“The Godfather” By Mario Puzo
232
Chapter 20
The death of Santino Corleone sent shock waves through the underworld of the nation.
And when it became known that Don Corleone had risen from his sick bed to take
charge of the Family affairs, when spies at the funeral reported that the Don seemed to
be
fully recovered, the heads of the Five Families made frantic efforts to prepare a
defense against the bloody retaliatory war that was sure to follow. Nobody made the
mistake of assuming that Don Corleone could be held cheaply because of his past
misfortunes. He was a man who had made only a few mistakes
in his career and had
learned from every one of them.
Only Hagen guessed the Don’s real intentions and was not surprised when emissaries
were sent to the Five Families to propose a peace. Not only to propose a peace but a
meeting of all the Families in the city and with invitations to Families all over the United
States to attend. Since the New York Families were the
most powerful in the country, it
was understood that their welfare affected the welfare of the country as a whole.
At first there were suspicions. Was Don Corleone preparing a trap? Was he trying to
throw his enemies off their guard? Was he attempting to prepare a wholesale massacre
to avenge his son? But Don Corleone soon made it clear that he was sincere. Not only
did he involve all the Families in
the country in this meeting, but made no move to put
his own people on a war footing or to enlist allies. And then he took the final irrevocable
step that established the authenticity of these intentions and assured the safety of the
grand council to be assembled. He called on the services of the Bocchicchio Family.
The Bocchicchio
Family was unique in that, once a particularly ferocious branch of the
Mafia in Sicily, it had become an instrument of peace in America. Once a group of men
who earned their living
by a savage determination, they now earned their living in what
perhaps could be called a saintly fashion. The Bocchicchios’ one asset was a closely
knit structure of blood relationships, a family loyalty severe
even for a society where
family loyalty came before loyalty to a wife.
The Bocchicchio Family, extending out to third cousins, had once numbered nearly two
hundred when they ruled the particular economy of a small section of southern Sicily.
The income for the entire family then came from
four or five flour mills, by no means
owned communally, but assuring labor and bread and a minimal security for all Family
members. This was enough, with intermarriages, for them
to present a common front
against their enemies.