“I told you he wouldn’t be here today,” I say, hoping Annie won’t notice I didn’t answer her question about the notes.
Theresa bounces back to us. “If he’s not here, we should go find him. Can we, Moose? Can we?”
“There’s no time,” I tell Theresa. “I gotta get back. I promised my mom. And I have to buy flowers.”
Theresa’s mouth pulls to one side. “But we woulda had time to play though. That would have taken time,” she reasons.
“Yeah, but Scout lives pretty far from here. We don’t have time to go get him and then play.” I’m pleased with how this comes out. It sounds like I know what I’m talking about.
“You’re going to buy flowers? For Piper?” Annie asks.
I’d planned to say my mom, but suddenly Piper sounds like a better idea, mostly because I have never in my life bought my mom flowers. Not that I’d buy them for Piper, but it does seem more likely.
This lying business is a lot more complicated than it looks.
“Yeah,” I say.
“Ohhhhh!” Theresa’s eyes seek Annie’s.
“It’s a good idea,” Annie tells me. “She’s mad at you, you know.”
“Tell me about it,” I say.
“Don’t worry. She’s mad at the world right now. My mom says it’s because she’s been the apple of her dad’s eye and now all he ever talks about is how much he wants a son. Piper won’t do well as second fiddle.” The corners of Annie’s mouth sneak up a little.
“So where are we getting the flowers?” Theresa wants to know.
“Let’s walk down Union. Probably a flower stand there.”
We walk about six blocks and don’t find anything. So Annie goes into a butcher shop and asks. The butcher directs us to a small stand, no bigger than an outhouse. They have roses: red, yellow, and pink. My gut pinches when I see how expensive they are. How can something you can just pick cost so much? I don’t have enough for a dozen, but I can buy a half dozen. Will that be enough?
“What color?” Annie asks.
“Yellow,” I tell the man behind the counter.
“I’d go with red. Yellow is friendship. Red is,
“That’s why I want yellow,” I insist.
Carefully I take my bat, ball, and glove out of the bag and set the yellow roses inside. I don’t want Darby Trixle or any of the other officers to see I’m carrying them. I wonder if Annie will comment about this, but she doesn’t say a word.
The closer we get to the water, the worse my hives itch. This Annie notices. “What are you scratching so much for? You allergic to flowers?”
“Hey look.” Theresa points to the dock at Fort Mason where we catch the boat back to Alcatraz. Maybe fifty or a hundred people are milling around like ants in a sugar bowl. A man standing on a barrel waves his arms and calls out, “Mae Capone, the wife of public enemy number one. She’s right here, folks. Don’t miss this. Gonna visit her hubby on the Rock. She’s quite the beauty too. C’mon, folks, Mae Capone right here.”
Theresa grabs my arm. “Did you hear that? Mae Capone! C’mon!”
But I’m not thinking about Mae. I’m thinking about Al. The man is stark raving mad. How am I supposed to give his wife flowers with all these people around? The place is swarming with reporters. They’d probably snap my picture as I give them to her. Then I’ll be in the morning papers. That’s just what I need. The warden would fire my father in a heartbeat.
I can’t get Theresa to hand Mae the roses either. If her picture gets in the paper, she’ll get in trouble, same as I would. Didn’t Scarface know Mae would be mobbed like this?
A reporter in a gray suit leans toward us. He hands out business cards like he’s dealing from a deck. “You kids live on Alcatraz? What’s the word on Capone? We heard he’s got his own furniture up there, Oriental rugs and the whole nine yards.”
“Capone gonna bust right outta there. You heard it from me,” the man on the barrel shouts.
A man with a puffy nose waves his big hand in my face. “You live on the Rock?” He shoves a slip of paper at me as a guy stinking of cigarettes hurries past.
“A hot tip’s worth cash money to me.” A guy with hairy wrists folds my hand around his card.
“We can’t, sir. The warden won’t let us talk to reporters-” Annie tells him as the crowd presses in.
“She’s coming!” Theresa shouts. My pulse is growing louder like my own heart is getting closer to me.
A man scrambles over the back of another. A large woman picks a reporter up and moves him out of her way. A guy with a hat two sizes too small is shooting photos in a mad rush. Another man in a dark suit elbows in front of me.
“This is crazy. Let’s get on the boat.” Annie pulls Theresa and me past the buck sergeant, who checks us off on his clipboard. We scoot up the ramp and out of the fray. Back onto the boat, settling against the railing, we see the tops of everyone’s heads as they rush Mae Capone.
Mae hides behind her mink wrap, and her leather gloves cover what little of her face isn’t buried in mink. A hat with a brown veil sits smartly on her short platinum blond movie star hair. I can’t hardly see her, but one thing is clear.
Mae Capone is a looker.
She’s making her way up the gangplank, but it’s slow going.
“How’s he doin’? His life in danger? What can you tell us, Mrs. Capone?”
And then from the back of the crowd Warden Williams appears, flanked by three Angel Island army officers.
Oh great, this is just who I need… the warden!
“Gentlemen! Gentlemen! Give the lady some room, please,” the warden’s booming voice barks. The people nearest the warden sense the power shift and they take a reluctant step back.
What am I supposed to do now, give Mae roses in front of the warden? It kind of explains why Piper isn’t here though. She must have known he’d be on the boat.
“They like the big guy on Alcatraz? They treating him right?” One man in the back keeps at it.
Another officer positions his barrel chest between Mae and the reporters. A skeleton-thin man throws a fistful of cards her way. “Floyd’s the name, at the Examiner. I’ll make it worth your while.”
But the warden is on him now. He picks up the cards and hands them back. “These won’t be necessary, Mr. Floyd,” he says.
The warden and the officers have the crowd in hand now. A path clears for Mae Capone and she heads up the gangplank straight for us. Her cheeks are flushed. Her lips are like bright boysenberries. Her perfume smells of lilacs and talcum powder mixed with the dead fish at the dock. She’s so close I could reach out and touch her soft brown leather glove.
I glance down at the warden still on the dock. His back is to us as he confers with one of the Angel Island officers. Mae’s mink brushes past my arm. “Excuse me,” Mae says.
My mouth drops open. All I can think about is giving her the roses, but I can’t do that here. Not with the warden right there. What am I, nuts? Theresa jabs her elbow in my side. “Me. Oh… How do you do, Mrs. Capone,” I stutter.
And then suddenly it occurs to me. If I give roses to every woman on the boat, I won’t get in trouble.
I grab a rose and hand it to Mae as she sweeps past. “Here. And here.” I give another to Annie and one to Theresa.
Mae smiles at me, a beautiful smile. “Why, thank you… Moose, isn’t it?” she says, and then she’s gone, yellow rose in hand, flanked by the officers and Darby Trixle.
Theresa’s eyes are big as Bundt cakes. “Why’d you do that?” she asks.
But I ignore Theresa as I hurry over to Doc Ollie’s sister, who looks exactly like him. She even wears the high-heeled equivalent of his sturdy shoes. I give her a rose and one to Mrs. Caconi and one to Bea Trixle.
“Why, Moose!” Bea Trixle’s face glows all the way down to the mouse brown roots of her newly blond hair. “Isn’t that the sweetest thing! What a nice young man you are! Darby! Oh, Darby!” Bea waves her husband down. “See what that nice Flanagan boy gave me.” She jiggles the rose in his face.
Darby sucks on his bottom lip.
“A rose. Long-stemmed too,” Bea tells Darby. “You know my birthday is coming up.”
“Yes, honey bunch.” Trixle glares at me. “I know.”
“They couldn’t be that expensive if a twelve-year-old boy got one,” Bea tells him as the warden appears, walking across the deck in his deliberate manner, the boat gently swaying. He surveys the scene.
“Where did the roses come from?” the warden asks Trixle.
Trixle waggles his head in my direction. “Flanagan boy, sir.”
The warden looks at me so hard it feels like he can see through my skull. “What’s this business about, Matthew?” he asks, using my real name, which always means trouble.
My knees are quaking under me. “Nothing, sir,” I tell him, trying to force my voice through my tight throat.
“Nothing, is it?” The warden raises his eyebrows. “Quite the ladies’ man, aren’t you?”
“No, sir,” I mutter.
“That’s not what my Piper says. I have my eye on you, Flanagan.” The warden shakes his head. “Got my fingers crossed the next one is a boy so I won’t have to worry about the likes of Moose Flanagan,” he tells Trixle.
“Ain’t nothing like a boy, sir,” Trixle agrees. “Me and the missus got our hopes on one too.”
“For twenty years been hankering for a son.” The warden smiles, his chest full, his blue eyes bright with possibility. Then he seems to realize I am still here.
“Go on, get out of here, Mr. Flanagan,” the warden tells me, and I begin to walk away but then I hear Trixle.
“It ain’t Moose I worry about. It’s his sister.”
“She’s not even on the island now, right?” the warden asks.
“Yeah, but she’s comin’ back, ain’t that right, Moose?” Trixle raises his voice so I can hear. He knows I’m listening to this.