The Sicilian - Mario Puzo [110]
Don Croce did not respond to any of this. He ate steadily, and had to admit to himself that the food in Rome was far better than the food in his native Sicily. The Don bent his huge emperor’s head close over his dish of spaghetti filled with truffles; the great jaws chewed steadily and inexorably. Occasionally he wiped his thin mustache with his napkin. The imperial beak of a nose stood sentinel over each new dish brought in by the servants as if scenting them for some poison. The eyes darted back and forth over the lavishly burdened table. He never said a word as the Minister droned on about momentous affairs of state.
They finished up with a huge platter of fruits and cheeses. Then over the ceremonial cup of coffee and a balloon glass of brandy, the Don made himself ready to speak. He shifted his huge bulk in the inadequate chair, and the Minister hastily led him into a drawing room with overstuffed armchairs. He ordered a servant to bring in the coffee and brandy and then dismissed him. The Minister himself poured the Don’s espresso, offered a cigar which was refused, then prepared himself to hear the Don’s wisdom which he knew would be to the point.
Don Croce regarded the Minister steadily. He was not impressed with the aristocratic profile, blunt thick features, the forcefulness. And he despised the Minister’s beard which he thought an affectation. This was a man who could impress in Rome but never in Sicily. Yet this was the man who could consolidate the Mafia’s power in Sicily. It had been a mistake in the old days to sneer at Rome; the result had been Mussolini and the Fascists. Don Croce had no illusions. A left-wing government could be serious about reforms, about the sweeping out of the subterranean government of the Friends of the Friends. Only a Christian Democratic government would maintain the legal processes that made Don Croce invulnerable, and he agreed to come to Rome with the satisfaction of a faith healer visiting a horde of crippled supplicants who suffered mostly from hysteria. He knew he could effect a cure.
“I can deliver Sicily to you in the next election,” he said to Minister Trezza. “But we have need of armed men. You must assure me that you will not move against Turi Guiliano.”
“That is the one promise I cannot make,” said Minister Trezza.
“That is the one promise you must make,” answered Don Croce.
The Minister stroked his small beard. “What kind of man is this Guiliano?” he asked reluctantly. “He is far too young to be so ferocious. Even for a Sicilian.”
“Ah, no, he’s a gentle lad,” said Don Croce, ignoring the Minister’s sardonic smile and failing to mention that he had never met Guiliano.
Minister Trezza shook his head. “I don’t think that possible,” he said. “A man who has killed so many carabinieri cannot be called a gentle lad.”
It was true. Don Croce thought that Guiliano had been particularly reckless during the past year. Since the time he had executed “Father” Dodana, Guiliano had unleashed his fury against all his enemies, Mafia and Rome alike.
He had begun sending letters to the newspapers proclaiming he was the ruler of Western Sicily, let Rome do what it may. He also sent letters forbidding the carabinieri of the towns of Montelepre, Corleone and Monreale to go out on patrol in the streets after midnight. His explanation for this was that his men had to get to certain points to visit friends or family, and he did not want them arrested in their beds or shot when they came out of their houses or when he himself wished to visit his family in Montelepre.
The newspapers printed these letters with gleeful sidebars. Salvatore Guiliano forbade the cassetta? This bandit forbids the police from performing their lawful patrols in the towns of Sicily? What impudence. What colossal effrontery. Did this young man think he was the King of Italy? There were cartoons showing carabinieri hiding in an alley of Montelepre as the huge figure of Guiliano stepped