“The Godfather” By Mario Puzo 102
enough nobody stopped him until he reached the nurses’ station on the fourth floor. But
he strode right past her query and on to his father’s room. There was no one outside the
door. Where the hell were the two detectives who were supposed to be waiting around
to guard and question the old man? Where the hell were Tessio and Clemenza’s
people? Could there be someone inside the room? But the door was open. Michael
went in. There was a figure in the bed and by the December moonlight straining through
the window Michael could see his father’s face. Even now it was impassive, the chest
heaved shallowly with his uneven breath. Tubes hung from steel gallows beside the bed
and ran into his nose. On the floor was a glass jar receiving the poisons emptied from
his stomach by other tubes. Michael stayed there for a few moments to make sure his
father was all right, then backed out of the room.
He told the nurse, “My name is Michael Corleone, I just want to sit with my father. What
happened to the detectives who were supposed to be guarding him?”
The nurse was a pretty young thing with a great deal of confidence in the power of her
office. “Oh, your father just had too many visitors, it interfered with the hospital service,”
she said. “The police came and made them all leave about ten minutes ago. And then
just five minutes ago I had to call the detectives to the phone for an emergency alarm
from their headquarters, and then they left too. But don’t worry, I look in on your father
often and I can hear any sound from his room. That’s why we leave the doors open.”
“Thank you,” Michael said. “I’ll sit with him for a little while. OK?”
She smiled at him. “Just for a little bit and then I’m afraid you’ll have to leave. It’s the
rules, you know.”
Michael went back into his father’s room. He took the phone from its cradle and got the
hospital operator to give him the house in Long Beach, the phone in the corner office
room. Sonny answered. Michael whispered, “Sonny, I’m down at the hospital, I came
down late. Sonny, there’s nobody here. None of Tessio’s people. No detectives at the
door. The old man was completely unprotected.” His voice was trembling.
There was a long silence and then Sonny’s voice came, low and impressed, “This is
Sollozzo’s move you were talking about.”
Michael said, “That’s what I figured too. But how did he get the cops to clear everybody
out and where did they go? What happened to Tessio’s men? Jesus Christ, has that
bastard Sollozzo got the New York Police Department in his pocket too?”
“Take it easy, kid.” Sonny’s voice was soothing. “We got lucky again with you going to