âHey, thereâs a red mark here, right near where it broke!â
âWhat kind of red mark?â Marshall asked.
KC looked closely at the strange red mark on the white marble. She gently touched it with her finger. âI canât tell what it is,â she said. âJust red.â
KC snapped a picture. âOkay, Iâm coming down!â she called over her shoulder.
A minute later, she was standing next to Marshall.
âThanks a lot,â she told Stub and Ralphie.
âCan I have my picture back?â Ralphie asked.
âOh, can I keep it for now?â KC asked. âIâm sure the president will want to see it. He might send you a thank-you note.â
âOkay!â Ralphie said with a big smile.
KC and Marshall raced toward the White House.
Twenty minutes later, they rushed through the private entrance. Out of breath, they hurried down the corridor to the presidentâs living quarters. A tall marine guard stood at attention next to the door.
âHi, Arnold,â the kids said.
The marine looked down at them. âHi, guys. Whatâs up?â
Marshall said, âLincolnâs thumb isââ
âNine inches long!â KC interrupted. She gave Marshall a look.
Arnold smiled at KC. âHow do youhappen to know that?â he asked.
âIâm studying the Lincoln Memorial,â she said. âAre my mom and the president in?â
Arnold nodded and opened the door for the kids.
They hurried inside and ran toward the library, where the president liked to relax.
âWhyâd you stop me?â Marshall asked KC. âThe missing thumb is huge news! If I donât tell someone, Iâll bust open!â
âI know, but the president should hear about it first,â KC said as they stepped into the library.
âHear about what?â the president asked.
President Zachary Thornton was sitting on a sofa next to KCâs mom, Lois. They were both practically buried in lists forthe big celebration that night.
George, the presidentâs cat, was lying in the middle of the mess of papers.
âOkay, Marsh, now you can tell him,â KC said.
âWe were at the Lincoln Memorial!â Marshall blurted out. âAnd guess what happened!â
âWe wonât have to guess if you tell us,â KCâs mom said, smiling at her daughterâs best friend.
âOne of Lincolnâs thumbs is missing!â Marshall nearly shouted.
The president and First Lady stared at the two kids.
âHis thumb â¦,â the president said.
âIs missing?â his wife added.
âHonest, Mom,â KC said. âWe went to take pictures for my report on DanielChester French. When we got there, Lincolnâs left thumb was gone!â
The president blinked. âJust â¦Â gone? Like, broken off?â he asked.
KC nodded. âThereâs just a short stump now,â she said.
The four stared at each other. Finally, the president jumped from the sofa and hurried out of the room. George the cat meowed and hopped down to the floor.
âSit, kids,â KCâs mom said. She made room on the sofa. âThis isnât a joke, is it?â she asked. âYouâre not just teasing, are you?â
âCross my heart!â Marshall said.
âI even took a picture,â KC said. She pulled her camera from her pack. She clicked a button, and the image of Lincolnâs left hand with its missing thumbshowed up in the small screen.
âOh my,â KCâs mom breathed. The picture clearly showed that Lincolnâs left hand had no thumb.
KCâs mom held the camera closer. âWhatâs that little red mark?â she asked.
âI donât know,â KC said. âI looked at it, butââ
âThe Park Service is on the case,â the president said as he hurried back into the room. âA couple of park rangers were cleaning the statue this morning. Maybe
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