“The Godfather” By Mario Puzo 180
made certain that the other fellow got his share of profit. Nobody lost. He did this, of
course, by obvious means. Like many businessmen of genius he learned that free
competition was wasteful, monopoly efficient. And so he simply set about achieving that
efficient monopoly. There were some oil wholesalers is Brooklyn, men of fiery temper,
headstrong, not amenable to reason, who refused to see, to recognize, the vision of Vito
Corleone, even after he had explained everything to them with the utmost patience and
detail. With these men Vito Corleone threw up his hands is despair and sent Tessio to
Brooklyn to set up a headquarters and solve the problem. Warehouses were burned,
truckloads of olive-green oil were dumped to form lakes in the cobbled waterfront
streets. One rash man, an arrogant Milanese with more faith in the police than a saint
has in Christ, actually went to the authorities with a complaint against his fellow Italians,
breaking the ten-century-old law, of omerta. But before the matter could progress any
further the wholesaler disappeared, never to be seen again, leaving behind, deserted,
his devoted wife and three children, who, God be thanked, were fully grown and capable
of taking over his business and coming to terms with the Genco Pura oil company.
But great men are not born great, they grow great, and so it was with Vito Corleone.
When prohibition came to pass and alcohol forbidden to be sold, Vito Corleone made
the final step from a quite ordinary, somewhat ruthless businessman to a great Don in
the world of criminal enterprise. It did not happen in a day, it did not happen in a year,
but by the end of the Prohibition period and the start of the Great Depression, Vito
Corleone had become the Godfather, the Don, Don Corleone.
It started casually enough. By this time the Genco Pura Oil Company had a fleet of six
delivery trucks. Through Clemenza, Vito Corleone was approached by a group of Italian
bootleggers who smuggled alcohol and whiskey in from Canada. They needed trucks
and deliverymen to distribute their produce over New York City. They needed
deliverymen who were reliable, discreet and of a certain determination and force. They
were willing to pay Vito Corleone for his trucks and for his men. The fee was so
enormous that Vito Corleone cut back drastically on his oil business to use the trucks
almost exclusively for the service of the bootlegger-smugglers. This despite the fact that
these gentlemen had accompanied their offer with a silky threat. But even then Vito
Carleone was so mature a man that he did not take insult at a threat or become angry
and refuse a profitable offer because of it. He evaluated the threat, found it lacking in
conviction, and lowered his opinion of his new partners because they had been so
stupid to use threats where none were needed. This was useful information to be