Gabriel Is No Angel Read online




  Gabriel slid his band across the desk, until bis fingertips barely grazed Rae’s. At another time, with another man, the contact might have been innocent. But there was nothing innocent about this man.

  Letter to Reader

  Title Page

  About the Author

  Dedication

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Epilogue

  Copyright

  Gabriel slid his band across the desk, until bis fingertips barely grazed Rae’s. At another time, with another man, the contact might have been innocent. But there was nothing innocent about this man.

  No, Gabriel MacLaren was nothing but trouble. Rugged, stubborn, sexy, blue-eyed trouble. He made no effort to disguise the desire in those gorgeous blue eyes, and the sight of all that aggressive male need sent heat spiraling through her body.

  She let her lashes drift downward, hiding her eyes. Oh, boy, she’d better watch herself.

  Get out while you can, the rational part of her mind urged.

  Logic dictated caution. But caution had never been her strong suit. What would it be like, she wondered, to be loved by such a man? Anticipation ran like wildfire through her veins.

  This was a new experience for her. Compelling. Irresistible. Dangerous...

  Dear Reader,

  I’m not going to waste any time before I give you the good news: This month begins with a book I know you’ve all been waiting for. Nighthawk is the latest in Rachel Lee’s ultrapopular CONARD COUNTY miniseries. Craig Nighthawk has never quite overcome the stigma of the false accusations that have dogged his steps, and now he might not live to get the chance. Because in setting himself up as reclusive Esther Jackson’s protector—and lover—he’s putting himself right in harm’s way.

  Amnesia is the theme of Linda Randall Wisdom’s In Memory’s Shadow. Sometimes you can go home again—if you’re willing to face the danger. Luckily for Keely Harper, Sam Barkley comes as part of the package. Two more favorite authors are back—Doreen Roberts with the suspenseful Every Waking Moment, and Kay David with And Daddy Makes Three, a book to touch your heart. And welcome a couple of new names, too. Though each has written elsewhere, Maggie Simpson and Wendy Haley make their Intimate Moments debuts with McCain’s Memories (oh, those cowboys!) and Gabriel Is No Angel (expect to laugh), respectively.

  So that’s it for this time around, but be sure to come back next month for more of the best romance reading around, right here in Silhouette Intimate Moments.

  Yours,

  Leslie Wainger

  Senior Editor and Editorial Coordinator

  Please address questions and book requests to:

  Silhouette Reader Service

  U.S.: 3010 Walden Ave., P.O. Box 1325, Buffalo, NY 14269

  Canadian: P.O. Box 609, Fort Erie, Ont. L2A 5X3

  GABRIEL IS NO ANGEL

  WENDY HALEY

  WENDY HALEY led a gypsy sort of life as a child, moving every three years or so. She continued this process as an adult before settling on the East Coast. A full-time writer, Wendy publishes romance, suspense, horror, young adult horror and mainstream fiction. She’s written historical romances as Wendy Garrett.

  To Jonathan—and the wave!

  Chapter 1

  Rae stood in front of the full-length mirror in the dressing room. Tiny brass bells tinkled as she adjusted the top of her costume.

  “You’ve really, truly gone over the edge with this one,” she told her reflection.

  She’d gotten herself hired as entertainment at the biggest private gambling house in Baltimore. Rae Ann Boudreau, belly dancer and process server extraordinaire. Her old college roommate, Yasmin, had spent most of a year teaching her this skill. As a lark, of course. Who would have expected it to come in handy?

  Rae Ann tossed her shoulder-length chestnut hair back and frowned at herself. Really, she should have turned this case down. Six years of experience had told her it would be a problem from the get-go. But she hadn’t been able to refuse Barbara Smithfield, who was trying to collect two years’ child support from the husband who’d deserted her. She’d come to Boudreau Professional Process Service in desperation, having been refused by every other process server in town.

  “A twenty-nine-year-old soft touch, that’s what you are,” Rae muttered.

  If only the woman hadn’t brought her kids with her. Ah, those kids, Rae thought. Even if she’d had a heart of stone, those three children would have melted it. They were eight, seven and four. Big blue eyes. The youngest sucked her thumb and clutched a raggedy, loved-to-death teddy bear.

  “It’s the blue eyes,” Rae groaned. “Ever since Jimmy Donovan in second grade, I’ve had this weakness for blue eyes.”

  Then she laughed. She’d spent at least sixty hours working for the thirty-dollar fee she’d charged Barbara Smithfield, and might as well enjoy the finale, belly dancing and all. Rae Ann Boudreau always got her man.

  She wiggled her hips. The embroidery of her girdle caught the light in a rich, multicolored gleam, which was echoed by the large fake sapphire she’d pasted into her navel. Actually, she thought the skimpy costume flattered her. Belly dancers were supposed to have curves, of which she had more than her share. No one could ever call Rae Ann Boudreau skinny. In fact, it wouldn’t have hurt her feelings one bit if there’d been a smidgen more room in the skimpy bra top.

  Someone knocked on the door. “They’re ready for you, honey,” a man called.

  “Well, I’m ready for them, too, sugar,” she cooed.

  After checking one last time to make sure the subpoena was securely tucked away, she sashayed out to the main room.

  Automatically, she scanned the area, tallying possible escape routes. There were too many doors for comfort; she’d have to be sharp to keep Smithfield from getting away from her.

  The decor tended toward paneling and mirrors—some two-way—and the muted gold of the carpet and walls made a nice, rich contrast against the gleaming wood. Nice, Rae thought. Gaming tables were scattered throughout the large room, piloted by clean-cut employees whose friendly smiles didn’t once flicker as they raked the house’s winnings in. Rae would have given a lot to know who owned this place. Whoever it was, he had a mighty slick operation going.

  The buzz of conversation became hushed as the men realized she’d come in. Rae spotted a familiar face or two, but doubted they’d connect the rouged, mascaraed and thoroughly veiled belly dancer with the all-business process server who’d thrust subpoenas into their unwilling hands.

  She also spotted her quarry. Peter Smithfield had a weak, almost pretty face. Dissipation made him look years older than the picture she’d seen, and his mouth held a downward-turned curve of dissatisfaction.

  Evidently, it hadn’t been a good night for poker. Well, his evening wasn’t about to get any better.

  “Gotcha,” she murmured.

  Then she caught sight of another face in the crowd, a rough-hewn, intensely masculine face. And oh, God, eyes to die for.

  They were ice blue, as clear as cracked glass, and startlingly pale compared to his black lashes and flaring dark brows.

  Secrets lurked in those eyes, things that sparked both her interest and her caution. Her gaze drifted involuntarily to his wide, sensual mouth. Lines bracketed those hard, well-cut lips, giving him a look of world-weary cynicism. He didn’t be
long here. For he was not the kind of man who played games, even one as dangerous as gambling. Her interest sharpened even more. She’d always been good at pegging people, but he eluded her.

  Well, whatever he might be, he was male with a capital M, and reaction spurred along her nerves and sank deep into her body. This had never happened to her. Rae had always thought of herself as immune from the usual feminine weaknesses; she was self-made, self-contained, self-reliant.

  So then why did his gaze feel like a caress on her skin? Why did her blood run through her veins in a sweet, hot tide, and why did her pulse race faster than it had any right to do?

  She reined herself in sternly, reminding herself that she’d come here to do a job. If Rae Ann Boudreau took on an assignment to serve a subpoena, it got served. She wasn’t about to let libido jeopardize that perfect record.

  Slowly, sensuously, she raised her arms and clanged her finger cymbals. She could feel the crowd’s attention sharpen and focus. Against her will, her gaze drifted back to the man with the dangerous crystalline eyes. Heat sparked those pale depths as she began to sway.

  She didn’t know what came over her—she really didn’t. But somehow, everything changed. No longer did she move dispassionately, her process server’s mind clicking away behind the ritualized patterns.

  No. She danced for him. Only for him. The ancient, graceful movements became the medium of communication between them, and the message was hot.

  Some small, sane corner of her mind was glad they weren’t alone. For this was magic. Powerful and dangerous, infinitely seductive.

  She couldn’t stop. Her gaze locked with his, trapped by the pure male desire in those blue, blue eyes. He wanted her. She wanted him to want her. She told him so with every glance, every movement of her body. Arousal coiled along her limbs, making her movements even more sensual.

  He watched. He knew. She could see that awareness jolting through his eyes, in the tightening of his mouth. If he’d touched her now, this moment, she’d probably go up in flames.

  Then she spotted Peter Smithfield oozing along the wall toward the interior doorway, and she snapped back to reality. She had no business getting star struck and losing track of things. Barbara Smithfield and those three kids needed help, and Rae was the only one who cared enough to try.

  Slowly, unobtrusively, she danced her way closer to her quarry. An absurd nursery rhyme began running through her head: “Bells on her fingers, and rings on her toes...” And a subpoena in her girdle.

  Dam. She hadn’t gotten to the end of her dance yet, and Smithfield was almost to the door. She hated to lose her cover by racing after him, but she’d prefer that to letting him get away. As she spun, she caught a glimpse of her blue-eyed devil. Something in his expression startled her, but she didn’t have time to think about it.

  Getting out of the room was going to be harder than she thought. Evidently, the audience had really liked her dance; hands reached out for her as she made her way toward the door. She twirled out of reach of a man who wanted to put a twenty-dollar bill into her girdle. And twirled again, setting her gauzy veils spinning around her in a multicolored whirl as she avoided another man’s grasp.

  Finally, she was clear. She stopped, her head bowed, her arms stilled in a graceful arc. The veils drifted back into place.

  Applause exploded in the room. Instead of bowing, Rae went for an inscrutable lift of her head, a flashing glance that speared straight to a pair of sensuous ice blue eyes. Then she ran lightly from the room.

  She heaved a sigh of relief as she spotted Smithfield standing just outside the rest room. Thank you, thank you, she thought. She started toward him. The bells on her anklet jingled exotically, and a smarmy smile spread over his face.

  “Hell-o, beautiful,” he said.

  Still opting for mysterious, she smiled. Another doorway led to the rear of the house, she noted. Casually, she moved to stand between him and it. Draping herself against the wall, she studied him from beneath her lashes. He liked her, obviously. But his eyes held wariness, as well as admiration, and she knew this was going to be tricky. He’d proved himself to be very good at spotting possible legal complications, and light on his feet, as well. If she played it wrong, he’d run from her, and it would be a cold day in Hades before he’d let her get near him again.

  Then his gaze dropped to her chest, and she knew she had him. He wasn’t going to walk away—at least until it was too late.

  A loud crash of shattering wood rang through the room she’d just left. She whirled to see men in bulletproof vests burst in through the doors, guns drawn.

  “Police!” one shouted. “Everybody on the floor!”

  A bust, Rae thought. Darn, darn, darn! “Not now,” she muttered, reaching toward her girdle.

  Peter Smithfield bolted for the door. Rae grabbed him as he raced past her, and they fell to the floor. Unfortunately, he landed on top. She held him by the front of his shirt while she tried to reach the papers tucked into her girdle. If only he’d stop squirming, she could...

  A big, square hand seemed to come out of nowhere. It wound itself in Smithfield’s collar, hauling him up with a jerk.

  Rae focused on a rough-hewn face and a pair of furious ice-blue eyes. What was he doing here? Astonishment stilled her for a moment.

  “Get out of here,” the newcomer growled, flinging Smith-field toward the door.

  Rae scrambled to her feet. “Hey!”

  Smithfield didn’t stop moving. Rae sprang after him, only to be caught in midleap by a hard arm around her waist.

  “Not so fast,” the man said.

  “Let go!” She squirmed frantically, but his grip didn’t ease at all. “Let go, damn it! I’ve got unfinished business with that guy!”

  “I bet you do.”

  His voice was deep, with a brandy-and-smoke huskiness that made her nerve endings quiver. It was also angry enough to freeze the air around them.

  Rae twisted in his iron grip. A cop, she thought. She should have known. He wasn’t the kind of man who’d play games. Well, she wasn’t playing, either.

  “Get your hands off me,” she snapped.

  One side of his mouth went up, but he didn’t let her go. His gaze made a sweep of her body, then made another, slower one. A tingle raced through her, heat and temper and anticipation all rolled together.

  Desire flared into his pale eyes, turning them hot. Rae found herself staring at his mouth. It was hard and male, yet there was a sensuous curve to his bottom lip that made her want to taste it.

  This is bad, she thought. Or maybe very, very good.

  Then she realized that his smile had turned cold and cynical, and that he was still holding her. And yet his hands felt hot against her skin, and his grasp had a possessiveness to it that made her pulse stutter and leap.

  He felt it, too, and it was obvious he didn’t like it. His eyes turned smoky and narrow, and the line of his jaw hardened.

  “You ought to get a real job, darlin’,” he growled.

  “A real...” Rae’s temper flared. “You’ve got your nerve!”

  “Nothing to match yours,” he drawled. “Ever heard of the notion of privacy? Or maybe he paid you enough not to care?”

  Astonishment silenced her for a moment. He’d thought that she and Smithfield were... Oh, Lord. Anger washed through her, as hot and primitive as her desire. She jammed her hands on her hips and glared at him. “I should have known. You’re a cop.”

  “You got it, sweetheart.”

  She let her breath out with a hiss. “You know, you guys are all the same. You think the worst of everyone.”

  “That’s a laugh, coming from a—”

  “Oh, excuse me,” she said. “I was unfair in my assessment. You’re a vice cop. You know everyone’s bad.”

  “You’ve got it pegged, darlin’,” he said. “Now, just for curiosity’s sake, how much did he pay you?”

  “Enough,” she retorted, too furious for caution. “Why? Thinking of making an offer?


  His eyes chilled. Rae stood for a moment to let her disdain sink in, then turned and started to walk away. She didn’t get far; his hand closed around her upper arm, pulling her to a halt.

  She jabbed backward with her elbow, only to find both her wrists imprisoned in his inexorable grip.

  Then she felt the cold metal touch of handcuffs.

  “Hey,” she raged, glaring at him over her shoulder. “What do you think you’re doing?”

  He spun her around to face him. Even in her fury, Rae felt something warm and heavy slam into her chest as she met his gaze. He pulled her closer. Then he slid his hands up her arms to her shoulders slowly, almost as though he didn’t want to—and couldn’t help it.

  Her breath grew shallow as his long fingers curved over her flesh. It wasn’t an ungentle touch, but it held a darkly veiled aura of possessiveness that made her heart beat much too fast.

  Then she lifted her chin, a defiant gesture. Rae Ann Boudreau had never been unnerved by a man in her life, and she wasn’t about to start now.

  “What the devil are you doing?” she demanded.

  “I’m Detective Gabriel MacLaren, vice squad,” he said. “And you’re under arrest.”

  “Arrest!” she yelped. “What for?”

  He grinned at her. “Prostitution, honey-child.”

  Chapter 2

  Feeling weary down to his bones, Gabriel propped his feet up on his desk. God, he hated late shift. He glanced up briefly as two beat cops hauled a very intoxicated, very large and loud man past him.

  “Not another one,” he muttered.

  He wished he could stop thinking about the belly dancer. But oh, boy, she’d settled into his mind and wouldn’t leave him alone. He’d felt an actual physical jolt when their gazes had met that first time. It bothered him.