and gave her girlfriend one last kiss before taking her place in the back seat. "Wake me when we get to Illinois," she said miserably as she tried to make herself comfortable between Nancy, who was leaning on the car door and staring off into space with a sad look in her eyes, and Lauren, who was taking up more than her share of the seat. "I'll just sleep until then," Midge announced.
"That's silly, Midge," Cherry scolded in a light tone. "Why, there's plenty to do until then. We could see how many meadowlarks we could spot; I've already seen one so far. Or we could play the license plate game. That's where you try to spot cars from different states. Whoever spots the most variety wins," she explained eagerly.
"But there aren't many cars on the road," Lauren pointed out.
Cherry realized Lauren was right. Except for that brown car that had been keeping a steady distance behind them since they had left Pocatello, she had seen no other automobiles that morning.
"We could sing songs," Cherry proposed brightly. "When I was a Girl Scout, we always sang songs to pass the time. I could teach you one," she offered eagerly. "Does that sound like fun, Nancy?" Cherry asked her chum.
But Nancy said nothing. She just gave a great big sigh and turned her head toward the car door.
"I think that sounds like a grand idea, Cherry!" Velma cried when she saw how crestfallen Cherry was by Nancy's lack of enthusiasm.
"Teach us a song, Cherry," Midge chimed in. "But first, pass me that thermos, babe," she said to Velma. She filled a paper cup with the steamy, hot liquid, took a big sip, and said, "Okay, Cherry. Let's hear it."
In a clear, high voice, Cherry began singing a traveling tune. Soon her chums were singing merrily as they sped through western Wyoming. Everyone, that is, except Nancy who sat silently as if she were in another world-a world far removed from the gay little group.
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CHAPTER 12
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Shocking News
"That's funny," Cherry frowned as she hung up the telephone receiver and stepped out of the booth. "That's the second time I've called home this morning, and there's still no answer."
Cherry had felt sure she'd catch her mother at home. After all, Saturday was her mother's wash day, and Mrs. Aimless always did everything on the right day. Mondays she baked. Tuesdays she canned fresh fruits and vegetables. Wednesdays she puttered in the garden and attended her ladies' club luncheon. Thursdays she dusted, swept, and turned the mattresses, and Fridays she washed windows, scrubbed the front steps, and changed the shelf paper in her kitchen cabinets.
"And today she should be home doing the wash," Cherry thought as she wrinkled her pretty brow, wondering where her mother could have possibly gone. "Perhaps she's in the basement starching Father's shirts and didn't hear the telephone," Cherry reasoned. "That must be it. Where else could Mother be?"
She forgot her mother's puzzling absence once she took her seat at the table and had a chance to peruse the menu, which was chock full of tempting treats. They hadn't had a real breakfast, only coffee and oranges in the car, and Cherry had been forced to abandon her plan of reaching the Rocky Mountains before stopping to dine when even Nancy admitted she was willing to lose a little travel time in order to stop for a snack.
"Besides, if we eat quickly; but not too quickly as to cause stomach-aches, we'll only be a half hour off schedule," Cherry realized. She took out her little red spiral notebook and neatly changed the estimated time of their arrival in the Rockies to 12:30 p.m.
Cherry had to admit she could use a bite to eat as well. When it was her turn to order, she was hard-pressed to choose between the special of the day, liver loaf sandwich, or a clear broth soup and raw-vegetable salad served with an assortment of crackers. She knew she should opt for the lighter lunch. Since she had already driven four hours that morning, she would no doubt spend the afternoon napping. A
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