“The Godfather” By Mario Puzo 270
some sort on your vocal cords, in your larynx. If you stay here the next few hours, we
can nail it down, whether it’s malignant or nonmalignant. We can make a decision for
surgery or treatment. I can give you the whole story. I can give you the name of a top
specialist in America and we can have him out here on the plane tonight, with your
money that is, and if I think it necessary. But you can walk out of here and see your
quack buddy or sweat while you decide to see another doctor, or get referred to
somebody incompetent. Then if it’s malignant and gets big enough they’ll cut out your
whole larynx or you’ll die. Or you can just sweat. Stick here with me and we can get it all
squared away in a few hours. You got anything more important to do?”
Valenti said, “Let’s stick around, Johnny, what the hell. I’ll go down the hall and call the
studio. I won’t tell them anything, just that we’re held up. Then I’ll come back here and
keep you company.”
It proved to be a very long afternoon but a rewarding one. The diagnosis of the staff
throat man was perfectly sound as far as Jules could see after the X rays and swab
analysis. Halfway through, Johnny Fontane, his mouth soaked with iodine, retching over
the roll of gauze stuck in his mouth, tried to gait. Nino Valenti grabbed him by the
shoulders and slammed him back into a chair. When it was all over Jules grinned at
Fontane and said, “Warts.”
Fontane didn’t grasp it. Jules said again. “Just some warts. We’ll slice them right off like
skin off baloney. In a few months you’ll be OK.”
Valenti let out a yell but Fontane was still frowning. “How about singing afterward, how
will it affect my singing?”
Jules shrugged. “On that there’s no guarantee. But since you can’t sing now what’s the
difference?”
Fontane looked at him with distaste. “Kid, you don’t know what the hell you’re talking
about. You act like you’re giving me good news when what you’re telling me is maybe I
won’t sing anymore. Is that right, maybe I won’t sing anymore?”
Finally Jules was disgusted. He’d operated as a real doctor and it had been a pleasure.
He had done this bastard a real favor and he was acting as if he’d been done dirt. Jules
said coldly, “Listen, Mr. Fontane, I’m a doctor of medicine and you can call me Doctor,
not kid. And I did give you very good news. When I brought you down here I was certain
that you had a malignant growth in your larynx which would entail cutting out your whole
voice box. Or which could kill you. I was worried that I might have to tell you that you