you were stuck in, Billy: it used to be a booklift, but then we used it to send Diet-tapes down to WESCAC. There was only half a dozen people allowed to operate it from upstairs, to feed in secret stuff about the Nikolayans and to read out WESCAC’s defense orders—I mean people like the Joint Chairmen of Military Science, and the WESCAC Director, and the Vice-Chancellor for Riot Research. Whoever it was put you in there, he wanted you dead, because that dumbwaiter went where no human student would ever dare go—right down into WESCAC’s Belly! This was after the Diet fight, when WESCAC was set to EAT anybody that even came near its Riot-storage. I don’t know who your parents are, but I bet WESCAC does: you must have got the same Prenatal Aptitude-Tests that all New Tammany babies get, because when George opened the Belly door and fetched you out, there was this official PAT-card hung around your neck—the only thing you had on. No name was on it, and no IQ; just in the place where it usually says what a kid should major in, WESCAC had printed the words Pass All Fail All …”
“By George!” I exclaimed.
Max gestured with his open palms. “By George it didn’t mean a thing, or by me either when I saw it. It don’t make sense how one student could pass everything and flunk everything too. But if it meant you were going to do one or the other, like be a cum laude Graduate or flunk out altogether, there were plenty students like that in the old days, and nobody put them out to die on account of it.”
The only likely hypothesis, he declared, was that my birth had been a threat or embarrassment to someone high in the administrative hierarchy of the College, who had chosen to commit an extraordinary infanticide in order to be rid of me. The scheme was feasible enough: I would be found dead by some other high official within a few days (assuming they were not all in on the plot): because of the delicate involvement of WESCAC there would be no publicity, lest the Administration be embarrassed or a valuable scientist lost; the Campus Security Police would make a secret investigation, which could be thwarted by any professor-general or vice-chancellor; the findings, if any, would be submitted to the Attorney-Dean, who if he weren’t involved in the thing himself would anyhow not prosecute without the Chancellor’s consent. What Max regarded as even more significant, however, was that there had been apparently no investigation at all, on the one hand, nor on the other any attempt by the culprit to follow through with his crime. It could be no secret to the guilty party that I had been spirited out of the dumbwaiter, though he might well not suspect I was still alive: poor George having heard my cries and been partially EATen by WESCAC for entering its Belly to rescue me, he was able afterwards neither to keep his brave deed secret nor to give a lucid account of it. That he was not made a hero of or even pensioned off, but quietly dismissed, argued that my enemy knew the deed was out—how must he have suffered then not to know further what George had done with me! Or if he did know me to be alive and in Max Spielman’s hands (no friend then of the powers-that-were), and yet permitted George and me both to go on living, one of two other things must have been the case: Did he rather risk exposure by the mad booksweep or the “crazy old Moishian”—as Max’s foes called him—than repeat and compound his felony? Was it that the perpetrator of the deed, like Snow White’s forestry-major, was not its instigator, but had only followed orders that he was glad to see miscarry, and had dared not then report or affirm the miscarriage? Or could it be, as Max himself chose to think, that while some influential personage or personages wanted me dead, some other of comparable influence did not, so that, the attempt having failed and come to light, my secret enemies were prevented by my secret friends from finishing the job—perhaps even from knowing it was unfinished? It was no coincidence, Max argued, that prior to my discovery he’d been a mere helper about the goat-barn, which was scheduled to be razed and the herd disposed of to make room for more poultry-pens; then not a month after he’d received me from George these plans had been changed without explanation: the Senior Goatherd was given a vice-chairmanship in Animal Husbandry, and Max had been allowed, almost unofficially, to manage the barn and herd until the Rexford administration took office and dignified his position with titles and a modest research-budget.
“So you see, Bill, you got a momma and a poppa someplace; anyhow you did once. And it’s not any poor scrub-girl, that her boyfriend got her in trouble and she tried to keep it secret; it’s like you were found in a rare-book vault, you know, that nobody but an old grand chancellor and his viziers had got the keys to.”
A dismaying thing occurred to me. “Then Billy Bocksfuss might not even be my right name!”
Max patted my leg—which owing to the hard oak tabletop had gone numb to pain and love-pats alike. “It was the right name for you when I got you, boy, but it’s not your real one, the way you mean. You were an orphan of the storm, like me, that the student race made their goats. Your poor leg and foot were bunged up so by the tape-cans I didn’t think you’d ever walk, even if nobody stole you away or killed you in the play-pound. And when I saw what a fine little buck you were growing to be on Mary Appenzeller’s milk, I said, ‘Well Mary, that’s some billy we got ourselves, nein? And it shouldn’t surprise me he’ll sprout two horns to go with that hoof of his …’ ”
Now he grasped hard my senseless limb. “Ach, Billy, I tell you, I loved you so from the time I saw you, and hated so much what us humans had done, if I’d had one wish it would have been you was a Ziegenbock for real! I wanted you to grow a thick fleece and big horns like Brickett Ranunculus
, and be fierce and gentle the way he is, and so strong, and calm, and beautiful … you never would have to hate anybody!”
Thus it had come to pass (he concluded with the same rue that had commenced this history and got lost in its unfolding) he named me Billy Bocksfuss, and swearing George Herrold as best he could to silence, nursed me secretly for a year, after which he gave out that he’d found me crawling one morning with the other kids in the play-pound and meant to raise me as his son. Among his apprehensions had been that the tabloids would make a campus sensation of the story, not a few of whose features recalled such legends as the founding of Remus College; but they had inexplicably buried the report in their back pages or ignored it altogether. Just as mysteriously, the Nursery School’s Department of Student Welfare from Infancy to Age Six, whose chairman was a famously meddlesome lady, had made but a token inspection of my circumstances; the officials had asked Max politely to fill out a few forms legalizing my wardship and subsequently ignored us. With an uneasy kind of relief, then, Max had found himself free, to all appearances, to make a choice more difficult than the original “adoption”: