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Sisters

Page 1

by Danielle Steel




  One tumultuous year.

  One Manhattan brownstone.

  And four very different young women …

  Sisters

  PRAISE FOR THE RECENT NOVELS OF

  DANIELLE STEEL

  SISTERS

  “Female bonding with a cozy slumber-party vibe.”

  —Kirkus Reviews

  “Steel's plots are first-rate—and this one is no exception.”

  —Newark Star-Ledger

  BUNGALOW 2

  “Steel's many loyal readers will be entertained by this story of a dedicated mother and wife who embarks on a series of life-altering adventures in Hollywood.”

  —Publishers Weekly

  H.R.H.

  “A journey of discovery, change and awakening … a story of love found, love lost and ultimately an ending that proves surprising.”

  —Asbury Park Press

  “Steel's fans will be waiting for this one.”

  —Booklist

  COMING OUT

  “Acknowledges the unique challenges of today's mixed families.”

  —Kirkus Reviews

  “[A] tender, loving novel.”

  —Fort Wayne Journal Gazette

  THE HOUSE

  “Many happy endings.”

  —Chicago Tribune

  “A … Steel fairy tale.”

  —Booklist

  TOXIC BACHELORS

  “A breezy read … that will keep fans reading and waiting for more.”

  —Publishers Weekly

  “Steel delivers … happy endings in the usual nontoxic, satisfying manner.”

  —Booklist

  MIRACLE

  “Steel is almost as much a part of the beach as sunscreen.”

  —New York Post

  “Another Steel page-turner. Three strangers' lives become linked after a terrible storm ravages northern California.”

  —Lowell Sun

  IMPOSSIBLE

  “Dramatic, suspenseful … Steel knows what her fans want and this solid, meaty tale will not disappoint them.”

  —Booklist

  ECHOES

  “Courage of conviction, strength of character and love of family that transcends loss are the traits that echo through three generations of women…. A moving story that is Steel at her finest.”

  —Chattanooga Times Free Press

  “Get your hankies … Steel put her all into this one.”

  —Kirkus Reviews

  “A compelling tale of love and loss.”

  —Booklist

  A MAIN SELECTION OF THE LITERARY GUILD

  AND DOUBLEDAY BOOK CLUB

  Also by Danielle Steel

  HONOR THYSELF FIVE DAYS IN PARIS

  AMAZING GRACE LIGHTNING

  BUNGALOW 2 WINGS

  H.R.H. THE GIFT

  COMING OUT ACCIDENT

  THE HOUSE VANISHED

  TOXIC BACHELORS MIXED BLESSINGS

  MIRACLE JEWELS

  IMPOSSIBLE NO GREATER LOVE

  ECHOES HEARTBEAT

  SECOND CHANCE MESSAGE FROM NAM

  RANSOM DADDY

  SAFE HARBOUR STAR

  JOHNNY ANGEL ZOYA

  DATING GAME KALEIDOSCOPE

  ANSWERED PRAYERS FINE THINGS

  SUNSET IN ST. TROPEZ WANDERLUST

  THE COTTAGE SECRETS

  THE KISS FAMILY ALBUM

  LEAP OF FAITH FULL CIRCLE

  LONE EAGLE CHANGES

  JOURNEY THURSTON HOUSE

  THE HOUSE ON HOPE STREET CROSSINGS

  THE WEDDING ONCE IN A LIFETIME

  IRRESISTIBLE FORCES A PERFECT STRANGER

  GRANNY DAN REMEMBRANCE

  BITTERSWEET PALOMINO

  MIRROR IMAGE LOVE:POEMS

  HIS BRIGHT LIGHT: THE RING

  The Story of Nick Traina LOVING

  THE KLONE AND I TO LOVE AGAIN

  THE LONG ROAD HOME SUMMER'S END

  THE GHOST SEASON OF PASSION

  SPECIAL DELIVERY THE PROMISE

  THE RANCH NOW AND FOREVER

  SILENT HONOR PASSION'S PROMISE

  MALICE GOING HOME

  To my mother Norma,

  and to my incredibly wonderful fantastic most

  fabulous in the entire world loving daughters:

  Beatrix, Sam, Victoria, Vanessa, and Zara.

  May you always, always, always be there for each

  other, with tenderness, compassion, patience, loyalty,

  and love. You are each the best gift that I have given

  to the others.

  And to Simon, Mia, Chiquita, Talulah, Gidget, and

  Gracie, the absolutely best, most adorable, and most

  beautiful dogs on the planet.

  with all my love,

  Mom/d.s.

  Chapter 1

  The photo shoot in the Place de la Concorde, in Paris, had been going since eight o'clock that morning. They had an area around one of the fountains cordoned off, and a bored-looking Parisian gendarme stood watching the proceedings. The model stood in the fountain for hours on end, jumping, splashing, laughing, her head thrown back in practiced glee, and each time she did it, she was convincing. She was wearing an evening gown hiked up to her knees, and a mink wrap. A powerful battery-operated fan blew her long blond hair out in a mane behind her.

  Passersby stopped and stared, fascinated by the scene as a makeup artist in a tank top and shorts climbed in and out of the fountain to keep the model's makeup perfect. By noon, the model still looked like she was having a fabulous time, as she laughed with the photographer and his two assistants between shots as well as on camera. Cars slowed as they drove by, and two American teenagers stopped and stared in amazement as they strolled by and recognized her.

  “Oh my God, Mom! It's Candy!” the older of the two girls intoned with awe. They were on vacation in Paris from Chicago, but even Parisians recognized Candy easily. She was the most successful supermodel in America, and on the international scene, and had been since she was seventeen. Candy was twenty-one now, and had made a fortune modeling in New York, Paris, London, Milan, Tokyo, and a dozen other cities. The agency could barely handle the volume of her bookings. She was on the cover of Vogue at least twice a year, and was in constant demand. Candy was, without a doubt, the hottest model in the business, and a household name even to those who knew little about fashion.

  Her full name was Candy Adams, but she never used her last name, just Candy. She didn't need more than that. Everybody knew her, her face, her name, her reputation as one of the world's leading models. She managed to make everything look like fun, whether she was running through snow barefoot in a bikini in the freezing cold in Switzerland, walking through the surf in an evening gown in the winter on Long Island, or wearing a full-length sable coat under a blazing sun in the Tuscan hills. Whatever she did, she looked as though she was having a ball doing it. Standing in the fountain in the Place de la Concorde in July was easy, despite the heat and the morning sun, in one of Paris's standard summer heat waves. The shoot was for another Vogue cover, for the October issue, and the photographer, Matt Harding, was one of the biggest in the business. They had worked together hundreds of times over the last four years, and he loved shooting with her.

  Unlike other models as important as she was, Candy was always easy—good-natured, funny, irreverent, sweet, and surprisingly naïve after the success she'd enjoyed since the beginning of her career. She was just a nice person, and an incredible beauty. She didn't have a single bad angle. Her face was virtually perfect for the camera, with no flaws, no defects. She had the delicacy of a cameo, with finely carved features, miles of naturally blond hair that she wore long most of the time, and blue eyes the color of sky and the size of saucers. Matt knew she liked to party hard and stay out late, and amazingly it
never showed in her face the next day. She was one of the lucky few who could get away with playing and never have it show afterward. She wouldn't be able to get away with it forever, but for now she still could. If anything, she only got prettier with age, although at twenty-one, one could hardly expect her to be touched by the ravages of time, but some models started to show it even at her age. Candy didn't. And her natural sweetness still showed through just as it had the first day he'd met her, when she was seventeen and doing her first shoot for Vogue with him. He loved her. Everyone did. There wasn't a man or woman in the business who didn't love Candy.

  She stood six foot one in bare feet, weighed a hundred and sixteen pounds on a heavy day, and he knew she never ate, but whatever the reason for her light weight, it looked great on her. Although she was thin in person, she always looked fabulous in the images he took of her. Just like Vogue, which adored her and had assigned him to work with her on this shoot, Candy was his favorite model.

  They wrapped up the shoot at twelve-thirty, and she climbed out of the fountain as though she had only been in it for ten minutes, instead of four and a half hours. They were doing a second setup at the Arc de Triomphe that afternoon, and one that night at the Eiffel Tower, with the sparklers going off behind them. Candy never complained about difficult conditions or long hours, which was one of the reasons photographers loved working with her. That, and the fact that you couldn't get a bad photograph of her. Her face was the most forgiving on the planet, and the most desirable.

  “Where do you want to go for lunch?” Matt asked her, as his assistants put away his cameras and tripod and locked up the film, while Candy slipped out of the white mink wrap and dried her legs with a towel. She was smiling, and looked as though she had enjoyed it thoroughly.

  “I don't know. L'Avenue?” she suggested with a smile. She was easy. They had plenty of time. It would take his assistants roughly two hours to set up the shoot at the Arc de Triomphe. He had gone over all the details and angles with them the day before, and he didn't need to be there until they had the shot fully ready. That gave him and Candy a couple of hours for lunch. Many models and fashion gurus frequented L'Avenue, also Costes, the Buddha Bar, Man Ray, and an assortment of Paris haunts. He liked L'Avenue too, and it was close to where they were going to shoot that afternoon. He knew it didn't matter where they went, she wasn't likely to eat much anyway, just consume gallons of water, which was what all the models did. They flushed their systems constantly so they didn't gain an ounce. And with the two lettuce leaves Candy usually ate, she was hardly likely to put on weight. If anything, she got thinner every year. But she looked healthy, in spite of her enormous height, and ridiculously light weight. You could see all the bones in her shoulders, chest, and ribs. Just as she was more famous than most of her counterparts, she was also thinner than most. It worried Matt for her sometimes, although she just laughed when he accused her of having an eating disorder. Candy never responded to comments about her weight. Most major models flirted with or suffered from anorexia, or worse. It went with the territory. Humans didn't come in these sizes, not after the age of nine. Adult women, who ate even halfway normally, just weren't that thin.

  They had a car and driver who took them to the restaurant on the Avenue Montaigne, and as usual at that hour and time of year, it was mobbed. The couture collections were being shown the following week, and designers, photographers, and models had already started to fly in. In addition, it was high tourist season in Paris. Americans loved the restaurant, but so did trendy Parisians. It was always a scene. One of the owners spotted Candy immediately, and showed them to a table on the glassed-in terrace, which they referred to as the “Veranda.” It was where she liked to sit. She loved the fact that she could smoke in any restaurant in Paris. She wasn't a heavy smoker, but indulged occasionally, and she liked having the freedom to do it, without getting dark looks or ugly comments. Matt commented that she was one of the few women who made smoking look appealing. She did everything with grace, and could make tying her shoelaces look sexy. She simply had that kind of style.

  Matt ordered a glass of white wine before lunch, and Candy asked for a large bottle of water. She had left the giant water bottle she usually toted around in the car. She ordered a salad for lunch, without dressing, Matt ordered steak tartare, and they settled back to relax, as people at tables around them stared at her. Everyone in the place had recognized her. She was wearing jeans and a tank top and flat silver sandals she had bought the year before in Portofino. She often had sandals made there, or in St. Tropez; she usually got there every summer.

  “Are you coming down to St. Tropez this weekend?” Matt asked, assuming she was. “There's a party on Valentino's yacht.” He knew that Candy would have been one of the first to be asked, and she rarely turned down an invitation, and surely not this one. She usually stayed at the Byblos Hotel, with friends, or on someone's yacht. Candy always had a million options, and was in huge demand, as a celebrity, a woman, and a guest. Everyone wanted to be able to say she'd be there, so others would come. People used her as a lure, and proof of their social prowess. It was a hard burden to carry, and often crossed the line into exploitation, but she didn't seem to mind, and was used to it. She went where she wanted to, and where she thought she'd have the best time. But this time she surprised him. Despite her incredible looks, she was a woman of many facets, and not the mindless, superficial beauty some expected. Candy was not only gorgeous but decent, and very bright, even if still naïve and young, despite her success. Matt liked that about her. There was nothing jaded about Candy, and she enjoyed it all, whatever she did.

  “I can't go to St. Tropez,” she said, picking at her lettuce. So far, he had seen her actually swallow two bites.

  “Other plans?”

  “Yeah,” she said simply, smiling. “I have to go home. My parents give a Fourth of July party every year, and my mother would kill me if I didn't show up. It's a command performance for me and my sisters.” Matt knew she was close to them. None of her sisters were models, and if he remembered correctly, she was the youngest. She talked about her family a lot.

  “Aren't you doing the couture shows next week?” More often than not, she was Chanel's bride, and had been Saint Laurent's before they closed. She made a spectacular bride.

  “Not this year. I'm taking two weeks off. I promised. Usually I go home for the party, and come back just in time for the shows. This year I figured I'd stay home for a couple of weeks and hang out. I haven't seen all my sisters in one place since Christmas. It's pretty hard with everyone away from home, mostly me. I've hardly been in New York since March, and my mom's been complaining, so I'm staying home for two weeks and then I have to go to Tokyo after that for a shoot for Japanese Vogue.” It was where a lot of the models made big money, and Candy made more than most. The Japanese fashion magazines ate her up. They loved her blond looks and her height.

  “My mom gets really pissed when I don't come home,” she added, and he laughed. “What's so funny?”

  “You. You're the hottest model in the business, and you're worried about your mom getting mad if you don't go home for the Fourth of July barbecue, or picnic, or whatever it is. That's what I love about you. You're really still a kid.” She shrugged with an impish smile.

  “I love my mom,” she said honestly, “and my sisters. My mom gets really upset when we don't come home. Fourth of July, Thanksgiving, Christmas. I missed Thanksgiving once, and she gave me shit about it for a year. As far as she's concerned, family comes first. I think she's right. When I have kids, I want that too. This stuff is fun, but it doesn't last forever. Family does.”

  Candy still had all the same values she'd been brought up with, and believed in them profoundly, no matter how much she loved being a supermodel. But her family was even more important to her. Much more so than the men in her life, who thus far had been brief and fleeting, and from what Matt had observed were usually jerks, either young ones just trying to show off by being out with her, or
older ones who often had a more sinister agenda. Like many other beautiful young women, she was a magnet to men who wanted to use her, usually by being seen with her, and enjoying the perks of her success. The most recent one had been a famous Italian playboy who was notorious for the beautiful women he went out with—for about two minutes. Before that, there had been a young British lord, who looked normal but had suggested whips and bondage, and Candy found out later he was bisexual and deep into drugs. Candy had been startled, and ran like hell, although it was not the first time she'd had that kind of offer. In the last four years, she'd heard it all. Most of her relationships had been short-lived. She didn't have the time or the desire to settle down, and the kind of men she met were not the kind she wanted to stay with. She always said that she'd never been in love, although she had been out with a lot of men, but none of them worthwhile, since the boy she'd been involved with in high school. He was still in college now, and they had lost touch.

 

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