What If You’ve Already Met an Angel?
- Rebecca Imre
- 5 days ago
- 2 min read

Not the kind with wings or loud entrances. Not the type that say, "Behold!" Not the kind you’d recognize.
The kind you almost forget—until later.
We tend to imagine angels as unmistakable. Radiant. Otherworldly. Impossible to miss. After all, that is what we're told, in the Bible and elsewhere. Either they enter with trumpets, or they work invisibly.
But what if that’s not how they work at all? What if the point isn’t to be seen—but to move quietly, just enough to change something that needed changing?
Think about the moments in your life that don’t quite make sense.
The stranger who said exactly what you needed to hear
The delay that kept you from being somewhere at the wrong time
The unexpected help that arrived without explanation
The feeling—just for a second—that you weren’t alone
We explain these things away, calling them coincidence, luck, timing; but what if they’re not?
In the Angels Trilogy, angels don’t announce themselves. They don’t glow or descend from the sky. They observe and intervene—carefully. Most importantly, they work within the boundaries of human choice.
I truly believe that when our "guardian angels" intervene, it is not usually through miraculous outcomes. They work to protect us, but sometimes, because of our own choices, they can't.
That’s where things get uncomfortable.
Because if angels exist in that quiet, restrained way, it means something else does too: opposition.
Evil isn't always loud or obvious, but it is just as present and just as patient as good.
The real battle isn’t happening in dramatic moments. It’s happening in decisions, small choices, what we do when no one is watching.
So here’s the question:
What if you’ve already met an angel—and didn’t recognize it?
Would you have listened?
Would you have noticed?
Or would it have felt so ordinary that you let the moment pass?
That’s the space the Angels Trilogy lives in.
Not in spectacle—but in the tension between what we see and what we almost see. Between what we choose—and what might be quietly influencing those choices.
If you’re drawn to stories where the line between the natural and the supernatural is thin… where good and evil move quietly through ordinary lives… where the stakes are real, and the outcomes aren’t guaranteed—
Then you may already be closer to that world than you think.
📚 Step into it with the Angels Trilogy: In the Shadow of Angels, In the Realm of Angels, In the Dreams of Angels
Because the truth is—If angels are real…
They probably don’t look the way you expect.



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