The US Capital Commotion
First published in the United States 2011 as
Flat Stanley’s Worldwide Adventures #9: The US Capital Commotion
First published in Great Britain 2015
by Egmont UK Limited
The Yellow Building, 1 Nicholas Road
London, W11 4AN
Text copyright 2011 by the Trust u/w/o Richard C. Brown a/k/a Jeff Brown f/b/o Duncan Brown
Illustrations copyright 2015 by the Trust u/w/o Richard C. Brown a/k/a Jeff Brown f/b/o Duncan Brown
First e-book edition 2015
ISBN 978 1 4052 7250 6
Ebook ISBN 978 1 7803 1507 2
www.egmont.co.uk
A CIP catalogue record for this title is available from the British Library
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, or stored in a database or retrieval system, without the prior written permission of the publisher.
Contents
Cover
Title Page
Copyright
1 Stars and Stripes
2 The Governor’s Visit
3 A Hero’s Welcome
4 We the People
5 The Monumental Mistake
6 The Oval Office
7 The Award Ceremony
8 In the Mail
Back series promotional page
Stars and Stripes
Every Fourth of July, Stanley Lambchop dreamed of being in the local Independence Day parade – that is, until the year that his bulletin board fell on him in the middle of the night and flattened him.
‘Can’t I be Abraham Lincoln?’ Stanley pleaded. Moments before the parade was about to begin, he found himself sitting in the centre of the Grammar Society float, with his legs rolled up tightly to his chest.
‘I cannot tell a lie,’ intoned his father, George Lambchop. He towered over Stanley majestically in a white wig and ponytail. ‘I think you look patriotic.’
‘Oh, George,’ blushed Stanley’s mother, Harriet Lambchop, who was wearing an old-fashioned blue gown and a ribbon in her hair. ‘You are such a good father . . . of our country. George Washington!’
Stanley’s father winked. ‘No, Betsy Ross. It is you who deserves our gratitude for giving birth to such a fine flag.’ He gestured grandly down towards Stanley, and Mrs Lambchop curtsied with a giggle.
‘How many times do I have to tell you,’ interrupted Stanley, ‘I don’t want to be the –’
His younger brother, Arthur, appeared from the other side of the float. Arthur had stretched a pale bathing cap over his head and had fringed it with strands from an old grey mop. ‘It’s not too late to be my kite, Stanley!’ He peered down at Stanley from over his tiny spectacles and patted his huge belly, which was actually a pillow stuffed under his shirt.
‘I beg your pardon, Mr Benjamin Franklin,’ their father said, shaking his head gravely. ‘I cannot allow your brother to be struck by lightning.’
‘Aw,’ said Arthur. ‘Even if it means discovering electricity?’
Suddenly, a nearby brass band launched into a bouncy rendition of ‘America the Beautiful’. The float lurched forwards.
‘The parade is starting!’ Stanley’s mother squealed. She picked up a wooden pole and poked it at Stanley. ‘Stanley, get up! You have to wave!’
‘Can’t I just wave with my hands,’ Stanley said, ‘like everyone else?’
‘No!’ his family shouted.
Stanley let out a sigh, grabbed on to the top of the pole, and slowly unfurled his body.
His mother had spent days sewing his costume. Thirteen red and white stripes ran down to his toes, while a square of blue with white stars covered half of his chest. He began swishing back and forth, as if he were fluttering in the breeze.
‘Check out the Stars and Stripes!’ yelled someone.
‘Hey, flag boy!’ someone yelled. ‘Smile!’
A local television crew ran up and hopped alongside the float. Everywhere Stanley looked, people were pointing their fingers at him.
Being flat had given Stanley the opportunity to do things most people never dreamed of. He had travelled around the world by airmail. He could slide under doors, slip between bars, and fold himself into origami ninja throwing stars. He had served as a cape used by the great matador Carmen del Junco in Mexico and performed with the acrobatic twins known as the Flying Chinese Wonders in Beijing.
But being flat didn’t always make Stanley feel good. Sometimes, he felt as if people paid attention to him not because of who he was, but merely because of how he looked. The only reason everyone is so excited, thought Stanley, as the float rolled on, is that I look weird. Nobody cares about what I’m really like.
Around him, his father, mother, and brother waved excitedly to the screaming throngs of people. Meanwhile, Stanley’s body kept on waving, but he didn’t even feel like he was there.
The next morning, Stanley was examining himself in the mirror that hung on the back of his bedroom door. He turned to the side, and it was as if his body suddenly disappeared. After all, he was only half an inch thick.
Suddenly, the door flew open.
‘Guess who’s on the front page of the newspaper!’ shouted Arthur.
‘Thanks for knocking,’ Stanley grumbled. He pushed the door, and it swung away from the wall where he’d been abruptly flattened once again.
‘It’s my room, too,’ huffed Arthur. ‘Anyway, look!’
Sure enough, there was a photograph of the Lambchops atop the Grammar Society float – and right in the middle was Stanley, swinging from his mother’s flagpole. WHAT A COUNTRY! blared the headline.
Just then, the telephone rang. ‘George,’ called Stanley’s mother a moment later. ‘It’s a journalist from WUSA. They’re asking about our very own flag – Stanley!’
Stanley felt something rise up from deep inside him. ‘I AM NOT A FLAG!’ he screamed.
Arthur gaped at Stanley, and suddenly both their parents were standing in the doorway.
‘Stanley,’ his mother said slowly. ‘Are you feeling all right?’
Without answering, Stanley sprinted straight to the living room and slid under the couch, where nobody could bother him.
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