Al Capone Does My Homework

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Authors: Gennifer Choldenko

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DIAL BOOKS FOR YOUNG READERS

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Copyright © 2013 by Gennifer Choldenko

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, scanned, or distributed
in any printed or electronic form without permission. Please do not participate in
or encourage piracy of copyrighted materials in violation of the author’s rights.
Purchase only authorized editions.

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Choldenko, Gennifer, date.

Al Capone does my homework / Gennifer Choldenko. p. cm.

Sequel to: Al Capone shines my shoes.

Summary: “Moose Flanagan, who lives on Alcatraz along with his family and the families
of the other prison guards, faces new challenges when his father is promoted to associate
warden”—Provided by publisher.

Includes bibliographical references.

ISBN 978-1-101-59036-2

1. United States Penitentiary, Alcatraz Island, California—Juvenile fiction. [1. United
States Penitentiary, Alcatraz Island, California—Fiction. 2. Alcatraz Island (Calif.)—History—20th
century—Fiction. 3. Swindlers and swindling—Fiction. 4. Fires—Fiction. 5. Autism—Fiction.
6. Brothers and sisters—Fiction.] I. Title.

PZ7.C446265Akh 2013 [Fic]—dc23 2012039138

The publisher does not have any control over and does not assume any responsibility
for author or third-party websites or their content.

Contents

Title Page

Copyright

Dedication

Prison Map

 

1. The Warden’s Son

2. America’s Roughest Prison

3. Explosion

4. The Flanagan Girl

5. On My Watch

6. Fits and Whispers

7. Under the Caconis’ Apartment

8. The House of Sticks

9. Annie and Me at the Swings

10. A Bad Day for Pixies

11. The Best Pitching Arm

12. Just Plain Mean

13. Al Capone Is My English Teacher

14. Button It Up

15. The Chinless Man

16. One Thing You Shouldn’t Do

17. Fingering Suckers

18. Flickering Lights

19. The Other Jack

20. Funny Business

21. Al Capone Eats a Sandwich

22. The Queen Falls

23. “Am I a Criminal Too?”

24. State Problem

25. In Charge of Everything

26. Nat’s Turn

27. Eyes

28. The Pixies’ Secret

29. Al Capone Drops the Ball

 

Author’s Note

Acknowledgments

To my dad,
JAMES ALEXANDER JOHNSON

1.
The Warden’s Son

Sunday, January 19, 1936

Today is my dad’s first official day as associate warden on Alcatraz Island, home
to anyone who is anyone in the criminal world. On our island we have world-famous
robbers, thieves, swindlers, sharpshooters, second-story burglars, mad-dog murderers,
plus a whole lot of ordinary criminals—vicious but not well-known.

No one ever believes I live on Alcatraz. Even my eighth-grade history teacher made
me write on the chalkboard
I do not live on Alcatraz
two hundred times. She didn’t even apologize when she found out I wasn’t lying.

My mother couldn’t buy stockings at O’Connor and Moffat’s. They wouldn’t take her
check, on account of it said:
Helen Flanagan, Alcatraz Island, California
. My father had trouble getting his driver’s license. They thought he was an escaped
prisoner too stupid to fake his address, instead of an officer at the most notorious
prison in North America.

My friend Annie was kicked out of Sunday school for saying she lived on Alcatraz.
They sent her to confession. She confessed she didn’t live on Alcatraz and the next
day she confessed she’d lied in confession.

Of course, Piper, the warden’s daughter, never gets in trouble for anything. Nothing
sticks to her. She’s as slippery as a bar of soap.

I’m betting a guard like Darby Trixle—also known as Double Tough—doesn’t have these
kinds of problems either. Darby was born in a uniform, one size too tight. My dad,
on the other hand, looks like a middle-age dance instructor. You’d never expect him
to carry a firearm. An accordion maybe, but not a rifle. Not that there are firearms
everywhere on Alcatraz. Only up in the guard towers and the catwalks. At any given
moment you are in the crosshairs down at the dock, but not up on the parade grounds.

My dad may not look the part, but as of today, he’s the number two guy on the island.
Piper lords it over all the kids that she’s the warden’s daughter, but now I’m the
warden’s son
. Okay, the associate warden . . . but still.

In the kitchen, Dixieland band music is playing on the radio and my father is dressed
in his crisp blue uniform. My mom is patiently trying to brush my sixteen-year-old
sister Natalie’s hair, which she really hates.

From a distance Nat seems normal, but when you get close you start to notice things
are a bit off. She rocks from side to side. She drags her chin along her chest. She
won’t ever look in your eyes, and sometimes stares straight at your privates. My dad
says Natalie views the world through her own personal kaleidoscope and it’s our job
to see from her perspective. That sounds good until she’s counting every hairpin in
the bathroom when my bladder is about to explode, or she’s lying flat on the ground
in the middle of the train station when the cutest girl in school walks by.

Today, Mom and Nat are waiting for Mrs. Kelly to arrive. Mrs. Kelly is the teacher
who helps her learn the social graces.

“You nervous?” I ask my father as he sits on the edge of his bed, giving his shoes
a last buff. His face is newly shaved, his skin smells of soap, and his shoes are
as shiny as good silver spoons, but still he keeps shining them.

“He’s fine,” my mother calls.

My father smiles as he slips his stocking feet into his shoes. “See, I’m fine,” he
says, smoothing down his hair and placing his officer’s cap squarely on his head.

“You’re nervous,” I say.

“Could be,” he answers.

“You want one of Nat’s buttons . . . for luck?” Natalie collects buttons. She loves
them the way I love baseball.

“Think she could spare one?”

I head back to the kitchen. “Nat, Dad needs a button. Can you let him have one?”

Nat’s head is down, inches from her plate, her eyes focused on chasing the slippery
whites of her egg. My mother glares at me. “I just got her to sit down for breakfast.”

Nat wiggles out of her chair and heads into the living room. A minute later she comes
back with her hand tightly closed.

She walks up to my dad, who is gulping the last of his coffee, and opens her fist
to reveal one flat, four-hole button.

My father beams at her. “That’s a beaut, sweet pea,” he says, sliding it into his
pocket.

“Ninety-seven,” Nat says.

“I’ll take good care of ninety-seven. You betcha. Guess I’m all set now, except for
one thing.” He gives my mother an embarrassingly long kiss.

My mom smiles. “Good luck,” she says.

I follow him outside. He grins at me. “Where do you think you’re going? Think I can’t
handle the job on my own, do you?”

“Of course you can handle it,” I say, though I am worried. My dad is too nice to be
a warden.

I watch as he walks across the connecting balconies and turns the corner to the stairs.
A minute later, he’s down below, where eight cons are sweeping the dock. Darby Trixle’s
got his eye on them, barking orders through his bullhorn. He loves that bullhorn,
sleeps with it under his pillow. Probably takes it to the bathroom with him too. I
can just hear him: “Bowel movement approaching.”

I follow along after my dad down the stairs. Not close enough for him to notice. I
don’t want him to send me back home.

“Good morning, Darby.” My father walks over for a chat.

Darby sucks his belly in and pokes his chest out. “Good morning, boss,” he says.

Will Darby be nice to me now that my dad is his boss?

Probably not.

My dad looks at all the prisoners as he talks to Darby. I know the names of some.
There’s #227, Lizard, a big woolly mammoth of a guy with a puffy face and spindly
legs. Annie says he ate a lizard in the rec yard once—that’s how he got his name.
There’s #300, Count Lustig, a world-famous con man. And there’s #141, Indiana, who
has no chin and no eyebrows. Indiana waves at me when Darby isn’t looking. But having
a chinless, eyebrow-less felon wave at you is not fun, believe me.

I’m not the only guy watching all of this either. Donny Caconi is on the 64 building
phone, but his eyes are tracking the cons. Donny is the grown son of Mrs. Caconi,
the lady who knocks on your door if the phone is for you. Since she weighs more than
a river barge, and there are a lot of steps in 64 building, this is impressive. Mrs.
Caconi’s husband used to be a guard here, but he got transferred and she didn’t go
with him. Nobody knows why.

Donny is tall, thin, and graceful as a girl—the opposite of his mother—and he dresses
snappy like he has loads of girlfriends. He nods his head at me as if I’m his long-lost
friend. Donny is everybody’s long-lost friend. We all really like him.

Dad finishes his conversation and heads up the switchback.

Then I see Count Lustig motion to Darby. Darby rolls his eyes at the Count but walks
his way. With Darby’s back turned, Indiana spits on the dock behind my father. Lizard
and another con with red hair laugh.

My father glances back at them, his brow furrowed. He knows something happened, but
he’s not sure what. He’s too far up the road to do anything anyway . . . but I’m not.

A little voice in my head tells me this is not my business and I should stay out of
it. But that little voice doesn’t understand how I’m the warden’s son now, and I have
to start acting like it.

My feet step over the white painted line that we’re not supposed to cross when the
cons are down here.

“Don’t do that!” I tell Indiana in my most threatening voice, but I’m so nervous,
it comes out wibbly-wobbly.

Indiana looks at me with his chinless, eyebrow-less face. Lizard cocks his head toward
Indiana as if to say
Take a look at that kid
.

Darby half walks, half runs toward me, his tight blue officer’s jacket bristling.
“Get outta here.” He waves me back in short angry motions.

“He spit at my father,” I say. But when I look at Indiana, his face is perfectly blank,
like he doesn’t speak our language.

“Your father needs his kid to take care of him?” Trixle barks.

“He didn’t see it. I did.”

Trixle shakes his head, then waggles his finger at me. “I don’t care what you see.
You stay out of the dock area when the cons are down here, because I sure as heck
don’t need your help.”

My arms are shaking and my legs feel like tapioca pudding. I retreat back across the
line as fast as my shaky legs will take me.

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