“The Godfather” By Mario Puzo
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Gardens and fields, sparkly green, decorated the desert landscape like bright emerald
necklaces. And sometimes he walked as far as the town of Corleone, its eighteen
thousand people strung out in dwellings that pitted the side of the nearest mountain, the
mean hovels built out of black rock quarried from that mountain. In the last year there
had been over sixty murders in Corleone and it seemed that death shadowed the town.
Further on, the wood of Ficuzza broke the savage monotony of arable plain.
His two shepherd bodyguards always carried their luparas with them when
accompanying Michael on his walks. The deadly Sicilian shotgun was the favorite
weapon of the Mafia. Indeed the police chief sent by Mussolini to clean the Mafia out of
Sicily had, as one of his first steps, ordered all stone walls in Sicily to be knocked down
to not more than three feet in height so that murderers with their luparas could not use
the walls as ambush points for their assassinations. This didn’t help much and the police
minister solved his problem by arresting and deporting to penal colonies any male
suspected of being a mafioso.
When the island of Sicily was liberated by the Allied Armies, the American military
government officials believed that anyone imprisoned by the Fascist regime was a
democrat and many of these mafiosi were appointed as mayors of villages or
interpreters to the military government. This good fortune enabled the Mafia to
reconstitute itself and become more formidable than ever before.
The long walks, a bottle of strong wine at night with a heavy plate of pasta and meat,
enabled Michael to sleep. There were books in Italian in Dr. Taza’s library and though
Michael spoke dialect Italian and had taken some college courses in Italian, his reading
of these books took a great deal of effort and time. His speech became almost
accentiess and, though he could never pass as a native of the district, it would be
believed that he was one of those strange Italians from the far north of Italy bordering
the Swiss and Germans.
The distortion of the left side of his face made him more native. It was the kind of
disfigurement common in Sicily because of the lack of medical care. The little injury that
cannot lie patched up simply for lack of money. Many children, many men, bore
disfigurements that in America would have been repaired by minor surgery or
sophisticated medical treatments.
Michael often thought of Kay, of her smile, her body, and always felt a twinge o
conscience at leaving her so brutally without a word of farewell. Oddly enough his
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