By Tyler Currie s
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Special to The Washington Post i{|lsd(+
Sunday, July 27, 2008; Page P02 8yE%X!E
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She is pretty, the young woman sitting on a bench in People's Square, a popular park in the center of Shanghai. Our eyes meet and she waves. AFINm%\/0
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I've been in Shanghai for five days. I am here for work, alone and maybe too eager to find a friend. ~.W=
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The woman speaks good English and we begin chatting. Suddenly a man, her friend, appears. 4C,kA+P
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"You are from America?" he asks with enthusiasm. Z[})40[M
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They both studied English in college and look to be in their mid-20s. The man says he's a newspaper reporter, and the woman wants to work in hotel management. I struggle with the pronunciation of her name -- Zhu Xiaobei -- so she scribbles it on a scrap of paper, along with a phone number. T\2) $
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"We're going to a famous teahouse for a traditional Chinese tea ceremony," Xiaobei says. "Come with us." zJfK4o
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It sounds interesting. Plus, the man and woman are intelligent and engaging, and they seem harmless. I don't think twice before wandering off with a pair of strangers. S_|9j{w)
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Several blocks away, we enter the "famous" teahouse. I'm not sure what I'd been expecting, but this isn't it. It's just a store in a garish shopping center. A pudgy hostess leads us to a dimly lit private room without windows. There's a short table at the center with stacks of cups and jars of tea. I do not see any other patrons. L_Y9+
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Xiaobei sits to my left, pulling her chair close, and the ceremony begins. We sample six different teas and eat multi-flavored pumpkin seeds. The journalist translates our hostess's description of each tea. !v-w6WG"
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