“The Godfather” By Mario Puzo 208
stoop and unlock his hands from the railing. Standing up, he could see the kids look at
him with the staring, sickened faces of people who had witnessed the degradation of a
fellow human being. He was a little dizzy but if was more from shock, the raw fear that
had taken command of his body; he was not badly hurt despite the shower of heavy
blows. He let Coach lead him by the arm into the back room of the candy store and put
ice on his face, which, though it was not cut or bleeding, was lumpy with swelling
bruises. The fear was subsiding now and the humiliation he had suffered made him sick
to his stomach so that he had to throw up. Coach held his head over the sink, supported
him as if he were drunk, then helped him upstairs to the apartment and made him lie
down in one of the bedrooms. Carlo never noticed that Sally Rags had disappeared.
Sally Rags had walked down to Third Avenue and called Rocco Lampone to report what
had happened. Rocco took the news calmly and in his turn called his caporegime, Pete
Clemenza. Clemenza groaned and said, “Oh, Christ, that goddamn Sonny and his
temper,” but his finger had prudently clicked down on the hook so that Rocco never
heard his remark.
Clemenza called the house in Long Beach and got Tom Hagen. Hagen was silent for a
moment and then he said, “Send some of your people and cars out on the road to Long
Beach as soon as you can, just in case Sonny gets held up by traffic or an accident.
When he gets sore like that he doesn’t know what the hell he’s doing. Maybe some of
our friends on the other side will hear he was in town. You sever can tell.”
Clemenza said doubtfully, “By the time I could get anybody on the road, Sonny will be
home. That goes for the Tattaglias too.”
“I know,” Hagen said patiently. “But if something out of the ordinary happens, Sonny
may be held up. Do the best you can, Pete.”
Grudgingly Clemenza called Rocco Lampone and told him to get a few people and cars
and cover the road to Long Beach. He himself went out to his beloved Cadillac and with
three of the platoon of guards who now garrisoned his home, started over the Atlantic
Beach Bridge, toward New York City.
One of the hangers-on around the candy store, a small bettor on the payroll of the
Tattaglia Family as an informer, called the contact he had with his people. But the
Tattaglia Family had not streamlined itself for the war, the contact still had to go all the
way through the insulation layers before he finally got to the caporegime, who contacted
the Tattaglia chief. By that time Sonny Corleone was safely back in the mall, in his