“The Godfather” By Mario Puzo 181
pondered at its proper time.
Again he prospered. But, more important, he acquired knowledge and contacts and
experience. And he piled up good deeds as a banker piles up securities. For in the
following years it became clear that Vito Corleone was not only a man of talent but, in
his way, a genius.
He made himself the protector of the Italian families who set themselves up as small
speakeasies in their homes, selling whiskey at fifteen cents a glass to bachelor laborers.
He became godfather t Mrs. Colombo’s youngest son when the lad made his
confirmation and gave a handsome present of a twenty-dollar gold piece. Meanwhile,
since it was inevitable that some of his trucks be stopped by the police, Genco
Abbandando hired a fine lawyer with many contacts in the Police Department and the
judiciary. A system of payoffs was set up and soon the Corleone organization had a
sizable “sheet,” the list of officials entitled to a monthly sum. When the lawyer tried to
keep this list down, apologizing for the expense, Vito Corleone reassured him. “No; no,”
he said. “Get everyone on it even if they can’t help us right now. I believe in friendship
and I am willing to show my friendship first.”
As time went by the Corleone empire became larger, more trucks were added, the
“sheet” grew longer. Also the men working directly for Tessio and Clemenza grew in
number. The whole thing was becoming unwieldy. Finally Vito Corleone worked out a
system of organization. He gave Clemenza and Tessio each the title of Caporegime, or
captain, and the men who worked beneath them the rank of soldier. He named Genco
Abbandando his counselor, or Consigliere. He put layers of insulation between himself
and any operational act. When he gave an order it was to Genco or to one of the
caporegimes alone. Rarely did he have a witness to any order he gave any particular
one of them. Then he split Tessio’s group and made it responsible for Brooklyn. He also
split Tessio off from Clemenza and made it clear over the years that he did not want the
two men to associate even socially except when absolutely necessary. He explained
this to the more intelligent Tessio, who caught his drift immediately, though Vito
explained it as a security measure against the law. Tessio understood that Vito did not
want his two caporegimes to have any opportunity to conspire against him and he also
understood there was no ill will involved, merely a tactical precaution. In return Vito gave
Tessio a free hand in Brooklyn while he kept Clemenza’s Bronx life very much under his
thumb. Clemenza was the braver, more reckless, the crueler man despite his outward
jollity, and needed a tighter rein.