
One Weekend Only
Sometimes love only needs a weekend.
Delia came to the beach to find her voice again, to pour her heart into the dream she thought she’d lost. She didn’t expect to find Kai—the man who tangled with her song like his music had always been waiting for her.
Their harmony is effortless. Their history, anything but.
One weekend stretches into her life with salt on her skin, music in the air, and the kind of intimacy that feels more like remembering than discovery. But the tide always pulls back.
As Delia and Kai face their distance, they must decide whether a love found in three days can survive the weight of miles, time, and old wounds.
In this emotional and lyrical romance, Delia and Kai’s weekend love story becomes a testament to rediscovery, healing through music, and the hope of mature love found when you least expect it.

Tango in Austin
Some connections begin with a single step.
When Ella Fontenot leaves the coast for Austin, she plans to keep things simple: renovate her family’s crumbling B&B and finally feel settled. Then her contractor walks in—Jack Miller, a quiet craftsman who sketches in the margins of his blueprints and listens more than he speaks.
As sawdust and sharp banter fill the days, an unspoken tension grows. Nights lead Ella into Austin’s hidden corners—a speakeasy humming with music, intimacy, and possibility—and something begins to shift. About the city. About herself. About Jack.
What starts as a single tango becomes a language of desire, distance, and risk.
And as unfinished walls and unanswered questions blur together, Ella must decide how much uncertainty she’s willing to risk for love.
A Saltwater Song novel — a slow-burn, emotionally rich romance set in Austin’s hidden corners, where secrets linger, sisters meddle, and every step toward love feels like learning to breathe again.

The Letters
Some love stories wait to be finished.
Twenty years ago, Audrey Fontenot and Luke Hale wrote letters across oceans—love that stretched through ink and time until one final silence broke it. She built a life without him: music, sisters, a small cottage on Nantucket where the sea keeps her secrets.
Then one morning, his handwriting appears again.
Now in her forties, with her guitar by the porch and salt air threading through her hair, Audrey opens the letter that unravels everything she thought she’d buried. Luke has returned—to the island, to the sea, and to her.
As summer unfolds, music and memory weave their way through second chances, unfinished songs, and the tender reckoning of love rediscovered.
Set between the wild beauty of Nantucket and the warmth of small-town Texas, The Letters is a sweeping romance told across the decades—about music that heals, forgiveness that takes time, and the rare love that returns when you least expect it.

The Rhythm Between Us
Before words, there was rhythm.
Arina never planned to fall in love again—certainly not after moving to Tanager Street, barefoot in the middle of a capoeira circle. She came for quiet routines, to homeschool her sons, and to continue her dolphin communication research—not to feel her heart stumble in her chest.
Then she meets Matteus—the Brazilian man whose every movement feels like music. His rhythm is a language her body remembers before her mind can resist.
What begins as a lesson in balance becomes a slow, sensual unraveling—two people rediscovering trust, desire, and the wild pulse of being alive.
When their connection finally ignites, it’s wildfire. But love built on rhythm can’t survive on passion alone. To stay, they’ll have to face what’s been unsaid—and decide if the music between them is enough to begin again.
A lyrical, steamy small-town romance for readers who believe love can heal what time forgot.

The Song Beneath the Surface
Some connections are felt before they can rise to the surface.
Lena lives half in the world and half in the water. It’s the only place she feels whole—floating, weightless, beyond the reach of everything that’s broken her.
Until River Dawson.
He sees her son with uncanny clarity, guiding him toward regulation through play, animals, and the sea. But he sees her too—quietly, reverently, like she’s something luminous he’s afraid to touch.
He’s her son’s therapist.
He’s off-limits.
He’s also the first man who’s ever matched her rhythm.
When he steps out of his role and into her life, the current shifts. One swim at Blue Springs becomes a confession. One near-kiss becomes an ache they both carry. And one storm on the coast will reveal just how deeply they belong to each other. Together they’ll build a new community, and learn the language of each other’s bodies in water and moonlight.
A sensory, submerging romance about love that rises from the deep, a mother who learns she is not too much, and the man who falls for her exactly as she is.

The Mango Tree
What found her wasn’t on the map.
Gloria Reyes boards a routine flight carrying salt on her skin and a quiet readiness for change. She doesn’t expect the journey to end somewhere unnamed—on an island that feels paused in time and oddly aware of her presence.
Some landings are accidents.
Some loves take root the moment you arrive.
Reid, the steady pilot who gets them down safely, becomes an anchor in the strangeness—calm, reserved, and watchful. As days stretch and a fragile community forms, Gloria feels herself drawn toward both the man and the land, pulled by a rhythm she can’t explain and a tenderness that grows in the spaces between them.
But the island keeps its own secrets. And when one night shifts everything Gloria thought she knew—about her voice, her body, and her future—she must decide what she’s willing to protect… and what she’s brave enough to claim.
The Mango Tree is a lush, atmospheric romantasy about slow-growing love, nature-bound magic, and the way some places don’t just change you—they choose you.