Salt & Light

£3.99

£3.99 • £7.99 GBP / $4.99 • $9.99 USD / Free in KU

🌊 Grumpy protector • Cursed mermaid • Second chances • Slow burn with real heat

For readers who love seaside magic, emotional redemption, and slow-burn chemistry that hits deep.

She’s been drowning in guilt for nearly two centuries.

He’s the only man who can teach her to breathe again.

But saving her might cost him everything he’s already lost once before.

💫 Perfect for fans of Cornish folklore, and small-town paranormal love stories with heart, Salt & Storms is book three in The Saltmere Chronicles—standalone romances linked by selkie legends, seaside longing, and second chances worth fighting for.

£3.99 • £7.99 GBP / $4.99 • $9.99 USD / Free in KU

🌊 Grumpy protector • Cursed mermaid • Second chances • Slow burn with real heat

For readers who love seaside magic, emotional redemption, and slow-burn chemistry that hits deep.

She’s been drowning in guilt for nearly two centuries.

He’s the only man who can teach her to breathe again.

But saving her might cost him everything he’s already lost once before.

💫 Perfect for fans of Cornish folklore, and small-town paranormal love stories with heart, Salt & Storms is book three in The Saltmere Chronicles—standalone romances linked by selkie legends, seaside longing, and second chances worth fighting for.

Salt & Light / The Saltmere Chronicles 06

£3.99

 

Some secrets have consequences. His just ran away to Cornwall.

A cursed woman who saves everyone but herself.

A lifeboat captain who’s forgotten how to be saved.

And a century-old reckoning rising from the deep.

Welcome to Saltmere, where even the ghosts have unfinished business.

Salt & Light is book 6 of The Saltmere Chronicles, a steamy British paranormal romance series filled with selkie legends, storm-soaked passion, and small-village secrets that won’t stay buried.

Contains mature content. Written in British English with authentic Cornish setting and dialect.

Book 6 of 6 Print Length Language Publication Date File Size
The Saltmere Chronicles 182 pages British English 11-Jan-26 4.9 MB

The story:

Rosamunde Carbis is Saltmere's resident sea witch—tide magic, ancient partnerships with Cornish sea spirits, and fourteen months of carefully avoiding Dr Kieran Ashworth. The academic who nearly destroyed her village. Who's spent all that time trying to prove he's changed.

Nobody knew Kieran had a child until his nine-year-old daughter appears in the village square, alone and terrified, looking for her dad.

Lily ran away from London because something underground is calling to her—old magic, angry voices, liminal spaces only she can sense. And she's not the only one hearing it. Saltmere's magical children are being marked by spriggans, grotesque Cornish spirits who guard ancient places... and steal children.

The mines beneath the village have been disturbed. The boundaries are breaking. And the spriggans want something.

Rosamunde should walk away. But watching Kieran parent with quiet desperation, seeing Lily find friends who don't think she's strange, feeling domestic routines form in the spaces between crisis—her walls are cracking faster than Saltmere's foundations.

Some partnerships start with magic. Some families are forged in crisis. And some sea witches discover that the most dangerous thing isn't the spriggans ...

It's wanting to stay.

Salt & Light is the sixth and final book in The Saltmere Chronicles, a steamy British paranormal romance series set in coastal Cornwall, where ancient magic meets modern love.

PERFECT FOR READERS WHO LOVE:

  • TJ Green's White Haven Witches - atmospheric British settings with authentic witchcraft

  • Louisa Morgan's witch novels - magic that feels real and grounded

  • Paranormal cosies with bite - warmth without sacrificing stakes

  • Welsh culture and mythology - the real thing, written by someone who lives in Wales

  • Found family dynamics - earned trust and genuine friendship

  • Slow-burn romance - chemistry that builds naturally across books

  • Mysteries that make you think - layered investigations with satisfying resolutions

  • Magic systems with rules and costs - power that matters because it isn't free


The opening pages are like the start of a conversation with an old friend. [...] Old and new characters falling into place, along with magic of Cornwall thrown in for good measure, gives the perfect escape. Well done Toria, loved every minute of it.
— Amazon UK Review

Read an excerpt …

The harbour was in a strange mood that morning. Too still, the water sitting flat and grey beneath a sky that couldn't decide whether to rain. Even the gulls were quiet—wheeling overhead without their usual raucous complaints—and that was never a good sign.

Rosamunde Carbis was picking through late-season tomatoes at Mrs Henderson's market stall, half her attention on the produce and half on the wrongness settling over Saltmere like a held breath, when the commotion started.

"Someone fetch Old Tom—"

"Is that child alone?"

"Where are her parents?"

She looked up to find a small crowd forming near the harbour end of the square. The sort of crowd that gathered when something was very wrong, not just mildly interesting.

Rosamunde abandoned the tomatoes.

A girl stood in the centre of the square like a stone dropped into still water, creating ripples of concern in all directions. Nine or ten years old, Rosamunde estimated. Travel-worn clothes, rucksack dragging from one shoulder, and an expression that managed to be both determined and terrified in equal measure.

"I'm looking for someone," the child was saying to Mrs Penhallow, who'd been first on the scene with her usual efficiency. "My dad. He lives here. Sometimes."

"What's your dad's name, love?" Mrs Penhallow had bent down to the girl's level, all grandmotherly concern.

"Dr Kieran Ashworth." The girl's voice wavered slightly. "He does research. Sea creatures and things. He's been staying here."

The name hit Rosamunde like cold water.

Around the square, she could see the same recognition rippling outward. Dr Ashworth—the academic who'd nearly destroyed Saltmere fourteen months ago, who'd spent the time since trying to prove he'd learned something from that disaster. Who appeared in the village for weeks at a time doing careful, respectful research, then vanished back to London without explanation.

Dr Ashworth, who had apparently never mentioned having a daughter.

"Right," Rosamunde said, stepping forward before she could think better of it. The crowd parted slightly. "I know Dr Ashworth. Let me call him."

The girl's head snapped toward her, hope flaring in eyes that were red-rimmed from crying. "You know where he is?"

"I know how to reach him." Rosamunde pulled out her mobile, already scrolling for his number. They'd exchanged details months ago for research coordination—purely professional, nothing more. "What's your name?"

"Lily." The girl shifted her rucksack, wincing slightly. "Lily Ashworth. I came from London. On the bus. Well, three buses actually. And then the lady at the post office said he'd been in yesterday, so I waited, but—" Her voice cracked. "He wasn't there. And I don't know where else to look."

Three buses from London. Christ.

The phone rang twice before Ashworth answered. "Rosamunde? Is everything all right?"

His voice carried the careful courtesy he'd adopted since the incident—formal enough to maintain distance, warm enough not to seem cold. As though he was constantly aware of how close he'd come to being permanently unwelcome in Saltmere.

"You need to come to the square," Rosamunde said. "Now."

A pause. Then, with barely contained panic: "What's happened? Is it—did something—"

"Nothing supernatural. Just... come to the square. Quickly. Your daughter's here."

The silence that followed was absolute.

"My—" His voice cracked. "Lily's there? In Saltmere? Is she hurt? Is she—"

"She's safe. Tired and scared, but safe. Just come. Quickly." She ended the call before he could ask more, before the fear in his voice could become something she'd have to navigate, turning her attention back to Lily. The girl had wrapped her arms around herself, looking suddenly very small and very young despite the determined set of her jaw.

"He's on his way," Rosamunde said gently. "Why don't we get you sitting down? Mrs Penhallow, would you—"

"I'll fetch water," Mrs Penhallow announced, already bustling toward her cafe. "And perhaps a biscuit or two. You look proper famished, love."

Rosamunde guided Lily to the bench near the war memorial, the one that got afternoon sun. The girl sank onto it with visible relief, letting her rucksack drop to the cobblestones.

"How long have you been travelling?" Rosamunde asked, settling beside her.

"Since this morning. Left at six." Lily pulled her knees up, making herself smaller. "Gran was still asleep. I left her a note."

"Your gran."

"Dad's mum. I live with her when he's here. She's nice, but—" Lily's voice went quieter. "She doesn't understand. About the spaces."

"The spaces?"

But Lily had spotted something over Rosamunde's shoulder, and her entire face transformed. "Dad!"

Rosamunde turned to see Dr Kieran Ashworth running—actually running—across the square from the direction of Church Lane. His usually neat hair was dishevelled, his jacket forgotten, mobile still clutched in one hand. He looked absolutely terrified.

Nothing like the controlled, careful academic she'd grown used to over the past fourteen months.

"Lily!" He reached them in seconds, dropping to his knees in front of the bench, hands hovering as though he couldn't quite believe she was real. "Lily, what—how did you—" His voice cracked entirely. "Are you hurt? Are you all right?"

"I'm fine, Dad." Lily launched herself off the bench into his arms, and he caught her, pulling her tight against his chest. "I'm sorry. I'm sorry, I know I shouldn't have, but I was scared, and I missed you, and Gran doesn't understand about the spaces hurting—"

"Shh. Shh, it's all right." He was shaking, Rosamunde realised. Absolutely shaking with relief and residual terror. One hand cupped the back of Lily's head, the other wrapped around her back, holding her like she might disappear if he loosened his grip. "You're safe. You're here. That's what matters."

Rosamunde looked away, giving them a moment of privacy despite the small crowd of villagers still hovering nearby. This was something raw and intimate—a father's love stripped of any pretence or control.

Not at all what she'd expected when she'd called him.

"You can't do that again, Lily," Ashworth was saying, his voice steadier now but still rough. "Three buses from London—do you have any idea how dangerous—what if something had happened—"

"But nothing did." Lily pulled back enough to look at him, tears tracking down her cheeks. "And I had to come. It was getting too loud. The spaces. They kept—" She hiccupped. "I couldn't make them stop."

"I know. I know they were getting worse." He wiped her tears with his thumbs, cupping her face. "But we talk about these things, remember? We make plans together. We don't just—"

"I left Gran a note."

"A note is not a plan." But his lips twitched despite himself. "What did it say?"

"'Gone to find Dad in Cornwall. Back soon. Love, Lily.'" She said it like she'd rehearsed it. "I even drew a heart."

"Very thorough." He pulled her close again, resting his cheek against her hair. "Your gran's probably having an absolute conniption right now. I need to call her. Let her know you're safe."

Over Lily's head, his eyes found Rosamunde's. The gratitude there was profound, and something else—embarrassment, perhaps, or resignation. The look of a man whose carefully maintained privacy had just shattered across the village square.

"Thank you," he said. "For calling me. For—" He gestured helplessly at everything. "Thank you."

"Of course." Rosamunde stood, giving them space, but found she couldn't quite leave. "Is she really all right? Should we call the surgery?"

"I'm fine," Lily insisted, pulling back from her father to look at Rosamunde properly for the first time. "Just tired. And hungry. Did someone mention biscuits?"

"Mrs Penhallow did." Rosamunde couldn't help but smile. The girl had clearly inherited her father's single-minded focus. "She'll be back in a moment."

"You're the sea witch, aren't you?" Lily asked with the absolute lack of filter possessed only by nine-year-olds and the very elderly. "Dad talks about you. He says you're brilliant but intimidating."

"Lily," Ashworth said, pained. "That's not—I didn't say—"

"You did, though." Lily looked between them with interest. "You said she was the most powerful witch in Cornwall and you'd cocked things up badly and you weren't sure she'd ever forgive you, but you hoped she might eventually because her work was fascinating and you'd learned a lot from watching how she—"

"Right." Ashworth stood, lifting Lily with him in one smooth motion despite her being far too big to be carried. "That's quite enough sharing for today, thank you. Let's get you home and fed, and then we're having a serious conversation about—"

He stopped mid-sentence, seeming to realise he'd just said 'home' in front of half the village. Home. Not his rented cottage, not his temporary accommodation. Home.

Rosamunde watched something complicated cross his face.

"I'll need to make some calls," he said instead, settling Lily more securely on his hip. "Sort out—there's a lot to sort out."

"Of course." Rosamunde stepped back, letting him pass. "If you need anything—"

"Thank you." He met her eyes again, and there was something vulnerable there she'd never seen before. "Really. I'll—I'll explain. Everything. When I can. When Lily's settled. If you're willing to listen."

"Go," Rosamunde said, more gently than she'd intended. "Take care of her. We can talk later."

She watched them go—Ashworth carrying his daughter across the square despite her protests that she was too old for this, Lily's arms wrapped around his neck, both of them talking at once now, relief making them giddy. Mrs Penhallow intercepted them with biscuits wrapped in a serviette, and Lily's delighted "Thank you!" carried back across the cobblestones.

Around Rosamunde, the crowd began to disperse, already buzzing with speculation. Dr Ashworth had a daughter. A daughter who could apparently travel across England on her own initiative. A daughter he'd kept completely secret for the fourteen months he'd been coming to Saltmere.

"Well," Old Tom said from behind her, making her jump. "That's interesting."

"Quite."

"Didn't know he had a child."

"Neither did anyone else, apparently."

"Protective, then." Old Tom nodded approvingly. "Can't fault a man for protecting his daughter. Not after what happened before."

No. She couldn't fault him for that.

But as she watched them disappear toward Church Lane—Ashworth still carrying Lily despite her age, their heads bent close together—Rosamunde felt something shift in her chest. Something uncomfortable and unwelcome and dangerously like the beginnings of a crack in the careful walls she'd spent so long building.

Dr Kieran Ashworth wasn't just the arrogant academic who'd nearly destroyed her village. He wasn't just the careful researcher who'd spent fourteen months trying to make amends.

He was a father. A single father, apparently, based on the absence of anyone else in this equation. A man who dropped everything and ran across the square with terror in his eyes because his daughter was in danger.

A man who, according to his apparently very talkative daughter, thought Rosamunde was brilliant.

Brilliant but intimidating.

She should probably be annoyed by that.

Instead, walking back to collect her abandoned vegetables, she found herself smiling despite her better judgement.

Brilliant would do, she supposed.

And perhaps intimidating wasn't entirely inaccurate either.


FAQs

  • Salt & Bone is a complete standalone romance with a satisfying HEA (happily ever after). Isla and Cian's love story wraps up fully in this book. However, the series features interconnected characters and deepening mythology, so reading in order gives you the richest experience of Saltmere's magical world.

  • Steamy! Salt & Bone contains three on-page sex scenes with emotional intimacy and moderate physical detail. Heat level: 3.5 out of 5.

  • This book contains: peril, past trauma references, explicit sexual content, references to past infidelity of a partner, death/grief themes (in backstory), and supernatural captivity.

    Features consensual transformation and a happily ever after.

  • Each book features a different couple with their own complete romance, so you CAN read them out of order. However, the series mythology deepens and characters from previous books appear, so publication order (starting with Salt & Bone) gives you the fullest experience.

  • If you enjoy British paranormal romance with atmospheric coastal settings, authentic folklore, and emotional depth, you'll love Salt & Bone. Readers compare it to Nalini Singh's Psy-Changeling series (for the shifter romance) and Deborah Harkness's All Souls Trilogy (for the British atmosphere and mythology).

  • Fated mates, selkie shifter romance, only one bed, forced proximity, grumpy/sunshine elements, British small-town setting, forbidden magic, and "there's only one way to break the curse."

  • Salt & Bone is approximately 38,000 words (184 pages in paperback), which typically takes 2-4 hours to read. Perfect for a cosy evening or a weekend binge!

  • Yes! The audiobook is scheduled for release (🤞🏻) in 2026. Join my newsletter (form at the bottom of the page) to be notified when it's available.


The Saltmere Chronicles [...] have reminded me of happier times and just how quaint the fishing villages around Cornwall are. These books have captured the ‘quirks’ beautifully and they remind me of exactly the things I love about the area!
— Amazon UK Review

all books in the series …

The Saltmere Chronicles are six interconnected standalone romances. Each book features a different couple with their own complete love story, but returning characters and deepening mythology make them best read in order.