Meet three women who are as different as could be—at least that's what they think—and the men who've turned their lives upside down as their paths collide in sizzling, sexy Miami. . . .
Ranya is a modern-day princess—brought up behind the gilded walls of Saudi Arabian high society and winner of the dream husband sweepstakes . . . until said husband turns out to be more interested in Paolo, the interior-decorator-cum-underwear-model, than in his virginal new wife.
Smart, independent, but painfully shy, Zahra has managed to escape her impoverished Palestinian roots to carve out a life of comfort. But she can't reveal her secrets to the man she adores or shake off the fear that she doesn't deserve any of it. She also can't shake the fear that if she holds on to anything—or anyone—too dearly, they will be taken away in the blink of a kohl-lined eye.
Rio has risen above the slums of her native Honduras—not to mention the jeers of her none too supportive family—to become editor in chief of Suéltate magazine, the hottest Latina-targeted glossy in town, and this in spite of Georges Mallouk, her hunky-yet-clueless boss, and in spite of Rio's totally wrong but oh-so-sinfully-right affair with the boss's delicious but despicable younger brother, Joe.
In this city of fast cars, sleek clubs, and unapologetic superficiality, Ranya, Zahra, and Rio wrestle with the ties that bind them to their difficult pasts, and it just might be time for them to cut loose. . . .
At the Publisher's request, this title is being sold without Digital Rights Management Software (DRM) applied.
Release date:
September 30, 2008
Publisher:
Tom Doherty Associates
Print pages:
384
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London
Ranya
I didn't see it coming. They all say that, I know, but it's not like you wake up one morning and say to yourself: "This is the day it all falls apart; now, what should I wear?"
Dodi and I made sure everything would be as close to perfect as mere mortals could ever hope to get. From a Reem Acra confection of silk and organza so sweet and fluffy it could have been a meringue, to scheduling the big day to fall on Friday, that holiest of weekdays, our wedding day had been unequalled in pomp and over-the-top indulgence since Auntie Najla married off her fifth and final daughterto a lesser member of the Qatar royal family (much, much lesser).
Then, in less time than it takes to round off one lunar cycle, kaboom.
A mushroom cloud of unforeseen humiliation detonated in the halls of one of Montreal's finer department stores, and rose up with the dread of impending doom. The dust of public scandal has yet to settle on me, and already I have no idea what I'm going to do.
Snuggling deeper into my armchair, I surrender to the soothing aura of white linen tablecloths, tinkling stemware, and ebullient chatter of young women sitting in clusters around the hotel's private lounge, evidence of their morning jaunt to the shops stacked in brightly colored carrier bags at their feet. I try to channel a different time, when these things stood for all the wonder and delight of a five-year-old tagging along on a business trip with her indulgent father, or perhaps on a European shopping excursion with her mother. Instead I can only wonder if any one of those pretty girls with their flashy jewelry and bouncy giggles would ever have the misfortune of waking up one morning to the sucker-punch discovery that their husband of one month, the catch of the decade, the long-awaited award for obedient patience in the face of advancing time and mounting despair, was in fact, hopelessly and beyond any doubt, gay.
Probably not.
I pick up the cup of steaming amber liquid in front ofme, focusing on the mint particles huddled together at the bottom, and try to make like Julie Andrews and think about a few of my favorite things. Like Nutella straight from the jar and a lazy half-day at a spa.
"C'est payant, le terrorisme," I hear a woman next to me say, suddenly and without warning, to the man snuggled in a red velvet upholstered chair beside her. She tosses her wispy hair to the side and raises a glass of champagne to her lips, giggling.
I cradle my teacup back in its gold-rimmed saucer and square my shoulders.
Terrorism pays, she mouths again, surreptitiously jutting her chin at the groups of women sitting at tables around us.
Her eyes meet mine for half a second. She smiles, blissfully unaware the puffy-eyed woman in the belted Victor & Rolf shirtdress and cinnamon streaks happens to be one of Them--the Others. Girls who, if you were to take away their headscarves and have them show a little more leg, would look a lot like me.
"Them" being the veiled, coffee and mocha and olive-skinned versions of me.
There are lots of us filling the lounge, sitting around in gaggles, some conspicuous, some not, prattling in a thousand different variations of Gibberish, the official language of the Others--Urdu, Hindi, Farsi, and at least three different kinds of Arabic.
What I think has got the pointy-chinned blonde so miffed is that this particular set of Others isn't conforming to hergeneral idea of what Others should be like--their headscarves are multicolored, some fringed, some sequined, some in solid, saturated hues and some patterned in plaid, or paisley, or Pucci. They're not bundled in shapeless black but rather swathed in longish boho skirts I recognize from the storefront windows lining Bond Street. Scattered throughout the room, flowing saris kiss the carpeted floors and pointy stiletto tips poke out from underneath the edges of structured wide-legged trousers while she, Miss Freckles, sits apart with her bored and listless companion. Worse--these Others seem contented, carefree, and positively unsubmissive.
I should say something.
I can embarrass her, bring a much-needed flush into those sallow cheeks. But I lower my head and stare into my own cup instead.
What would I say? Me, a grown woman who chose flight over fight when she had been wronged by a philandering husband?
"Excuse me, but I think you owe this lady an apology," a masculine voice booms in English.
What?
"What?" The blonde cradles her china cup back in its saucer and looks up at the man towering over her. Her face crumples up into a mask of loathing. Oh, no.
"I'm pretty sure you heard me the first time," says Mystery Man.
The blonde is just as frozen as I am. Her friend just sitsback and looks the other way, contempt dripping from every facial feature.
"Whatever." She shrugs.
"'Whatever' isn't exactly an apology."
He doesn't budge. He has the build of an athlete, stuffed into a sleek (Italian? English?) single-breasted suit, and a sort of sunny informality about him that stands out in this somber crowd. I try not to stare, but that's hard to do when you're already frozen in place.
"Excuse me, Mr. Mallouk, can we help you with anything?" A hotel attendant with a shiny name tag that says "Katie" scurries up to us.
This should be my cue to leave. Now, before any more damage on my account is done. Still, I can't seem to budge.
"Yeah, actually, these guests were being rude to Miss ... uh?"
He looks at me and smiles encouragingly. His teeth are too straight to be anything but American.
"Ranya." Should I give him my last name, too? Tell him I'm technically a "Mrs.," though I don't think that should count given the circumstances?
Again, probably not.
"I don't mean to cause a scene or anything, Katie," he turns to the attendant, who seems just as awestruck by this man as the rest of us are, "but I think Ranya is as entitled to a comfortable and respectful environment as the rest of us."
"Of course she is, Mr. Mallouk, may I ask exactly what happened?"
Katie looks back and forth from the American's relaxed face to the blonde's visible annoyance, then to my own mortification.
I came here to be invisible. This is the absolute last thing I wanted. To cause another scene, upset yet more people. But it seems Humiliation won't be releasing me from its clutches anytime soon.
"Well, this lady over here," the man Katie referred to as Mr. Mallouk nods toward the couple, "she made this joke--at least I think it was a joke--and I'm pretty sure I misunderstood ... . Why don't you ask her to share it with us, you know, just in case I heard wrong," he says icily.
The culprit fidgets, scratches the back of her skull, and tucks a strand of yellow hair behind an ear, without once looking at any of us.
"Fine. I'm sorry." She exaggerates a bow of her head in my direction. "Are you happy now?"
"Not really, but you've wasted enough of our time." He turns to Katie, thanks her, and then stops in front of my table.
"Look--I'm really sorry about that. It was totally uncalled for. You really should have said something."
"How did you even know?"
He shakes his head and laughs. "Trust me, I know."
"Mallouk ... Lebanese, right? You don't look it, though." I can feel myself blushing again. I'm not exactly prone to striking up conversations with perfect strangers in hotel lounges.
"Well ... they taught us to say 'Phoenician' at Bible school, but yeah, Lebanese. I guess." He laughs. "Fourth generation. If it hadn't been for my dad's near-maniacal obsession of making sure we spoke Arabic in the house, I don't think I would've been any more Lebanese than this English muffin over here. I'm Georges, by the way." He looks flustered, as if not sure whether to shake my hand or not.
He settles on shoving both hands into his pockets instead and nodding in my direction.
"Well, uh, it was nice meeting you, Ranya. I'm sure I'll see you around."
"Mmm-hmm." I try to convey my gratitude by flapping my curled and tinted eyelashes at him. It's the best I can do. Where, I wonder, did the sparkling social graces I was bred to exhibit go? The au courant remarks designed to hint at a political science major, minor in French literature? An offhand reference or two to semesters at a Belgian lycée, summers at the family flat in Cyprus where beautiful Cypriots would slow their scooters to a near halt on dusty narrow streets and holler sweet obscenities at my cousins and me while we pretended to ignore them?
He turns and heads back to his table. There's a woman I hadn't noticed before sitting there waiting for him. She's around my age, a little thick around the middle and in need of serious exfoliation. And her eyes are shooting daggers at me.