“The Godfather” By Mario Puzo
278
Rather, he lives in his village and at sunrise begins his voyage out to work in distant
fields, a commuter on foot. A worker who arrived at his pagliaio and found it looted was
an injured man indeed. The bread was taken out of his mouth for that day. The Mafia,
after the law proved helpless, took this interest of the peasant under its protection and
solved the problem in typical fashion. It hunted down and slaughtered all pagliaio
thieves. It was inevitable that some innocents suffered. It was possible that if Michael
wandered past a pagliaio that had just been looted he might be adjudged the criminal
unless he had somebody to vouch for him.
So on one sunny morning he started hiking across the fields followed by his two faithful
shepherds. One of them was a plain simple fellow, almost moronic, silent as the dead
and with a face as impassive as an Indian. He had the wiry small build of the typical
Sicilian before they ran to the fat of middle age. His name was Calo.
The other shepherd was more outgoing, younger, and had seen something of the world.
Mostly oceans, since he had been a sailor in the Italian navy during the war and had just
had time enough to get himself tattooed before his ship was sunk and he was captured
by the British. But the tattoo made him a famous man in his village. Sicilians do not often
let themselves be tattooed, they do not have the opportunity nor the inclination. (The
shepherd, Fabrizzio, had done so primarily to cover a splotchy red birthmark on his
belly.) And yet the Mafia market carts had gaily painted scenes on their sides, beautifully
primitive paintings done with loving care. In any case, Fabrizzio, back is his native
village, was not too proud of that tattoo on his chest, though it showed a subject dear to
the Sicilian “honor,” a husband stabbing a naked man and woman entwined together on
the hairy floor of his belly. Fabrizzio would joke with Michael and ask questions about
America, for of course it was impossible to keep them in the dark about his true
nationality. Still, they did not know exactly who he was except that he was in hiding and
there could be no babbling about him. Fabrizzio sometimes brought Michael a fresh
cheese still sweating the milk that formed it.
They walked along dusty country roads passing donkeys pulling gaily painted carts. The
land was filled with pink flowers, orange orchards, groves of almond and olive trees, all
blooming. That had been one of the surprises. Michael had expected a barren land
because of the legendary poverty of Sicilians. And yet he had found it a land of gushing
plenty, carpeted with flowers scented by lemon blossoms. It was so beautiful that he
wondered how its people could bear to leave it. How terrible man had been to his fellow
man could be measured by the great exodus from what seemed to be a Garden of
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