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“Catch-22” By Joseph - Khamkoo

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“Catch-22” <strong>By</strong> <strong>Joseph</strong> Heller 156<br />

the sooner we can make some progress on this. I’d like to get in the Christmas issue if<br />

we can. I imagine the circulation is higher then.’ And to the chaplain’s horror, the colonel<br />

lifted the phone to volunteer the group for Avignon and tried to kick him out of the<br />

officers’ club again that very same night a moment before Yossarian rose up drunkenly,<br />

knocking over his chair, to start an avenging punch that made Nately call out his name<br />

and made Colonel Cathcart blanch and retreat prudently smack into General Dreedle,<br />

who shoved him off his bruised foot disgustedly and order him forward to kick the<br />

chaplain right back into the officers’ club. It was all very upsetting to Colonel Cathcart,<br />

first the dreaded name Yossarian! tolling out again clearly like a warning of doom and<br />

then General Dreedle’s bruised foot, and that was another fault Colonel Cathcart found<br />

in the chaplain, the fact that it was impossible to predict how General Dreedle would<br />

react each time he saw him. Colonel Cathcart would never forget the first evening<br />

General Dreedle took notice of the chaplain in the officers’ club, lifting his ruddy,<br />

sweltering, intoxicated face to stare ponderously through the yellow pall of cigarette<br />

smoke at the chaplain lurking near the wall by himself.<br />

‘Well, I’ll be damned,’ General Dreedle had exclaimed hoarsely, his shaggy gray<br />

menacing eyebrows beetling in recognition. ‘Is that a chaplain I see over there? That’s<br />

really a fine thing when a man of God begins hanging around a place like this with a<br />

bunch of dirty drunks and gamblers.’ Colonel Cathcart compressed his lips primly and<br />

started to rise. ‘I couldn’t agree with you more, sir,’ he assented briskly in a tone of<br />

ostentatious disapproval. ‘I just don’t know what’s happening to the clergy these days.’<br />

‘They’re getting better, that’s what’s happening to them,’ General Dreedle growled<br />

emphatically.<br />

Colonel Cathcart gulped awkwardly and made a nimble recovery. ‘Yes, sir. They are<br />

getting better. That’s exactly what I had in mind, sir.’<br />

‘This is just the place for a chaplain to be, mingling with the men while they’re out<br />

drinking and gambling so he can get to understand them and win their confidence. How<br />

the hell else is he ever going to get them to believe in God?’<br />

‘That’s exactly what I had in mind, sir, when I ordered him to come here,’ Colonel<br />

Cathcart said carefully, and threw his arm familiarly around the chaplain’s shoulders as<br />

he walked him off into a corner to order him in a cold undertone to start reporting for<br />

duty at the officers’ club every evening to mingle with the men while they were drinking<br />

and gambling so that he could get to understand them and win their confidence.<br />

The chaplain agreed and did report for duty to the officers’ club every night to mingle<br />

with men who wanted to avoid him, until the evening the vicious fist fight broke out at the<br />

ping-pong table and Chief White Halfoat whirled without provocation and punched<br />

Colonel Moodus squarely in the nose, knocking Colonel Moodus down on the seat of his<br />

pants and making General Dreedle roar with lusty, unexpected laughter until he spied<br />

the chaplain standing close by gawking at him grotesquely in tortured wonder. General<br />

Dreedle froze at the sight of him. He glowered at the chaplain with swollen fury for a<br />

moment, his good humor gone, and turned back toward the bar disgruntedly, rolling<br />

from side to side like a sailor on his short bandy legs. Colonel Cathcart cantered<br />

fearfully along behind, glancing anxiously about in vain for some sign of help from<br />

Colonel Korn.<br />

‘That’s a fine thing,’ General Dreedle growled at the bar, gripping his empty shot glass<br />

in his burly hand. ‘That’s really a fine thing, when a man of God begins hanging around<br />

a place like this with a bunch of dirty drunks and gamblers.’ Colonel Cathcart sighed<br />

with relief. ‘Yes, sir,’ he exclaimed proudly. ‘It certainly is a fine thing.’<br />

‘Then why the hell don’t you do something about it?’<br />

‘Sir?’ Colonel Cathcart inquired, blinking.<br />

‘Do you think it does you credit to have your chaplain hanging around here every<br />

night? He’s in here every goddam time I come.’<br />

‘You’re right, sir, absolutely right,’ Colonel Cathcart responded. ‘It does me no credit at<br />

all. And I am going to do something about it, this very minute.’<br />

‘Aren’t you the one who ordered him to come here?’

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