Boards
Catch 22
CATCH-22
JOSEPH HELLER
Copyright (c) Joseph Heller, 1955, 1961
The island of Pianosa lies in the Mediterranean Sea eight miles south of Elba. It is
very small and obviously could not accommodate all of the actions described. Like the
setting of this novel, the characters, too, are fictitious.
TO MY MOTHER AND TO SHIRLEY, AND MY CHILDREN, ERICA AND TED
CONTENTS:
CHAPTER 1 - THE TEXAN
CHAPTER 2 - CLEVINGER
CHAPTER 3 - HAVERMEYER
CHAPTER 4 - DOC DANEEKA
CHAPTER 5 - CHIEF WHITE HALFOAT
CHAPTER 6 - HUNGRY JOE
CHAPTER 7 - McWATT
CHAPTER 8 - LIEUTENANT SCHEISSKOPF
CHAPTER 9 - MAJOR MAJOR MAJOR MAJOR
CHAPTER 10 - WINTERGREEN
CHAPTER 11 - CAPTAIN BLACK
CHAPTER 12 - BOLOGNA
CHAPTER 13 - MAJOR - DE COVERLEY
CHAPTER 14 - KID SAMPSON
CHAPTER 15 - PILTCHARD & WREN
CHAPTER 16 - LUCIANA
CHAPTER 17 - THE SOLDIER IN WHITE
CHAPTER 18 - THE SOLDIER WHO SAW EVERYTHING TWICE
CHAPTER 19 - COLONEL CATHCART
CHAPTER 20 - CORPORAL WHITCOMB
CHAPTER 21 - GENERAL DREEDLE
CHAPTER 22 - MILO THE MAYOR
CHAPTER 23 - NATELY'S OLD MAN
CHAPTER 24 - MILO
CHAPTER 25 - THE CHAPLAIN
CHAPTER 26 - AARFY
CHAPTER 27 - NURSE DUCKETT
CHAPTER 28 - DOBBS
CHAPTER 29 - PECKEM
CHAPTER 30 - DUNBAR
CHAPTER 31 - MRS. DANEEKA
CHAPTER 32 - YO-YO'S ROOMIES
CHAPTER 33 - NATELY'S WHORE
CHAPTER 34 - THANKSGIVING
CHAPTER 35 - MILO THE MILITANT
CHAPTER 36 - THE CELLAR
CHAPTER 37 - GENERAL SCHEISSKOPF
CHAPTER 38 - KID SISTER
CHAPTER 39 - THE ETERNAL CITY
CHAPTER 40 - CATCH-22
CHAPTER 41 - SNOWDEN
CHAPTER 42 - YOSSARIAN
APPENDIX
CHAPTER 1 - THE TEXAN
It was love at first sight.
The first time Yossarian saw the chaplain he fell madly in love with him.
Yossarian was in the hospital with a pain in his liver that fell just short of being
jaundice. The doctors were puzzled by the fact that it wasn't quite jaundice. If it
became jaundice they could treat it. If it didn't become jaundice and went away they
could discharge him. But this just being short of jaundice all the time confused them.
Each morning they came around, three brisk and serious men with efficient mouths
and inefficient eyes, accompanied by brisk and serious Nurse Duckett, one of the
ward nurses who didn't like Yossarian. They read the chart at the foot of the bed
and asked impatiently about the pain. They seemed irritated when he told them it
was exactly the same.
'Still no movement?' the full colonel demanded.
The doctors exchanged a look when he shook his head.
'Give him another pill.'
Nurse Duckett made a note to give Yossarian another pill, and the four of them
moved along to the next bed. None of the nurses liked Yossarian. Actually, the pain in
his liver had gone away, but Yossarian didn't say anything and the doctors never
suspected. They just suspected that he had been moving his bowels and not
telling anyone.
Yossarian had everything he wanted in the hospital. The food wasn't too bad, and his
meals were brought to him in bed. There were extra rations of fresh meat, and
during the hot part of the afternoon he and the others were served chilled fruit
juice or chilled chocolate milk. Apart from the doctors and the nurses, no one ever
disturbed him. For a little while in the morning he had to censor letters, but he was
free after that to spend the rest of each day lying around idly with a clear
conscience. He was comfortable in the hospital, and it was easy to stay on because he
always ran a temperature of 101. He was even more comfortable than Dunbar, who
had to keep falling down on his face in order to get his meals brought to him in bed.
After he had made up his mind to spend the rest of the war in the hospital, Yossarian
wrote letters to everyone he knew saying that he was in the hospital but never
mentioning why. One day he had a better idea. To everyone he knew he wrote that he
was going on a very dangerous mission. 'They asked for volunteers. It's very
dangerous, but someone has to do it.
I'll write you the instant I get back.' And he had not written anyone since.
All the officer patients in the ward were forced to censor letters written by all the
enlisted-men patients, who were kept in residence in wards of their own. It was a
monotonous job, and Yossarian was disappointed to learn that the lives of enlisted
men were only slightly more interesting than the lives of officers. After the first
day he had no curiosity at all. To break the monotony he invented games. Death to all
modifiers, he declared one day, and out of every letter that passed through his
hands went every adverb and every adjective. The next day he made war on articles.
He reached a much higher plane of creativity the following day when he blacked out
everything in the letters but *a, an* and *the*. That erected more dynamic
intralinear tensions, he felt, and in just about every case left a message far more
universal. Soon he was proscribing parts of salutations and signatures and leaving the
text untouched. One time he blacked out all but the salutation 'Dear Mary' from a
letter, and at the bottom he wrote, 'I yearn for you tragically. R. O. Shipman,
Chaplain, U.S. Army.' R.O. Shipman was the group chaplain's name.
When he had exhausted all possibilities in the letters, he began attacking the names
and addresses on the envelopes, obliterating whole homes and streets, annihilating
entire metropolises with careless flicks of his wrist as though he were God. Catch-22
required that each censored letter bear the censoring officer's name. Most letters
he didn't read at all. On those he didn't read at all he wrote his own name. On those
he did read he wrote, 'Washington Irving.' When that grew monotonous he wrote,
'Irving Washington.' Censoring the envelopes had serious repercussions, produced a
ripple of anxiety on some ethereal military echelon that floated a C.I.D. man back
into the ward posing as a patient. They all knew he was a C.I.D. man because he kept
inquiring about an officer named Irving or Washington and because after his first
day there he wouldn't censor letters. He found them too monotonous.
It was a good ward this time, one of the best he and Dunbar had ever enjoyed. With
them this time was the twenty-four-year-old fighter-pilot captain with the sparse
golden mustache who had been shot into the Adriatic Sea in midwinter and not even
caught cold. Now the summer was upon them, the captain had not been shot down,
and he said he had the grippe. In the bed on Yossarian's right, still lying amorously on
his belly, was the startled captain with malaria in his blood and a mosquito bite on his
ass. Across the aisle from Yossarian was Dunbar, and next to Dunbar was the
artillery captain with whom Yossarian had stopped playing chess. The captain was a
good chess player, and the games were always interesting. Yossarian had stopped
playing chess with him because the games were so interesting they were foolish.
Then there was the educated Texan from Texas who looked like someone in
Technicolor and felt, patriotically, that people of means - decent folk - should be
given more votes than drifters, whores, criminals, degenerates, atheists and indecent
folk - people without means.
Yossarian was unspringing rhythms in the letters the day they brought the Texan in.
It was another quiet, hot, untroubled day. The heat pressed heavily on the roof,
stifling sound. Dunbar was lying motionless on his back again with his eyes staring up
at the ceiling like a doll's. He was working hard at increasing his life span. He did it
by cultivating boredom. Dunbar was working so hard at increasing his life span that
Yossarian thought he was dead. They put the Texan in a bed in the middle of the
ward, and it wasn't long before he donated his views.
Dunbar sat up like a shot. 'That's it,' he cried excitedly. 'There was something
missing - all the time I knew there was something missing - and now I know what it
is.' He banged his fist down into his palm. 'No patriotism,' he declared.
'You're right,' Yossarian shouted back. 'You're right, you're right, you're right. The
hot dog, the Brooklyn Dodgers. Mom's apple pie. That's what everyone's fighting for.
But who's fighting for the decent folk? Who's fighting for more votes for the
decent folk? There's no patriotism, that's what it is. And no matriotism, either.'
The warrant officer on Yossarian's left was unimpressed.
'Who gives a shit?' he asked tiredly, and turned over on his
side to go to sleep.
The Texan turned out to be good-natured, generous and likable.
In three days no one could stand him.
He sent shudders of annoyance scampering up ticklish spines, and everybody fled
from him - everybody but the soldier in white, who had no choice. The soldier in
white was encased from head to toe in plaster and gauze. He had two useless legs and
two useless arms. He had been smuggled into the ward during the night, and the men
had no idea he was among them until they awoke in the morning and saw the two
strange legs hoisted from the hips, the two strange arms anchored up
perpendicularly, all four limbs pinioned strangely in air by lead weights suspended
darkly above him that never moved. Sewn into the bandages over the insides of both
elbows were zippered lips through which he was fed clear fluid from a clear jar. A
silent zinc pipe rose from the cement on his groin and was coupled to a slim rubber
hose that carried waste from his kidneys and dripped it efficiently into a clear,
stoppered jar on the floor. When the jar on the floor was full, the jar feeding his
elbow was empty, and the two were simply switched quickly so that the stuff could
drip back into him. All they ever really saw of the soldier in white was a frayed black
hole over his mouth.
The soldier in white had been filed next to the Texan, and the Texan sat sideways on
his own bed and talked to him throughout the morning, afternoon and evening in a
pleasant, sympathetic drawl. The Texan never minded that he got no reply.
Temperatures were taken twice a day in the ward. Early each morning and late each
afternoon Nurse Cramer entered with a jar full of thermometers and worked her way
up one side of the ward and down the other, distributing a thermometer to each
patient. She managed the soldier in white by inserting a thermometer into the hole
over his mouth and leaving it balanced there on the lower rim. When she returned to
the man in the first bed, she took his thermometer and recorded his temperature,
and then moved on to the next bed and continued around the ward again. One
afternoon when she had completed her first circuit of the ward and came a second
time to the soldier in white, she read his thermometer and discovered
that he was dead.
'Murderer,' Dunbar said quietly.
The Texan looked up at him with an uncertain grin.
'Killer,' Yossarian said.
What are you fellas talkin' about?' the Texan asked nervously.
'You murdered him,' said Dunbar.
'You killed him,' said Yossarian.
The Texan shrank back. 'You fellas are crazy. I didn't even touch him.'
'You murdered him,' said Dunbar.
'I heard you kill him,' said Yossarian.
'You killed him because he was a nigger,' Dunbar said.
'You fellas are crazy,' the Texan cried. 'They don't allow niggers in here.
They got a special place for niggers.'
'The sergeant smuggled him in,' Dunbar said.
'The Communist sergeant,' said Yossarian.
'And you knew it.'
The warrant officer on Yossarian's left was unimpressed by the entire incident of
the soldier in white. The warrant officer was unimpressed by everything and never
spoke at all unless it was to show irritation.
The day before Yossarian met the chaplain, a stove exploded in the mess hall and set
fire to one side of the kitchen. An intense heat flashed through the area. Even in
Yossarian's ward, almost three hundred feet away, they could hear the roar of the
blaze and the sharp cracks of flaming timber. Smoke sped past the orange-tinted
windows. In about fifteen minutes the crash trucks from the airfield arrived to fight
the fire. For a frantic half hour it was touch and go. Then the firemen began to get
the upper hand. Suddenly there was the monotonous old drone of bombers returning
from a mission, and the firemen had to roll up their hoses and speed back to the field
in case one of the planes crashed and caught fire. The planes landed safely. As soon
as the last one was down, the firemen wheeled their trucks around and raced back up
the hill to resume their fight with the fire at the hospital. When they got there, the
blaze was out. It had died of its own accord, expired completely without even an
ember to be watered down, and there was nothing for the disappointed firemen to do
but drink tepid coffee and hang around trying to screw the nurses.
The chaplain arrived the day after the fire. Yossarian was busy expurgating all but
romance words from the letters when the chaplain sat down in a chair between the
beds and asked him how he was feeling. He had placed himself a bit to one side, and
the captain's bars on the tab of his shirt collar were all the insignia Yossarian could
see. Yossarian had no idea who he was and just took it for granted that he was either
another doctor or another madman.
'Oh, pretty good,' he answered. 'I've got a slight pain in my liver and I haven't been
the most regular of fellows, I guess, but all in all I must admit that I feel pretty
good.'
'That's good,' said the chaplain.
'Yes,' Yossarian said. 'Yes, that is good.'
'I meant to come around sooner,' the chaplain said, 'but I really haven't been well.'
'That's too bad,' Yossarian said.
'Just a head cold,' the chaplain added quickly.
'I've got a fever of a hundred and one,' Yossarian added just as quickly.
'That's too bad,' said the chaplain.
'Yes,' Yossarian agreed. 'Yes, that is too bad.'
The chaplain fidgeted. 'Is there anything I can do for you?' he asked after a while.
'No, no.' Yossarian sighed. 'The doctors are doing all that's humanly possible,
I suppose.'
'No, no.' The chaplain colored faintly. 'I didn't mean anything like that. I meant
cigarettes or books or toys.'
'No, no,' Yossarian said. 'Thank you. I have everything I need, I suppose –
everything but good health.'
'That's too bad.'
'Yes,' Yossarian said. 'Yes, that is too bad.'
The chaplain stirred again. He looked from side to side a few times, then gazed up at
the ceiling, then down at the floor. He drew a deep breath.
'Lieutenant Nately sends his regards,' he said.
Yossarian was sorry to hear they had a mutual friend. It seemed there was a basis to
their conversation after all. 'You know Lieutenant Nately?' he asked regretfully.
'Yes, I know Lieutenant Nately quite well.'
'He's a bit loony, isn't he?'
The chaplain's smile was embarrassed. 'I'm afraid I couldn't say. I don't think I
know him that well.'
'You can take my word for it,' Yossarian said. 'He's as goofy as they come.'
The chaplain weighed the next silence heavily and then shattered it with an abrupt
question. 'You are Captain Yossarian, aren't you?'
'Nately had a bad start. He came from a good family.'
'Please excuse me,' the chaplain persisted timorously. 'I may be committing a very
grave error. Are you Captain Yossarian?'
'Yes,' Captain Yossarian confessed. 'I am Captain Yossarian.'
'Of the 256th Squadron?'
'Of the fighting 256th Squadron,' Yossarian replied. 'I didn't know there were any
other Captain Yossarians. As far as I know, I'm the only Captain Yossarian I know,
but that's only as far as I know.'
'I see,' the chaplain said unhappily.
'That's two to the fighting eighth power,' Yossarian pointed out, 'if you're thinking
of writing a symbolic poem about our squadron.'
'No,' mumbled the chaplain. 'I'm not thinking of writing a symbolic poem about your
squadron.'
Yossarian straightened sharply when he spied the tiny silver cross on the other side
of the chaplain's collar. He was thoroughly astonished, for he had never really talked
with a chaplain before.
'You're a chaplain,' he exclaimed ecstatically. 'I didn't know you were a chaplain.'
'Why, yes,' the chaplain answered. 'Didn't you know I was a chaplain?'
'Why, no. I didn't know you were a chaplain.' Yossarian stared at him with a big,
fascinated grin. 'I've never really seen a chaplain before.'
The chaplain flushed again and gazed down at his hands. He was a slight man of about
thirty-two with tan hair and brown diffident eyes. His face was narrow and rather
pale. An innocent nest of ancient pimple pricks lay in the basin of each cheek.
Yossarian wanted to help him.
'Can I do anything at all to help you?' the chaplain asked.
Yossarian shook his head, still grinning. 'No, I'm sorry. I have everything I need and
I'm quite comfortable. In fact, I'm not even sick.'
'That's good.' As soon as the chaplain said the words, he was sorry and shoved his
knuckles into his mouth with a giggle of alarm, but Yossarian remained silent and
disappointed him. 'There are other men in the group I must visit,' he apologized
finally. 'I'll come to see you again, probably tomorrow.'
'Please do that,' Yossarian said.
'I'll come only if you want me to,' the chaplain said, lowering his head shyly.
'I've noticed that I make many of the men uncomfortable.'
Yossarian glowed with affection. 'I want you to,' he said.
'You won't make me uncomfortable.'
The chaplain beamed gratefully and then peered down at a slip of paper he had been
concealing in his hand all the while. He counted along the beds in the ward, moving his
lips, and then centered his attention dubiously on Dunbar.
'May I inquire,' he whispered softly, 'if that is Lieutenant Dunbar?'
'Yes,' Yossarian answered loudly, 'that is Lieutenant Dunbar.'
'Thank you,' the chaplain whispered. 'Thank you very much. I must visit with him. I
must visit with every member of the group who is in the hospital.'
'Even those in other wards?' Yossarian asked.
'Even those in other wards.'
'Be careful in those other wards, Father,' Yossarian warned. 'That's where they
keep the mental cases. They're filled with lunatics.'
'It isn't necessary to call me Father,' the chaplain explained. 'I'm an Anabaptist.'
'I'm dead serious about those other wards,' Yossarian continued grimly. 'M.P.s won't
protect you, because they're craziest of all. I'd go with you myself, but I'm scared
stiff: Insanity is contagious. This is the only sane ward in the whole hospital.
Everybody is crazy but us. This is probably the only sane ward in the whole world, for
that matter.'
The chaplain rose quickly and edged away from Yossarian's bed, and then nodded with
a conciliating smile and promised to conduct himself with appropriate caution. 'And
now I must visit with Lieutenant Dunbar,' he said. Still he lingered, remorsefully.
'How is Lieutenant Dunbar?' he asked at last.
'As good as they go,' Yossarian assured him. 'A true prince. One of the finest, least
dedicated men in the whole world.'
'I didn't mean that,' the chaplain answered, whispering again. 'Is he very sick?'
'No, he isn't very sick. In fact, he isn't sick at all.'
'That's good.' The chaplain sighed with relief.
'Yes,' Yossarian said. 'Yes, that is good.'
'A chaplain,' Dunbar said when the chaplain had visited him and gone.
'Did you see that? A chaplain.'
'Wasn't he sweet?' said Yossarian. 'Maybe they should give him three votes.'
'Who's they?' Dunbar demanded suspiciously.
In a bed in the small private section at the end of the ward, always working
ceaselessly behind the green plyboard partition, was the solemn middle-aged colonel
who was visited every day by a gentle, sweet-faced woman with curly ash-blond hair
who was not a nurse and not a Wac and not a Red Cross girl but who nevertheless
appeared faithfully at the hospital in Pianosa each afternoon wearing pretty pastel
summer dresses that were very smart and white leather pumps with heels half high
at the base of nylon seams that were inevitably straight. The colonel was in
Communications, and he was kept busy day and night transmitting glutinous messages
from the interior into square pads of gauze which he sealed meticulously and
delivered to a covered white pail that stood on the night table beside his bed. The
colonel was gorgeous. He had a cavernous mouth, cavernous cheeks, cavernous, sad,
mildewed eyes. His face was the color of clouded silver. He coughed quietly, gingerly,
and dabbed the pads slowly at his lips with a distaste that had become automatic.
The colonel dwelt in a vortex of specialists who were still specializing in trying to
determine what was troubling him. They hurled lights in his eyes to see if he could
see, rammed needles into nerves to hear if he could feel. There was a urologist for
his urine, a lymphologist for his lymph, an endocrinologist for his endocrines, a
psychologist for his psyche, a dermatologist for his derma; there was a pathologist
for his pathos, a cystologist for his cysts, and a bald and pedantic cetologist from
the zoology department at Harvard who had been shanghaied ruthlessly into the
Medical Corps by a faulty anode in an I.B.M. machine and spent his sessions with the
dying colonel trying to discuss *Moby Dick* with him.
The colonel had really been investigated. There was not an organ of his body that had
not been drugged and derogated, dusted and dredged, fingered and photographed,
removed, plundered and replaced. Neat, slender and erect, the woman touched him
often as she sat by his bedside and was the epitome of stately sorrow each time she
smiled. The colonel was tall, thin and stooped. When he rose to walk, he bent forward
even more, making a deep cavity of his body, and placed his feet down very carefully,
moving ahead by inches from the knees down. There were violet pools under his eyes.
The woman spoke softly, softer than the colonel coughed, and none of the men in the
ward ever heard her voice.
In less than ten days the Texan cleared the ward. The artillery captain broke first,
and after that the exodus started. Dunbar, Yossarian and the fighter captain all
bolted the same morning. Dunbar stopped having dizzy spells, and the fighter captain
blew his nose. Yossarian told the doctors that the pain in his liver had gone away. It
was as easy as that. Even the warrant officer fled. In less than ten days, the Texan
drove everybody in the ward back to duty - everybody but the C.I.D. man, who had
caught cold from the fighter captain and come down with pneumonia.
CHAPTER 2 - CLEVINGER
In a way the C.I.D. man was pretty lucky, because outside the hospital the war was
still going on. Men went mad and were rewarded with medals. All over the world, boys
on every side of the bomb line were laying down their lives for what they had been
told was their country, and no one seemed to mind, least of all the boys who were
laying down their young lives. There was no end in sight. The only end in sight was
Yossarian's own, and he might have remained in the hospital until doomsday had it not
been for that patriotic Texan with his infundibuliform jowls and his lumpy,
rumpleheaded, indestructible smile cracked forever across the front of his face like
the brim of a black ten-gallon hat. The Texan wanted everybody in the ward to be
happy but Yossarian and Dunbar. He was really very sick.
But Yossarian couldn't be happy, even though the Texan didn't want him to be,
because outside the hospital there was still nothing funny going on. The only thing
going on was a war, and no one seemed to notice but Yossarian and Dunbar. And when
Yossarian tried to remind people, they drew away from him and thought he was crazy.
Even Clevinger, who should have known better but didn't, had told him he was crazy
the last time they had seen each other, which was just before Yossarian had fled
into the hospital.
Clevinger had stared at him with apoplectic rage and indignation and, clawing the
table with both hands, had shouted, 'You're crazy!'
'Clevinger, what do you want from people?' Dunbar had replied wearily above the
noises of the officers' club.
'I'm not joking,' Clevinger persisted.
'They're trying to kill me,' Yossarian told him calmly.
'No one's trying to kill you,' Clevinger cried.
'Then why are they shooting at me?' Yossarian asked.
'They're shooting at *everyone*,' Clevinger answered.
'They're trying to kill everyone.'
'And what difference does that make?'
Clevinger was already on the way, half out of his chair with emotion, his eyes moist
and his lips quivering and pale. As always occurred when he quarreled over principles
in which he believed passionately, he would end up gasping furiously for air and
blinking back bitter tears of conviction.
There were many principles in which Clevinger believed passionately. He was crazy.
'Who's they?' he wanted to know. 'Who, specifically, do you think is trying
to murder you?'
'Every one of them,' Yossarian told him.
'Every one of whom?'
'Every one of whom do you think?'
'I haven't any idea.'
'Then how do you know they aren't?'
'Because' Clevinger sputtered, and turned speechless with frustration.
Clevinger really thought he was right, but Yossarian had proof, because strangers he
didn't know shot at him with cannons every time he flew up into the air to drop
bombs on them, and it wasn't funny at all. And if that wasn't funny, there were lots
of things that weren't even funnier. There was nothing funny about living like a bum
in a tent in Pianosa between fat mountains behind him and a placid blue sea in front
that could gulp down a person with a cramp in the twinkling of an eye and ship him
back to shore three days later, all charges paid, bloated, blue and putrescent, water
draining out through both cold nostrils.
The tent he lived in stood right smack up against the wall of the shallow, dull-colored
forest separating his own squadron from Dunbar's. Immediately alongside was the
abandoned railroad ditch that carried the pipe that carried the aviation gasoline
down to the fuel trucks at the airfield. Thanks to Orr, his roommate, it was the most
luxurious tent in the squadron. Each time Yossarian returned from one of his holidays
in the hospital or rest leaves in Rome, he was surprised by some new comfort Orr had
installed in his absence - running water, wood-burning fireplace, cement floor.
Yossarian had chosen the site, and he and Orr had raised the tent together. Orr, who
was a grinning pygmy with pilot's wings and thick, wavy brown hair parted in the
middle, furnished all the knowledge, while Yossarian, who was taller, stronger,
broader and faster, did most of the work. Just the two of them lived there, although
the tent was big enough for six.
When summer came, Orr rolled up the side flaps to allow a breeze that never blew to
flush away the air baking inside.
Immediately next door to Yossarian was Havermeyer, who liked peanut brittle and
lived all by himself in the two-man tent in which he shot tiny field mice every night
with huge bullets from the .45 he had stolen from the dead man in Yossarian's tent.
On the other side of Havermeyer stood the tent McWatt no longer shared with
Clevinger, who had still not returned when Yossarian came out of the hospital.
McWatt shared his tent now with Nately, who was away in Rome courting the sleepy
whore he had fallen so deeply in love with there who was bored with her work and
bored with him too. McWatt was crazy. He was a pilot and flew his plane as low as he
dared over Yossarian's tent as often as he could, just to see how much he could
frighten him, and loved to go buzzing with a wild, close roar over the wooden raft
floating on empty oil drums out past the sand bar at the immaculate white beach
where the men went swimming naked. Sharing a tent with a man who was crazy wasn't
easy, but Nately didn't care. He was crazy, too, and had gone every free day to work
on the officers' club that Yossarian had not helped build.
Actually, there were many officers' clubs that Yossarian had not helped build, but he
was proudest of the one on Pianosa. It was a sturdy and complex monument to his
powers of determination. Yossarian never went there to help until it was finished;
then he went there often, so pleased was he with the large, fine, rambling, shingled
building. It was truly a splendid structure, and Yossarian throbbed with a mighty
sense of accomplishment each time he gazed at it and reflected that none of the
work that had gone into it was his.
There were four of them seated together at a table in the officers' club the last
time he and Clevinger had called each other crazy. They were seated in back near the
crap table on which Appleby always managed to win. Appleby was as good at shooting
crap as he was at playing ping-pong, and he was as good at playing ping-pong as he was
at everything else. Everything Appleby did, he did well. Appleby was a fair-haired boy
from Iowa who believed in God, Motherhood and the American Way of Life, without
ever thinking about any of them, and everybody who knew him liked him.
'I hate that son of a bitch,' Yossarian growled.
The argument with Clevinger had begun a few minutes earlier when Yossarian had
been unable to find a machine gun. It was a busy night. The bar was busy, the crap
table was busy, the ping-gong table was busy. The people Yossarian wanted to
machine-gun were busy at the bar singing sentimental old favorites that nobody else
ever tired of.
Instead of machine-gunning them, he brought his heel down hard on the ping-pong
ball that came rolling toward him off the paddle of one of the two officers playing.
'That Yossarian,' the two officers laughed, shaking their heads, and got another ball
from the box on the shelf.
'That Yossarian,' Yossarian answered them.
'Yossarian,' Nately whispered cautioningly.
'You see what I mean?' asked Clevinger.
The officers laughed again when they heard Yossarian mimicking them.
'That Yossarian,' they said more loudly.
'That Yossarian,' Yossarian echoed.
'Yossarian, please,' Nately pleaded.
'You see what I mean?' asked Clevinger. 'He has antisocial aggressions.'
'Oh, shut up,' Dunbar told Clevinger. Dunbar liked Clevinger because Clevinger
annoyed him and made the time go slow.
'Appleby isn't even here,' Clevinger pointed out triumphantly to Yossarian.
'Who said anything about Appleby?' Yossarian wanted to know.
'Colonel Cathcart isn't here, either.'
'Who said anything about Colonel Cathcart?'
'What son of a bitch do you hate, then?'
'What son of a bitch is here?'
'I'm not going to argue with you,' Clevinger decided. 'You don't know who you hate.'
'Whoever's trying to poison me,' Yossarian told him.
'Nobody's trying to poison you.'
'They poisoned my food twice, didn't they? Didn't they put poison in my food during
Ferrara and during the Great Big Siege of Bologna?'
'They put poison in *everybody's* food,' Clevinger explained.
'And what difference does *that* make?'
'And it wasn't even poison!' Clevinger cried heatedly, growing more emphatic as he
grew more confused.
As far back as Yossarian could recall, he explained to Clevinger with a patient smile,
somebody was always hatching a plot to kill him. There were people who cared for him
and people who didn't, and those who didn't hated him and were out to get him. They
hated him because he was Assyrian. But they couldn't touch him, he told Clevinger,
because he had a sound mind in a pure body and was as strong as an ox. They couldn't
touch him because he was Tarzan, Mandrake, Flash Gordon. He was Bill Shakespeare.
He was Cain, Ulysses, the Flying Dutchman; he was Lot in Sodom, Deirdre of the
Sorrows, Sweeney in the nightingales among trees. He was miracle ingredient Z-247.
He was -
'Crazy!' Clevinger interrupted, shrieking. 'That's what you are! Crazy!
'- immense. I'm a real, slam-bang, honest-to-goodness, three-fisted humdinger.
I'm a bona fide supraman.'
'Superman?' Clevinger cried. 'Superman?'
'Supraman,' Yossarian corrected.
'Hey, fellas, cut it out,' Nately begged with embarrassment.
'Everybody's looking at us.'
'You're crazy,' Clevinger shouted vehemently, his eyes filling with tears. 'You've got
a Jehovah complex.'
'I think everyone is Nathaniel.'
Clevinger arrested himself in mid-declamation, suspiciously. 'Who's Nathaniel?'
'Nathaniel who?' inquired Yossarian innocently.
Clevinger skirted the trap neatly. 'You think everybody is Jehovah.
You're no better than Raskolnkov-'
'Who?'
'- yes, Raskolnikov, who -'
'Raskolnikov!'
'- who - I mean it - who felt he could justify killing an old woman -'
'No better than?'
'- yes, justify, that's right - with an ax! And I can prove it to you!' Gasping furiously
for air, Clevinger enumerated Yossarian's symptoms: an unreasonable belief that
everybody around him was crazy, a homicidal impulse to machine-gun strangers,
retrospective falsification, an unfounded suspicion that people hated him and were
conspiring to kill him.
But Yossarian knew he was right, because, as he explained to Clevinger, to the best
of his knowledge he had never been wrong. Everywhere he looked was a nut, and it
was all a sensible young gentleman like himself could do to maintain his perspective
amid so much madness. And it was urgent that he did, for he knew his
life was in peril.
Yossarian eyed everyone he saw warily when he returned to the squadron from the
hospital. Milo was away, too, in Smyrna for the fig harvest. The mess hall ran
smoothly in Milo's absence. Yossarian had responded ravenously to the pungent aroma
of spicy lamb while he was still in the cab of the ambulance bouncing down along the
knotted road that lay like a broken suspender between the hospital and the squadron.
There was shish-kabob for lunch, huge, savory hunks of spitted meat sizzling like the
devil over charcoal after marinating seventy-two hours in a secret mixture Milo had
stolen from a crooked trader in the Levant, served with Iranian rice and asparagus
tips Parmesan, followed by cherries jubilee for dessert and then steaming cups of
fresh coffee with Benedictine and brandy. The meal was served in enormous helpings
on damask tablecloths by the skilled Italian waiters Major - de Coverley had kidnaped
from the mainland and given to Milo.
Yossarian gorged himself in the mess hall until he thought he would explode and then
sagged back in a contented stupor, his mouth filmy with a succulent residue. None of
the officers in the squadron had ever eaten so well as they ate regularly in Milo's
mess hall, and Yossarian wondered awhile if it wasn't perhaps all worth it. But then
he burped and remembered that they were trying to kill him, and he sprinted out of
the mess hall wildly and ran looking for Doc Daneeka to have himself taken off
combat duty and sent home. He found Doc Daneeka in sunlight, sitting on a high stool
outside his tent.
'Fifty missions,' Doc Daneeka told him, shaking his head.
'The colonel wants fifty missions.'
'But I've only got forty-four!'
Doc Daneeka was unmoved. He was a sad, birdlike man with the spatulate face and
scrubbed, tapering features of a well-groomed rat.
'Fifty missions,' he repeated, still shaking his head.
'The colonel wants fifty missions.'
CHAPTER 3 - HAVERMEYER
Actually, no one was around when Yossarian returned from the hospital but Orr and
the dead man in Yossarian's tent. The dead man in Yossarian's tent was a pest, and
Yossarian didn't like him, even though he had never seen him. Having him lying around
all day annoyed Yossarian so much that he had gone to the orderly room several times
to complain to Sergeant Towser, who refused to admit that the dead man even
existed, which, of course, he no longer did. It was still more frustrating to try to
appeal directly to Major Major, the long and bony squadron commander, who looked a
little bit like Henry Fonda in distress and went jumping out the window of his office
each time Yossarian bullied his way past Sergeant Towser to speak to him about it.
The dead man in Yossarian's tent was simply not easy to live with. He even disturbed
Orr, who was not easy to live with, either, and who, on the day Yossarian came back,
was tinkering with the faucet that fed gasoline into the stove he had started building
while Yossarian was in the hospital.
'What are you doing?' Yossarian asked guardedly when he entered the tent,
although he saw at once.
'There's a leak here,' Orr said. 'I'm trying to fix it.'
'Please stop it,' said Yossarian. 'You're making me nervous.'
'When I was a kid,' Orr replied, 'I used to walk around all day with crab apples in my
cheeks. One in each cheek.'
Yossarian put aside the musette bag from which he had begun removing his toilet
articles and braced himself suspiciously. A minute passed. 'Why?' he found himself
forced to ask finally.
Orr tittered triumphantly. 'Because they're better than horse chestnuts,'
he answered.
Orr was kneeling on the floor of the tent. He worked without pause, taking the
faucet apart, spreading all the tiny pieces out carefully, counting and then studying
each one interminably as though he had never seen anything remotely similar before,
and then reassembling the whole apparatus, over and over and over and over again,
with no loss of patience or interest, no sign of fatigue, no indication of ever
concluding. Yossarian watched him tinkering and felt certain he would be compelled to
murder him in cold blood if he did not stop. His eyes moved toward the hunting knife
that had been slung over the mosquito-net bar by the dead man the day he arrived.
The knife hung beside the dead man's empty leather gun holster, from which
Havermeyer had stolen the gun.
'When I couldn't get crab apples,' Orr continued, 'I used horse chestnuts. Horse
chestnuts are about the same size as crab apples and actually have a better shape,
although the shape doesn't matter a bit.'
'Why did you walk around with crab apples in your cheeks?' Yossarian asked again.
'That's what I asked.'
'Because they've got a better shape than horse chestnuts,' Orr answered.
'I just told you that.'
'Why,' swore Yossarian at him approvingly, 'you evil-eyed, mechanically-aptituded,
disaffiliated son of a bitch, did you walk around with *anything* in your cheeks?'
'I didn't,' Orr said, 'walk around with *anything* in my cheeks. I walked around with
crab apples in my cheeks. When I couldn't get crab apples I walked around with
horse chestnuts. In my cheeks.'
Orr giggled. Yossarian made up his mind to keep his mouth shut and did.
Orr waited. Yossarian waited longer.
'One in each cheek,' Orr said.
'Why?'
Orr pounced. 'Why what?'
Yossarian shook his head, smiling, and refused to say.
'It's a funny thing about this valve,' Orr mused aloud.
'What is?' Yossarian asked.
'Because I wanted -'
Yossarian knew. 'Jesus Christ! Why did you want -'
'- apple cheeks.'
'- apple cheeks?' Yossarian demanded.
'I wanted apple cheeks,' Orr repeated. 'Even when I was a kid I wanted apple cheeks
someday, and I decided to work at it until I got them, and by God, I did work at it
until I got them, and that's how I did it, with crab apples in my cheeks all day long.'
He giggled again. 'One in each cheek.'
'Why did you want apple cheeks?'
'I didn't want apple cheeks,' Orr said. 'I wanted *big* cheeks. I didn't care about
the color so much, but I wanted them big. I worked at it just like one of those crazy
guys you read about who go around squeezing rubber balls all day long just to
strengthen their hands. In fact, I was one of those crazy guys. I used to walk around
all day with rubber balls in my hands, too.'
'Why?'
'Why what?'
'Why did you walk around all day with rubber balls in your hands?'
'Because rubber balls -' said Orr.
'- are better than crab apples?'
Orr sniggered as he shook his head. 'I did it to protect my good reputation in case
anyone ever caught me walking around with crab apples in my cheeks. With rubber
balls in my hands I could deny there were crab apples in my cheeks. Every time
someone asked me why I was walking around with crab apples in my cheeks, I'd just
open my hands and show them it was rubber balls I was walking around with, not crab
apples, and that they were in my hands, not my cheeks. It was a good story. But I
never knew if it got across or not, since it's pretty tough to make people understand
you when you're talking to them with two crab apples in your cheeks.'
Yossarian found it pretty tough to understand him then, and he wondered once again
if Orr wasn't talking to him with the tip of his tongue in one of his apple cheeks.
Yossarian decided not to utter another word. It would be futile. He knew Orr, and he
knew there was not a chance in hell of finding out from him then why he had wanted
big cheeks. It would do no more good to ask than it had done to ask him why that
whore had kept beating him over the head with her shoe that morning in Rome in the
cramped vestibule outside the open door of Nately's whore's kid sister's room. She
was a tall, strapping girl with long hair and incandescent blue veins converging
populously beneath her cocoa-colored skin where the flesh was most tender, and she
kept cursing and shrieking and jumping high up into the air on her bare feet to keep
right on hitting him on the top of his head with the spiked heel of her shoe.
They were both naked, and raising a rumpus that brought everyone in the apartment
into the hall to watch, each couple in a bedroom doorway, all of them naked except
the aproned and sweatered old woman, who clucked reprovingly, and the lecherous,
dissipated old man, who cackled aloud hilariously through the whole episode with a
kind of avid and superior glee.
The girl shrieked and Orr giggled. Each time she landed with the heel of her shoe,
Orr giggled louder, infuriating her still further so that she flew up still higher into
the air for another shot at his noodle, her wondrously full breasts soaring all over
the place like billowing pennants in a strong wind and her buttocks and strong thighs
shim-sham-shimmying this way and that way like some horrifying bonanza. She
shrieked and Orr giggled right up to the time she shrieked and knocked him cold with
a good solid crack on the temple that made him stop giggling and sent him off to the
hospital in a stretcher with a hole in his head that wasn't very deep and a very mild
concussion that kept him out of combat only twelve days.
Nobody could find out what had happened, not even the cackling old man and clucking
old woman, who were in a position to find out everything that happened in that vast
and endless brothel with its multitudinous bedrooms on facing sides of the narrow
hallways going off in opposite directions from the spacious sitting room with its
shaded windows and single lamp. Every time she met Orr after that, she'd hoist her
skirts up over her tight white elastic panties and, jeering coarsely, bulge her firm,
round belly out at him, cursing him contemptuously and then roaring with husky
laughter as she saw him giggle fearfully and take refuge behind Yossarian. Whatever
he had done or tried to do or failed to do behind the closed door of Nately's whore's
kid sister's room was still a secret. The girl wouldn't tell Nately's whore or any of
the other whores or Nately or Yossarian. Orr might tell, but Yossarian had decided
not to utter another word.
'Do you want to know why I wanted big cheeks?' Orr asked.
Yossarian kept his mouth shut.
'Do you remember,' Orr said, 'that time in Rome when that girl who can't stand you
kept hitting me over the head with the heel of her shoe? Do you want to know why
she was hitting me?'
It was still impossible to imagine what he could have done to make her angry enough
to hammer him over the head for fifteen or twenty minutes, yet not angry enough to
pick him up by the ankles and dash his brains out. She was certainly tall enough, and
Orr was certainly short enough.
Orr had buck teeth and bulging eyes to go with his big cheeks and was even smaller
than young Huple, who lived on the wrong side of the railroad tracks in the tent in
the administration area in which Hungry Joe lay screaming in his sleep every night.
The administration area in which Hungry Joe had pitched his tent by mistake lay in
the center of the squadron between the ditch, with its rusted railroad tracks, and
the tilted black bituminous road.
The men could pick up girls along that road if they promised to take them where they
wanted to go, buxom, young, homely, grinning girls with missing teeth whom they
could drive off the road and lie down in the wild grass with, and Yossarian did
whenever he could, which was not nearly as often as Hungry Joe, who could get a jeep
but couldn't drive, begged him to try. The tents of the enlisted men in the squadron
stood on the other side of the road alongside the open-air movie theater in which,
for the daily amusement of the dying, ignorant armies clashed by night on a
collapsible screen, and to which another U.S.O. troupe came that same afternoon.
The U.S.O. troupes were sent by General P. P. Peckem, who had moved his
headquarters up to Rome and had nothing better to do while he schemed against
General Dreedle. General Peckem was a general with whom neatness definitely
counted. He was a spry, suave and very precise general who knew the circumference
of the equator and always wrote 'enhanced' when he meant 'increased'. He was a
prick, and no one knew this better than General Dreedle, who was incensed by
General Peckem's recent directive requiring all tents in the Mediterranean theater
of operations to be pitched along parallel lines with entrances facing back proudly
toward the Washington Monument. To General Dreedle, who ran a fighting outfit, it
seemed a lot of crap.
Furthermore, it was none of General Peckem's goddam business how the tents in
General Dreedle's wing were pitched. There then followed a hectic jurisdictional
dispute between these overlords that was decided in General Dreedle's favor by ex-
P.F.C. Wintergreen, mail clerk at Twenty-seventh Air Force Headquarters.
Wintergreen determined the outcome by throwing all communications from General
Peckem into the wastebasket. He found them too prolix. General Dreedle's views,
expressed in less pretentious literary style, pleased ex-P.F.C. Wintergreen and were
sped along by him in zealous observance of regulations. General Dreedle was
victorious by default.
To regain whatever status he had lost, General Peckem began sending out more
U.S.O. troupes than he had ever sent out before and assigned to Colonel Cargill
himself the responsibility of generating enough enthusiasm for them.
But there was no enthusiasm in Yossarian's group. In Yossarian's group there was
only a mounting number of enlisted men and officers who found their way solemnly to
Sergeant Towser several times a day to ask if the orders sending them home had
come in. They were men who had finished their fifty missions. There were more of
them now than when Yossarian had gone into the hospital, and they were still waiting.
They worried and bit their nails. They were grotesque, like useless young men in a
depression. They moved sideways, like crabs.
They were waiting for the orders sending them home to safety to return from
Twenty-seventh Air Force Headquarters in Italy, and while they waited they had
nothing to do but worry and bite their nails and find their way solemnly to Sergeant
Towser several times a day to ask if the order sending them home to
safety had come.
They were in a race and knew it, because they knew from bitter experience that
Colonel Cathcart might raise the number of missions again at any time. They had
nothing better to do than wait. Only Hungry Joe had something better to do each
time he finished his missions. He had screaming nightmares and won fist fights with
Huple's cat. He took his camera to the front row of every U.S.O. show and tried to
shoot pictures up the skirt of the yellow-headed singer with two big ones in a
sequined dress that always seemed ready to burst. The pictures never came out.
Colonel Cargill, General Peckem's troubleshooter, was a forceful, ruddy man. Before
the war he had been an alert, hardhitting, aggressive marketing executive. He was a
very bad marketing executive. Colonel Cargill was so awful a marketing executive that
his services were much sought after by firms eager to establish losses for tax
purposes. Throughout the civilized world, from Battery Park to Fulton Street, he was
known as a dependable man for a fast tax write-off. His prices were high, for failure
often did not come easily. He had to start at the top and work his way down, and with
sympathetic friends in Washington, losing money was no simple matter. It took
months of hard work and careful mis-planning. A person misplaced, disorganized,
miscalculated, overlooked everything and opened every loophole, and just when he
thought he had it made, the government gave him a lake or a forest or an oilfield and
spoiled everything. Even with such handicaps, Colonel Cargill could be relied on to run
the most prosperous enterprise into the ground. He was a self-made man who owed
his lack of success to nobody.
'Men,' Colonel Cargill began in Yossarian's squadron, measuring his pauses carefully.
'You're American officers. The officers of no other army in the world can make
that statement. Think about it.'
Sergeant Knight thought about it and then politely informed Colonel Cargill that he
was addressing the enlisted men and that the officers were to be found waiting for
him on the other side of the squadron. Colonel Cargill thanked him crisply and glowed
with self-satisfaction as he strode across the area. It made him proud to observe
that twenty-nine months in the service had not blunted his genius for ineptitude.
'Men,' he began his address to the officers, measuring his pauses carefully. 'You're
American officers. The officers of no other army in the world can make that
statement. Think about it.' He waited a moment to permit them to think about it.
'These people are your guests!' he shouted suddenly. 'They've traveled over three
thousand miles to entertain you.
How are they going to feel if nobody wants to go out and watch them? What's going
to happen to their morale? Now, men, it's no skin off my behind. But that girl that
wants to play the accordion for you today is old enough to be a mother. How would
you feel if your own mother traveled over three thousand miles to play the accordion
for some troops that didn't want to watch her? How is that kid whose mother that
accordion player is old enough to be going to feel when he grows up and learns about
it? We all know the answer to that one. Now, men, don't misunderstand me. This is all
voluntary, of course. I'd be the last colonel in the world to order you to go to that
U.S.O. show and have a good time, but I want every one of you who isn't sick enough
to be in a hospital to go to that U.S.O. show right now and have a good time, and
that's an order!'
Yossarian did feel almost sick enough to go back into the hospital, and he felt even
sicker three combat missions later when Doc Daneeka still shook his melancholy head
and refused to ground him.
'You think you've got troubles?' Doc Daneeka rebuked him grievingly. 'What about
me? I lived on peanuts for eight years while I learned how to be a doctor. After the
peanuts, I lived on chicken feed in my own office until I could build up a practice
decent enough to even pay expenses. Then, just as the shop was finally starting to
show a profit, they drafted me. I don't know what you're complaining about.'
Doc Daneeka was Yossarian's friend and would do just about nothing in his power to
help him. Yossarian listened very carefully as Doc Daneeka told him about Colonel
Cathcart at Group, who wanted to be a general, about General Dreedle at Wing and
General Dreedle's nurse, and about all the other generals at Twenty-seventh Air
Force Headquarters, who insisted on only forty missions as a completed tour of duty.
'Why don't you just smile and make the best of it?' he advised Yossarian glumly.
'Be like Havermeyer.'
Yossarian shuddered at the suggestion. Havermeyer was a lead bombardier who never
took evasive action going in to the target and thereby increased the danger of all the
men who flew in the same formation with him.
'Havermeyer, why the hell don't you ever take evasive action?' they would demand in
a rage after the mission.
'Hey, you men leave Captain Havermeyer alone,' Colonel Cathcart would order.
'He's the best damned bombardier we've got.'
Havermeyer grinned and nodded and tried to explain how he dumdummed the bullets
with a hunting knife before he fired them at the field mice in his tent every night.
Havermeyer was the best damned bombardier they had, but he flew straight and
level all the way from the I.P. to the target, and even far beyond the target until he
saw the falling bombs strike ground and explode in a darting spurt of abrupt orange
that flashed beneath the swirling pall of smoke and pulverized debris geysering up
wildly in huge, rolling waves of gray and black. Havermeyer held mortal men rigid in
six planes as steady and still as sitting ducks while he followed the bombs all the way
down through the plexiglass nose with deep interest and gave the German gunners
below all the time they needed to set their sights and take their aim and pull their
triggers or lanyards or switches or whatever the hell they did pull when *they*
wanted to kill people they didn't know.
Havermeyer was a lead bombardier who never missed. Yossarian was a lead
bombardier who had been demoted because he no longer gave a damn whether he
missed or not. He had decided to live forever or die in the attempt, and his only
mission each time he went up was to come down alive.
The men had loved flying behind Yossarian, who used to come barreling in over the
target from all directions and every height, climbing and diving and twisting and
turning so steeply and sharply that it was all the pilots of the other five planes could
do to stay in formation with him, leveling out only for the two or three seconds it
took for the bombs to drop and then zooming off again with an aching howl of
engines, and wrenching his flight through the air so violently as he wove his way
through the filthy barrages of flak that the six planes were soon flung out all over
the sky like prayers, each one a pushover for the German fighters, which was just
fine with Yossarian, for there were no German fighters any more and he did not want
any exploding planes near his when they exploded. Only when all the *Sturm und
Drang* had been left far behind would he tip his flak helmet back wearily on his
sweating head and stop barking directions to McWatt at the controls, who had
nothing better to wonder about at a time like that than where the bombs had fallen.
'Bomb bay clear,' Sergeant Knight in the back would announce.
'Did we hit the bridge?' McWatt would ask.
'I couldn't see, sir, I kept getting bounced around back here pretty hard and I
couldn't see. Everything's covered with smoke now and I can't see.'
'Hey, Aarfy, did the bombs hit the target?'
'What target?' Captain Aardvaark, Yossarian's plump, pipe-smoking navigator, would
say from the confusion of maps he had created at Yossarian's side in the nose of the
ship. 'I don't think we're at the target yet. Are we?'
'Yossarian, did the bombs hit the target?'
'What bombs?' answered Yossarian, whose only concern had been the flak.
'Oh, well,' McWatt would sing, 'what the hell.'
Yossarian did not give a damn whether he hit the target or not, just as long as
Havermeyer or one of the other lead bombardiers did and they never had to go back.
Every now and then someone grew angry enough at Havermeyer to throw a
punch at him.
'I said you men leave Captain Havermeyer alone,' Colonel Cathcart warned them all
angrily. 'I said he's the best damned bombardier we've got, didn't I?'
Havermeyer grinned at the colonel's intervention and shoved another piece of peanut
brittle inside his face.
Havermeyer had grown very proficient at shooting field mice at night with the gun he
had stolen from the dead man in Yossarian's tent. His bait was a bar of candy and he
would presight in the darkness as he sat waiting for the nibble with a finger of his
other hand inside a loop of the line he had run from the frame of his mosquito net to
the chain of the unfrosted light bulb overhead. The line was taut as a banjo string,
and the merest tug would snap it on and blind the shivering quarry in a blaze of light.
Havermeyer would chortle exultantly as he watched the tiny mammal freeze and roll
its terrified eyes about in frantic search of the intruder. Havermeyer would wait
until the eyes fell upon his own and then he laughed aloud and pulled the trigger at
the same time, showering the rank, furry body all over the tent with a reverberating
crash and dispatching its timid soul back to his or her Creator.
Late one night, Havermeyer fired a shot at a mouse that brought Hungry Joe bolting
out at him barefoot, ranting at the top of his screechy voice and emptying his own
.45 into Havermeyer's tent as he came charging down one side of the ditch and up
the other and vanished all at once inside one of the slit trenches that had appeared
like magic beside every tent the morning after Milo Minderbinder had bombed the
squadron. It was just before dawn during the Great Big Siege of Bologna, when
tongueless dead men peopled the night hours like living ghosts and Hungry Joe was
half out of his mind because he had finished his missions again and was not scheduled
to fly. Hungry Joe was babbling incoherently when they fished him out from the dank
bottom of the slit trench, babbling of snakes, rats and spiders.
The others flashed their searchlights down just to make sure. There was nothing
inside but a few inches of stagnant rain water.
'You see?' cried Havermeyer. 'I told you. I told you he was crazy, didn't I?'
CHAPTER 4 - DOC DANEEKA
Hungry Joe was crazy, and no one knew it better than Yossarian, who did everything
he could to help him. Hungry Joe just wouldn't listen to Yossarian. Hungry Joe just
wouldn't listen because he thought Yossarian was crazy.
'Why should he listen to you?' Doc Daneeka inquired of Yossarian without looking up.
'Because he's got troubles.'
Doc Daneeka snorted scornfully. 'He thinks he's got troubles? What about me?' Doc
Daneeka continued slowly with a gloomy sneer. 'Oh, I'm not complaining. I know
there's a war on. I know a lot of people are going to have to suffer for us to win it.
But why must I be one of them? Why don't they draft some of these old doctors
who keep shooting their kissers off in public about what big sacrifices the medical
game stands ready to make? I don't want to make sacrifices. I want to make dough.'
Doc Daneeka was a very neat, clean man whose idea of a good time was to sulk. He
had a dark complexion and a small, wise, saturnine face with mournful pouches under
both eyes. He brooded over his health continually and went almost daily to the
medical tent to have his temperature taken by one of the two enlisted men there who
ran things for him practically on their own, and ran it so efficiently that he was left
with little else to do but sit in the sunlight with his stuffed nose and wonder what
other people were so worried about. Their names were Gus and Wes and they had
succeeded in elevating medicine to an exact science. All men reporting on sick call
with temperatures above 102 were rushed to the hospital. All those except Yossarian
reporting on sick call with temperatures below 102 had their gums and toes painted
with gentian violet solution and were given a laxative to throw away into the bushes.
All those reporting on a sick call with temperatures of exactly 102 were asked to
return in an hour to have their temperatures taken again. Yossarian, with his
temperature of 101, could go to the hospital whenever he wanted to because he was
not afraid of them.
The system worked just fine for everybody, especially for Doc Daneeka, who found
himself with all the time he needed to watch old Major - de Coverley pitching
horseshoes in his private horseshoe-pitching pit, still wearing the transparent eye
patch Doc Daneeka had fashioned for him from the strip of celluloid stolen from
Major Major's orderly room window months before when Major - de Coverley had
returned from Rome with an injured cornea after renting two apartments there for
the officers and enlisted men to use on their rest leaves. The only time Doc Daneeka