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  “Guess again.” Mitchell glued the edges together.

  “Why do you always stick your tongue out?” Angel said. “You look like Maggie.”

  Mitchell didn’t mind looking like Maggie. She was a good dog.

  He found sparkly gold paint.

  Angel began to smile. “I know. It’s a tower for my castle.”

  “Right,” said Mitchell.

  He dumped gold paint all over it.

  He and Angel went to her shelf.

  Mitchell’s hands were sticky. So was the tower.

  It dripped all over the floor. Right onto a bunch of crumbs. They looked like gold nuggets.

  Wait until Jake the Sweeper saw them.

  Mitchell rubbed the dots with his feet.

  One dot with his right foot.

  Another dot with his left.

  “Watch out,” Angel said.

  Bonk!

  Mitchell tripped across the floor.

  The tower flew into Peter Petway.

  Double bonk!

  “The tower is ruined!” Angel said. “I can’t believe it.”

  Peter Petway was sitting on the floor. He was covered in gold dots.

  “I’ve been looking for you,” Peter said.

  Uh-oh! Mitchell closed his eyes.

  He thought about his old school.

  Nothing scary like this ever happened there.

  CHAPTER 9

  STILL SATURDAY

  Peter Petway leaned forward.

  Mitchell leaned back.

  “Why did you call my brother a loser?” Angel put her hands on her hips. “I saw you from the window that day.”

  Mitchell grabbed her arm. Who knew what Peter Petway would do?

  Peter blinked. “Not me.” He shook his head. “That’s what I call my brother, Trevor. He calls me that, too.”

  Mitchell let out his breath.

  Up close, Peter didn’t look so tough.

  But Angel had her worst look: a pushed-up nose and squinty eyes. “Why are you looking for my brother?” she asked.

  Wow. Angel was tough.

  Peter ducked into a classroom. “Wait,” he called. “I’ll be right back.”

  He came out with Trevor’s mask. “Someone said you were looking for a mask.”

  What a mess it was. Mitchell rubbed it on his shirt. “Thanks,” he said. “It belongs to Trevor.”

  Mitchell turned the mask over. Hadn’t Peter seen Trevor’s T.P.?

  “Look,” Angel said. “He wrote his initials backwards. P.T. instead of T.P.”

  They all grinned at each other.

  Peter gave them each a high five. Then he disappeared into the gym.

  “I have to look for Trevor,” Mitchell told Angel.

  Trevor found them first. He jumped out of the boys’ room. “Eeeee-yaaah!” he yelled.

  He stopped. “Did I scare you?”

  “Yes!” Angel said.

  Trevor looked happy. “I might win a prize for karate.”

  Mitchell held out the mask.

  Trevor gave the clown nose a pat. “I knew you’d find it.”

  It was time to go home for lunch. Mitchell and Angel started down the path.

  Mr. Oakley was outside. He took a bag out of his pocket. Inside was a squashed sandwich.

  Mitchell sniffed. It smelled like peanut butter. It made his stomach rumble.

  “It’s for the squirrels.” Mr. Oakley left it on the front lawn.

  Jake the Sweeper would have a fit.

  “It makes the squirrels happy,” Mr. Oakley said. “It makes me happy, too.”

  “You’re very good at nature,” Mitchell said.

  Mr. Oakley laughed. “Everyone is good at something.”

  He went down Plum Street. “Don’t forget,” he said. “Monday is prize day.”

  Terrible Thomas, the cat, flew out of the bushes. He scarfed down half the sandwich.

  Mitchell and Angel headed for home.

  “I’m not going to win a prize,” Angel said. “I’m not good at anything.”

  Mitchell was surprised. He thought she was good at everything.

  “You’re a good swimmer.” He crossed his fingers.

  “I sink right to the bottom,” she said.

  “Well …”

  She leaned closer. “Listen, Mitchell. I saw specks in the pool. Maybe seeds.”

  She scratched her arm. “They might grow into sharks.”

  Sharks!

  But then Mitchell shook his head. “I don’t think sharks grow in pools.”

  “How about lizards?”

  “Maybe not.” He took a breath. “I’m not good at anything, either.”

  “But Mr. Oakley said everyone is good at something.”

  Mitchell saw a worm on the sidewalk.

  He picked it up. He put it in a puddle.

  Monday he’d ask Mr. Oakley about sharks and lizards. He’d find out where they grew.

  Mitchell opened their side door. “Wait. I just thought of something.”

  Angel stopped.

  “I know what the seeds were,” he said. “Sand from my bathing suit.”

  “Really?” Angel smiled. “You’re shaping up, Mitchell. You’re beginning to think. And something else,” she said.

  He wouldn’t win a prize for thinking. But still it was a good thing to do.

  “Yolanda says you’re an okay kid.”

  He couldn’t believe it. An okay kid. Wow!

  He thought of poor Angel. Good at nothing.

  He thought a little more.

  “You’re good at being a sister,” he said.

  Angel grinned. “Too bad I can’t get a prize for that.”

  “Yes,” Mitchell said. “But a being a good sister isn’t bad at all.”

  CHAPTER 10

  MONDAY-PRIZE DAY

  Mitchell wore his I’M #1 shirt.

  It wasn’t Number One anymore. It had cheese-popper stains and mud stains. It had pizza stains, too.

  Mom had put it in the washing machine. Mitchell had pulled it out before it got wet.

  After school, he followed everyone to the lunchroom.

  The lunch lady’s face was red. “I’ve been working on a special snack. It’s prize day, you know.”

  Mitchell wondered what the snack was. It might be horrible.

  Something like chicken livers.

  It wasn’t, though.

  The lunch lady brought out blueberry muffins.

  All of them had a 1 on top.

  “It’s because of your shirt,” the lunch lady told Mitchell.

  Habib grinned at him. So did Sumiko and Destiny.

  Destiny gave Mitchell two muffins. “It’s only fair,” she said.

  “Thanks.” He ate the blueberries out of the tops. Then he and Habib went down to Homework Help.

  Next to him, Habib counted aloud. “One hundred forty-eight plus eighty-one …”

  “You’re getting good at this,” Mitchell said.

  “… equals almost five hundred,” Habib said.

  Mitchell found his pencil. He began to write.

  The Zelda A. Zigzag School is Number One.

  I’m glad to be here.

  Even without a prize.

  They went to the auditorium. Ms. Katz was sitting on the stage.

  She looked different.

  Mitchell wondered why.

  Then Gina sang “The Star-Spangled Banner.”

  Ms. Katz stood up. “That’s our first prize,” she said. “It’s to Gina for good strong singing.”

  Gina twirled her pearl necklace. She went up to the stage for a looks-like-gold medal.

  Everyone clapped.

  Ms. Katz looked around. She frowned.

  Mitchell saw why she looked different. She had sat on her glasses.

  Yolanda pointed. Then Ms. Katz saw the glasses on her chair. She looked at Mitchell and smiled.

  “We have a medal for Yolanda for artwork,” she said. “And one for Destiny. She helps out with snacks.”
<
br />   “I have yellow zigzags in my hair today,” Destiny said. “It’s in honor of Zelda A. Zigzag.”

  Ms. Katz gave out a million more prizes. That kid named Charlie got one for helping Jake the Sweeper.

  Mitchell kept his head down. He wouldn’t get anything.

  Neither would Habib and Angel.

  Then Ms. Katz called Habib’s name.

  “This medal is for juggling with one apple,” Ms. Katz said. “Good work, Habib.”

  Habib came back to his seat. “Next week I’ll try to juggle with two apples.”

  Next was Sumiko. It was because she knew Japanese words!

  She had taught Mitchell one of them. Hai.

  It meant—

  Mitchell had to think.

  “Yes!”

  Ms. Katz said, “We have one more medal. It’s for Angel McCabe.”

  Angel!

  Mitchell tried to think. Angel couldn’t swim. She was afraid of everything. Her castle looked like—

  “Everyone makes castles with towers,” Ms. Katz said. “Angel made one that’s different. So this is for imagination.”

  Mitchell clapped hard. His hands stung.

  Angel came back to her seat. “I’m glad you smashed the castle,” she told Mitchell. “Maybe you’re Number One after all.”

  Then Ellie climbed up to the stage. “I want to give out a prize, too.” She smiled at Mitchell.

  Mitchell sat up straight.

  Was he good at something besides thinking?

  “Mitchell gets a prize for writing.”

  Mitchell ran up onto the stage.

  “Excellent work, Mitchell.” Ellie pinned a medal to his shirt.

  Everyone clapped. Mitchell felt great. Better than that. He felt excellent.

  “What about me?” a voice called.

  “Me too,” said another.

  Everyone looked around.

  “Trevor and Clifton!” Ms. Katz said.

  They went up to the stage.

  “Medals? Of course!” Ms. Katz said. “You win for making masks.”

  “Eee-yaaah!” said Trevor. He grinned at Clifton.

  Mitchell sat back. He looked at his medal. It had been the best day.

  But then he saw Angel’s arm.

  Poison ivy! It must be from the nature walk.

  Bonk!

  Angel would probably figure that out.

  He’d be right back to Number Eighty-seven again.

  But for now, he was Number One.

  Patricia Reilly Giff is the author of many beloved books for children, including the Kids of the Polk Street School books, the Friends and Amigos books, and the Polka Dot Private Eye books. Several of her novels for older readers have been chosen as ALA-ALSC Notable Books and ALA-YALSA Best Books for Young Adults. They include The Gift of the Pirate Queen; All the Way Home; Water Street; Nory Ryan’s Song, a Society of Children’s Book Writers and Illustrators Golden Kite Honor Book for Fiction; and the Newbery Honor Books Lily’s Crossing and Pictures of Hollis Woods. Lily’s Crossing was also chosen as a Boston Globe–Horn Book Honor Book. Her most recent books are Big Whopper, Eleven, Wild Girl, and Storyteller. Patricia Reilly Giff lives in Connecticut.

  Alasdair Bright is a freelance illustrator who has worked on numerous books and advertising projects. He loves drawing and is never without his sketchbook. He lives in Bedford, England.

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

  Text copyright © 2010 by Patricia Reilly Giff

  Illustrations copyright © 2010 by Alasdair Bright

  All rights reserved. Published in the United States by Wendy Lamb Books, an imprint of Random House Children’s Books, a division of Random House, Inc., New York.

  Wendy Lamb Books and the colophon are trademarks of Random House, Inc.

  Visit us on the Web! www.randomhouse.com/kids Educators and librarians, for a variety of teaching tools, visit us at www.randomhouse.com/teachers

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Giff, Patricia Reilly.

  Number one kid / Patricia Reilly Giff; illustrated by

  Alasdair Bright. —1st ed.

  p. cm.

  Summary: When Mitchell’s father gets a new job and his family moves,

  he and his sister go to a new school where they must make new friends

  and adjust to new routines.

  eISBN: 978-0-375-89635-4

  [1. Schools—Fiction. 2. Brothers and sisters—Fiction.

  3. Self-confidence—Fiction.] I. Bright, Alasdair, ill. II. Title.

  PZ7.G3626Nu 2010

  [Fic]—dc22

  2009033019

  Random House Children’s Books supports the First Amendment and celebrates the right to read.

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