Read Charming Lily Online

Authors: Fern Michaels

Charming Lily (38 page)

The women gasped as one. “You mean we're going to go to China and . . . and . . . ”
“Snatch the son of a bitch?” Kathryn said. “Yep, that's what it means all right.”
“Tell us how we are going to get inside China, snatch this guy, and get back out,” Nikki demanded. “I would think the Chai family are watched as closely as our Secret Service agents watch over our retired politicians.”
Charles nodded. “You're right, Nikki, but in China they are watched even more closely. I can't swear to this, but I do know how the Chinese think in these matters. It's doubtful Ming's own eye is on his son. There are hundreds of eyes on him. They don't want any kind of scandal that will make them lose face. Family is very important. Respect of one's family is paramount.”
Myra's eyes pooled with tears. “If it's impossible, why are we even discussing the matter? Why was I so foolish to think we could finally get to ... that . . . hellish person?”
“Myra, dear, it is not impossible to get to John Chai. However, it will be a very dangerous and difficult mission for all of us. We are going to need a lot of outside help.”
“What kind of help?” Isabelle asked nervously.
“Chinese help. In . . . ah ... in my other life, I made friends with some very unlikely people. People that I was forced to depend on to stay alive. One develops, over time, instincts where people are concerned. I have a friend named Su Zhow Li. He got me out of a rather horrid situation and then I was able to save his life later on. He is probably in his mid-seventies by now if he is still alive. I haven't been able to renew old friendships since moving here. That was one of the conditions of my transfer from England to America. I'm now willing to ignore that condition.
“Li was born in China but spent many years living in England. His father was British, his mother came from a very well-to-do Chinese family. In the early fifties, as some of you may know, China undertook a massive economic and social reconstruction program. China's new leaders curbed inflation by restoring the economy, and rebuilt many of its war-damaged industrial plants.” It had been years since Li told him this story, and Charles wondered if he was remembering everything correctly.
“China's new leaders, with their new-found authority, wedged their way into almost every phase of Chinese life. It worked for a few years, then Mao Zedong, founder of the People's Republic, broke away from the Soviet model of Communism and announced what he thought of as an even better economic system. They called it the Great Leap Forward. The goal was to raise industrial and agricultural production. They formed communes. People had factories in their back yards. It was disastrous because the normal market mechanisms were disrupted, and so agricultural production fell behind. The Chinese people exhausted themselves by producing what later turned out to be shoddy goods that were not fit for sale.”
“Tell me about it,” Yoko grumbled. “I wouldn't buy something that said “made in China” for all the tea in China.” She giggled at her witticism.
“Bad timing, poor planning, whatever you want to call it, the Chinese people were starving. Around this time, Li's family sought passage to his father's homeland.”
Charles knew he'd piqued the women's interest when Kathryn asked, “How did they manage to get out of China?”
Charles grinned wryly. “Very carefully, that's how. Li never gave me all the details, but he did say it was a long, dangerous journey. Li's mother had connections and money. They finally arrived in England and amassed a fortune in silks. Li was sent to America and graduated from Harvard at the top of his class. He is a brilliant man. Years and years later, he returned to Hong Kong a very wealthy man.”
“Is he going to help us?” Nikki asked.
“Patience, my dear, patience,” Charles said.
Myra banged her clenched fist on the table. “I have no patience, Charles. Please, get to the point. Do you have a plan?” Her tone of voice said quite clearly that Charles
had better have
a plan.
Evidently Charles thought so, too. “The reason I brought up my old friend Li is because he has a private airstrip outside of Hong Kong.”
The silence in the room was palpable as the women digested Charles's words. That brought it all front and center. They were going to China.
“I'm waiting for Li to contact me via a scrambled phone. I'll have more details as soon as I hear from him.” Charles looked around at the sisters. They all looked worried, except Myra who was smiling serenely. “This . . . caper . . . will test your skills to the fullest.”
“Like hacking off three guys' balls didn't take skill!” Kathryn hooted, referring to their first mission. The others clapped their hands in agreement. “And let's not forget those creeps we just sent off to Africa. Skill is knowing what to do at precisely the right moment. As women we have a honed instinct that allows us to improvise in a heartbeat.”
The women clapped again. Myra clapped the loudest, her eyes bright and shiny.
FERN MICHAELS is the international
New York Times
bestselling author of
The Guest List
,
Celebration, Yesterday, Finders Keepers,
and many other novels. Surrounded by five children, three grandchildren, and five dogs, she shares her 300-year-old South Carolina plantation home with a resident ghost named Mary Margaret who leaves messages on her computer. Aside from writing books, (“I like writing about families and strong women who find their niche in life just the way I did”) and administering two family-run day care centers, Fern has a brand-new hobby: I'm taking gourmet cooking lessons and, so far, the only comment from my kids is this, ‘It's okay mom, but don't make it again.' The dogs walk away from the leftovers. What's a writer to do?”
 
Fern likes to hear from her fans and can be e-mailed at [email protected]
ZEBRA BOOKS are published by
 
Kensington Publishing Corp.
850 Third Avenue
New York, NY 10022
 
Copyright © 2001 by First Draft, Inc.
ISBN: 978-0-8217-7019-1
 
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any means without the prior written consent of the Publisher, excepting brief quotes used in reviews.
 
If you purchased this book without a cover you should be aware that this book is stolen property. It was reported as “unsold and destroyed” to the Publisher and neither the Author nor the Publisher has received any payment for this “stripped book.”
 
 
 
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