02/ Salt & Secrets

£2.99 (free in KU) / £6.99 GBP
$2.99 (free in KU) / $8.99 USD

A sunshine-bright selkie trying to rebuild what the sea destroyed.

A guarded artist whose Sight sees too much of the truth.

And a village losing its memory to a thief who deals in compulsion.

Welcome to Saltmere, where every secret has a keeper—and a price.

Salt & Secrets – Book Two of the Saltmere Chronicles

Read For Free in KU

Available in: ebook & paperback worldwide

  • I had a lot of fun with Rowan and Morwenna, I love me a good mystery so writing this was a real treat.

    This story is written in British English, with UK settings and folklore. Spelling, phrasing, and cultural details reflect the Cornish village it’s set in.

  • Print Length: 152 pages
    ASIN: B0FP1WR3XV
    Language: British English

  • Print Length: 152 pages
    ISBN:
    Dimensions: 5” x 8”
    Language: British English


The magic and residents of Saltmere are really coming to life and anchoring themselves as these stories unfold. Bring on book 3!
— Amazon UK Review

☀️ Grumpy/sunshine • Forced partnership • Hidden magic • Slow burn with real heat

For readers who love small-town tension, slow-burn chemistry, and a touch of coastal magic.

She’s the woman who keeps Saltmere standing.

He’s the man determined to shake it up.

One reckless partnership could save—or shatter—the village.

Morwenna Penrose doesn’t need Rowan Blackwater’s grin, his plans, or his daily coffee offerings. She needs the truth. Someone is sabotaging Saltmere from the inside—small acts that are tearing at the trust holding the community together. And Rowan’s the only one with enough charm to get people talking.

Forced to work side by side, sparks fly fast. Rowan refuses to let Morwenna hide behind her walls; Morwenna forces Rowan to face the risks his optimism can’t fix. Their chemistry burns hotter than either expected—but love might not survive the fallout.

Because when loyalty’s tested and secrets come to light, Saltmere’s future hangs in the balance: renewal or ruin, honesty or heartbreak.

💫 Perfect for fans of cosy romantic fantasy, British folklore, and grumpy/sunshine banter, Salt & Secrets is book two in The Saltmere Chronicles—standalone romances linked by selkie magic, seaside longing, and second chances that come with salt in the air.

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read an excerpt

The gulls were already at war on the roof when Rowan Blackwater came down the narrow stairs, two at a time, grinning as though dawn itself had chosen him for a confidant. The Tide's Turn smelled of bacon, damp wool, and the faint tang of spilled seawater that clung to the floorboards no matter how often he scrubbed. It was the sort of chaos he thrived on.

By the fire, a pair of pensioners were locked in their second argument of the morning. Not about politics, or the weather, but about jam.

"Jam first, cream after—Cornish way," the husband insisted, his knife poised in trembling authority above the scone.

"Utter nonsense, Harold. Cream, then jam. How else would you know you'd enough cream?" His wife shot back.

The sound of a drill whirring to life somewhere overhead briefly drowned out their debate. Dave Tremayne's work boots thumped across the guest room floor above as he tackled the plumbing disaster that had greeted the morning.

Rowan swept in with a tray of teapots before the scone debate could reach a volume likely to compete with the power tools. "Good news," he said cheerfully. "There's no right answer—except the one you'll be telling all your friends you learned in Cornwall. Which, incidentally, is whichever method makes you happiest."

The wife snorted into her tea. Harold muttered about traditions, but the crisis was averted. Rowan deposited the teapots, spun on his heel, and ducked back behind the counter just as Dave appeared at the bottom of the stairs, toolbox in hand and a harried expression on his weathered face.

"Right, that's sorted," Dave announced. "Pipe joint worked loose. Should hold for now."

"Brilliant, thanks Dave," Rowan said, reaching for his wallet. "What do I owe you?"

"Call it twenty. Though this building's showing its age. These fixes won't hold forever."

The wi-fi light blinked accusingly red at Rowan from the router shelf whilst he counted out notes. He flicked the switch, counted to five, flicked it back on. A chorus of groans rose from the corner table where three London lads were jabbing at their mobiles.

"Still down?" Rowan called, all false innocence.

"Mate, it's like the dark ages here!" one of them protested.

"Dark ages had better beer," Rowan replied, sliding three vouchers across. "On the house. Consider it compensation for the authentic medieval experience."

Dave shouldered his toolbox but lingered near the bar. "You might want to think about upgrading more than just the wi-fi," he said quietly. "Building like this needs constant attention if you want to keep it viable for guests."

Rowan just grinned wider, though he caught the edge in Dave's voice. Twenty-five years Dave had been keeping the village's buildings functioning, and lately there'd been an undertone to his advice that suggested more than professional concern.

"Noted," Rowan said. "Though she's held up this long, haven't you, old girl?" He patted the scarred bar top affectionately.

Dave's mouth twitched—not quite a smile. "Aye, well. Old doesn't mean invincible." He headed for the door, then paused. "You'll call if anything else goes wrong?"

"Always do."

This was how the mornings went: fires to put out, literal and otherwise. He loved it. Every guest, every daft complaint, every chance to prove that Saltmere could be both ancient and alive. Even Dave's increasingly pointed reminders about maintenance couldn't dampen his enthusiasm.

Behind the bar, Cian appeared with a stack of linens slung over his shoulder. He eyed Rowan's grin with suspicion. "You look like a man up to mischief."

Rowan reached for the cups waiting on the sideboard. Two takeaway lids snapped on with satisfying precision. "Not mischief. Strategy."

"Ah," Cian said dryly. "Her again."

Rowan ignored him, though he felt the corner of his mouth twitch. He hadn’t missed a day in months. Not once. The ritual mattered now—more than he cared to admit.

Outside, salt air slapped his face. Waves battered the harbour wall, spray leaping higher than the fishermen's swearing. Rowan shifted the coffees and climbed Gull Lane two steps at a time.

He paused briefly, drawn to the water. The sea's rhythm beat against him, too familiar. He heard seals calling beyond the surf. His skin prickled. He shook it off and kept climbing.

Cobbles slick underfoot, cottages pressed close. The village was stirring: dogs barking, fried bread smells, the church bell groaning. And he was, in that moment—balanced precariously between the tide of his guests and the promise of seeing Morwenna Penrose.

He could picture her already: arms folded, eyebrow cocked, as though she hadn’t been expecting him every morning for weeks. She’d scowl at the coffee, make a barbed comment about cheap beans or gentrified tourism, and he’d grin through it like the fool he was.

It was their game. She kept the walls up; he pretended not to notice the cracks.

Halfway up the lane, old Mrs Trevithick was shaking a rug out of her front window. “Morning, Rowan, love,” she called over the thwack of dust. “Off to see your lady friend?”

“Strictly business, Mrs T,” he said with exaggerated solemnity. “Community outreach.”

She cackled so hard she nearly dropped the rug, disappearing back inside.

Rowan whistled under his breath as he climbed, a selkie tune he half-remembered from childhood, though he’d deny it if asked. He wasn’t meant to call the sea so lightly. But habits slipped when he was happy.

The closer he got to Morwenna’s cottage, the more the air seemed to change—less village bustle, more sea hush, as though the Atlantic itself leaned in to listen. Stone walls glistened with salt, gulls cried sharper here, the wind tugged at his jacket like a warning.

He slowed at her door, pulse quickening despite himself. He always knocked. Always waited. He’d never risk barging in—she’d hex him with nothing more than a look.

But still, the anticipation fizzed in his chest. He rapped his knuckles against the weathered wood, balancing the coffees carefully.

“Delivery,” he called, as he always did.

Silence a beat too long. Then, footsteps within, and the creak of the latch.

Morwenna Penrose filled the doorway like the sea filled a harbour: all sharp edges, dark eyes, and a beauty that looked perilously close to dangerous.

She took in the cups, then him. “Persistent, aren’t you?”

Rowan grinned, heart stuttering despite himself. “Relentlessly.”


I walked alongside Rowan & Morwenna on the cobblestones & smelled the sea, completely captivated by them & their story.
— Amazon UK Review

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