Class President

Read Class President Online

Authors: Louis Sachar

BOOK: Class President
2.12Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Mrs. North looked lost.…

“Are you all right?” asked Kenny.

“We are going to have a visitor today,” Mrs. North said finally.

Marvin couldn’t wait to hear who it was. From the way Mrs. North was acting, he thought it must be somebody weird.

“Who is it?” asked Warren.

“Is it somebody I’ve heard of?” asked Nick.

“Oh, I hope so, Nick,” said Mrs. North. Then she took a deep breath and said, “The president will becoming here.”

The Marvin Redpost series by Louis Sachar

Marvin Redpost #1
Kidnapped at Birth?
Marvin Redpost #2
Why Pick on Me?
Marvin Redpost #3
Is He a Girl?
Marvin Redpost #4
Alone in His Teacher’s House
Marvin Redpost #5
Class President
Marvin Redpost #6
A Flying Birthday Cake?
Marvin Redpost #7
Super Fast, Out of Control!
Marvin Redpost #8
A Magic Crystal?
More books by Louis Sachar!
The Boy Who Lost His Face
Dogs Don’t Tell Jokes
Holes
Stanley Yelnats’ Survival Guide to Camp Green Lake
There’s a Boy in the Girls’ Bathroom

Text copyright © 1999 by Louis Sachar.
Illustrations copyright © 1999 by Amy Wummer.
All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. Published in the United States by Random House Children’s Books, a division of Random House, Inc., New York, and simultaneously in Canada by Random House of Canada Limited, Toronto.

www.randomhouse.com/kids

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Sachar, Louis, 1954-
Marvin Redpost: class president / by Louis Sachar.
   p.  cm.   “A stepping stone book.”
SUMMARY
: Even though they have all come to school in holey clothes, Marvin and his third-grade class manage to impress their surprise visitor—the president of the United States.
eISBN: 978-0-307-80572-0
[1. Schools—Fiction.  2. Presidents—Fiction.  3. Citizenship—Fiction.]
I. Title.  PZ7.S1185Mao  1999 [Fic]—dc21  98-14313

Random House, Inc.  New York, Toronto, London, Sydney, Auckland

RANDOM HOUSE
and colophon are registered trademarks and
A STEPPING STONE BOOK
and colophon are trademarks of Random House, Inc.

v3.1

To Zach and Max

Contents

1

There was a red post out in front of Marvin Redpost’s house. The rest of the fence was white. Marvin tapped the post for luck as he walked through the gate on his way to school.

He wore a pair of blue jeans with a hole over each knee. It was “hole day” at school.

Every day had been special this week. Monday, he had to wear socks that didn’t match. Tuesday, everyone wore T-shirts that came from a vacation. Wednesday,
yesterday, had been hat day. And today, everyone had to wear clothes with holes.

His two best friends, Nick and Stuart, were waiting for him at the corner.

“Do you think Mrs. North will wear clothes with holes?” asked Stuart.

“Sure, why not?” asked Marvin.

“No way!” said Nick. “I’ll bet you a million dollars!”

Nick had also said there was “no way!” Mrs. North would wear mismatched socks. He had also said there was “no way!” she would let the kids wear hats in class.

So far, he owed Marvin two million dollars.

Nick was wearing a T-shirt that had a large hole under his right armpit. It had been torn in a fight.

“She probably doesn’t even own any
clothes with holes,” Nick said. “How could a teacher get holes in her clothes?”

“Moths,” said Marvin. “She might have a wool sweater. Moths eat wool.”

“Actually, moths don’t really eat wool,” Stuart pointed out. “Everybody thinks that, but really, it’s the caterpillars that eat the wool.”

Stuart was wearing a T-shirt that also had a large hole under the right armpit. It had also been torn in a fight.

It was the same fight.

Nick and Stuart had fought each other. But now they were friends.

“You want to come over after school today?” Nick asked.

“Okay,” said Stuart.

“I can’t,” said Marvin. “My mom is taking me to the shoe store. I’m going to my
cousin’s bar mitzvah on Saturday.”

When they got to school, everybody they saw had holes in their clothes. Travis wore a shirt that was more hole than it was shirt. Clarence had a hole in his sneaker and his sock, so his big toe stuck all the way through.

“You should clip your toenail,” said Marvin.

“You should clip your mouth!” said Clarence.

That didn’t really make sense, but Marvin got the point. Clarence was the toughest kid in his class.

The bell rang, and everybody lined up and went inside.

Mrs. North was waiting in the classroom. She had a large hole in her shirt, over her stomach.

Marvin stopped and stared. He could see Mrs. North’s belly button.

Nick now owed him three million dollars.

2

Casey Happleton usually sat at the desk next to Marvin. She was absent today.

Marvin was disappointed to see her desk empty. She was a funny girl, and he knew she would have liked “hole day.”

“I must say,” said Mrs. North, “you are all so well dressed today. I’ve never seen a better-looking group of third graders.”

Everybody laughed.

“How’d you get a hole in your shirt?” Kenny asked.

“I was working in my garden,” said Mrs. North. “My shirt got snagged on a thorn from a rosebush.”

Marvin nodded. He should have guessed.

“We should dress this way all the time,” said Judy Jasper. “That way, nobody would feel bad if their parents were too poor to buy them new clothes.”

“That’s a good idea,” said Mrs. North.

Marvin thought so, too.

“And the holes keep you cool on a hot day,” Stuart pointed out.

“You’re right,” said Mrs. North.

Marvin agreed. Holes made perfect sense. He wondered why nobody had thought of it before.

A child’s voice came over the P.A. system. “Please rise for the Pledge of Allegiance.”

Every day, a different kid got to lead the school in the pledge.

“That’s Casey!” said Judy Jasper.

Marvin recognized Casey’s voice as she recited the pledge. She sounded very serious.

He put his hand over his heart and said it along with her.

When Casey came back to class, she told Mrs. North that Mr. McCabe wanted to see her. Mr. McCabe was the principal.

“Did he say why?” Mrs. North asked.

Casey shook her head.

Casey wore a shirt that was way too big for her. Marvin guessed it was her father’s. Not only did it have holes in it, but it also had paint spilled on it.

Mrs. North told the class she would be gone for only a minute. She said she
expected everyone to behave and to use their time wisely.

After she left, Nick said, “I bet you Mrs. North got in trouble for wearing torn clothes!”

“No, Mr. McCabe is also wearing torn clothes,” said Casey. “I saw his elbow.”

“What did it look like?” asked Judy.

“Pink and bumpy,” said Casey.

Casey had a ponytail that stuck out of the side of her head instead of the back. She sat down next to Marvin. The ponytail was on Marvin’s side. Sometimes, when Casey laughed really hard, her ponytail went around in circles.

Mrs. North was gone for a lot longer than a minute. When she returned, she had a very strange expression on her face. She looked lost. She opened her mouth,
but didn’t say anything.

“Are you all right?” asked Kenny.

Mrs. North looked at Kenny, but still didn’t say anything. Finally, she spoke. She said, “We are …” then stopped.

She started again. “There will …”

That was as far as she got.

She tried again. “I expect …”

Her mouth shut tight. She tapped her desk with her fist.

At last she managed to say a complete sentence. “We are going to have a visitor today.”

Marvin couldn’t wait to hear who it was. From the way Mrs. North was acting, he thought it must be somebody weird.

“Who is it?” asked Warren.

“Is it somebody I’ve heard of?” asked Nick.

“Oh, I hope so, Nick,” said Mrs. North. Then she took a deep breath and said, “The president will be coming here.”

Everybody gasped.

Marvin was a little confused. He wasn’t sure which president Mrs. North meant. Did she mean the president of the United States? Or did she mean the president of something else, like the president of a shoe company?

Marvin’s school was in Maryland. It was less than twenty miles from Washington, D.C. His father worked in Washington, D.C. So it was possible that Mrs. North meant the president of the United States. But why would the president of the United States come to his school?

Other books

Chosen (9781742844657) by Morgansen, Shayla
Lose Control by Donina Lynn
Moonstar by David Gerrold
Two and Twenty Dark Tales by Georgia McBride
Dublin Folktales by Brendan Nolan
The Singularity Race by Mark de Castrique