“The Godfather” By Mario Puzo
205
On East 112th Street a long line of cars were doubleparked in front of a candy store that
was the headquarters of Carlo Rizzi’s book. On the sidewalk in front of the store, fathers
played catch with small children they had taken for a Sunday
morning ride and to keep
them company as they placed their bets. When they saw Carlo Rizzi coming they
stopped playing ball and bought their kids ice cream to keep them quiet. Then they
started studying the newspapers that gave the starting pitchers,
trying to pick out
winning baseball bets for the day.
Carlo went into the large room in the back of the store. His two “writers,” a small wiry
man called Sally Rags and a big husky fellow called Coach, were already waiting for the
action to start.
They had their huge, lined pads in front of them ready to write down bets.
On a wooden stand was a blackboard with the names of the sixteen big league baseball
teams chalked on it, paired to show who was playing against who. Against each pairing
was a blocked-out square to enter the odds.
Carlo
asked Coach, “Is the store phone tapped today?”
Coach shook his head. “The tap is still off.”
Carlo went to the wall phone and dialed a number. Sally Rags and Coach watched him
impassively as he jotted down the “line,” the odds on all the baseball games for that day.
They watched him as he hung up the phone and walked over to the blackboard and
chalked up the odds against each game. Though Carlo did not know it, they had already
gotten the line and were checking his work. In the first week
in his job Carlo had made a
mistake in transposing the odds onto the blackboard and had created that dream of all
gamblers, a “middle.” That is, by betting the odds with him and then betting against the
same team with another bookmaker at the correct. odds, the gambler could not lose.
The only one who coud lose was Carlo’s book. That mistake had caused a
six-thousand-dollar loss in the book for the week and confirmed the Don’s judgment
about his son-in-law. He had given the word that all of Carlo’s work was to be checked.
Normally the highly placed members of the Corleone Family
would never be concerned
with such an operational detail. There was at least a five-layer insulation to their level.
But since the book was being used as a testing ground for the son-in-law, it had been
placed under the direct scrutiny of Tom Hagen, to whom a report was sent every day.
Now
with the line posted, the gamblers were thronging into the back room of the candy
store to jot down the odds on their newspapers next to the games printed there with
probable pitchers. Some of them held their little children by the hand as they looked up