It was still dark when the plane landed in Los Angeles. Hagen checked into his hotel,
showered and shaved, and watched dawn come over the city. He ordered breakfast and newspapers to be sent up to his room and relaxed until it was time for his ten A.M.
appointment with Jack Woltz. The appointment had been surprisingly easy to make.
The day before, Hagen had called the most powerful man in the movie labor unions, a
man named Billy Goff. Acting on instructions from Don Corleone, Hagen had told Goff to
arrange an appointment on the next day for Hagen to call on Jack Woltz, that he should
hint to Woltz that if Hagen was not made happy by the results of the interview, there
could be a labor strike at the movie studio. An hour later Hagen received a call from
Goff. The appointment would be at ten A.M. Woltz had gotten the message about the
possible labor strike but hadn't seemed too impressed, Goff said. He added, "If it really
comes down to that, I gotta talk to the Don myself."
"If it comes to that he'll talk to you," Hagen said. By saying this he avoided making any
promises. He was not surprised that Goff was so agreeable to the Don's wishes. The
family empire, technically, did not extend beyond the New York area but Don Corleone
had first become strong by helping labor leaders. Many of them still owed him debts of
friendship.
But the ten A.M. appointment was a bad sign. It meant that he would be first on the
appointment list, that he would not be invited to lunch. It meant that Woltz held him in
small worth. Goff had not been threatening enough, probably because Woltz had him on
his graft payroll. And sometimes the Don's success in keeping himself out of the
limelight worked to the disadvantage of the family business, in that his name did not
mean anything to outside circles.
His analysis proved correct. Woltz kept him waiting for a half hour past the appointed
time. Hagen didn't mind. The reception room was very plush, very comfortable, and on a
plum-colored couch opposite him sat the most beautiful child Hagen had ever seen. She
was no more than eleven or twelve, dressed in a very expensive but simple way as a
grown woman. She had incredibly golden hair, huge deep sea-blue eyes and a fresh
raspberry-red mouth. She was guarded by a woman obviously her mother, who tried to
stare Hagen down with a cold arrogance that made him want to punch her in the face.
The angel child and the dragon mother, Hagen thought, returning the mother's cold
stare.
Finally an exquisitely dressed but stout middle-aged woman came to lead him through a
string of offices to the office-apartment of the movie producer. Hagen was impressed by
the beauty of the offices and the people working in them. He smiled. They were all
shrewdies, trying to get their foot in the movie door by taking office jobs; and most of
them would work in these offices for the rest of their lives or until they accepted defeat
and returned to their home towns.
Jack Woltz was a tall, powerfully built man with a heavy paunch almost concealed by his
perfectly tailored suit. Hagen knew his history. At ten years of age Woltz had hustled
empty beer kegs and pushcarts on the East Side. At twenty he helped his father sweat
garment workers. At thirty he had left New York and moved West, invested in the
nickelodeon and pioneered motion pictures. At forty-eight he had been the most
powerful movie magnate in Hollywood, still rough-spoken, rapaciously amorous, a
raging wolf ravaging helpless flocks of young starlets. At fifty he transformed himself. He
took speech lessons, learned how to dress from an English valet and how to behave
socially from an English butler. When his first wife died he married a world-famous and
beautiful actress who didn't like acting. Now at the age of sixty he collected old master
paintings, was a member of the President's Advisory Committee, and had set up a
multimillion-dollar foundation in his name to promote art in motion pictures. His daughter
had married an English lord, his son an Italian princess.
His latest passion, as reported dutifully by every movie columnist in America, was his
own racing stables on which he had spent ten million dollars in the past year. He had
made headlines by purchasing the famed English racing horse Khartoum for the
incredible price of six hundred thousand dollars and then announcing that the
undefeated racer would be retired and put to stud exclusively for the Woltz stables.
He received Hagen courteously, his beautifully, evenly tanned, meticulously barbered
face contorted with a grimace meant to be a smile. Despite all the money spent, despite
the ministrations of the most knowledgeable technicians, his age showed; the flesh of
his face looked as if it had been seamed together. But there was an enormous vitality in
his movements and he had what Don Corleone had, the air of a man who commanded
absolutely the world in which he lived.
Hagen came directly to the point. That he was an emissary from a friend of Johnny
Fontane. That this friend was a very powerful man who would pledge his gratitude and
undying friendship to Mr. Woltz if Mr. Woltz would grant a small favor. The small favor
would be the casting of Johnny Fontane in the new war movie the studio planned to
start next week.
The seamed face was impassive, polite. "What favors can your friend do me?" Woltz
asked. There was just a trace of condescension in his voice.
Hagen ignored the condescension. He explained. "You've got some labor trouble
coming up. My friend can absolutely guarantee to make that trouble disappear. You
have a top male star who makes a lot of money for your studio but he just graduated
from marijuana to heroin. My friend will guarantee that your male star won't be able to
get any more heroin. And if some other little things come up over the years a phone call
to me can solve your problems."
Jack Woltz listened to this as if he were hearing the boasting of a child. Then he said
harshly, his voice deliberately all East Side, "You trying to put muscle on me?"
Hagen said coolly, "Absolutely not. I've come to ask a service for a friend. I've tried to
explain that you won't lose anything by it."
Almost as if he willed it, Woltz made his face a mask of anger. The mouth curled, his
heavy brows, dyed black, contracted to form a thick line over his glinting eyes. He
leaned over the desk toward Hagen. "All right, you smooth son of a bitch, let me lay it on
the line for you and your boss, whoever he is. Johnny Fontane never gets that movie. I
don't care how many guinea Mafia goombahs come out of the woodwork." He leaned
back. "A word of advice to you, my friend. J. Edgar Hoover, I assume you've heard of
him"– Woltz smiled sardonically– "is a personal friend of mine. If I let him know I'm being
pressured, you guys will never know what hit you."
Hagen listened patiently. He had expected better from a man of Woltz's stature. Was it
possible that a man who acted this stupidly could rise to the head of a company worth
hundreds of millions? That was something to think about since the Don was looking for
new things to put money into, and if the top brains of this industry were so dumb, movies
might be the thing. The abuse itself bothered him not at all. Hagen had learned the art of
negotiation from the Don himself. "Never get angry," the Don had instructed. "Never
make a threat. Reason with people." The word "reason" sounded so much better in
Italian, ragione, to rejoin. The art of this was to ignore all insults, all threats; to turn the
other cheek. Hagen had seen the Don sit at a negotiating table for eight hours,
swallowing insults, trying to persuade a notorious and megalomaniac strong-arm man to
mend his ways. At the end of the eight hours Don Corleone had thrown up his hands in
a helpless gesture and said to the other men at the table, "But no one can reason with
this fellow," and had stalked out of the meeting room. The strong-arm man had turned
white with fear. Emissaries were sent to bring the Don back into the room. An
agreement was reached but two months later the strong-arm was shot to death in his
favorite barbershop.
So Hagen started again, speaking in the most ordinary voice. "Look at my card," he
said. "I'm a lawyer. Would I stick my neck out? Have I uttered one threatening word? Let
me just say that I am prepared to meet any condition you name to get Johnny Fontane
that movie. I think I've already offered a great deal for such a small favor. A favor that I
understand it would be in your interest to grant. Johnny tells me that you admit he would
be perfect for that part. And let me say that this favor would never be asked if that were
not so. In fact, if you're worried about your investment, my client would finance the
picture. But please let me make myself absolutely clear. We understand your no is no.
Nobody can force you or is trying to. We know about your friendship with Mr. Hoover, I
may add, and my boss respects you for it. He respects that relationship very much."
Woltz had been doodling with a huge, red-feathered pen. At the mention of money his
interest was aroused and he stopped doodling. He said patronizingly, "This picture is
budgeted at five million."
Hagen whistled softly to show that he was impressed. Then he said very casually, "My
boss has a lot of friends who back his judgment."
For the first time Woltz seemed to take the whole thing seriously. He studied Hagen's
card. "I never heard of you," he said. "I know most of the big lawyers in New York, but
just who the hell are you?"
"I have one of those dignified corporate practices," Hagen said dryly. "I just handle this
one account." He rose. "I won't take up any more of your time." He held out his hand,
Woltz shook it. Hagen took a few steps toward the door and turned to face Woltz again.
"I understand you have to deal with a lot of people who try to seem more important than
they are. In my case the reverse is true. Why don't you check me out with our mutual
friend? If you reconsider, call me at my hotel." He paused. "This may be sacrilege to
you, but my client can do things for you that even Mr. Hoover might find out of his
range." He saw the movie producer's eyes narrowing. Woltz was finally getting the
message. "By the way, I admire your pictures very much," Hagen said in the most
fawning voice he could manage. "I hope you can keep up the good work. Our country
needs it."
Late that afternoon Hagen received a call from the producer's secretary that a car would
pick him up within the hour to take him out to Mr. Woltz's country home for dinner. She
told him it would be about a three-hour drive but that the car was equipped with a bar
and some hors d'oeuvres. Hagen knew that Woltz made the trip in his private plane and
wondered why he hadn't been invited to make the trip by air. The secretary's voice was
adding politely, "Mr. Woltz suggested you bring an overnight bag and he'll get you to the
airport in the morning."
"I'll do that," Hagen said. That was another thing to wonder about. How did Woltz know
he was taking the morning plane back to New York? He thought about it for a moment.
The most likely explanation was that Woltz had set private detectives on his trail to get
all possible information. Then Woltz certainly knew he represented the Don, which
meant that he knew something about the Don, which in turn meant that he was now
ready to take the whole matter seriously. Something might be done after all, Hagen
thought. And maybe Woltz was smarter than he had appeared this morning.