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Exit Door Four, she reminded herself as she gathered her
suitcases. That was the door through which James had told her to exit Baggage
Claim. His instruction wasn't necessary. The door was well marked in both
English and Chinese.

Allison paused before guiding her baggage cart through the door.
She'd glimpsed the Emerald City. Now she would meet Oz himself, the wizard who
believed in her talent, needed it, needed
her.
Because of James's
confidence, Allison convinced herself she had wings... and could fly.

But Oz was an illusion. A phantom of smoke and mirrors.

***

Maylene stood beside the Rolls-Royce limousine watching the door
through which Allison would appear. Her heart had been racing all day, and
during the drive from the Trade Winds to Kai Tak, every cell in her body began
to tremble.

Help me, James, she'd implored silently during the drive.

James hadn't sensed her unspoken plea, any more than he'd noticed
the anxiety she felt. He was far away, oblivious to her torment—lost in his own,
perhaps, or simply preoccupied with problems at the resort he was building near
Australia's Great Barrier Reef.

Maylene had to rely on herself to find control over her emotions.
She hadn't found it yet and any moment she'd be face-to-face with her sister.

Most of those emerging through Exit Door Four had been to Hong
Kong before. Their self-assured expressions signaled that they knew they'd be
met by a hotel representative and escorted without delay to a prearranged
limousine. On this Sunday night, most travelers were business people, in a
hurry to get to their rooms and recover from jet lag before their high-powered
meetings in the morning.

Suddenly, amid the stream of confident faces came an uncertain
one. She wasn't sure where to look, or what she'd see. But she was eager to
greet the unknown.

It didn't matter that her dress was rumpled from the trans-Pacific
flight, or that her shoulder-length hair was mussed. There was a freshness
about her, an aura that was pure gold.

As Maylene's silk-stockinged legs teetered atop high fashion's
highest heels, her heart teetered on the edge of disaster. What if some impulse
she could neither detect nor control compelled her to lunge at Allison? To
attack?

I won't let it happen. I cannot,
will
not, permit the
cruelty to surface. I'll sense the impulse in time and stop it....

Allison's searching, hopeful gaze found her—and Maylene felt
herself moving. She was gliding, not lunging, as if pulled by a powerful magnet
from deep within the golden girl.

"Allison? Hello. I'm—"
your sister, your sister!
"—Maylene
Kwan."

"Oh! You're the architect. It's so
nice
of you to take
the time to meet me. James has told me how brilliant you are."

Allison's voice was admiring, as if she was proud of Maylene's
brilliance and not resentful in the least—merely happy that such talented
people existed and she was lucky enough to meet one of them.

Maylene stared, unable to speak. Wholesome, rumpled and
lovely,
Allison was also gloriously unafraid... as if she had no shame, no
torments, to hide.

Of course she has nothing to hide! She was
chosen,
and you
were
abandoned.
She was
loved,
and you were
hurt.
You
should hate her, hate her,
hate
her.

But, Maylene's heart whispered, how can I blame her for being
chosen over me? If I'd been my father I'd have chosen her, too.

"James is also here," Maylene finally murmured,
gesturing toward the Rolls into which Allison's luggage was being loaded.
"He got a call just as we pulled up. There's a problem with a resort he's
building in Australia. We can get into the car if you like, or we can wait here
until he's finished."

"It's fine to wait here." Allison smiled. "The air
is so
tropical."

In truth, the night was hot and humid, a breath away from rain.
Maylene liked the sultry warmth, and had always felt a little cold in England,
but summertime visitors to Hong Kong often found the steaminess smothering.

Needing to know, Maylene asked, "Do you really like the heat,
Allison, or are you just being polite?"

"I really like it." Allison's smile became a frown.
"It's going to make my hair curl, though. I guess that's okay, it got a
bit limp on the plane, but—I'm babbling, aren't I?"

Allison's shrug tilted her head and caused Maylene to focus more
closely on the golden hair—and discover a little falseness about the sister who
seemed too good to be true. Allison's hair color wasn't natural. It couldn't
be. There wasn't simply moonlight. There was fire as well. The illusion rivaled
what Maylene hoped to achieve with the Jade Palace, one moment gold, the next
red, the next a harmony of both.

An illusion, Maylene realized that
was
natural. How had
nature achieved such a spectacular blend? Was it a mix of separate strands of
gold and red? Or did each hair contain within itself the ability to be both?

A slight shake of Allison's head drew Maylene from her musings. At
a loss for words, her gaze fell to the thick paperback in Allison's purse.

"You're reading
Noble House."

"All the way across the ocean. My suitcases are filled with
nonfiction books about Hong Kong, but I'd never read
Noble House
so I
thought..."

"It's a good book," Maylene reassured her. Then, because
it was suddenly very important that her sister like the place that had been her
home, she asked, "Are you enjoying it?"

"Very much. May I ask you something, though? It's probably a
foolish question, but..."

"Ask."

"Well, it wouldn't be correct to refer to James as a
'taipan,'
would it? I mean, from what I've read, even though taipan means 'leader' in
Cantonese, it's generally used to refer to the head of a trading company."

"That's right. In terms of power and influence, however,
James rivals any taipan." Maylene smiled. "You're reading very
carefully, aren't you?"

"Yes, well, I want to know everything I can about—"

Allison stopped. Because there he was.

Oz himself.

But not Oz. James Drake was no phantom. Or was he? Allison saw no
mirrors. But there was the smoke of his dark gray eyes, and the aristocratic
face at once elegant and harsh.

James was shadow and stone. Passion and power. And standing beside
Maylene, where he belonged, his handsomeness complemented perfectly her exotic
beauty.

"This is James," Maylene announced to her blushing
sister. "Our fearless taipan."

James heard the gentleness in Maylene's voice, but his expression
sent a silent reminder of her promise to be nice to the girl from Texas.

"She's reading
Noble House,
James! And we were just
discussing the appropriate use of 'taipan.'" Maylene turned to Allison.
"Whether the term's completely correct or not, James
is
a taipan.
In fact, the only discernible difference between him and the
Noble House
taipans
of thirty years ago is that the job is much tougher now. With 1997 only four
years away, everything is more relentless.
Our
fearless taipan, however,
never lets the pressure get to him."

James might have arched a bemused eyebrow at Maylene, but his
attention was elsewhere.

"Hello, Allison," he greeted her. "Welcome to Hong
Kong."

"Hello, James. Thank you. I'm very glad to be here."

Urged by him, Allison had left the safe haven of her home. Her
Texas cocoon was a faraway memory—as was the ease with which she'd spoken to
James when he'd been an ocean away.

She stood before him, heart fluttering, her brain in a frantic
search for words. Would the sensual yet austere wizard be interested in hearing
that from the night-black sky Hong Kong appeared to her a treasure trove of
jewels? Or that the shadowy silhouettes of 747s looked to her like dinosaurs?
Or that she loved the tropical steaminess a more sophisticated woman, mindful
of her stylish hair, would view as a nuisance?

Allison dismissed such observations as hopelessly naive, and she
didn't have the courage to speak aloud the most important observation of
all—that in the smoke of his taipan eyes she saw something dark, something
deep...something that, to her, looked very much like pain.

Allison didn't say a word. She only smiled.

And James smiled in reply, a surprised, tender smile that made her
want to sing and dance—and cry.

Nine

Usually
one of the Trade Winds' white-uniformed bellmen would show a new
guest to her apartment and describe the many services offered by the hotel.
Tonight the bellman had been excused. Tonight, for Allison, the hotel's owner
assumed those duties himself.

All of Hong Kong's five-star hotels placed a premium on service.
But the Trade Winds set the standard of luxury by which the others were judged.

In addition to a staff dedicated to anticipating every conceivable
need—before the guest did—most services were available around the clock.
Clothes were laundered twenty-four hours a day; rooms were cleaned at the time
specified by the guest; and every floor had butlers, who, within minutes of a
request, would appear with hot tea, buttered scones, baskets of dim sum and
newspapers from around the globe.

In-room dining was offered by all the hotel's restaurants. If one
was in the mood for French, one ordered from DuMaurier's, and the Blue Lantern
boasted a sweet and colorful Cantonese, and if hot and spicy suited, there was
Szechuan from the Wild Ginger, and, for traditional British fare, one needed only
to ring Elliott's. The hotel's entire fourth floor was dedicated to fitness—an
Eden Health Spa, a running track, an indoor pool—and a second pool, on the
thirtieth floor, overlooked Victoria Harbour.

Guests of the hotel's residential apartments enjoyed additional
services. The kitchens were kept fully stocked with staples, as well as the
finest in wine, liquor, champagne, and since few business visitors to Hong Kong
had time to shop for groceries, a preprinted shopping list was supplied, with
selections for every imaginable taste. Within two hours of giving the list to
one of the butlers, or faxing it to the concierge, the items would arrive.

"This is wonderful," Allison whispered—repeatedly—as
James described the luxuries of the Trade Winds while showing her the luxurious
apartment that was hers. She wished for more imaginative words, but rejected
every other breathless superlative as even more naive.

In desperation, she looked to the sophisticated woman who was at
ease with James. Maylene had been silent for a while. And, Allison realized, a
dramatic transformation had taken place.

Maylene appeared tense. Troubled.

Allison wanted to help. But her questioning smile drew no
response. The other woman's gaze was unseeing—even though Maylene was staring
right at her.

James's pager sounded, not for the first time.

"I'm going to have to answer this fairly soon," he said.
"But I want to show you your office and darkroom."

"My office and darkroom?"

James smiled. "Follow me."

The apartment's second bedroom had been equipped with desk, file
cabinets, computer and fax.

"The cabinets lock and are also fireproof," James
explained. "Theft has never been a problem in the hotel. You might want to
keep a duplicate set of negatives in a safe-deposit box downstairs, in any event."

Allison couldn't imagine anyone wanting to steal her photographs,
but his expression eloquently conveyed the rather remarkable fact that he
believed her Hong Kong photographs would be valuable.

"The bath seemed the logical place for the darkroom," James
continued. "I'm told it's state-of-the-art. If there's anything else you
need, please let me know. The man who set it up will be making the murals for
the hotel. He has a vested interest in ensuring your negatives are the best
quality possible."

"Thank you," Allison murmured, both elated and terrified
by his confidence in her talent. Yes, she'd taken some good portraits of her
native Texas for
Lone Star Serenade.
But could she really do justice to
this exotic place? And would flaws easily hidden in book-sized photographs be
glaringly revealed when enlarged to murals? Would she disappoint the man who
clearly expected so much of her?
Too
much?

What was she
doing
here? What had possessed her to embark
on this adventure? She was wearing low-heeled pumps, not ruby-red slippers, but
it would be prudent to tap her heels together anyway. With luck, such
tapping—and the silent mantra, "There's no place like home"—would
transport her to a bedroom in Dallas strewn with magazines about weddings and
brides.

But Allison neither tapped her sensible shoes, nor thought the
sensible mantra. Instead, she met the gaze of the man who expected so much of
her. And when she did, her fluttering heart soared even higher.
This
is
where I belong.

The message in his eyes seemed a reflection of her own. Yes, they
were saying.
This
is your home.

James's pager sounded, and the moment was gone.

"I'd better deal with this," James said. "I'm
afraid I won't be able to stay for tea. Maylene will tell you anything I've
forgotten about the hotel." He looked to Maylene, not for confirmation of
her willingness, but to ask a question. It was a moment before he posed it,
however—a moment during which he compelled Maylene's distracted gaze to meet
his. "Will you give Allison directions to the Towers?" "Yes. Of
course."

"Good." James returned to Allison. "I'll see you in
the morning, Allison. Sleep well."

***

Then James was gone, and Maylene and Allison were seated on a
living room couch, the traditional welcoming pot of green tea steaming on the
table before them. Maylene knew James expected her to be the gracious hostess,
but how could she?

She'd permitted herself to believe that her first sight of Allison
would be the most difficult. If she could just control herself...

But Maylene felt more precarious now, an emotional tangle of
ancient fears she knew well and foolish longings that were new. The longings
urged her to search for physical proof of sisterhood with the golden girl. She
had been, until the search came to a crushing halt. There weren't any bonds of
consequence between wicked Number One Daughter and lovely Number Two
Daughter—nor would Allison want there to be.

The reminder gave Maylene the control she needed to look at eyes
as different from her own as good was from evil.

"Please don't feel you have to stay, Maylene."

There. See? She doesn't want you here. She's dismissing you. You
should seize the opportunity. Who knows what will happen if you don't, what
cruel—or foolish—words you might speak?

I'm just going to speak
polite
words, Maylene told herself.
Polite lies. "I guess you've noticed how distracted I've been. Please don't
take it personally, Allison. My mind keeps wandering to a problem I'm having
with a blueprint. I'd like to stay for tea... if that's all right with
you."

"Yes, of course. I'd like that."

The conversation was easy for a while, thanks to Allison. She
raved about the drama of landing at Kai Tak, and the glitter of the Hong Kong
skyline, and the luxuries of the Trade Winds, and how nice it was of James to
put a darkroom in her apartment...

Allison faltered midway through her gushing about James. "I
guess I don't need to tell you how wonderful James is."

She thinks James and I are lovers, Maylene realized. And she's
obviously dazzled by James herself.

Being dazzled by James wasn't unusual. Most women were. But
another woman might be envious of Maylene, or resentful. Not Allison. She was
looking proud of her again, as if it made perfect sense James would have chosen
her—as if she, Maylene, was deserving of his love.

She wasn't deserving, and she could prove her unworthiness right
now. I
do
know how wonderful James is, she could say. I know how desire
looks in his eyes, desire for me, how his lethal, elegant hands feel when they
touch me.

"James and I are good friends," Maylene said. "Not
lovers."

"Is he married?"

"No." Maylene saw Allison's hope and felt an almost
forgotten emotion, in hiding for fifteen years and badly rusted from the spill
of tears—the urge to protect. For the first thirteen years of her life,
protectiveness had been Maylene's constant companion. She'd concealed her own
sadness from her mother, wanting no unhappiness cast on their private world of
love—or on the memory of the father who'd have been with them, protecting them
both, had he not died.

The true beneficiary of Garrett's love was sitting before her,
vulnerable and ready to trust. It wasn't too late for Maylene to prove her own
cruelty. She could set a trap for Allison—and end forever her own foolish
longings. James is
obviously
attracted to you, Allison. I'm his friend.
I can tell. All you need to do is offer yourself to him.

Maylene set no trap. She told Allison the truth. It wasn't a
betrayal of James; Gweneth's death was hardly a secret. Sam knew, as did Sir
Geoffrey and Lady Lloyd-Ashton—and everyone else who'd met Gweneth during the
Drakes' Christmastime visit to Hong Kong. For that matter, anyone in England
who'd read newspapers or watched television three months later knew.

"Oh, no," Allison whispered as she learned of the
tragedy in Wales. "How awful for James. And Gweneth."

"Yes. It's not a sadness that's easily overcome. James is
married to his work, Allison. He isn't involved with anyone, nor does he want
to be—especially now."

"Because of the Jade Palace?"

Maylene nodded. "It was Gweneth's idea. He's building it
because of her."

Silence fell, and for many moments the sisters were lost in
thought. Eventually, Allison reached for the teapot and poured them each a
little more tea.

"Is that a medical alert bracelet?" Maylene asked.

"Yes. I guess I'm so accustomed to being around people who
know about it that I forget I'm wearing it."

"Are you okay?"

Allison smiled. "As long as I don't get a blood transfusion,
I'm perfectly fine. I have a severe allergic reaction when I'm given other
people's blood."

"That's something that can be detected in advance, isn't
it?"

"Usually. But not in my case. With the routine cross-matching
techniques used in blood banks, everything looks compatible—even though it's
not. My hematologist in Dallas has devised a complicated set of tests that will
detect the incompatibility, but it hardly matters. In ten years of testing, he
hasn't found a single unit that would work."

"What if you needed blood?"

"I couldn't get it," Allison said simply, without drama,
despite the simple, dramatic fact that a blood transfusion would kill her.
She'd survived—barely—the only transfusion she'd ever received. But her immune
system was sensitized, armed against any future invasion. The response would be
swifter the next time, and more potent than the last. "I just have to hope
I'll never need another transfusion."

"You won't."
You can't. I won't let you.
"That
must have been very frightening for you."

"For me, yes, but mostly for my father. He was with me when
the reaction happened, and I remember his terror. I wanted to tell him not to
worry, and how much I loved him and my grandparents." Allison remembered
something else Maylene didn't know. "My family is my father and
grandparents. My mother died when I was born."

Allison's face, saddened by the loss of the mother she'd never
known, triggered memories for Maylene. How she'd loved the father she was told
had died. How she'd missed him. And how perfect she'd believed life would be if
only he were alive.

She had something in common with her golden sister, after all.

"I'm sorry, Allison."

The phone trilled during Allison's "Thank you." The
caller was Garrett Whitaker, the father Maylene had loved and missed so
desperately—and who'd been filled with terror when he feared he was watching
his beloved daughter die.

He wanted to make certain that beloved daughter had arrived
safely, happily, in Hong Kong.

What a loving father! What if he'd ever called
her—
just
once—to see if she was happy and safe? And what if he'd been there—just once—to
pick up the pieces of her broken heart when she was called the half-breed child
of a whore?

"Yes, Dad," Allison laughed. "I'm here, safe and
sound. Everything's just fine.... Yes, I was met at the airport, by both James
Drake and Maylene Kwan. She's the architect for the Jade Palace. She's here
now, in fact, visiting and drinking tea... Dad?... Oh, good, for a moment I was
afraid we'd lost the connection."

He'd recovered quickly, Maylene thought, from the shock of
learning his daughters were together sipping tea. And why not? He assumed his
secret was safe.

Maylene could set him straight. She merely had to take the
receiver from her sister's silver-braceleted hand. Hello, Daddy, it's me, the
daughter you abandoned. Surprised I know about you? Well, I do. Your coercion
of my mother lasted only thirteen years. No, she didn't betray you. She never
would. She pretended you were a dead hero, just as you told her to. I
discovered the lies myself. I know the truth about you, Daddy. You're no
hero... except to Allison. At least, you
were
her hero—until now.

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