Cherry Ames Boxed Set 1-4

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by Helen Wells


  “I don’t want you to go away, Cherry,” she said.

  “I’ll write,” Cherry promised. “I’ll want to know how you’re getting along and you’ll have to write me all the Spencer news.”

  “Where will you be?”

  “I don’t know,” Cherry had to reply. In a matter of hours, she would be out of here and she still did not know where she was going. Neither did most of her classmates. Vivian Warren had had an offer from a small city hospital, but Vivian wanted a better-paying position to make up for her years of hardship and unremitting work. Bertha had been invited to be visiting nurse in her own rural community. Cherry herself could easily have secured a post through Dr. Joe or Miss Reamer or on her own application. But like all the rest of her classmates, she was putting off the decision. She was still thinking earnestly about Army nursing.

  Two nights before graduation day the seniors had to attend the final lecture. It was late when they came out and headed back toward Crowley. Suddenly a huge crowd of student nurses surged around them from all sides. They had been lying in wait! Laughing, they fell upon the outnumbered seniors and proceeded to tear off the seniors’ blue and white student dresses, their student aprons and bibs! They left them in their caps and very little else. Cherry fled into Crowley just in time to escape with her slip.

  The next day Cherry and her class appeared proudly in all-white. She thought she would burst with pride. She had earned it, and it was hers to wear for the rest of her life! In another way, Cherry felt very sober. Here she was at the ending. No, this was not an ending, for she stood again at the beginning of something new—whatever it might be.

  Early that afternoon the seniors left in giggling groups for the photographer’s. They came back to attend Miss Reamer’s tea for the seniors. When they walked in, they exclaimed—the familiar lounge looked so festive, with great bowls of colorful flowers everywhere and a sumptuous tea table. A number of the doctors and supervisors and head nurses and surgeons with whom they had worked had come to do them honor. Even some of the Administrators of Spencer Hospital were present, and Cherry actually regretted Dr. Wylie’s absence. The visiting and the tea that followed were very pleasant. After an hour, the others left and only the guests of honor, the seniors, and Miss Reamer remained.

  The Superintendent of Nurses sat down beside the flower-banked fireplace and looked from one radiant young face to another. “When you all first came to Spencer,” she said with a smile, “I told you you had the makings of an exceptional class. I was not mistaken. I expect big things of this class. And now I must tell you something about the careers which are open to you, although I have already talked to each of you individually. If you ever want to consult me again, come back to Spencer, no matter how many years after graduation.” Cherry smiled at her gratefully and Miss Reamer smiled back.

  Cherry was astonished at the length of Miss Reamer’s list. Nurses were needed now, and would be needed in even greater numbers after the war, Miss Reamer said—as general duty nurses in great city hospitals—as private duty nurses, pleasant work which could take them all over the world—as those invaluable community guardians, public health nurses, Red Cross nurses—as rural nurses driving a clinic on wheels, bringing health care to farmers and people in isolated communities—as children’s nurses—the list went on and on.

  “There is something for every taste, you see,” Miss Reamer smiled. “City or small town or country, at home or abroad, big crowds or a handful of people, young or old.”

  Miss Reamer stopped for breath and so did the seniors. Gwen sprang up and presented her with an enormous pitcher of iced tea. Everybody laughed.

  “A glass would be nice,” Miss Reamer hinted to Gwen. Gwen produced one. The class waited, then the Superintendent of Nurses went on again:

  “Then there are, as I hardly need tell you, Army and Navy nurses. Just now, that is the most needed and gallant work of all. That most likely would take you to far parts of the world, and you’d certainly be helping in making history. And it won’t be a temporary wartime job. After the war, there will be plenty of veterans’ nursing to be done. There also will be relief and rehabilitation programs in the war-torn countries, and nurses will be needed to help those starved people back to health again.” She smiled at them. “I think I’ve finally finished, believe it or not!”

  After some questions, and some informal talking-it-over, the seniors drifted down to the lake. Their adoptees, just turned juniors, were fêting them with a picnic.

  Down at the water’s edge it was still bright afternoon at six-thirty. The adoptees had set up a picnic table, spread with huge bowls of potato salad and baked beans and tomatoes and dill pickles. The frankfurters already sizzling over an open bonfire smelled tantalizing. The seniors were not allowed to help, so some of them, at Cherry’s light-hearted suggestion, went wading. The hot dogs, on toasted buns, tasted every bit as good as they smelled. And with the steaming coffee, their adoptees proudly brought forth a vast tiered cake. It was decorated with the senior’s class flower, gardenias, made of sparkling white spun icing.

  “Are you enjoying it?” Mildred asked Cherry eagerly.

  “It’s divine!” Cherry replied. “It’s something I’ll look back on and wish could happen again!”

  After supper, they sat on the grass or leaned against tree trunks and watched the sun drop lower and lower toward the rim of the lake. Someone started to sing. Then everyone was singing familiar songs—rollicking ones, dreamy ones. They sang until the first star flickered in the pale sky, and shadows crossed their faces. A huge orange harvest moon rose slowly out of the treetops. Suddenly, as though at a given signal, the group began to sing the school song—slow, grave, and yet ringing:

  All o’er the earth

  Angels in white,

  In sickness, age, and birth,

  Bring light.

  Healing we bring,

  Hope and help we bring,

  We of Spencer too shall bring,

  These brave and shining deeds we sing–

  Our sister, our Nurse!

  It was a pledge and an ideal. The last note of the sweet clear girls’ voices died away among the trees. They started to gather up their picnic things. Cherry realized sadly that her student days were over.

  CHAPTER XV

  Cherry Decides

  GRADUATION DAY STARTED AT SIX O’CLOCK IN THE morning for Cherry, when the phone shrilled in Crowley corridor.

  “Good morning, dear. Congratulations!” said a familiar cheerful voice.

  “Mother!” Cherry said. She was suddenly very happy. “Mother, where are you?”

  “Hi, Cherry!” came Midge’s voice. “Aren’t you excited? Isn’t it wonderful! I’m dying to see you in your white get-up!”

  “Will someone kindly tell me where you all are?” Cherry demanded, laughing.

  Her father’s voice came over the receiver. “How is the graduate? We’re here at the railroad station and we’re going to have some breakfast. What time do you want us up there?”

  “Graduation is at noon, Dad, but please come as soon as you can!”

  Shortly after she had hung up, the phone rang again. Cherry raced down the corridor for the second time.

  It was Charlie. “Sorry, I can’t tell you where I am. But it’s a long way from where you are. … I’m fine. … Look here, I didn’t call up long distance to talk about me. … Well, I’m not permitted to tell anything over the phone, anyway. … Yes, I am fine, and congratulations! I’m pretty proud of my twin sister. … Good for you! … That’s right, we’re both doing the things we always had our hearts set on. … I’ll bet. … I sure would like to see you. … Not a chance. … We might meet up by accident on the other side of the world. … Yes, I got your letter. Let me know what you decide, will you? … Say, my three minutes are up! Write me. … Congratulations again and I mean it! … So long—Nurse!”

  Cherry hung up with a hand that trembled a little. It would be strange, having a graduation without Charlie around
. They had always had their graduations together. What a darling he was to phone!

  She missed him acutely when her parents arrived and they were all together except for Charlie. But she remembered he was all alone and probably twice as lonesome. And her mother looked so charming, her father was so obviously proud of her, and Midge was so thrilled, that Cherry was as happy as seniors are meant to be on graduation day.

  Presently Cherry, in her dazzling white uniform and cap, had quite a group gathered around her in the lounge. Her parents, Midge, Dr. Joe, Lex, Mildred, and even Mom was there. She beamed when Cherry said, “Mom helped us catch the penicillin thief!” By the time Cherry had introduced some of her classmates, and had been introduced to their families, and taken her mother to see her room at Crowley, and then returned to the lounge, it was time for the seniors to assemble. Cherry’s guests went into the auditorium and Cherry, with Ann and Gwen, hurried to the smaller room beside the auditorium.

  The seniors took their places in a long line four abreast. These were the last few minutes they all would be together as a class. In an hour from now, Cherry would no longer be a student. Her class would be breaking up, and the girls she had worked and played and lived with for three years would scatter to the four corners of the globe. Cherry wondered if she would ever see any of them again. The girls were trying to joke, but their eyes were sad and their voices unsteady.

  “Have you decided what you’re going to do yet, Cherry?” Ann asked her very low.

  Cherry shook her head. “No, not yet,” she whispered back.

  Ann straightened her shoulders and stared ahead. Cherry knew what Ann’s plans were, and Mai Lee’s, and a number of others’. It would be only a few moments more now …

  There was a rustle of starched white uniforms. Cherry looked around and saw the Superintendent of Nurses coming past the rows of graduates, accompanied by two women. One was an Army Nurse, the other a Red Cross Nurse.

  When they reached the front of the room, Miss Reamer raised her hand and called the class to attention.

  “Graduates,” she addressed them. “I take pleasure in introducing to you Miss Culver from the Red Cross. She has a message for you.”

  Miss Culver smiled and stepped forward. She spoke briefly but with deep feeling. “I am here to help appeal to you to answer our country’s urgent need for war nurses. But we have with us someone who can tell you even better than I just how crying that need is. May I present to you Lieutenant Sanders, one of the Army Nurses who escaped from Corregidor.”

  The Army Nurse, trim and neat in her uniform, greeted the graduates, who were watching her intently with eager, expectant faces. “I hardly know how or where to begin … there’s so much to tell!” In her face was reflected all the horror and suffering she had seen—landing barges full of sick and wounded; boys lying fever-ridden and helpless in jungle hospitals; doctors working tirelessly day and night, often without a nurse to help. A note of urgency crept into her voice as she pleaded with them to answer their country’s call. “You are needed, desperately needed! If we are to save our men out there fighting for us—if we are even to win this war—you nurses must help. Are you ready to serve?”

  Cherry and her classmates had heard other appeals. But this appeal was different. It was being put directly up to each one of them. For the first time, Cherry felt personally responsible for the lives of Charlie and all the other American boys.

  Beside her there was a crackle of a sleeve. Ann had raised her hand. She could hear Ann’s quickened breathing. Mai Lee’s hand was raised next. The room was filled with tension and a breathless silence. Cherry watched with her heart pounding. Then Bertha Larsen’s hand went up; Marie Swift’s; Gwen’s; Vivian’s. Then five more hands shot up, one after another. No one had said a word, and still no one spoke.

  “What shall I do?” Cherry thought frantically. “How can I let them go and not go too? Those boys I saved Dr. Joe’s drug for—” Out of the hush, hands were slowly raised, until it seemed a white forest blurred Cherry’s vision. “Those soldiers who needed the drug—” suddenly she realized that she had faced a murderer because she felt responsible for those boys—way down deep, she had thought of them as her patients! That was her answer!

  Cherry raised her hand.

  The room was profoundly silent. Miss Reamer’s face was working with emotion. The two nurses preserved their quiet expressions but their eyes were shining. It was unanimous. The whole graduating class had volunteered.

  The silence seemed to be swelling and growing, as if the room would burst, and out of it they suddenly were singing, “We too shall bring …” as they had never sung it before! Miss Reamer wiped her eyes.

  Shaken, the class marched into the auditorium, to the grave music of the organ. They took their seats on the platform. Ranks and ranks of them in white, they looked out at the familiar loving faces in the audience. Cherry found her father and mother. Lex sat next to them, beaming up at Cherry.

  The Red Cross Nurse was talking to the audience, “… all of these young women have volunteered! Unanimously! All of them are making the greatest offering any woman can.” A roar of applause rolled forward like thunder.

  The graduation exercises were dignified and simple. The names of the graduates were read, and in a sort of dream Cherry walked across the platform and Miss Reamer presented her with her certificate.

  “Good luck, Cherry!” she said.

  Cherry sat down again, trembling. She was a nurse now! She was really a nurse!

  Then all of a sudden it was all over and Cherry was down off the stage with her parents and friends. They were embracing her and congratulating her, both on her graduation and on her great decision, although Cherry’s mother had tears in her eyes as she smiled.

  Here they were, all the dear familiar faces—her sweet mother, her good, kind father, Midge and Mildred both looking toward her with the shining wistful admiration of younger girls, here were Mom and her beloved Dr. Joe, and Lex with his serious gaze, redheaded Gwen, and Ann, not calm for once, her classmates and her teachers.

  But Cherry saw beyond them. She was looking into the exciting, unknown future which stretched ahead of her. She, Cherry Ames, was going to be an Army Nurse!

  CHERRY AMES, ARMY NURSE

  CHERRY AMES NURSE STORIES

  CHERRY AMES ARMY NURSE

  By

  HELEN WELLS

  Copyright © 1944 by Grosset & Dunlap, Inc.

  Copyright © renewed 2006 by Harriet Schulman Forman

  Springer Publishing Company, Inc.

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior permission of Springer Publishing Company, Inc.

  Springer Publishing Company, Inc.

  11 West 42nd Street, 15th Floor

  New York, NY 10036-8002

  Production Editor: Print Matters, Inc.

  Cover design by Takeout Graphics, Inc.

  Composition: Compset, Inc.

  06 07 08 09 10/5 4 3 2 1

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Wells, Helen, 1910–

  Cherry Ames, Army nurse / by Helen Wells.

  p. cm. — (Cherry Ames nurse stories)

  Summary: When she and her classmates in Spencer Hospital’s nurses training program enthusiastically sign up for the Army Nurse Corps, Cherry Ames soon finds herself in Panama and struggling her way through army regulations.

  ISBN 0-97715-972-8 (pbk.)

  [1. Nurses—Fiction. 2. Hospitals—Fiction. 3. World War, 1939–1945—Fiction. 4. United States. Army Nurse Corps—Fiction. 5. Panama—History—20th century—Fiction.] I. Title.

  PZ7.W4644Cb 2005

  [Fic]—dc22

  2005051741

  Printed in the United States of America by Bang Printing

  Contents

  FOREWORD

  I

  O
N HER WAY

  II

  LIEUTENANT AMES REPORTING

  III

  LOVEY

  IV

  CHERRY MEETS BUNCE

  V

  ON BIVOUAC

  VI

  SECRET JOURNEY

  VII

  SEÑORITA CHERRY

  VIII

  A GHOST RETURNS

  IX

  EMERGENCY!

  X

  SPECIAL MISSION

  Foreword

  Helen Wells, the author of the Cherry Ames stories, said, “I’ve always thought of nursing, and perhaps you have, too, as just about the most exciting, important, and rewarding, profession there is. Can you think of any other skill that is always needed by everybody, everywhere?”

  I was and still am a fan of Cherry Ames. Her courageous dedication to her patients; her exciting escapades; her thirst for knowledge; her intelligent application of her nursing skills; and the respect she achieved as a registered nurse (RN) all made it clear to me that I was going to follow in her footsteps and become a nurse—nothing else would do. Thousands of other young people were motivated by Cherry Ames to become RNs as well. Cherry Ames motivated young people on into the 1970s, when the series ended. Readers who remember reading these books in the past will enjoy rereading them now—whether or not they chose nursing as a career—and perhaps sharing them with others.

  My career has been a rich and satisfying one, during which I have delivered babies, saved lives, and cared for people in hospitals and in their homes. I have worked at the bedside and served as an administrator. I have published journals, written articles, taught students, consulted, and given expert testimony. Never once did I regret my decision to enter nursing.

 

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