More Favorites by
CHRIS GRABENSTEIN
Escape from Mr. Lemoncello’s Library
Mr. Lemoncello’s Library Olympics
Mr. Lemoncello’s Great Library Race
The Island of Dr. Libris
Welcome to Wonderland: Home Sweet Motel
Welcome to Wonderland: Beach Party Surf Monkey
THE HAUNTED MYSTERY SERIES
The Crossroads
The Demons’ Door
The Zombie Awakening
The Black Heart Crypt
COAUTHORED WITH JAMES PATTERSON
Daniel X: Armageddon
Daniel X: Lights Out
House of Robots
House of Robots: Robots Go Wild!
House of Robots: Robot Revolution
I Funny
I Even Funnier
I Totally Funniest
I Funny TV
I Funny: School of Laughs
Jacky Ha-Ha
Pottymouth and Stoopid
Treasure Hunters
Treasure Hunters: Danger Down the Nile
Treasure Hunters: Secret of the Forbidden City
Treasure Hunters: Peril at the Top of the World
Treasure Hunters: Quest for the City of Gold
Word of Mouse
For Fred,
my best four-legged writing partner
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 © 2018 by Chris Grabenstein
Cover art copyright © 2018 by Brooklyn Allen
Interior illustrations copyright © 2018 by Kelly Kennedy
All rights reserved. Published in the United States by Random House Children’s Books, a division of Penguin Random House LLC, New York.
Random House and the colophon are registered trademarks of Penguin Random House LLC.
Visit us on the Web! rhcbooks.com
Educators and librarians, for a variety of teaching tools, visit us at RHTeachersLibrarians.com
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Names: Grabenstein, Chris, author. | Kennedy, Kelly (Illustrator), illustrator.
Title: Sandapalooza shake-up / Chris Grabenstein ; illustrated by Kelly Kennedy.
Description: First edition. | New York : Random House, [2018] | Series: Welcome to Wonderland ; #3 | Summary: In order to save the reputation of the Wonderland, P.T. and Gloria must find the culprit who stole a royal tiara from the hotel.
Identifiers: LCCN 2016050421 | ISBN 978-1-5247-1758-2 (hardcover) | ISBN 978-1-5247-1761-2 (hardcover library binding) | ISBN 978-1-5247-1760-5 (ebook)
Subjects: | CYAC: Mystery and detective stories. | Hotels, motels, etc.—Fiction.
Classification: LCC PZ7.G7487 San 2018 | DDC [Fic]—dc23
Ebook ISBN 9781524717605
Random House Children’s Books supports the First Amendment and celebrates the right to read.
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Contents
Cover
More Favorites by Chris Grabenstein
Title Page
Dedication
Copyright
Chapter 1: Coming Attractions
Chapter 2: The Sweet Suite
Chapter 3: Royal Treatment
Chapter 4: Walt Wilkie’s Wonder World
Chapter 5: Cheeseburgers in Paradise!
Chapter 6: Free Advice for Ten Thousand Dollars
Chapter 7: The Sand Men
Chapter 8: Tool Talk
Chapter 9: Metal Detectors and Microscopes
Chapter 10: Monkey See
Chapter 11: Trouble in Paradise
Chapter 12: Royal Pains in My Patootie
Chapter 13: A One-Minute Mystery?
Chapter 14: Clearing Clara
Chapter 15: Bellhopping to It
Chapter 16: Zombie Alert
Chapter 17: Mess Conference
Chapter 18: Losing Our Appetites
Chapter 19: Making a Mountain Out of an Anthill
Chapter 20: Behind Enemy Lines
Chapter 21: Princess for a Day
Chapter 22: Cinderella’s Sand Castle
Chapter 23: Showtime on the Beach
Chapter 24: Dirty Laundry
Chapter 25: Surprise Evidence
Chapter 26: Plunderland?
Chapter 27: Scraps of Information
Chapter 28: Getaway Minivan?
Chapter 29: I Rest My Suitcase
Chapter 30: Phone Trouble
Chapter 31: Late-Night Eavesdropping
Chapter 32: Grilling More Than Burgers
Chapter 33: Does Everybody Go to Orlando?
Chapter 34: Seven Wonders of the Sandy World
Chapter 35: Checking Out
Chapter 36: Instant Replay
Chapter 37: Fatherly Advice
Chapter 38: What Would Travis Do?
Chapter 39: Jimbo in Hot Water
Chapter 40: Case Closed
Chapter 41: Person of Interest
Chapter 42: Meet the Freebies
Chapter 43: Master Chef?
Chapter 44: The Right Side of the Menu
Chapter 45: The Whole Picture
Chapter 46: Special Guests
Chapter 47: Lady-in-Waiting
Chapter 48: Pinky Power
Chapter 49: Couch Potato Crown
Chapter 50: Chunky Funky Monkey to the Rescue
Chapter 51: Monkey Business
Chapter 52: The Darkest Night
Chapter 53: Going from Bad to Workshop
Chapter 54: Evil Sand Creatures
Chapter 55: I Can’t Sand It!
Chapter 56: Knocking on Doors
Chapter 57: Sandtastic News!
Chapter 58: Sand Which We Want
Chapter 59: Science Project
Chapter 60: Sand Devils
Chapter 61: Ketching Up with Grandpa?
Chapter 62: Hey, Hey, Tampa Bay
Chapter 63: And…Action!
Chapter 64: The Key to Finding the Tiara
Chapter 65: A Room with a View
Chapter 66: Poseidon’s Crown
Chapter 67: Well-Done Burgers
Chapter 68: The Family Plan
Chapter 69: Metal Detectives
Chapter 70: Burgers on the Breeze
Chapter 71: Caution: Nerds at Work
Chapter 72: Sand Grabs
Chapter 73: Demolition Derby
Chapter 74: My Crowning Achievement
Chapter 75: And Now a Word from Their Sponsor
Chapter 76: Family Fiesta
P.T. and Gloria’s Fact or Fiction Quiz: Beach Blanket Edition!
Sandapalooza Sand-Sculpting Tips That’ll Blow the Sand Right Out of Your Shorts!
Acknowledgments
About the Author
“To tell you the truth, I don’t know how I survived the fourteen-story plunge,” I told my audience.
They were all sipping frosty fruit drinks and nibbling conch fritters at our motel’s brand-new poolside restaurant—the Banana Shack.
“I slid over the first waterfall and rocketed into a ninety-degree zero-gravity free fall! It was a steeper drop than the Summit Plummet at Disney’s Blizzard Beach!”
“Woo-hoo!” cried my grandpa, Walt Wilkie, when I mentioned outdoing his archrival, the Walt over in Orlando.
“I slid around an awesome loop-de-loop that shot me like a cannonball across the sky and into a log flume! Next came a series of wicked switchbacks, plus an aqua tunnel that hurled me straight through a tank swarming with live sharks!”
“That part was my idea,” added my business-savvy best friend, Gloria Ortega, because Shark Tank is her favorite TV show.
“Finally,” I said, putting the cherry on top of the ice-cream sundae of my story, “I splashed down in a surf pool, where I caught a wave and went boarding with an audio-animatronic Surf Monkey aqua-bot!”
“That is so cool!” said one of the kids at a nearby table.
He and his family were among the lucky guests who’d been able to book rooms at my family’s St. Pete Beach motel after it became super famous in the movie Beach Party Surf Monkey—the Hollywood blockbuster starring Academy Award–winning actress Cassie McGinty, YouTube sensation Kevin the Monkey, and local hero Pinky Nelligan, who’s one of my best buds. The “No” neon in our No Vacancy sign had been lit for so long we were afraid it might burn out.
“Where exactly is this waterslide?” asked the boy’s mom.
“Right now, only in my computer.”
“He used a RollerCoaster Tycoon expansion kit,” explained Gloria.
“But,” I said, gazing at the towering concrete hotel on the other side of our short stucco wall, “someday we might buy the place next door and actually build it.”
“What?” said Grandpa. “All of a sudden you want to buy the Conch Reef Resort?”
“Hey,” I said with a shrug, “it’s the perfect height. Fourteen stories tall.”
“Whoa, dude,” said our new chef, Jimbo. “Are they, like, selling, man?”
Jimbo is what they call a Parrothead. That means he loves the laid-back, island-breezy music of Jimmy Buffett. Jimbo is extremely mellow and always wears a baggy Hawaiian shirt and sunglasses and has a ponytail sticking out the back of his baseball cap. He doesn’t shave too often, either.
“Mr. Conch should sell his resort to somebody,” I told Jimbo. “Because ever since our movie came out, nobody wants to stay over there except the people who wanted to stay over here and couldn’t.”
My audience laughed. Grandpa and I grinned.
Fact: Conch Enterprises, the company that tried to sabotage our motel’s movie, wasn’t doing so well anymore.
Double fact: Grandpa and I couldn’t’ve been happier if all the doughnuts in the world were wrapped in bacon and dripping with cheese.
“It doesn’t get any better than this,” said Gloria’s dad, Mr. Ortega, who was hanging out in the lobby with my mom, waiting for our VIP guests to arrive.
“You’re in the big leagues now, Wanda,” he told Mom. “You just have to remember what got you to the dance, and focus on fundamentals.”
Gloria’s father, Manny Ortega, is a sportscaster on channel ten, WTSP—the local CBS station for Tampa, St. Petersburg, and Sarasota. He’s changed stations a lot in his career. That means he and Gloria have moved around a lot, too. Since WTSP probably won’t be Mr. Ortega’s final destination, they’re “extended stay” guests at the Wonderland. They rent a couple of rooms so they don’t have to buy a house that they’d just have to sell when Mr. Ortega gets “the Call” from ESPN for his dream job.
Mom likes having Mr. Ortega at the motel. Me too. He’s extremely cool. Mom and Mr. Ortega aren’t exactly dating, but they do make goo-goo eyes at each other all the time.
What does my dad think about Mom flirting with Mr. Ortega?
Who knows?
My father, as you may have already noticed, isn’t really in the picture. He hasn’t been for twelve years—he left town before I was even born. Mom doesn’t talk about him all that much. The only thing she’s ever told me is “He was very handsome and very charming, and he could tell a good story, P.T. Just like you.”
So, Dad, if you’re reading this, drop by sometime. Apparently, we have a lot in common.
Anyhow, back to our big VIP guests. It was Thursday. After school. We were all waiting for the royal family to arrive. Well, not the royal family, but a family full of royalty from England.
They’d be staying in our one vacant room. Actually, it was a suite of rooms—225, 226, and 227—also known as the Cassie McGinty Suite. We call it that because that’s where the movie star and her mom, a famous producer, stayed when they were filming Beach Party Surf Monkey. We even decorated the rooms with movie posters, stills from the shoot, and a few props, like Surf Monkey’s boogie board and Cassie McGinty’s framed hippie-girl costume.
Naturally, everybody wanted to sleep in that three-bedroom suite.
But that weekend, it was reserved for Lord and Lady Pettybone and their teenaged daughter, Lady Lilly. Lord Pettybone was a marquess, which is higher than an earl but lower than a duke, unless your Duke is a dog.
The Pettybone family would be traveling to Florida with their “trusted manservant” Digby, so he needed a room, too.
All in all, the royals were getting three of our best bedrooms because they were bringing us a ton more free publicity. The Tampa Bay Times had already done a big write-up about their visit. Sales of Royal Crown Cola were soaring all along St. Pete Beach. Even the St. Pete Beach Dairy Queen and Burger King were getting in on the act with “Our Royal Cousins” meal deals.
The royals coming to the Wonderland were traveling with the first Duchess of Twittleham’s crown, which they called the Twittleham Tiara. Loaded with precious jewels, it was priceless and super special.
In fact, according to legend, the diamonds in the Twittleham Tiara had once belonged to Queen Guinevere, King Arthur’s wife in all those classic legends about the Knights of the Round Table. Some say Arthur got the idea for the shape of his table from Guinevere’s crown, which was also round.
The Twittleham Tiara was worth so much money we probably should’ve booked it a room of its own!
“We have a safe in the office,” Mom said to Digby, the royal family’s butler, who came into the lobby ahead of the others to make sure everything was “tickety-boo,” which, I found out later, is British for “hunky-dory” or “okeydokey.”
“I’m certain you do,” said Digby, looking down his nose at Mom and sniffing like he smelled cat poop. The butler had a leather-covered lockbox handcuffed to his wrist. The box was about the size of, oh, a tiara. I wished I had X-ray vision. Then I could’ve seen all the Twittleham diamonds!
“However,” Digby continued, “Lord and Lady Pettybone prefer to rely on our own tried, tested, and true security measures.”
He tapped the box.
“It is constructed of two-inch-thick reinforced steel and has a GPS tracking device embedded in its base.”
“It’s also chained to your arm,” I said.
“Indeed,” said Digby.
“Ah, you’ve met Digby, I take it?” said a man who walked into the lobby just then. He was wearing crisp white pants, an even crisper white shirt, and a posh blue blazer. An elegant lady in a billowy summer dress and a blond girl maybe a year or two older than me were with him.
“I’m Charles Pettybone, Marquess of Herferrshire,” said the man. “This is my wife, Lady Annette Mary Gertrude Humphries Pettybone, and, of course, our daughter, Lady Lilly.”
“Pleased to meet you,” said Mom, doing a tiny curtsy.
“Meet me uptown!” said Mr. Ortega, raising his palm to slap our newest guest a high five.
Lord Pettybone left him hanging.
“I’m absolutely thrilled to be sleeping in the same room where Cassie McGinty once slept!” said Lady Lilly.
Her mother smiled. “Our daughter is quite a fan of your film about the surfing monkey. In fact, Lilly’s insistence was the main reason we agreed to stop here in…Where are we again, Digby?”
“St. Petersburg, milady,” said the butler, clicking his heels and bowing from the waist.
“Quite,” said Lady Pettybone.
“Well,” I said, “if you loved Beach Party Surf Monkey, you’ll be happy to hear that the Wonderland offers all VIP guests an exclusive behind-the-scenes movie tour.”
I showed Lady Lilly my elbow. “Recognize this?”
“Not really…”
“It was in the fli
ck.”
“Brilliant! So you’re a movie star, too?”
“Nah. Just my elbow.”
Gloria stepped forward and handed our new guests the glossy brochures she’d designed for our movie tours. Like I said, Gloria is an awesome entrepreneur.
“Tours start at fifteen dollars a person and include a stop at our Surf Monkey souvenir shop,” she told our royal guests. “You can also enjoy a delicious Surf Monkey burger with curly monkey-tail fries at the Wonderland’s all-new, all-fabulous Banana Shack.”
“N’yes,” said Lord Pettybone. “I’m certain we can.”
“Plus,” I said, “since this is a long holiday weekend here in the United States, St. Pete Beach is sponsoring its first-ever Sandapalooza sand sculpture competition.”
“How fascinating,” said Lady Pettybone, sounding totally not fascinated. She turned to Mom. “Is everything as it should be with our arrangements?”
“Yes, Your Ladyship,” said Mom. “I have you staying with us for five nights. You’ll be upstairs in the Cassie McGinty Suite through Tuesday morning.”
“I wish we could stay even longer,” said Lilly. “Especially if there’s going to be a Sandapalooza!”
“Lilly, love,” said her mum (which is what they call moms over in England, I think), “we promised we’d take Great-Grandmama’s tiara to Disney World.”
“That is the main purpose of our trip,” added Lilly’s dad. “Won’t it be thrilling to see the Twittleham Tiara on display inside Cinderella Castle?”
“Yes, Father,” said Lady Lilly with a dainty bow.
We were glomming on to Disney World’s big new princess promotional push. The first Duchess of Twittleham’s tiara would be on exhibit in Orlando for the next twelve months. But since the Wonderland was the priceless tiara’s first stop in Florida and this was the first time it had ever been in America, we had first dibs on all the hoopla and publicity, which made my grandfather very, very happy.
Having anything before Disney always did.
Our family feud with Disney started way back on October 1, 1970, when my grandfather opened a wacky motel and miniature amusement park called Walt Wilkie’s Wonder World.
Sandapalooza Shake-Up Page 1