“The Godfather” By Mario Puzo
293
in their beds, there came a knocking on Filomena’s door. She was by no means
frightened, it was the quiet hour babes prudently chose to enter safely into this sinful
world, and so she dressed and opened the door. Outside it was Luca Brasi whose
reputation even then was fearsome. It was known also that he was a bachelor. And so
Filomena was immediately frightened. She thought he had come to do her husband
harm, that perhaps her husband had foolishly refusal Brasi some small favor.
But Brasi had come on the usual errand. He told Filomena that there was a woman
about to give birth, that the house was out of the neighborhood some distance away and
that she was to come with him. Filomena immediately sensed something amiss. Brasi’s
brutal face looked almost like that of a madman that night, he was obviously in the grip
of some demon. She tried to protest that she attended only women whose history she
knew but he shoved a handful of green dollars in her hand and ordered her roughly to
come along with him. She was too frightened to refuse.
In the street was a Ford, its driver of the same feather as Luca Brasi. The drive was no
more than thirty minutes to a small frame house in Long Island City right over the bridge.
A two-family house but obviously now tenanted only by Brasi and his gang. For there
were some other ruffians in the kitchen playing cards and drinking. Brasi took Filomena
up the stairs to a bedroom. In the bed was a young pretty girl who looked Irish, her face
painted, her hair red; and with a belly swollen like a sow. The poor girl was so
frightened. When she saw Brasi she turned her head away in terror, yes terror, and
indeed the look of hatred on Brasi’s evil face was the most frightening thing she had
ever seen in her life. (Here Filomena crossed herself again.)
To make a long story short, Brasi left the room. Two of his men assisted the midwife and
the baby was born, the mother was exhausted and went into a deep sleep. Brasi was
summoned and Filomena, who had wrapped the newborn child in an extra blanket,
extended the bundle to him and said, “If you’re the father, take her. My work is finished.”
Brasi glared at her, malevolent, insanity stamped on his face. “Yes, I’m the father,” he
said. “But I don’t want any of that race to live. Take it down to the basement and throw it
into the furnace.”
For a moment Filomena thought she had not understood him properly. She was puzzled
by his use of the word “race.” Did he mean because the girl was not Italian? Or did he
mean because the girl was obviously of the lowest type; a whore in short? Or did he
mean that anything springing from his loins he forbade to live. And then she was sure he
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