
that a magician had owned the large shingled house with its bay windows and imposing turrets before it
had been converted by his estate into apartments. At night the stairs creaked and wind whistled up the
chimney flues. It was scary, but it was fun.
Kind of like Jusef,she told herself, and giggled.
Venice Beach itself was like every dream of southern California every Indonesian kid back home had:
hip, crazy, sexy. Meg had felt at home as soon as Jusef had taken her there. She just knew it was where
she had to live. And the Victorian building — called “Casombra” — was the only place they looked at
before he signed a one-year lease for her.
For three months she studied voice and dance while he groomed her to be lead singer in his new band.
In Asia, Jusef Rais was a huge rock star. But he wanted more. He wanted America. He was forming
Bahasa Fusion around himself to achieve that. Meg firmly believed that he was going to be the next Ricky
Martin, only Asian.
And she would be beside him all the way.
Jusef was the only son of an incredibly wealthy Indonesian family, the Raises. His father, Bang, was a
cult figure in Indonesia. Bang was both idolized and feared, often by the same people. Thousands wanted
him to lead the country, in whatever manner he chose: president, prime minister, dictator.
Jusef was intimidated in the extreme by his father, which Meg could understand. She’d rather do just
about anything than be in the vicinity of Bang Rais.Pak Rais gave her the creeps. He was always
watching her, always studying her. Jusef tried to laugh it off, tell her she was a hottie and could she blame
the old man?
She never told Jusef that his father reminded her of all the men who had come and gone after the death
of her family. She wasn’t sure he would understand. She and Jusef were both Indonesian, and they both
knew she had asked for the treatment she had gotten by virtue of the path she had taken. Men were men.
The woman who expected a man to be different from his nature was only asking for trouble.
But all that was just a shadow in an otherwise very sunny sky. Jusef had been afraid that his father would
block his dream. As the only son, he was destined to take over the family empire. In Indonesia, sons
must behave like sons. But Bang had indulged him and chose Jusef’s cousin, Slamet, to be the next Rais
to manage all their businesses.
Jusef moved to the family compound in Los Angeles to pursue his ambitions of American stardom.
Slamet and Bang came over often, bringing along an entourage, and often stayed for months. According
to Jusef, Bang’s devoted followers were planning a government takeover.
Meg had no idea if that was so. At Jusef’s order, she concentrated on her music. She exercised at the
gym, took dance, and skated whenever she could. She had a sleek, athletic body now, and she dressed
to show it off. She wore a pair of cutoff jean shorts and her baby tee was tight and seductive; she grinned
when a few of the bodybuilders working out on the sparkling sand hooted at her. Her incredibly long,
straight black hair was piled up on the back of her head, and it fell out of her hair clip as she picked up
speed. She gave her hair a shake, and the steroid brigade applauded.
Her McDonald’s bag was clutched in her right fist. She knew she was late for rehearsal. But Jusef would
forgive her. After all, she was late because he’d kept her awake all night.
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