Heather!â
âOooh!â cried Bess.
âAhhh!â exclaimed George.
There were only a few Hollywood Heathers made in the whole United States. She was very special and very expensive.
âI heard Heatherâs poncho is made out of real cashmere,â Bess said. âThatâs wool from goats.â
âI heard she has real leather boots!â George said.
âAnd sterling silver earrings!â Nancy put in.
âI read on the City Girls Web site that thereâs only one Hollywood Heather left in the whole country,â George added.
Mr. Drew slowed down as he drove up a tree-lined street. He stopped the car in front of a huge white house.
âThis is the Shannon house, girls,â Mr. Drew said.
Nancy leaned over Bess and George to look out the window. âWow!â she exclaimed.
A red carpet lined the path leading to the house. There were huge lights on the lawn and cardboard cutouts of famous movie stars!
Deirdre stepped out of the house wearing dark sunglasses and a fancy feather boa. As Nancy, Bess, and George walked up the red carpet, Mr. Shannon snapped pictures of them. Nancy guessed they were for Deirdreâs Web site. Mr. Shannon was a lawyer, just like Nancyâs dad.
âNancy, George, Bess!â Deirdre called, swinging her boa. âAre you ready for your close-up? I meanâsleepover?â
âWhatâs up with this?â Bess whispered to Nancy and George.
âI think Deirdre has gone Hollywood,â George whispered.
The flash from Mr. Shannonâs camera made Nancy see spots. âI donât get it,â she said as she blinked. âIsnât this supposed to be a City Girls party?â
CHAPTER TWO
Sleepover Secret
âHi, girls!â Mrs. Shannon said as they entered the house. Deirdreâs mom was wearing a pink sweater and black stretch pants. Her brown hair was combed in a neat flip.
âHello,â Nancy said in her most polite voice.
âWhy donât you bring your gear down to the basement?â Mrs. Shannon said. âThatâs where the fun is!â
âAnd the snacks!â Deirdre added.
Deirdre waved them to the door leading to the basement. George pointed to a dark blue duffel bag against the wall. âLooks like someone forgot their bag,â she said.
Deirdre squeezed her nose and said, âThatâs Trina Vanderhoofâs smelly basketball bag. Iâmmaking her keep it upstairs so it doesnât stink up the sleepover.â
Nancy felt something tickle her ankle. She looked down and saw a furry white cat. It purred softly as it rubbed against Nancyâs leg.
âShe looks like a marshmallow!â Nancy cooed.
âYou guessed her name,â Deirdre said. âItâs Marshmallow!â
âCan Marshmallow come to the party?â George asked.
âI wish,â Deirdre sighed. âTrina is allergic to cats.â
Trina Vanderhoof was in Mrs. Baileyâs third grade class at school. She was so tall that she played basketball with the fourth grade boys at recess. She was also becoming very good friends with Deirdre.
The girls walked down the narrow staircase to the basement. The room was decorated with silverand gold balloons and big cardboard stars. A sign on the wall read, HOORAY FOR HOLLYWOOD ! There was also a big-screen TV, a DVD player, a sofa against one wall, and shelves filled with books and games. A table was piled high with presents for Deirdre.
Nancy saw more girls sitting on the floor with their dolls. She recognized Trina, Kendra Jackson, Madison Foley, Andrea Wu, and Marcy Rubin. Nancy knew everyone from schoolâexcept a little girl running around in footsie pajamas.
âMarcy pours orange juice on her cornflakes!â the little girl sang out loud. âMarcy is afraid of spiders!â
âThatâs my little sister, Cassidy,â Marcy groaned. âMy parents went to a concert tonight, so I had to bring
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