Page 115
Story: Closing Time (Catch-22 2)
Yossarian handed him two quarters and was given a round blue ticket with numbers in sequence wheeling around the rim of the disk of flimsy cardboard on a loop of white string. In helpful pantomime, the guard directed him to slip the loop over his head to hang the ticket around his neck and down over his breast. The name above the piping of his pocket read A. SCHROEDER.
"There's an elevator, sir, if you want to go directly."
"What's down there?"
"You're supposed to know, sir."
"Your name is Schroeder?"
"Yes, sir. Arthur Schroeder."
"That's fucking funny." The soldier said nothing as Yossarian studied him. "Were you ever in the air corps?"
"No, sir."
"How old are you, Schroeder?"
"I'm a hundred and seven."
"That's a good number. How long have you been here?"
"Since 1900."
"Hmmmmm. You were about seventeen when you enrolled?"
"Yes, sir. I came in with the Spanish-American War."
"These are all lies, aren't they?"
"Yes, sir. They are."
"Thank you for telling me the truth."
"I always tell the truth, sir."
"Is tha
t another lie?"
"Yes, sir. I always lie."
"That can't be true then, can it? Are you from Crete?"
"No, sir. I'm from Athens, Georgia. I went to school in Ithaca, New York. My home is now in Carthage, Illinois."
"Is that so?"
"Yes, sir. I cannot tell a lie."
"You are from Crete, aren't you? You know the paradox of the Cretan who tells you Cretans always lie? It's impossible to believe him, isn't it? I want to go inside."
"You have your ticket." The guard punched a hole in the center and another in a number. The number was for the Human Pool Table.
"I can't go on that ride?"
"You've already been, sir," advised the guard named Schroeder. "Those are aluminized metal detectors just inside that arcade. Don't bring drugs or explosives. Be prepared for noise and the bright lights."
Yossarian pushed through the turnstile and walked into the framework of silver metal detectors at the entrance to the hallway. The moment he did, the lighting blinked off. And next, harsh white lights flashed on with a blaze that almost staggered him. He discovered himself inside a brilliantly illuminated hallway of magic mirrors. A roaring noise all but deafened him. It seemed like the blasts of an MRI machine. And he saw that the mirrors glittering grotesquely on all sides and overhead were deforming his reflections dissimilarly, as though he were liquefied into highlighted mercury and melting distinctly into something different from every point of view. Discrete parts of him were enlarged and elongated as though for extracting examination; his images were billowing into quantities of swells. In one mirror, he witnessed his head and neck misshapen into a slender block of Yossarian, while his torso and legs were stunted and bloated. In the mirror beside that one his body was monstrously inflated and his face reduced to a grape, a pimple with hair and a minuscule face with crushed features and a grin. He perceived that he was close to laughing, and the novelty of that surprise tickled him more. In no two mirrors were the deformities alike, in no one lens were the anomalies consistent. His authentic appearance, his objective structure, was no longer absolute. He had to wonder what he truly looked like. And then the ground beneath his feet began to move.
"There's an elevator, sir, if you want to go directly."
"What's down there?"
"You're supposed to know, sir."
"Your name is Schroeder?"
"Yes, sir. Arthur Schroeder."
"That's fucking funny." The soldier said nothing as Yossarian studied him. "Were you ever in the air corps?"
"No, sir."
"How old are you, Schroeder?"
"I'm a hundred and seven."
"That's a good number. How long have you been here?"
"Since 1900."
"Hmmmmm. You were about seventeen when you enrolled?"
"Yes, sir. I came in with the Spanish-American War."
"These are all lies, aren't they?"
"Yes, sir. They are."
"Thank you for telling me the truth."
"I always tell the truth, sir."
"Is tha
t another lie?"
"Yes, sir. I always lie."
"That can't be true then, can it? Are you from Crete?"
"No, sir. I'm from Athens, Georgia. I went to school in Ithaca, New York. My home is now in Carthage, Illinois."
"Is that so?"
"Yes, sir. I cannot tell a lie."
"You are from Crete, aren't you? You know the paradox of the Cretan who tells you Cretans always lie? It's impossible to believe him, isn't it? I want to go inside."
"You have your ticket." The guard punched a hole in the center and another in a number. The number was for the Human Pool Table.
"I can't go on that ride?"
"You've already been, sir," advised the guard named Schroeder. "Those are aluminized metal detectors just inside that arcade. Don't bring drugs or explosives. Be prepared for noise and the bright lights."
Yossarian pushed through the turnstile and walked into the framework of silver metal detectors at the entrance to the hallway. The moment he did, the lighting blinked off. And next, harsh white lights flashed on with a blaze that almost staggered him. He discovered himself inside a brilliantly illuminated hallway of magic mirrors. A roaring noise all but deafened him. It seemed like the blasts of an MRI machine. And he saw that the mirrors glittering grotesquely on all sides and overhead were deforming his reflections dissimilarly, as though he were liquefied into highlighted mercury and melting distinctly into something different from every point of view. Discrete parts of him were enlarged and elongated as though for extracting examination; his images were billowing into quantities of swells. In one mirror, he witnessed his head and neck misshapen into a slender block of Yossarian, while his torso and legs were stunted and bloated. In the mirror beside that one his body was monstrously inflated and his face reduced to a grape, a pimple with hair and a minuscule face with crushed features and a grin. He perceived that he was close to laughing, and the novelty of that surprise tickled him more. In no two mirrors were the deformities alike, in no one lens were the anomalies consistent. His authentic appearance, his objective structure, was no longer absolute. He had to wonder what he truly looked like. And then the ground beneath his feet began to move.
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