Friday, February 13, 2026

πŸ’πŸ’‹πŸ“˜πŸŽ₯Friday's Film AdaptationπŸŽ₯πŸ“˜πŸ’‹πŸ’˜: Sweeter than Chocolate by Lizzie Shane




Summary:

**NOW A HALLMARK CHANNEL ORIGINAL MOVIE!**

Do the Cupid chocolates from Lucy's shop really lead to true love?

Lucy Sweet has the magic touch when it comes to love. Rumor has it when you eat one of her Cupid chocolates on Valentine's Day, you'll meet your soulmate. Lucy is wary of putting too much faith in the legend, but she loves that How Sweet It Is has been a part of so many love stories...and if she wants to keep her great-grandparent's chocolate shop afloat, she needs all the help she can get.

Or is it all an elaborate con?

Ambitious and skeptical reporter Dean Chase doesn't believe in magic, and he's not too keen on love-at-first sight either. He prefers facts to fate, and he takes pride in his role as defender of the little guy. When a post about the Cupids goes viral, Dean is assigned to do a puff piece on Lucy and her shop. He's fully prepared to take down the chocolate shop taking advantage of romantic desperation, but he isn't prepared for Lucy.

Smart, funny, driven...she's not at all what he expected, and might be exactly what he needs. Will the legend melt like chocolate under closer inspection? Or could this cynic actually start believing in magic...and love?




Chapter One
There was nothing in the world so heavenly as the smell of fresh chocolate. Lucy Sweet had learned that at a very early age, standing at her great-grandmother’s knee in the kitchen of her family’s chocolate shop.

Burned chocolate, on the other hand? Not so great.

Which was why Lucy was currently hiding from the acrid, bitter scent—and the sneezing fit it had triggered—in the front area of How Sweet It Is. Her grandmother was training their new clerk, and Lucy was trying to stay out of their way, pretending to restock the display cases, while an ancient fan directed the charred chocolate fumes from the shop’s kitchen toward the back alley. Away from the sensitive noses of any potential customers.

Lucy wasn’t in the habit of burning chocolate. But then she wasn’t normally as distracted as she was today, obsessing over the sign that had appeared this morning on the empty storefront across the street.

COMING SOON: LA VIE DOUCE. FRENCH DELICACIES.

La vie douce. The sweet life.

Her stomach had been in knots ever since she’d spotted it, and the burned chocolate wasn’t the only casualty. She’d also ruined two batches of caramel before admitting to herself she was wasting her time…and ingredients.

Fortunately, her grandmother was too busy assisting their slow trickle of customers and training Georgie to notice the kitchen mishaps. She didn’t want Nana Edda worrying. Lucy had taken over How Sweet It Is when her grandfather had passed. Keeping it running was her responsibility and no one else’s. And she would figure out how to stay afloat—even if another sweet shop was opening right across the street.

Typically, when the shop was slow on a Friday afternoon, Lucy would retreat to the kitchen and take advantage of the quiet to whip up a batch of whichever sweet treat they were running low on, but she obviously couldn’t be trusted in the kitchen today. So instead, she crouched behind one of the display cases, rearranging it for the fourth time and trying to pretend she wasn’t quietly panicking, when the chimes over the etched-glass front door released a delicate cascade of sound, announcing a new customer.

Lucy looked automatically toward the entrance. Her best friend of twenty-five years struck a dramatic pose in the doorway, head thrown back, one arm in the air. At the sight, a smile broke through Lucy’s La Vie Douce preoccupation. Lena could always be counted on to jolt Lucy out of her worry-spirals. She was a human tidal wave of energy, crashing through life and leaving chaos and laughter in her wake.

“It’s official.” Lena thrust her left arm forward, elbow locked, fingers down. “We’re engaged!”

The diamond ring sparkled in the sunlight streaming through the shop windows as Tyler, Lena’s boyfriend—no, fiancΓ©, apparently—appeared in the doorway behind her. Tyler was tall and steady, as silent as Lena was talkative, and his lips quirked in an affectionate smile.

At the opposite end of the L-shaped counter, Nana Edda squealed with delight. “Lena!”

Her grandmother rushed around the counter toward Lucy’s best friend, dragging the new clerk Georgie in her wake. Even the two teenage customers, who had been debating the merits of various cocoa bombs for the last five minutes, rushed to gather around the newly engaged couple, but for a single stunned moment, Lucy didn’t move.

She crouched behind the display case, shock holding her in place as a single thought rang loud inside her mind.

She’s leaving me behind.

She rallied quickly, shoving the thought away and kicking herself into motion, hurrying around the counter to join the knot of noisy congratulations and jewelry admiration.

Lena beamed, glowing with the attention. She looked so happy. Lucy couldn’t imagine why she’d felt that little flicker of hesitation. It wasn’t exactly a surprise. Lena had been hurtling toward this moment since the second she met Tyler nearly a year ago.

“I thought for sure he was going to do it on Valentine’s Day,” Lena gushed to her eager audience. “Since that’s the anniversary of the day we met. But he knew I was expecting that and that I would obsess about every little detail, worrying about what I was going to wear, and whether I had anything in my teeth, so he surprised me last night. There we were, in the kitchen eating takeout kung pao chicken, and suddenly he’s down on one knee.”

Lena shot her quiet fiancΓ© a fond look, one that was returned with such affection that something twinged in Lucy’s chest. Something that almost felt like envy. She pushed it away, reminding herself that no matter how thrilled she was for Lena and Tyler, she didn’t have space in her life for romance right now.

Shoving aside her unexpectedly complicated feeling about the announcement, Lucy added an extra layer of cheer to her voice as she joined the chorus of well-wishes. “I’m so happy for you guys.”

Lena’s eyes locked on Lucy’s, forgetting the rest of the crowd. “Oh, Lucy!”

Lucy’s throat tightened at the joy in Lena’s eyes. A year ago, Lena had been nursing a broken heart after her breakup with Awful Adam, and now she was radiant with love. It felt like a puzzle piece falling into place. So why was Lucy also fighting back the sensation that something was coming to an end?

Lena pulled her into a hug, squeezing tight, then stepped back to arm’s length, her voice ringing with conviction as she declared, “It’s all thanks to you.”

“No, it isn’t.” Lucy’s face flushed as she found herself the focus of everyone’s gazes. Lena was a walking attention magnet, from her sunshine-yellow polka-dot dress to the hot pink daisy in her hair, but Lucy had always been happiest behind the scenes, tucked away in her kitchen in a chocolate-smudged apron.

She tried to step back, but Lena wasn’t ready to let her escape the spotlight.

“Are you kidding?” Lena’s grip tightened. “Of course it is! Tyler and I never would have met if it weren’t for the Cupid chocolates. Your magic recipe led me to my true love. And I am getting my picture on that wall.”

She thrust a freshly manicured finger toward the far wall, where a dozen framed photos were neatly arranged. The Cupid chocolate success stories.

Lena reached into the massive bag that was always hanging from her elbow. “I even came prepared.” She pulled out a framed photo of her and Tyler beaming into the camera. “I’m not gonna lie, I had this baby framed months ago so I’d be ready as soon as it happened. Our very own happily-ever-after!” She made an exaggerated pleading face for Lucy. “Can we put it up now? I want to get a picture of the Wall of Love with us on it.”

“The Wall of Love?” their new clerk Georgie asked, drawing Lena’s attention.

“You don’t know about the Wall?” She eyed Georgie’s crisp red apron with the How Sweet It Is logo in white across the chest. “Don’t tell me you’ve never heard of the Cupid chocolates?”

“It’s her second day,” Lucy explained, but Lena gasped as if she’d insulted St. Valentine himself.

“It should be the first thing you tell people! The Cupid chocolates are legendary.” Lena marched over to the display case that held the Cupids, gazing at them with near religious fervor. “Every year on February fourteenth, anyone who eats a Cupid chocolate with an open heart is guaranteed to find their true love.”

Lucy felt panic spike at Lena’s words, especially when she saw the teenage customers exchange eager looks. “We don’t actually guarantee—”

“That’s how I met Tyler,” Lena continued, oblivious to Lucy’s liability concerns. “And how each of these couples met and fell in love.”

She waved one artful hand, seamlessly transferring all three eager gazes—Georgie’s and the two teen customers’—to the Wall of Love.

Lucy couldn’t help but look, too. She was more than a little proud of that wall, even if she was nervous about claiming the Cupid chocolates guaranteed results. All of those couples had fallen in love after eating one of the Cupid chocolates on Valentine’s Day. Her chocolates. Coincidence or not, it was pretty special to have had a hand in that many love stories.

Her kitten heels clicking on the hardwood, Lena led her disciples over to the Wall of Love—which was a short journey. The shop was only twelve feet across at its widest point. Glass display cases showcasing their wares lined the L-shaped counter, but the far wall was unobstructed—and filled with photos. Twelve in all. Soon to be thirteen.

Lucy let her gaze drift over the framed photos of couple after couple. Maybe she didn’t need to worry about the shop across the street. Maybe the How Sweet It Is chocolate shop could survive a little competition.

“They really make absolutely anyone fall in love with you?” one of the teenagers asked.

“Oh, no, that isn’t how the magic works,” Lena exclaimed, her voice filling the shop—and Lucy tried not to cringe at the matter-of-fact, of-course-magic-is-real-and-we’re-selling-it tone. She believed in the chocolates, mostly—almost completely—but she’d always been wary of promising things the shop couldn’t deliver.

“The Cupid chocolates don’t make anyone fall in love,” Lena continued. “They guide whoever bites into them on Valentine’s Day with an open heart toward true love, but it may not be with the person you expect. Tyler and I were both on dates with other people when we realized we were meant to be with one another.”

“So they only work on Valentine’s Day?” the teen asked, an edge of disappointment coloring her tone. V-day was still several weeks away.

Again, Lucy opened her mouth to confirm that was, indeed, the belief, but her grandmother got there first. “Well, the magic is certainly most potent on Valentine’s Day, so be sure you come back then and bring your friends—”

“Nana…”

“I’ll take two,” the other teen ordered. Nana Edda quickly ushered the customers toward the main register.

Georgie went with them, and Tyler gave a sideways nod toward the Cupids. “I’ll get us a couple to celebrate.” He moved toward the others, leaving Lena alone with Lucy and the photos.

Lena held her picture up on the wall, trying out different spots, as Nana Edda waxed poetic about the family’s secret chocolate recipe. Lucy held back the urge to intervene as her grandmother stretched the truth to the breaking point and beyond. Nana Edda had always liked a story. So much so that Lucy wasn’t sure her grandmother even realized when she passed the threshold from truth into fiction. Lucy was the one who worried about the realities—such as the consequences for guaranteeing something they couldn’t deliver. She was the one who flinched every time her grandmother promised untold flights of romance with every purchase.

“What if we moved your great-grandparents’ picture?” Lena asked, pulling Lucy’s attention away from the Cupid discussion at the registers. “Gave them a place of honor. Maybe at the top? We can put Tyler and me in their old spot and then we won’t have to move the others around to make space for this one. What do you think?”

“That sounds good,” Lucy agreed. “I trust your eye more than mine.”

Lena was the one with artistic vision. Her family had run the flower shop down the street for nearly as long as Lucy’s had run the chocolate shop, and Lena did all their arrangements.

“You’re going to need a bigger wall after this year,” Lena commented, moving the photos around. Then she pulled a hammer and nail out of her giant purse to hang Lucy’s great-grandparents’ photo at the top, reigning over all the happy couples. Never let it be said that Lena didn’t come prepared to get what she wanted. She slanted a quick glance at Lucy. “And you’ll need a special spot for your own photo.”

Lucy groaned. “Don’t start.”

“I’m just saying that you have to try one this year! You’re the romantic enabler, making the dreams of all the people around you come true. Now it’s your turn to grab a little of that magic for yourself.”

“I’m fine just the way I am,” she insisted. She had too much on her plate to be adding romance to the mix. Ever since she’d taken over running How Sweet It Is, they’d been hanging on by their financial fingernails. Now, with La Vie Douce about to open across the street, she couldn’t afford to get distracted.

“This is not fine.” Lena frowned. “All you do is work. And I love this shop, but all work and no play isn’t fine.” She took one last look at her handiwork, and then turned to focus the full force of her attention on Lucy. “And besides, don’t you want to be more than fine? Don’t you want to be incandescently, deliriously happy?”

“I’ll leave that to you.”

Lena made a face, clearly prepared to argue more, but Lucy’s grandmother spoke before she could.

“Don’t mind her.” Nana Edda rounded the counter to join them. Lucy hadn’t noticed the other customers leaving. Tyler was still quietly taking photos of the Cupids while Georgie studied them as if looking for traces of magic. “She’s been grumpy all morning. Ever since they put up that sign across the street.”

Lena’s face twisted with sympathy. “I saw that.”

Lucy met her grandmother’s gaze. “I thought I’d done a good job of pretending not to notice.” She’d been trying so hard not to let her worry spill over onto anyone else.

Nana Edda’s eyebrows arched high over her glasses. “You burned two batches of caramel. And charred that dark chocolate to a crisp.”

“Oh, honey, are you okay?” Lena asked and Lucy squirmed under Lena and Nana Edda’s combined concern.

“It’s fine. I’m sure it’s fine.”

Lena’s face told her what she thought of fine, but this time, she didn’t argue. As one, they looked out the front window and across the street.

How Sweet It Is was a cozy little shop with an old-fashioned feel. They’d upgraded the display cases and added a credit-card reader since the days when her great-grandparents had first opened the shop on Watson Corners’ Main Street, but it still had an antique cash register that cheerfully binged every time they made change.

The kitchens were twice the size of the shop and gleaming with the results of the small-business loan Lucy had taken out to upgrade them when she took over the shop. The tiny little office in the back was lined with photos of her grandparents and great-grandparents, the history of the place surrounding her every time she sat down to do the books, a reminder of those who had come before.

And a reminder that if she didn’t manage to pay off the last of that small-business loan, she might lose everything that they’d built.

Watson Corners had been a cute little town when her great-grandparents had emigrated from Belgium and settled there. But in recent decades, the nearby city had expanded, and a posh suburb had slowly surrounded Watson Corners. The charming downtown area had stayed intact, but subdivisions of gorgeous new homes and manicured lawns had sprung up where open fields used to be.

Big businesses had followed, as well as many not-so-big businesses that flocked to the upscale suburb to cater to its posh new residents.

Like the fancy French whatever moving in across the street.

The hardware store in that space had closed down last year, the older couple who ran it for decades retiring and moving to Arizona. The storefront had been vacant for so long that the other shops along Main Street had started a betting pool on what would finally move into the massive space. It was easily triple the size of How Sweet It Is, even if she included the kitchens and the apartment above.

When construction had started, the windows had stayed covered with brown paper so no one could see what was being done inside, and the betting pool had gone wild. Lucy herself had wagered it would be a microbrewery. Or a new restaurant—maybe some fancy Michelin-star place that would draw more people to the area.

She hadn’t expected direct competition.

The swirly cursive of the “Coming Soon” sign had gone up this morning. And her stomach had instantly knotted.

“Maybe they’re a bistro. Or a savory-only French bakery,” Lena suggested with her usual degree of optimism. “Quiche and croque monsieur and baguettes and nothing else.”

“They’re huge,” Lucy said, staring at the building. She’d been so eager for a new business to open, but now she was dreading February first, the opening date listed on the sign. “It could be a chocolate factory for all we know. A French Willy Wonka.”

“Soups,” Nana Edda declared. “It’s all French onion soup and pommes frites, I bet.”

“Even if they are a bistro, they’ll have sweets, too,” Lucy said, always the voice of logic. “Pastries and tarts and chocolate croissants. And if people are already eating over there, they’re hardly going to walk across the street to get their dessert from us. People want one-stop-shopping, and all we are is chocolate.”

“We have a loyal customer base,” her grandmother insisted. “We’re a Watson Corners institution.”

And we’re barely hanging on as it is.

Lucy kept that thought to herself, just like she’d hoarded all the financial worry over the last few years.

Her grandmother was magic with the customers, but Lucy was the one who had taken business classes at night so she could run the shop when her grandfather passed away. It was all on her now, from placing the supply orders to making the chocolates to keeping the books. She’d grown up in these kitchens, learning the recipes from her grandfather and great-grandmother. How Sweet It Is was home. And she would not be the one who let it fail.

“I should get back,” Lena said. “But don’t worry, okay? I know that’s a big ask for you, but you’ve got this. Everyone loves How Sweet It Is.”

“Thank you, Lena.” She squeezed her friend’s hands, feeling the unfamiliar presence of the ring. “And congratulations again! Today is all about you and Tyler.”

“You bet it is.” Lena beamed, linking her arm with her fiancΓ© and sharing a look that made Lucy feel like she was standing outside on a snowy night, looking through a window at a warm, cozy fire.

Lucy waited until the bells above the door had rung over the exiting lovebirds before turning to her grandmother and arching her eyebrows. “Did I hear you tell those girls that the Cupid myth dates back through seven generations of Sweet women?” she drawled. “Don’t you think you got a little carried away with the lore there?”

“What?” Nana Edda asked with artful innocence. “We don’t know that the legend started with Gigi. Her ancestors probably meddled in love lives for centuries.”

“But they wouldn’t even have been Sweet women,” Lucy argued.

“They wouldn’t?” Georgie’s gaze pinged eagerly between Lucy and her grandmother. The grad student had been hired to give Lucy’s grandmother a break, but that had been before Lucy realized she was about to have competition directly across the street. Now she had yet another person on her payroll to worry about if the shop went under.

“Gigi married into the family,” Nana Edda explained. “Just like me.”

“And my great-grandparents changed their name to Sweet from Van Suyt when they emigrated to this country from Belgium. Which gives us, at most, four generations of Sweet women. If we include my mother, who also married into the family and has never made a chocolate in her life. Any more than that is just—”

“Adding a little flourish to the truth. It’s harmless.” Her grandmother dismissed her concerns with a wave of her hand. “People know I’m not serious. And they like the story.”

“They don’t know you’re not serious. And if they realize we’re lying about how many generations of Sweet women chocolatiers there have been, they might start wondering what else we’re lying about.”

“You mean the chocolates?” Nana Edda’s chin tipped up in affront. “We aren’t lying about the Cupid chocolates.”

“You can’t go around guaranteeing people that the Cupids will make them fall in love, Nana. We’re going to get sued by someone when it doesn’t work for them.”

“I didn’t guarantee. Who guaranteed?”

Lucy arched an eyebrow and her grandmother relented.

“Okay, yes, my language may have been a little on the guarantee-ish side of things, but no one is going to sue you over something your sweet little grandma said.” She fluttered her lashes, somehow making herself look small and helpless.

Lucy snorted, incapable of keeping a straight face. “Just try to go easy on the promises, okay? And maybe stop telling everyone the recipe is seven generations old? The fact that it was Gigi’s secret recipe is impressive enough.”

“It is when you say it. You can call her your great-grandmother, and it sounds like an ancient family secret. When I say it was my mother-in-law’s recipe, it has much less gravitas. Less sense of history.”

A history that might not last much longer if Lucy couldn’t keep things afloat.

She rubbed at her chest, worry pressing against her, tightening her lungs—and her grandmother caught the gesture.

“You should bite into one of those Cupid chocolates yourself. Fall in love. Let loose a little. You’ve gotten entirely too serious, Lucy Sweet.”

Lucy met her grandmother’s eyes, smiling helplessly at one of her favorite people on the planet. “I figure one of us ought to be.”

“Nonsense.” Nana Edda flapped a hand dismissively. “Seriousness is entirely overrated. Now love. Love is something the maker of the famous Cupid chocolates should fall into as soon as possible.”

What was it about one engagement that made everyone start looking for romance everywhere? “I’m fine just the way I am. Thank you.”

“I know, I know. Too busy for romance.” Her grandmother eyed her shrewdly. “But I also know you aren’t really worried about my harmless little exaggerations. You’re worried about that French place across the street.”

Lucy’s gaze went back to the frost-edged front windows of How Sweet It Is and the street beyond.

“Why don’t you do more to advertise the magic of the Cupids?” Georgie inquired. “I know someone who works for the local news station. I bet they’d love a story about magic Valentine’s chocolates.”

“Oh, that’s a wonderful idea!” Nana Edda exclaimed. “The Cupids are always our biggest sellers this time of year. People may not cross the street for any old candy, but they’ll come for love. Especially if we get the word out. I bet people would come from all around—”

Lucy held up both hands in stop signs. “No. No reporters.” She needed to keep her grandmother and her true-love guarantees as far away from reporters and their recording devices as possible. A lawsuit for false advertising was the last thing they needed. “The legend can spread the same way it always has—by word of mouth from happy customers.”

How Sweet It Is would survive the latest changes to Watson Corners. Just like it had for the last seventy years. Everything would be fine.

And if the current maker of the famous Cupid chocolates had never actually been in love…well. There would always be time for love later. Right now, she had a business to run.




A local chocolatier is rumored to have the secret recipe to finding true love on February 14th, drawing in a TV reporter to investigate.

Release Date: February 4, 2023
Release Time: 84 minutes

Director: David Weaver

Cast:
Eloise Mumford as Lucy Sweet
Dan Jeannotte as Dean Chase
Brenda Strong as Helen Sweet
Christin Park as Serena
Robert Underwood as Gary Shea
Jordana Summer as Georgie
Linda Ko as Nora Nguyen
Alexander Steele Zonjic as Tyler(as Alexander Zonjic)
Tosca Baggoo as Claire
Bobby Stewart as Malcolm(as Bobby L. Stewart)
Zack Currie as Mark Martinez-Spencer
Eduardo Britto as Pablo Martinez-Spencer
Jillian Knowles as Young Helen
Liam Boland as Scott Sweet
Nik Andrews as Wyatt Grace
Ron Holmes as Lucy's Opa
Cadence Compton as Young Luc






Lizzie Shane
Contemporary romance author Lizzie Shane was born in Alaska and still calls the frozen north home, though she can frequently be found indulging her travel addiction. Thankfully, her laptop travels with her and she has written her way through all fifty states and over fifty countries.

Lizzie has been honored to win the Golden Heart Award and HOLT Medallion, and has been named a finalist three times for Romance Writers of America’s prestigious RITA Award, but her main claim to fame is that she lost on Jeopardy! 



KOBO  /  iTUNES  /  AUDIBLE  /  CHIRP



B&N  /  iTUNES  /  SMASHWORDS
KOBO  /  BOOKSHOP  /  BOOKBUB

Film
ALL MOVIE  /  IMDB  /  HALLMARK







Thursday, February 12, 2026

πŸ’πŸ’‹πŸ’˜⏳Throwback Thursday's Time Machine⏳πŸ’˜πŸ’‹πŸ’: Quill Me Now by Jordan Castillo Price



Summary:
ABC Spellcraft #1
What if the words you wrote came true? 

Spellcraft isn’t exactly a respectable business, but it does pay the bills. At least, it should. Unfortunately, Dixon Penn failed his Spellcraft initiation. Instead of working in his family’s shop, he’s stuck delivering takeout orders in his uncle’s beat-up Buick.

Winning a Valentine’s Day contest at the largest greeting card company in the tri-state area would be just the thing to get his life back on track—but something at Precious Greetings just doesn’t add up. And despite numerous warnings to quit pestering them about his contest entry, he just can’t stop himself from coming back again and again.

It doesn’t hurt that the head of security is such a hottie. If Dixon had any common sense, he’d be scared of the big, mysterious, tattooed Russian.

To be fair, no one ever accused him of being too smart….

The ABCs of Spellcraft is a series filled with bad jokes and good magic, where MM Romance meets Paranormal Cozy. A perky hero, a brooding love interest, and delightfully twisty-turny stories that never end up quite where you’d expect.

Quill Me Now originally debuted in the Bad Valentine collection, with Love Magic by Jesi Lea Ryan, Hidden Hearts by Clare London, and Temporary Dad by Dev Bentham. 


Quill Me Now #1
Original Review February 2019:

We all know what happens when it comes to wishes, it is all in the wording well in Quill Me Now, magic and spells is all about the wording too.  Who knew the extent of the headache it would be when no one ever wants to leave a restaurant because of the slogan?  Dixon knows but unfortunately for him, spellcrafting that runs in his family doesn't seem to run in his veins but he can spot a poorly thought out one a mile away.  Having been summoned after sending in an entry to a greeting card contest, Dixon meets Yuri when he warns him to stay away but needing the money a winning entry would bring him Dixon is not easily kept away.  That's it about the plot you'll get but let me tell you, Quill Me Now is a lovely holiday gem that I would love to see more of but if this is all we get then it is absolutely delightful.  Magic, love, humor, good guys, bad guys all brought together by the writing style of Jordan Castillo Price, what more can a person ask for?


Volume 1 
Original Audiobook Review February 2020:
The brilliance of Dixon and Yuri, who shouldn't work on the surface but are a perfect fit once you see them together, is brought to life in this audiobook collection of the series.  There really is nothing new I can add to my original reviews for this delightfully fun series other than it is quite possibly even more zany and romantic the second time around.

Since there isn't anything new for me to add let me just comment on the narration.  Often when it comes to audiobooks, I rarely find the narrator's renditions match the voices I heard in my head when I originally read them(I should mention to those new to my reviews that I very rarely listen to audios that I haven't previously read as I tend to zone out here and there as I find myself concentrating on what I'm doing and by having read the story first then I'm not "lost" when I zone back in) but Nick Hudson's version of Dixon was spot-on.  The nuances of Dixon's zany-ness & peppy-ness was pretty darn perfect to how I "heard" him originally, now Yuri was slightly different but I found his take on the character even better than my own.  Could someone else have done as good a job?  Sure, but now that I've heard his Dixon and Yuri I can't imagine anyone else bringing the guys to life.

One last note, I mentioned in my review for Something Stinks at the Spa how these stories made me nostalgic for the movie serials of the 30s & 40s my parents collect.  That still rings true but having listened to them on audio now they also make me nostalgic for the old radio shows of the same era that I collect.  I kept expecting to hear Harlow Wilcox, Bill Goodwin, or Harry Von Zell break in with a sponsor's commercial and that is all down to the incredibly amazing meshing of Jordan Castillo Price's storytelling and Nick Hudson's narration.

RATING:





“Nothing good ever came of a valentine,” Sabina declared with great vehemence and utter conviction. “You hear me, Dixon? Nothing.”

I love my cousin. I do. But there’s opinionated…and then there’s Sabina. I said, “You haven’t even heard the details.”

“I don’t need to, either. Everyone knows those contests are a bunch of baloney.”

“Who’s everyone?”

She ignored the question. “And this ‘big prize’… what’s it even supposed to be?”

I squinted at the fine print. It was smudged with barbecue sauce, but if I held it up to the light, enough came through for me to get the gist. “A thousand dollars.”

Sabina waded through the furniture we were saving for someday. She squeezed between two heavy oak dressers, veered around a massive roll-top desk, climbed over a pile of boxes, and worked her way into our kitchen. It was really just an old utility sink and a microwave perched on top of a mini fridge, but both of us liked to keep up the illusion that we still lived in an actual house, not just a hastily converted attic. She attempted to clatter some dishes to demonstrate how ridiculous she thought my idea was, but we’d sold the maple kitchenette on Craigslist to keep creditors off our backs. And since the only flat surface to slam her mug against was a vinyl card table, it just gave off an unsatisfying thwack. She filled the mug with water and stuck it in the microwave, then crossed her arms, turned to me and said, “A thousand dollars for a few lines of schmaltzy poetry?”

“The verse doesn’t have to rhyme.” I slid the ad across the table for her to look at.

Sabina ignored it. “There’s no possible way anyone could afford to pay that kind of money to produce a valentine.”

“But Precious Greetings is the biggest card company in the state.”

“Even if every lovestruck dope in the city bought one, they’d barely recoup their outlay. Plus, who spends money on paper cards anymore when everything’s digital?” She slammed down a box of hot chocolate with an even quieter thwack, then glared at the microwave as if it would heat her water faster. “You’re just the type to fall for this kind of scheme, too.”

“What’s that supposed to mean?”

“A soft touch. You’re always giving your spare change to that wino down by the underpass. And he probably lives in a cushier place than we do.”

Well, no argument there.

No one would ever take Sabina for a soft touch. As we were growing up, strangers usually thought she was a boy. The weird, too-short haircuts from my Aunt Rose and hand-me-down clothes from me didn’t help. Nowadays, the ratty denim vest and bleach-tipped fauxhawk tomboy look were entirely deliberate. Plainly female…and no one pegged her for a pushover.

Not like me.

Trustworthy. Sensitive. Nice. This was the opinion strangers formed of me before I even said hello. I guess I just had one of those faces.



Saturday Series Spotlight
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Part 4  /  Part 5

Audiobook Collection Reviews
Volume 1  /  Volume 2  /  Volume 3




Jordan Castillo Price
Author and artist Jordan Castillo Price writes paranormal sci-fi thrillers colored by her time in the Midwest, from inner city Chicago, to various cities across southern Wisconsin. She’s recently settled in a 1910 Cape Cod near Lake Michigan with tons of character and a plethora of bizarre spiders. Her influences include Ouija boards, Return of the Living Dead, “light as a feather, stiff as a board,” girls with tattoos and boys in eyeliner.

Jordan is best known as the author of the PsyCop series, an unfolding tale of paranormal mystery and suspense starring Victor Bayne, a gay medium who’s plagued by ghostly visitations. And her quirky, sweet, magical series The ABCs of Spellcraft is sure to make you smile.



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EMAILS: jordan@psycop.com



Quill Me Now #1

ABC Spellcraft Series

The Complete Collections


Tuesday, February 10, 2026

πŸŽ…πŸŽ„After Christmas Holiday Reads 2025πŸŽ„πŸŽ…



⛄πŸŽ„πŸŽ…πŸ’—πŸŽ…πŸŽ„⛄

Well, the holidays are over and the new year is in full swing but there were still a few Christmas romances that were burning up my Kindle.  So here are my reviews for those holiday tales and it's never too late to surround yourself with the magic of Christmas, personally I think we could all use it more now than ever with the current climate. If you find you're still in the holiday mood be sure to also check out all my Christmas 2025 posts for all things holiday.


⛄πŸŽ„πŸŽ…πŸ’—πŸŽ…πŸŽ„⛄




The Business of Christmas by Ellie Thomas
Summary:
Christmas Below Stairs #2
Sequel to Christmas Below Stairs

In Regency London, former servants Eli and Joseph are now established shopkeepers, running their business with the help of Tilly, previously a kitchen maid in the grand town house where they used to work.

Eli, the former valet, is looking forward to enjoying Christmas and splashing out on gifts for their small, unconventional family, unaware Joseph has other ideas.

Rather than being satisfied with the hard-won success of their current premises, Joseph’s ambitions come to the fore, together with his resentment about being treated unfairly as a person of colour and his upbringing as a lowly foundling.

Could Joseph be letting his frustration take control, leading him to make a rash decision that might plunge them into penury? And can Eli intervene without jeopardising their relationship?


I won't say I forgot anything about the first book, Christmas Below Stairs because I didn't, reading The Business of Christmas was like it was yesterday when I last left Eli, Joseph,, and Tilly.  I love the romance of these stories but I think it's the relationship with Tilly that stands out for me. I won't say it's fatherly but its more than just brothers looking out and caring for their little sister.  As much as found families tend to play a huge part in many of the books I read, I don't think I've come across the connection these three strong-willed characters have, certainly not in historicals.

I won't give anything away but I can certainly understand and/or appreciate Joseph's need to better himself because of some of the looks he gets, obviously for different reasons but I get it. However, I can understand the apprehension Eli feels as well.  It's these elements that make them so perfect for each other but that doesn't mean it's easy.

The Business of Christmas is a lovely, heartwarming next chapter in the lives of the former servants who now determine their own path.  I don't know if the author has any plans to revisit this found family again but if so, I'll be sure to read it.

RATING:






The Magic of Midnight by RJ Scott
Summary:
Wishing Tree Vermont #3
When a cinnamon-roll bookseller meets the coffee shop grouch next door, sparks (and snowflakes) fly in Wishing Tree, Vermont.

In the small town of Wishing Tree, Vermont, Wesley has broken free from the golden cage of his wealthy family’s expectations. Now, he’s hiding away in his beloved bookstore, a cozy haven filled with stories that warm the soul. But his greatest joy? Showing the grumpy coffee shop owner next door that life doesn’t have to be so serious—especially at Christmas.

Hunter never planned to trade lectures on history for steaming lattes and frothy cappuccinos. But when a sudden twist of fate lands him in Vermont, running a coffee shop he inherited, he buries himself in the daily grind, determined to avoid messy emotions—and the annoyingly cheerful bookstore owner who seems intent on dragging him out of his shell.

Wesley’s relentless charm and holiday spirit clash with Hunter’s stubborn pragmatism, sparking irritation, banter, and undeniable chemistry. Underneath the tension, stolen kisses and quiet moments reveal a connection that feels like the season’s magic.

But just as their love begins to bloom, a twist of fate threatens to pull them apart. With Christmas fast approaching, can Wesley and Hunter overcome the odds and find their happily ever after? Or will their story end before the final snowflake falls?


I always love it when a book has at least some connection to a bookstore, especially a small town bookstore which can be rare to find these days, so that right there ups the joy for me. The Magic of Midnight is an opposites attract story that will tug at your heart but you'll also laugh, there isn't enough humor for a rom com label but the tugs on your heart won't bog you down in sadness either, quite the opposite really, you'll be uplifted seeing how those tugs play out.

As for the characters, Wesley and Hunter. Wesley is definitely the friend we all wish we had, he is so full of joy despite the journey behind him ending up in Wishing Tree in the first place. I can't lie, when we first met Hunter, I didn't like him but I also knew that was going to be part of his charm, seeing him grow as his story unfolded. Some might find Wes' excitement(to put it mildly) a bit OTT at times but I found it was one of the things that endeared him to me, having that pure joy in the seasonal events is something I can relate to.

Speaking of seasonal events, having Thanksgiving included in this story was a real treat, there is just not enough stories in the LGBTQ genres that mention the turkey holiday, so when I find one, it definitely stands out.

As I'm a spoiler-free reviewer, I'll just say, Wes and Hunter may be opposites attract but they also compliment each other which IMO makes them perfectly paired. Maybe "snark and cuddle" is more appropriate than "opposites attract" but IMO they both fit. However you label it, they are just a joyous holiday treat.

The Magic of Midnight is a perfect addition to the author's Wishing Tree series and though it is a standalone as it is a new couple, I highly recommend reading the series in order because past characters do pop up. IMO reading it order makes the story flow a little smoother, but you won't be lost if you start here, but be warned, it will make you want to learn the journeys of entries 1 & 2.

RATING:






Detective Fox by Isobel Starling
Summary:
A seasonal M/M Romance by Award-Winning Author Isobel Starling

Every good Dick needs a sidekick…

Actor, Tom Lewis’s world came crashing down when a honey trap and tabloid expose outed him and put pay to his flourishing career. The housewives favorite was most well-known for his role as ‘Detective Fox’ in the quaint British series 'Malmesbury Murders'. But after the media speculation about his sexuality, the show is on hiatus and Tom hasn’t worked in six months. Now things are getting serious, money is running out and Tom desperately needs a job. So when his agent offers him a seasonal acting job, he reluctantly agrees… and takes on the role of Santa for a top London Department store. This decision changes Tom’s luck.

When Tom overhears two unidentified store workers discussing a "job to get a little Christmas bonus”. He realizes the 'job' is of an illegal sort. Now, Tom could call the police, but then again, wouldn’t it be great for his flagging career if Detective Fox saved the day? So, Fox is on the case, and as every good Dick needs a sidekick, Tom decides a sexy young Elf named Eli Mason will fit the role - in more ways than one!

FYI. This is an M/M Romantic comedy
This book was previously titled "Detective Fox and the Christmas Caper" The title and cover have been updated.
The content has not changed.


My time is short so this won't be the review I hoped to write, fingers crossed I'll have time to come back and write more but know this is a delight. It has been on my Kindle for ages, and by "ages" I mean years, nearly a decade and I have no idea why it took so long to read it but I'm glad I finally did.

Amateur detection is one of my favorite kinds of mysteries and Isobel Starling did not disappoint. The blend of humor, mystery, and romance is what made Detective Fox such a joy to read. Tom and Eli are amazingly fun together, both on and off the case.  Being a holiday story is like adding an extra layer to an already yummy cake. And the fact that this is a British mystery is the delicious icing on that amazing cake.

I may not take the opportunity to read this annually but I know I'll be listening to it when the holiday season comes around again, maybe even when Xmas in July arrives. A holiday gem but in truth it's such a great mystery treat that it would be great all year long. I've only read one other Isobel Starling story and that was nearly 9 years ago so I'm going to stretch my label a bit and include her in my new-to-me author list and look forward to discovering more.

RATING:



The Business of Christmas by Ellie Thomas
Business was brisk the next morning.

If this keeps up until Christmas, we’ll be plump in the pocket, Eli thought. He tried not to wince at how much of that profit would be squandered in Joseph’s expensive schemes.

He anticipated that Joseph would return later than usual from the house clearance, after perusing the Swallow Street property.

He’s not one to dawdle, my Joseph.

Eli clung onto the hope that by taking a positive step towards fulfilling his ambition, Joseph, usually so level-headed, would start to see the wider view.

Maybe he’ll realise we’re better off staying here.

Eli’s misplaced optimism faded when Joseph appeared from the back of the shop in his shirt sleeves, his face wreathed in smiles.

“Did you get some decent moveables?” he asked mildly. “We need a few baubles to replace what I’ve sold so far.”

“That’s good news. Yes, I picked up some saleable trinkets. At least they will be once Tilly’s cleaned them up and you’ve placed them to your satisfaction.”

Joseph’s grin was so infectious that Eli’s lips curved, despite his rising trepidation.

“I dropped by that place off Swallow Street as we agreed,” Joseph continued blithely. “The landlord happened to be there and was very amenable to my enquiries. He’s even hinted at making a deal on the rent.”

“You didn’t agree to any terms?” Eli asked sharply.

“’Course not. I said I had to consult with my business partner and then we’d visit the premises together to make a final decision. He was most agreeable.”

I bet he was, Eli thought grimly. The whole affair felt off to him. Surely if the shop was in a prime position, it would have been snapped up already?

Unlike Joseph, Eli didn’t interpret the landlord’s eagerness favourably.

“Once you see the place I know you’ll grasp the potential. We could even go before the week is out.”

This was moving far too fast for comfort. Before I know it we’ll be dished up and stuck with somewhere we can’t afford.

“Go and see what?”

Tilly appeared in the doorway, holding a duster.

She might sleep like a baby, unaware of the regular night time activity on the floor below her attic chamber. During the day, there was no such thing as a private conversation. Tilly’s step was light and her ears were sharp.

Eli might have felt relief at the interruption to gather his thoughts if he hadn’t sensed looming disaster.

“We’re thinking of getting another shop,” Joseph said incautiously. “We’ll soon be moving to the West End where the guineas are more plentiful.”

“Move?” Tilly was stricken.

She looked from one man to the other, seeking assurance that they were joking.

Belatedly, realisation crossed Joseph’s face that he had spoken too soon.

“Nothing’s decided, Tilly,” Eli said soothingly. “It’s only a consideration.”

“But if you leave, where would I go?”

Tilly clutched the duster to her thin chest like a prized possession.

“As if we’d venture anywhere without you, Tilly,” Joseph said with unnatural heartiness. “Wherever we go, you’d come with us.”

Tilly would not be comforted. She was close to tears.

“But what about my friends? I can’t abandon Hester, she’ll be distraught. Why do we have to leave at all? This is our home.”

She burst into tears and fled. Joseph took a step to follow her.

“Leave her be,” Eli said gently. “Let her cry herself out. We’ll talk to her when she’s calmed down and is in a fit state to pay attention.”

Joseph appeared thunderstruck by Tilly’s outburst.

“I thought she’d be excited by the news.”

Oh, Joseph, Eli pinched the bridge of his nose in exasperation.

The rumble of a cart sounded from the back lane. Eli grasped the opportunity for distraction.

“That will be the delivery from the house sale. Why don’t you get set to unload the goods and shift them in the store room. Then we can have them ready to sell all the sooner.”

Joseph stood stock still, his expression puzzled as though he barely understood Eli’s instructions. Only the entrance of two ladies made him hasten away, not wanted to be caught improperly attired by potential customers.

“As I was telling you, Addie,” one of the ladies said chattily. “They have some lovely pieces here, perfect for Christmas gifts.”

Eli smiled benignly, allowing the ladies to browse and persuade each other to make a purchase without his interference.

Let’s deal with one problem at a time, he thought, unnerved by the sudden disharmony in their small household.





The Magic of Midnight by RJ Scott
Chapter 1
Wesley
“…and the entire regiment was never heard from again,” I said, drawing the words out and pausing, letting the silence grow heavy before I leaned closer to the lantern, which flickered in the middle of the store, casting long shadows stretching across rows of shelves and stacks of books.

My midnight-on-Halloween audience—all adults—sat scattered on beanbags and mismatched chairs normally used by kids, their faces tipped toward me, wide-eyed, waiting for the last line of the story. I could feel their anticipation, the delicious edge of fear I’d stoked with every twist and pause. Dressed as the ghost said to haunt the old Whitaker house on the edge of town, I moved closer into the soft light of an old lamp I’d found in the storeroom when I first bought the place—the story lantern that gave this place its name—and whispered the final words, savoring the silence.

“Blood and bones, an eerie presence—that’s all that remains. And that, my friends, is why no one dares spend a night in the Whitaker place. Not if they hope to leave alive.”

Gasps and a chorus of “oohs” and “aahs” rippled through the twenty or so people, the sound breaking the tension before laughter followed as I sat back in my chair. The ghost story I’d first spun three years ago, when I’d moved here and opened The Story Lantern bookstore, had taken on a life of its own, whispered and retold until it was turning into a Wishing Tree urban legend. What started as a bit of fun for me was now the kind of tale kids dared each other to repeat in the dark, and seeing that happen made my chest swell with something equal parts pride and wonder.

“I’m never going up that road again,” Brooke Haynes whispered to her husband, leaning into him with a dramatic shiver. “Not unless my big, brave husband comes with me and protects me from every creak and shadow.”

Callum snorted. “‘Brave’? You married the wrong guy if that’s what you’re after. I’m running away faster than you.”

“You’d leave me to the ghosts?” she teased, smacking his arm lightly.

“Absolutely,” he shot back, earning laughter from those around them.

I loved Brooke—she volunteered here for story hours and special events, and of course, she visited all the time with her kids. Charlie and Alice were avid readers who devoured everything I gave them, and although Willow was only three, she had already memorized her favorite picture books and insisted on turning the pages herself. Brooke had started taking on some of the invoicing side of the business, not that I’d asked, but apparently, it gave her a break from real life, and she loved it. At least with her handling the invoicing, it meant she caught mistakes, and I didn’t miss paying people or receiving money. She hadn’t said anything about what she saw, but I noticed her frowning as she checked items off the bank statement yesterday.

I hated that she saw how close I was to losing everything, but luckily, she never brought it up, so I could pretend it wasn’t real. And hell, someday, I might even be able to pay her back for what she did.

If I managed to keep the store.

People stretched, giggled, and stumbled to their feet, a little drunk on the pumpkin punch Brooke had shared liberally, then began drifting toward the door, chattering and laughing as they broke off into small groups, clutching each other as they stepped out into the crisp bite of the November night, searching for ghosts. It was past one in the morning, and Halloween in Wishing Tree had ended not with candy, but with whispered tales and a lantern glowing in my bookstore.

I wasn’t exactly sober myself—not really drunk either. I’d had one pumpkin cocktail and three caffeine-free coffees, but I was buzzing. One cup of spiced yumminess wasn’t enough to do anything but warm me, yet the high of telling stories, of watching my bookstore come alive, filled me until I almost forgot the stack of bills on my desk in the back office. Almost.

“You’re awesome, Wes!” Brooke exclaimed, flinging her arms around me in a tipsy hug that nearly knocked me off balance. She clung tight until Callum, laughing, pried her away and steadied her with an indulgent, long-suffering shake of his head. They’d made a point of telling me the kids were staying with his brother Bailey, and they had the whole night to themselves, and boy, were they enjoying it.

Giggling, shouting, ghostly wails, and laughter trailed up the street, and then a gruff voice cut through the night. “It’s one a.m.! What the hell’s going on down there?”

The crowd scattered like guilty kids. I tilted my head back, lantern light spilling through the window, and there he was, leaning out from his second-floor apartment next door. Hunter McCoy, owner of The Real McCoy coffee shop, was my big, scary neighbor who looked about ready to call the cops. His scowl was ferocious, and I couldn’t stop myself from grinning up at him. My grin widened because damn if Hunter didn’t look unfairly hot when he was irritated. Broad shoulders filling the window opening, that dark, mussed hair begging for fingers to be raked through it, a scowl that made his full lips more distracting. I’d never admit it out loud, but watching him glower down at me made my stomach twist in a way no ghost story ever could.

“It’s the magic of midnight storytelling, Hunter!” I shouted.

“It’s a noise at midnight violation!”

“Oops,” I called guiltily.

“What the hell are you wearing, Darkwood?” he snapped.

I glanced down at my costume. Dressed as a dead man—pale face paint, ragged Civil War uniform spattered with fake blood, a length of rusty chain dragging at my boots—I had piled on every ghostly stereotype I could think of.

“Isn’t it obvious?”

“No.”

“I’m a fallen Civil War soldier, doomed by a series of tragic events that saw my entire regiment slaughtered on the old Whitaker homestead just outside Wishing Tree!”

Hunter stared down at me, unimpressed. Then, with a sigh that carried months of his exasperation with me, he muttered something about how the 14th Vermont Infantry had never marched that close to town, his tone not rude but historically disdainful enough to make the remaining onlookers snicker. I turned to shrug at them; the only ones standing were Brooke and Callum, and they grinned back at me.

“Historically accurate Hunter is grumpy,” I summarized, and they were laughing as they left. I felt a bit mean then; I didn’t mean to make fun, but the pumpkin punch made my head spin.

“Keep the noise down!” he said and then slammed the window shut.

Not even Grumpy-McGrumperson Hunter McCoy could stop me from smiling as I slipped back inside, locked up, and turned off the electric lantern—no candles in a bookstore—then wrapped my arms around myself with a sigh of happiness. The store was mine; the stories I made up were mine, and the freedom from my family, from my old life, was mine. I might be a little lonely when the place was quiet in a way that sometimes reminded me I was alone. I never missed my parents, nor my bullying idiot brothers Benedict or Lewis, but my kid brother, Rupert? Yeah. I missed him.

One day, maybe I’d track him down. Maybe he didn’t hate me quite so much now.

“Stop getting maudlin,” I was cross at myself. “Focus on the good stuff.”

Like the fact I had the sexy-as-hell Hunter living next door.

Everything was great.

Everything was not great.

By the time I finally dragged myself awake, I’d had maybe five hours of sleep, tops. My skull throbbed with a headache that felt as though someone had wedged an axe behind my eyes, and my mouth tasted as if something had crawled in there and died overnight. Maybe I’d had more than one pumpkin drink after all, or maybe I was running on fumes from the high of the night before. I rolled over, groping blindly for the alarm clock, groaning when the numbers glared back at me—six a.m. Not to mention, my screen showed a missed call from my oldest brother, along with three messages from our family lawyer, and two from my father; I swiped to ignore them.

Money. It had to be about money.

Not right now, assholes.

I staggered into the bathroom, squinting at the harsh light. Peering into the mirror, I winced at the pale, exhausted face staring back at me—and at the smear of red along my neck. For a second, my stomach lurched at the thought I’d injured myself before I remembered the fake blood from last night. Grimacing, I scrubbed at it with a washcloth until it came away.

The shower was bliss, even if I lingered longer than I should have, taking extra time to rinse the sticky mess from my shoulder-length hair. I really needed to get it cut—one day, when life wasn’t so chaotic. I leaned closer to the mirror, double-checking for any leftover blood. Nothing. Just me, looking as rough as I felt, with water dripping down my nose. I gave my hair a rough towel dry, called it good enough, and pulled on clean clothes before heading down from my tiny apartment and into the bookstore a little after seven, unlocked the door, ready for an expected delivery, and dropped behind the counter with a mug of black coffee and a spider-shaped Halloween cookie.

The door swung open, and I plastered a smile on my face as if that could disguise how wrecked I felt.

Hunter filled the doorway, tall and broad, with sandy blond hair catching the light from the street outside. Handsome in a rugged way, his blue eyes flashed as they landed on me, piercing through the fog of my tiredness. He wore jeans that fit perfectly and a plain white T-shirt—of course, it was plain, with no logos or silly joke slogans. Clean lines, simple, effortless. And as always, the sight of him made my stomach swoop as if I were tumbling off a cliff, ridiculous and undeniable.

God, he was gorgeous.

And pissed, apparently.

“For the love of god, update the address with whoever the hell is sending you whatever this is!” Hunter snapped as he strode in with a box of books, hefting it like it weighed nothing. I would’ve been straining muscles and gasping for breath with that load, but he carried it as if it were empty. He was already scowling, and when his foot caught on the dangling arm of a plastic skeleton propped by the door, the whole thing toppled into him. Box still in hand, he wrestled with fake bones and nylon string as though it was a real monster, his expression sliding to the peak of the Hunter Index of Grumpy. I pegged him at a solid eight out of ten.

“Seriously?” he muttered, entangled, dropping the box with a thud to the floor.

I hurried over to help, which meant I was far too close to Hunter—broad, scowling, smelling of soap and fresh coffee—and even closer to the accidental brush of his rough hand across mine. Heat curled low in my stomach, my chest tightening with a ridiculous twist that made me want something I could never hope to have.

Hunter’s growl of exasperation deepened as I tried to help, which of course made things worse. One wrong tug and we were chest-to-chest, his arm against mine as the skeleton dangled awkwardly between us. My mouth worked faster than my brain. “Wait—don’t move. The femur’s twisted in with your sweater.”

He looked down with a sigh, then gave me a flat, unimpressed stare. “That’s a tibia.”

I smirked. “Tibia, femur, whatever. Same thing.”

His eyebrow twitched, the closest Hunter ever came to rolling his eyes. “Tibias are… never mind.”

He unpicked the tangle, and with one final tug, he stepped back. The skeleton slid apart in clattering pieces to the floor.

“You broke Cyril,” was all I could say.

“Cyril?” He didn’t sound impressed.

“Cyril the Cursed. He was a train robber, died in mysterious circumstances way back, and now his skeleton hangs in the bookstore as a warning.”

Hunter shook his head. “It’s plastic.”

“That’s what you’re meant to think,” I shot back, grinning.

He sighed—same as he always did when we talked, and I’d have been disappointed if he hadn’t—then jabbed a finger toward the box on the floor. “Fix the address.”

I didn’t want him to leave, not yet. “Do you, uh, want a coffee? To say sorry? I’ve got cookies.” The words spilled out before I could stop them, and inside my head I was already groaning—what the hell had I said?

The implied ‘you’re an idiot’ was in his raised brow. “I own a coffee shop, right?”

“Okay, so I can’t make coffee as good as you, I’ll give you that.”

“Yep.”

“Buuuuut your cookies are normal ones, and mine are Halloween cookies,” I explained, as if that made a difference.

It didn’t.

“I have to get back, we’re busy,” he said, then left in a swirl of cold air as the door swung shut behind him.

For a moment, I stared at the space he’d left, wishing I had half the steady foot traffic his cafΓ© pulled in every morning. People lined up for his coffee before the sun was up, and although he scowled through their orders, they came back for more. Meanwhile, my register sat quiet more often than not, and I was left relying on the occasional story night or holiday event to keep the lights on. It was hard not to compare—Hunter’s grumpy charm seemed to sell lattes by the dozen, while my best efforts at magic and cookies barely paid the heating bill.

I replayed the disaster in my head—me blurting about Halloween cookies and offering him coffee, him looking at me as if I was the most idiotic person he’d ever met. With a sigh, I nudged the delivery box with my knee. No way was I going to heft that thing, but it didn’t budge; instead, my knee nearly gave out, and pain shot up my leg. Swearing under my breath, I fetched the box cutter and sliced it open—it looked like I was transporting the books inside a few at a time. Yay for my on-the-slim-side, un-muscled, but kinda cute self.

“Yes!” Inside was the final book in my favorite paranormal YA series by an author I adored, and on top of it was an envelope. My heart stuttered as I tore it open—Adrian freaking Trevelyan had written me a note. Maybe it was his PA, maybe it was form-letter fluff, but it was addressed to me, Wesley Darkwood, care of The Story Lantern Bookstore.

Adrian’s note was short and scrawled in dark ink, but my eyes caught every word: he was thrilled to agree to come to Wishing Tree for a suggested book signing on December 21st, asked if I knew of any local inns or B&Bs where he could stay, and wondered if it would be all right to mention the event on his social media. He also said that I could message him directly if I needed to.

My heart thudded as I read it twice, then a third time, the paper trembling in my hands. There was a messaging address at the bottom, a direct email, and…

“He agreed. He’s coming. Oh my god, oh my god.” My very first book signing—and it featured my all-time favorite author? At Christmas? In Wishing Tree. Home of the Parade of Lights, the Christmas market, and the wishing tree itself.

I picked up a copy of the book, a sticky note on the front: ARC Copy for Wesley Darkwood and Brooke Haynes only.

“Oh my god! Brooke is gonna lose her shit!” I yelled. When I’d written to Adrian, I’d talked at length about how Brooke and I had read the series a hundred times, and he mentioned her! The book wouldn’t be released for another week, and the thrill of being among the first to hold it sent a fizz of excitement through me. There was nothing better—well, nothing except the moment when others would finally get to read it too, and I could gush and argue and revel in it with them.

Brooke was seriously going to die when she realized what we had, but I was definitely going to read it first. I sent her a message to say I had news, and by ten she was outside the door, Willow bundled on her hip, their cheeks pink from the cold.

“What news?” she said immediately. “Is everything okay? Is it the bank?”

I blinked at her. “Why would it be the bank?”

“I…” she shook her head. “Never mind.”

“This is something so good! I’m still in shock. That letter we sent to Adrian Trevelyan’s agent. Oh my god! Adrian himself… he wrote to me… he said yes!”

Her eyes widened, and then she whooped and danced over to me. Willow laughed as her mom placed her on the corner reading rug, her hands already reaching for the nearest picture book.

She put her hands on her hips. “Right, let’s start organizing this.”

“Brooke, you don’t have to⁠—”

“I’m here, deal with it,” she cut me off with the voice of a woman who managed three kids and a lawyer husband. I’d sent my half-hopeful, half-desperate plea six months ago. And he’d said yes. Hell. What now?

“We need a venue,” I said, panic rising. I hadn’t thought this through at all. “We can’t have it here in my store, it’s too small.”

Brooke leaned across the counter, eyes gleaming, and plucked a new notebook from the display, then grabbed a pen from behind the cash register. “Lucky for you, I already provisionally booked the town hall for the twenty-first.”

“What?” I stared at her. “You did?”

“As soon as you sent the letter to his agent,” she said, smug as anything.

I couldn’t help the grin. “Of course you did.”

She opened the notebook and clicked her pen as if she was about to dictate my entire future. “Okay then—tickets, promo, social media. Let’s go.”

And just like that, we were off—Brooke scribbling lists at lightning speed while I tried not to panic that Adrian Trevelyan, of all people, was actually coming to Wishing Tree for a signing.

Brooke tapped her pen against the notepad, already halfway through her list. “I’ll handle ticket sales—we’ll need to cap them, the hall only seats what, three hundred and fifty if you count the folding chairs in the back.”

I said faintly, my mind spinning. “That’s…a lot of people.”

“Which means a lot of books,” she said crisply, jotting down another line. “You’ll need to order at least four hundred copies to even start to cover preorders and on-the-day sales.”

My pulse jumped. My credit card was still reeling from last month’s supplier order, practically maxed, and the thought of piling four hundred more books on top of that made my stomach knot. If the pre-orders came through fast enough, maybe I could juggle it. Maybe. “Four hundred—Brooke, that’s⁠—”

“Doable,” she cut in.

“My account⁠—”

“I’ll talk to the publisher about sale or return, and invoicing after sales. And I’ll coordinate with the town hall for extra parking, signage, that sort of thing. Social media blitz starts Monday. Easy.”

I blinked at her, panic and gratitude colliding in my chest. “I can’t—Brooke, I can’t pay you for all your work on this.”

Hell, I could barely keep up with stock—so much for investing every cent I had in something I loved when it wasn’t a huge money maker.

She tilted her head, calm but firm, and then her voice softened. “Wesley. You let me sit in your store with a coffee and say I can read anything I want from your shelves. You never mind if Willow naps in the corner or if Alice raids your personal coloring books. You give me space when I need it.”

As if to prove her point, Willow padded back over, her small hands reaching up to me, as she demanded to be lifted. “Carry two!” she said—none of us knew what it meant. I scooped her into my arms, and she wrapped herself around me, face burrowing into my shoulder.

“I don’t need paying,” Brooke added gently. “You’re a friend, and I get more from this place than you realize.”

The weight of Willow’s head on my shoulder, the steady hum of Brooke’s certainty—it undid me a little. I’d never had a real friend before—at least not one who was pretending to be my friend while secretly wanting an in with my family. “Still…thank you,” I murmured.

Brooke smiled, sliding the notepad across to me. “Save it for Adrian Trevelyan. He’ll bring the crowd. You just make sure the shelves are stocked and the cocoa’s hot.”

I tightened my hold on Willow, who gave a sleepy sigh and whispered, “Deal.”

Brooke tapped her pen on the page, then glanced up at me, eyes sharp. “You know…if this goes well, Wes, it won’t just be about Adrian. Authors talk. Publicists notice. The Story Lantern could get on the map as the small-town stop for tours.”

My stomach flipped. “That sounds…terrifying.”

“It sounds like survival,” she countered, though her smile was kind. “And maybe growth, too. More signings. More readers. A future.”

I didn’t answer right away. Willow’s breathing against my shoulder made me ache with how much I wanted what her mother was suggesting—a future here, with books and light and laughter filling this little shop. A place people came back to, again and again.

“Let’s just get through Adrian first,” I muttered, my voice rough.

Brooke chuckled. “Fine. But don’t be surprised when this is just the beginning.”





Detective Fox by Isobel Starling
CHAPTER 1 
AGENT 
“I got you a great gig, Tom.  It’s yours for the taking.  You don’t even have to audition.” 

Tom Lewis lay in his preferred prone position on his agent’s worn black leather couch, where, over the last six months, he regularly flopped down and despaired about the unfairness of being an unemployed actor of such high caliber. He lifted the red velvet cushion that he’d pressed over his face to block out the sound of yet another complaint from his agent—usually along the lines of: “You know if you really wanna get back out there, you’re gonna have to step out of your comfort zone…”   

But no, Tom was pretty sure he’d just heard his agent say he’d got him—a—job?  Tom sat up, swung his legs off the couch, and stared at his agent with an expression of disbelief on his face.  He hadn’t worked since an exposΓ© in the British tabloids about his ‘Shocking Sordid Gay Sexploits’ months before.

Tom Lewis was considered a pin-up for homemakers the length and breadth of the British Isles, and he also had an enthusiastic American fan base too.  The forty-five-year-old actor was the epitome of tall, dark, and handsome, with swarthy looks, wavy raven hair to his jaw-line, and eyes so dark brown they appeared black.  In the days before the exposΓ©, a topless shot of Tom could send his fans, who gave themselves the moniker Tomkats, into a hormonal Twitter frenzy.  But, no matter how straight Tom presented, privately he was 110% gay and believed that the only people who needed to know that fact were the men he wanted to sleep with.  It was no one else’s business, and, so rightly, Tom was appalled at being outed, and alarmed by the vitriol of women online who were devastated that their fantasy man loved cock. 

Tom’s preference was for younger men.  So what if he was on Grindr.  Just because he was a well-known actor, it didn’t mean he wasn’t entitled to a private life.  Therefore, Tom had enjoyed his private life, hooking up whenever he could fit cock into his busy schedule. 

Tom now knew he’d been deluding himself.  After all, with such a well-known face, it was only a matter of time before one of his sexual partners recognized him.  And so it came to pass. Tom had been chatting online with a hot young thing named Devin, and later enjoyed an evening of very kinky sex with the twenty-year-old he’d met via the dating site.  But it turned out that Devin was a trainee reporter for the Scum or The Mail—Tom couldn’t remember which tabloid.  It didn’t matter anyway.  

Tom narrowed his eyes and considered his agent with consternation. “Jesus Derek, you could have said earlier and stopped me from whinging on and on for the past thirty minutes.” He said, “Come on, what’s the gig?  Spill,” Tom urged, suddenly hopeful… maybe even excited. 

Tom’s theatrical agent was Derek Bates, whom Tom had privately nicknamed The Master, for obvious reasons.  He sat behind a desk piled so high with paperwork that Tom was surprised it didn’t collapse under the weight.  Derek was connected, and he was old school—meaning he wasn’t one for tablet computers, PDF files, and new-fangled script software. No siree; Derek wanted paper copies of all scripts his clientele were considered for, in triplicate.  Luckily, Derek’s secretary, Arnold was a computer wiz and would get him out of any technical issues that were beyond him—like turning on the desktop computer!  

Derek was in his late fifties, ruddy-faced and sporting a blond wig that a certain horrible US president would probably arm-wrestle him for.  He had the body of a man who’d enjoyed far too many rich lunches on expenses, and spent too much time on his arse behind a desk.  

Derek met Tom’s keen gaze.  “I got you a sweet deal under the circumstances.  Five weeks at three thousand per week.  There’ll be two weeks rehearsal at two grand a week too”, Derek explained, “They were delighted at the chance to have the man who played the famous Detective Fox on their team.” 

Tom’s eyes widened at the thought of that kind of money.  It was a decent salary, and with the offers drying up after the social media furor from the tabloid stories, it would be very welcome.  His credit cards were maxed-out, and he’d been considering selling his Chelsea riverside apartment to make ends meet.  

Tom stared at his agent and noticed the shifty look in his eyes.  Suddenly, he felt uneasy.  Who would want him so badly without an audition?  What the hell was this gig?

“Look, I’ve told you a million times, I am NOT doing panto,” Tom scowled. 

“Would I do that to you?  Would I?”  Derek simpered, sounding wounded.  There was a lull for a moment while both men eyed one another suspiciously before Derek said “I’ll have you know that I believe Panto is a wonderful British tradition.  But, it’s not a pantomime, okay?” 

“Jesus, just tell me… is it a sitcom or a movie?  Please don’t say it’s a reality show; you know I’d rather crawl over broken glass than appear on one of those.”  

Tom was always very picky about his roles, and so far this stubbornness had paid off.  But now he was exasperated, teetering on the edge of agreeing to anything just to have something to take his mind off what a clusterfuck his life had become.  Three grand a week for five weeks solid work was not to be sniffed at. 

“As I said,” Derek continued, “The client would be delighted to have the Famous Detective on board.  They thought it would be a great theme to follow—” Derek took a deep rattling breath and then launched over the cliff…“—in investigating who’s been naughty and who’s been nice.” 

An icy shiver ran down Tom’s spine.  He was a Royal Shakespeare Company-trained actor, for God’s sake. 

“You have got to be fucking joking!” Tom roared in his best Detective Fox voice.  Derek held his hands up in surrender to try and placate his client.  

Tom’s anger melted away “Has it really got THAT bad?”  Derek gave a tight-lipped shrug.  

“Oh, Gawd.”  Tom rested his head in his hands, and a wave of depression engulfed him.  

He was officially a failure. 

“Hold your horses; hear me out, Tom.  Have I ever let you down?  Well, have I?”

Tom didn’t even attempt a reply.  

“It’s a good gig,” Derek insisted. ”The starring role of Santa for the Hambling’s Department Store Christmas extravaganzahh.” The agent delivered theatrically.  There was a long silence, as if Derek was waiting for his ta-da moment.  It never came. Tom just looked at him blankly with those scarily dark eyes. 

“Hambling’s—err, Tom, you must know Hambling’s?”  Derek said nervously to fill the awkward silence. 

“Of course, I bloody know Hambling’s,” Tom spat. “It’s London’s most expensive, exclusive department store.” 

“Le Blanc did it two years ago—and The Hoff took the gig last year.  You should be honored, seriously.  They even want you to choose your supporting cast.  Isn’t that great?  You wouldn’t have to deal with any arseholes who’d run to the papers.  Hambling’s has said they’ll make all of the applicants sign confidentiality agreements.  They have top-notch security.  If you take the job, they’ll give you carte blanche.” 

“Supporting cast,” Tom blurted disdainfully “Don’t make me laugh. You mean Elves.” he huffed.

“Come on Tom, will you do it?” Derek pleaded. 

“It’s either this, panto or I don’t know.  Have you considered teaching?”  He exhaled, exasperated. “You can’t go on like this.  And, though it pains me to say, seeing you mope around the place, it’s not good for business, and it’s not good for your brand.  Did you see the Daily Mail on Tuesday?  Apparently, Tom Lewis ‘cut a lonesome figure, much like the character he’s famous for.”  

“I was shopping for groceries for Christ’s sake,” Tom roared indignantly “Who the hell is full of the joys of spring when they’re shopping for toilet roll and detergent?”  Tom threaded his hands through his thick, dark hair, slumped back on the couch, and then pulled the red velvet cushion back over his face. 

There was no way in hell Tom would lower himself to dressing in a red, padded Santa suit.  He’d worked hard to become a serious actor, and he’d worked harder on his washboard abs.  He’d taken sword fighting lessons, learned to ride a horse, and spent years perfecting his range of accents.  Detective Fox was a deeply troubled soul who'd ‘seen too much’, and Tom had dug deep to find the wounded, loner Dick who always solved the case—and had no idea just how devastatingly attractive women found him.  

The last series of the show ended with a cliffhanger.  The actor who’d played his sidekick, Banks, had been shooting his mouth off on set and causing trouble amongst the cast so, in the show, he was killed off, and Fox never discovered whodunit.  The storyline was supposed to be continued as a sub-plot for the new season as Fox tirelessly searched for clues as to who killed his partner. 

Tom was sure he’d be back on the show sometime in September, but now the producer was saying it would happen after the New Year, and they would have a less troublesome actor lined up to be the new sidekick.  But then there were whispers in the press about recasting Detective Fox, too, and until the producers made a decision, Tom Lewis was in limbo, twiddling his thumbs.  

Tom came to a decision.  He could not take a role as Santa, not for anyone, no, no, no.  Talking about Christmas made him realize that he had no plans for the holidays this year.  He was a forty-five-year-old, single, unemployed actor, and in all honesty, he would probably be alone on Christmas Day, drowning his sorrows in a bottle of Bombay Sapphire Gin and a tub of ice cream.  It was the most pathetic situation he could imagine.  Tom’s closest friends had families or plans to jet off to warmer climes.  Tom could barely afford a meal out these days.  He would probably get sympathy invites, but the thought of spending the holidays with other people's screaming kids was not a welcome one.  Tom could take or leave children—leave them, mostly.  He wondered idly if all actors who’d played Santa Claus secretly hated kids eventually.  

Tom pondered for a moment longer.  Was he really suited to play Santa Claus?  Of course, he could play Santa, he was an actor, a professional, for goodness sake, and a friendly old man in a fat suit was well within his range.  It would be good to have a reason to get out of bed in the morning, and seven weeks work for nearly twenty grand—now that would see me comfortably into the New Year.  

If Tom took the role, he would do it his way.  He lay there on his very patient agent's couch and thought about actors he’d admired who‘d played Father Christmas.  There was Fred Astaire, and Richard Attenborough, and, more recently Tom Hanks and John Goodman.  Lots of successful actors played the big guy, and it hadn’t damaged their careers.

Tom pulled the cushion away from his face and took a deep breath.  He grimaced morosely, and then said, “Damn it—tell them I’ll do it.  But there’ll be no one-to-one.  No hugs.  No photography.  I’m not having stranger’s kids sitting on my knee, and suing me in twenty years for ruining their childhoods.” 

Derek gave a deep gravely laugh. “Atta Boy.” he cheered “I knew you’d say yes.  It’s all been arranged.  Auditions are on Friday.” 




Ellie Thomas
Ellie Thomas lives by the sea. She comes from a teaching background and goes for long seaside walks where she daydreams about history. She is a voracious reader especially about anything historical. She mainly writes historical romance.

Ellie also writes historical erotic romance under the pen name L. E. Thomas.










RJ Scott
Writing love stories with a happy ever after – cowboys, heroes, family, hockey, single dads, bodyguards

USA Today bestselling author RJ Scott has written over one hundred romance books. Emotional stories of complicated characters, cowboys, single dads, hockey players, millionaires, princes, bodyguards, Navy SEALs, soldiers, doctors, paramedics, firefighters, cops, and the men who get mixed up in their lives, always with a happy ever after.

She lives just outside London and spends every waking minute she isn’t with family either reading or writing. The last time she had a week’s break from writing, she didn’t like it one little bit, and she has yet to meet a box of chocolates she couldn’t defeat.








Isobel Starling
Isobel Starling loves writing M/M thrillers, mysteries, fantasy, and historical books. With over 50 titles, she's a #1 bestselling author in the USA, UK, France, and Germany. As well as English, German and French, her books are also available in Italian, and Spanish. 

Isobel runs Decent Fellows Press, where she produces audiobooks by John Wiltshire, Anna Butler, LJ Hayward and Harper Fox. Of the 50 audiobooks Isobel has produced, 45 of those are with the multi-award-winning narrator Gary Furlong.

So far, Decent Fellows Press has won the Independent Audiobook Award for Romance 2018, and has one title nomination for the SOVAS (Society of Voice Arts and Sciences) Award 2021 - Thriller Category. 

Isobel is totally against the use of #AI. She does not use AI generated cover art or any AI apps for book content. If you purchase books and audiobooks produced by Isobel you'll be getting a 100% authentic product, (Occasional pesky typos and all!) 

For audiobooks Decent Fellows Press will always choose #realhumanvoice #noAI




Ellie Thomas
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Isobel Starling


The Business of Christmas by Ellie Thomas

The Magic of Midnight by RJ Scott

Detective Fox by Isobel Starling
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