by Cassie Miles
Table of Contents
Cover Page
Excerpt
Dear Reader
Title Page
Dedication
CAST OF CHARACTERS
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Copyright
“Who do you think you are, anyway?”
“My name’s Dashiell.”
“As in Dashiell Hammett? The famous detective writer?” Liz rolled her eyes. “I suppose that would explain the trench coat and the fedora. Do you think you’re a private eye?”
“Let me come inside and I’ll explain.”
“Give me one good reason why I should.”
Dash concentrated on producing a quick miracle, so she’d believe in him—and he could keep her out of danger. His brilliant revelation was accompanied by a swelling chord of heavenly sound, the sweetest music in the galaxy. Then he explained, “It’s like this, Liz. I’m an angel.”
Liz gasped. Her curling brown hair seemed to be standing on end. Her complexion paled beneath the tan. A shiver made her shoulders tremble.
Dash frowned. Was the woman simply taking it well…or didn’t she believe him?
Dear Reader,
The word angel conjures up chubby cherubs or wizened old specters, not men who are virile and muscular and sinfully sexy. But when you enter the Denver Branch of Avenging Angels, you’ll meet some of the sexiest angels this side of heaven!
Whenever there’s injustice, the Avenging Angels are on the case.
Last month, author Margaret St. George brought you the first irresistible angel in The Renegade. Now, well-known author Cassie Miles brings you The Impostor! Cassie’s created a sexy, trenchcoat-clad P.I.—who just happens to be an angel, too!
I know you’ll love Dashiell—and all the Avenging Angels coming your way now through May. Don’t miss any of this superspecial quartet!
Regards,
Debra Matleucci
Senior Editor & Editorial Coordinator
Harlequin Books
300 East 42nd Street
New York, NY 10017
The Impostor
Cassie Miles
In memory of Cynthia Bergstrom Climp. Too soon an angel.
CAST OF CHARACTERS
Dashiell Divine—He’s tall, dark and very strange. His background as a private investigator hasn’t prepared him for this case.
Liz Carradine—Looking for excitement, she’s ready for a career change, but being partner to a private eye might be more than she can handle.
Agatha Orben—The elderly victim of a mysterious crime that went undetected for several months.
Jack Orben—Agatha’s son inherited the successful company OrbenCorp Coffee Imports. Though he’s not an astute businessman, he likes the prestige and money.
Sarah Orben Pachen—Agatha’s niece tended her while she was ill, and inherited the house. Finally, she has a gorgeous home to die for or to kill for.
Gary Gregory—The accountant whose passion is rose growing has recently become engaged to Sarah. Was his long-term plan to gain control of the inheritance?
Hector Messenger—A man with a dark and dangerous past, he buys raw coffee beans in exotic locations. His skill at working a deal might have gotten him into trouble.
Sister Muriel—The hardworking nun counsels the Orben family and inadvertently becomes pivotal in solving the case.
Chapter One
The first thing Dashiell saw was legs. Long, sleek, tan stems under silky black running shorts. She was something, really something. If he could have gotten her out of the jogging shoes and into a pair of high heels, Liz Carradine might be one classy-looking dame.
Despite the evening drizzle, she slowed to a walk, breathing hard after her run around the Big Lake at Denver’s City Park. She stopped, braced those amazing legs and tossed her head, sending a ripple through the brown ponytail atop her head. She glanced toward the east, then the west where the front range of the Rocky Mountains was invisible behind a curtain of gray September dusk. Again, she looked around and frowned.
She sensed his presence, Dash thought. That was good. He liked a woman who was alert. Not only beautiful, but smart, too! This Liz Carradine might be the perfect contact inside OrbenCorp Coffee Imports.
He turned up the collar on his trench coat and stepped from the shadows of a spreading elm tree. His footsteps crackled through a blanket of yellow autumn leaves as he approached her. “Dangerous time to go for a jog,” he offered.
“What?”
Though she was startled and backed away from him a step, he sensed no fear in her wide-set, pale blue eyes. Gently, he repeated, “It’s almost dark. Kind of a dangerous time to be out running.”
“Not for me. I can take care of myself.”
Though she spoke with as much bravado as a punk carrying heat, he knew she didn’t have a gun. There was no place in that skimpy little outfit to hide a weapon, not unless she had a switchblade stashed in the heel of those clodhopper running shoes. Why did women wear those things, anyhow?
She glared hard at him. “Don’t even think about trying anything.”
“Wouldn’t dream of it.” He smiled, just a little. This feisty little kitten had no idea who she was talking to.
“Are you laughing at me?”
He was amused. But laughing? “No. But I’m interested, precious. If I was up to something, how were you planning to defend yourself?”
“I’m not your precious.”
As Dash reached into the breast pocket of his trench coat to pull out his Camels, she sprang into a karate stance.
He held up the cigarette pack to show her he wasn’t going for a weapon, but she didn’t relax. A Ninja broad, huh? As if a chop to the windpipe could stop him. “Listen,” he said as he struck a kitchen match with his thumbnail and fired up his smoke, “all I want to do is talk to you, okay?”
“Keep away from me,” she threatened. “Don’t make me hurt you.”
She reversed her position with a swift motion, and he admired the play of muscles in her well-toned thighs. Wow! Dash inhaled deeply. He just couldn’t get over those legs. “Much as I like your…attitude,” he said, “we’ve got some business to discuss. It’s about OrbenCorp.’
“How do you know where I work?”
“I know your name is Elizabeth Carradine. I know your job is secretary to Jack Orben.”
“Executive assistant,” she corrected. “I’m an executive assistant to the president of OrbenCorp Coffee.”
“Right. I knew that.” What he didn’t know was if she could be trusted. That was what he had to figure out. “Anyway, Lizzie, I think we’re on the same side.”
“And which side is that?”
As a rule, Dashiell wasn’t inclined to discuss the eternal merits of good and evil. He’d never been much of a philosopher. He preferred action. “I’m on the side of the angels. Now, let’s go sit on that bench by the lake like a couple of civilized beings, and we’ll talk turkey.”
He started toward her.
Without hesitation, she gave a high-pitched yell. Her foot lashed out. Her hands slashed, smacked and slapped.
Before Dash was aware of what was happening, he was sitting on his butt in the dirt beside the path, and she was sprinting like a fleet and graceful gazelle toward the Seventeenth Avenue side of the lake.
“Okay, Lizzie.” Dash stubbed out his cigarette and rubbed his chin where sh
e’d left the imprint of her sole. “You wanna play rough?”
In the blink of a mortal eye, he became lighter than air and soared through the gray mists. With one stroke of his unseen angelic wings, he was at the edge of the park, standing beneath the diffused light of a streetlamp. He leaned against it, pulled down the brim of his fedora. His match flared with sulfurous flame, and he lit another cigarette as she came running toward him.
“You!” She jumped a few steps backward, whirled and stared at the far side of the lake where she’d whacked him. When she turned around, her blue eyes were wide as china saucers. “How did you—”
“All I want to do is talk.”
“No way.”
Her slender eyebrows pulled in a determined scowl, and she started running again. About a hundred yards away, she paused at the curb of Seventeenth Street, waiting for a break in the traffic.
This time, Dash didn’t bother to move. He formed his thoughts into words and wished them toward her in a suspended bubble that popped just over her head, spilling his thought. “Wait up, Liz. I need five minutes of your time.”
“No!”
He heard her shout over the rumbling splash of the traffic. This was one stubborn woman. A tough tomato. A hot-tempered tamale. Geez, what did she want? He’d gone to the trouble of performing two minor miracles, and she was unimpressed. What made her so suspicious? He might have to rethink his plan. Using her as a contact on his current assignment might be trickier than he had anticipated.
Liz darted into the street. The pavement was slick, and she stumbled. Went down on one knee. In her haste to rise, she slipped again and sprawled flat on her stomach across the double yellow line.
Down the street, in the dusk, the red light changed to green. Two cars revved and rolled toward her prone figure. From the opposite direction, more traffic rumbled and splashed across the dark, wet pavement. Even if the drivers saw her, they might not be able to brake in time.
“Get up,” Dash shouted. Where was her Guardian Angel?
Watching her, he held his breath. An uncharacteristic sensation clenched in his chest. Fear. He hadn’t felt fear in a very long time. In slow motion, he saw the oncoming headlights approaching her. Given time, he might have been able to stop them, but that would cause a pileup. The cars were so close. She had to hurry. She had to save herself. “Move, Liz!”
She was up. On her feet. Staggering, she made it to the far side of the street where she dodged between two parked cars. She was okay. A little bruised, but okay.
Dash breathed a prayer of relief. If anything had happened to her, he would have blamed himself. He should have known better than to approach a lone woman. Though she hadn’t seemed frightened of him, he’d startled her, made her careless.
It wouldn’t happen again. To avoid further mishap, he waited until she’d limped across two more busy streets. When she stood outside her place and fitted the key in the lock, he materialized again. “Liz, may I come in?”
She turned and glared. “You’ve got a lot of nerve.”
He couldn’t deny it.
“Did you see what happened?” she demanded. “You almost got me killed.”
He shrugged. Dash knew, from experience, that there were fates worse than death. “Let me explain.”
“Oh, I think I understand. You’re some weirdo who lurks around in the park in a trench coat, getting your kicks from scaring women.”
“That’s not true. You’ve got me wrong, all wrong.”
She pushed open the door to the renovated Victorian mansion where she had an apartment on the third floor, but before she went inside, she turned to him. “How did you get across the park so fast after I hit you?”
He would have lied if it was possible. That was one of the problems with being an angel. There was no sinning allowed. Whether he liked it or not, he was stuck with a couple of unbreakable commandments. So he winced and told the truth. “I flew.”
“Sure you did.” She stepped across the threshold. “Who the hell do you think you are, anyway?”
“My name’s Dashiell.”
“As in Dashiell Hammett? The famous detective writer?” She rolled her eyes, then chuckled. “I suppose that would explain the trench coat and fedora. Do you think you’re a private eye?”
“Let me come inside and I’ll explain.”
“You’ve got to be kidding!” She muttered, “You pop up from nowhere and scare me half to death. Then, you want me to invite you inside?”
“That’s about the size of it, precious.”
“You’re crazy!” She stepped inside the doorway to a tiled foyer.
“Wait!”
“Give me one good reason I should.”
Though Dash had always preferred the direct, simple approach without the celestial fireworks, there were occasions when a small dose of flash and dash could save a lot of time. This was one of those occasions Liz Carradine was a hard sell, and it was going to take an extreme measure to get past her suspicious nature.
“Here’s my reason,” he said.
Dash issued forth with a burst of luminosity. The explosion lasted only for an instant. Prolonged exposure to the full force of his radiance would have blinded her. His brilliant revelation was accompanied by a swelling chord of heavenly sound, the sweetest music in the galaxies. A hard breeze rocked against her as he offered a glimpse, a quick impression, of feathers. Pure, glowing, pearly white feathers. Wings.
Then the street was silent and dark again.
“It’s like this,” he explained as he stuck a Camel in the corner of his mouth. “I’m an angel.’
Liz stood and gaped, backlit by the glow from inside the entryway. Her curling brown hair seemed to be standing on edge. Her shoulders trembled. Her complexion paled beneath the tan, causing the sprinkle of freckles across the bridge of her nose to stand out in sharp relief.
He thought, all in all, she was taking it well.
She closed her mouth with a snap, shook her head in disbelief and stared at him. “Tell you what, Dashiell—”
“Call me Dash.”
“I’ll call you gone,” she said. “If you’re an angel, I’m Ivana Trump!”
She slammed the door in his face and he was left out on the street.
If he could have felt the chill, he probably would have shivered. Never before, in his years and years of angelic existence, had he ever encountered such a bullheaded dame. Most humans were knocked for a loop by a total radiant manifestation. Most humans fell to their knees and tried to kiss the hem of his trench coat. But not her, not Liz. Talk about your doubting Thomasina!
He stared at the carved oak door and beveled glass of the Victorian mansion where she had her apartment. That door had slammed hard. Inside, he imagined her stomping up the stairs, mumbling about weirdos.
Working with her was going to be a challenge, but she was still his best source at OrbenCorp. He’d have to try again. He’d have to convince her. A challenge, he thought. Might be fun. Grudgingly, Dash acknowledged a certain respect for this feisty little number with the great gams.
When he turned around, Dash came face to face with the sleaziest-looking Guardian Angel he’d ever seen. Her celestial robes were bordered with fake leopard skin and fitted tight. Her lipstick was red enough to stop traffic. She had big, blond hair and bigger bazooms. She laughed at him, then winked. “So, you’re the famous Dash from the Denver Branch of Avenging Angels. I’ve heard of you.”
“Sorry I can’t return the compliment, cookie.”
“You can call me Cherie.” She rested her fist on her hip and stuck out her bosom. “I’m the original hooker with a heart of gold. As you know, some of us do make it to heaven.”
“Are you supposed to be the Guardian Angel for Liz?”
She fluffed her hair. “That’s right.”
“You’re doing a lousy job, babe. Liz almost got killed in the traffic on Seventeenth Street. Where were you?”
“It’s not my fault. I got distracted,” she said brazenly
. “There was a party in one of the bars on Seventeenth and I dropped by. Out of nostalgia, you know. I used to love parties. Besides, I knew nothing would happen to Liz. Nothing ever does. I’ve never been Guardian Angel for somebody who’s so boring. She’s got no vices to speak of. All she ever does is work and read and jog and watch the tube.” She gestured for him to come close and whispered, “She hasn’t been with a man for three years.”
Dash found that hard to believe. No men? This nineties sensitivity stuff was getting out of hand if a snappy number like Liz Carradine wasn’t getting dates. He frowned at Cherie. “You wouldn’t lie, would you?”
“No way, Dash. I’m an angel.” She arched one painted eyebrow. “You sound like you might be interested in Lizzie. Tempted?”
Dash didn’t even dignify her comment with a reply. He knew the rules, and lust was one of the seven deadlies.
“My, my,” Cherie said, “this might be fascinating. The well-known detective Avenger falling for a human?”
“Knock it off, Cherie. You know better than that.”
“Do I?”
It was too bad that Liz got stuck with this floozy for a Guardian. On the other hand, Cherie’s lack of interest in her duties as a Guardian might work to his advantage.
Over the years, he’d done a lot of negotiating with the Guardians, and it was always a drag. With them, it was whining about one thing or another. Nervous Nellies. They were always complaining to the Avengers. Don’t do that. It’s dangerous. But he could tell that Cherie was different. She’d welcome some excitement.
Slinking close to him, she batted her eyelashes. Her scarlet fingernails creased the lapel of his trench coat. “Say, Dash, you think you could do anything about getting me reassigned? I’d be a great Avenging Angel.”
He suspected the only reason she wanted to be an Avenger was so she could once again take tangible physical form instead of being invisible to all but other angels. And he had to agree that it was a shame to waste all her spectacular artifice on angels. He hooked his arm through hers. “Let’s talk.”