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Introduction: Secrets In The Sand by Anne C. West (Marvellous Mysteries) Story 1

Look out for the 1st instalment in this 1st story in the Marvellous Mysteries series. My new series of mystery short stories in quirky towns at the coast.

The next episode will go live every Sunday for the next few weeks.

The prologue will be free and after that it will be password protected. Subscribers to my newsletter have access to the passwords for all posts in my #BlogAStory series here on my blog.

My newsletter subscribers received first dibs of the whole story yesterday and I’m so happy about the feedback I’m receiving.

Since this story is unedited with basic spelling and grammar checking done, you as readers are welcome to highlight any problems you have with character development, plot holes, etc. I appreciate every comment and opinion.

If you’re the reader of cozies or mysteries, this short story is for you.

Below is the blurb and prologue, also a work in progress. Let me know what you think.

Cheers!

***

Secrets in the Sand

A Sweet & Cozy Coastal Mystery with Heart

In the quaint coastal town of Saltford Bay, where the gulls gossip and the waves seem to remember everything, Nona Puckle discovers more than just seashells on her morning beach stroll — she finds a cryptic message scrawled in the sand:

“Tell Vera. I forgive you.”

Known for her curious collection of seaside oddities (and her unapologetically mismatched shoes), Nona can’t let it go. With the reluctant help of her practical friend Bree and the ever-dapper Charles Alexander-Worthington the Fourth, she sets off to unravel the mystery behind the words.

What begins as an odd curiosity quickly leads them into a decades-old tale of lost love, long-buried secrets, and the heartache of a family torn apart by a stormy night in 1982. As they piece together the clues — a forgotten photograph, a hidden letter, and whispers of a secret child — the friends must confront the truth about forgiveness, the cost of silence, and the unexpected ways the past can reach across time.

Brimming with warmth, wit, and heartfelt discovery, Secrets in the Sand is a delightful short read about friendship, redemption, and the kind of small-town mystery that lingers like salt on the air.

Perfect for readers who enjoy:

✅ Cozy mysteries with heart and humour

✅ Sweet, clean storytelling with emotional depth

✅ Quirky characters with unforgettable charm

If you love stories by Jeanne M. Dams, Nancy Atherton, or Richard Osman — or simply enjoy a beachside mystery with heart — you’ll adore Secrets in the Sand.

Prelogue

The morning begins the way it always does in Saltford Bay: with seagulls squawking their grievances, the salty tang of the sea clinging to everything, and Nona Puckle traipsing down the beach in her odd shoes — one red, one yellow, both purposefully mismatched. Life is too surprising, just to be drained of colour by predictability

Nona is Saltford’s unofficial collector of oddities. Whether it’s a message in a bottle, a spoon carved from whale bone, or a questionable photograph of a man in a feathered boa — she finds it. She’s not young, but not yet middle-aged either, that odd place in time where one can still be referred to as ‘eccentric’ rather than ‘batty.’ And Nona likes it that way.

This morning, however, promises more than just tide-washed treasures. For as she bends to inspect what she thinks might be a shattered teacup, she notices something carved into the damp sand — not footprints, not doodles left by a child’s stick, but something deliberate:

‘Tell Vera. I forgive you.’

She straightens slowly, her hand still hovering mid-air. Then, as if she’s afraid the sea might reach out and gobble up the words, she crouches and scribbles the message into her pocket notebook — the one with a flamingo on the cover and suspicious tea stains.

Behind her, a voice cuts through the salty breeze.

‘Do you always crouch like that on public beaches? People might talk.’

It’s Bree Foster — breezy by name, breezy by nature. Bree is Saltford’s resident realist. Practical, punctual, and permanently in linen, she runs the town’s only art supply store and has never once purchased glitter.

Nona doesn’t look up. ‘Someone left a message. In the sand.’

‘Maybe it was for someone walking by. Or a prank.’

‘Then why would it still be here after high tide?’

Bree sighs. ‘What are you dragging me into this time?’

From the promenade steps comes the unmistakable clack of polished leather loafers. Enter Charles Alexander-Worthington the Fourth — though everyone in town just calls him Charles, which he allows with great magnanimity.

Charles is tall, perpetually overdressed for seaside weather, and maintains the air of someone who once considered becoming a duke but found the logistics tiresome.

‘Ladies,’ he says, nodding as though accepting a medal, ‘I had the peculiar sense I was needed.’

‘You weren’t,’ Bree replies.

‘But you are,’ says Nona, eyes alight with that peculiar gleam that makes Bree feel she’ll end the day with sand in her shoes and guilt in her heart.

*****

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Throwback Thursday: The Story Behind the Story: A Day of Celebration

There Are So Many Books I Want to Write

There’s always a story behind the story that authors write.

Sometimes, it’s something you witness firsthand at a coffee shop—like a look, a murmur, or the way someone stirs their coffee when they’re nervous. Sometimes, it’s a dream your child tells you—half-wild, half-brilliant, and brimming with possibility. And sometimes, it’s the embodiment of rage you feel towards someone who’s wronged you.

But the point is, stories always have an origin story. That’s the most fascinating part for me.

I once listened to an interview with Bella Andre, the incredibly successful romance author. She said she often has two or three books already fully formed in her head, just from ideas she got out of the blue.

It sounds like a flippant thing, doesn’t it? Like some people are just “blessed with ideas.” But here’s the thing: the ideas we have for books will always have roots in real-life experience. Always.

What fascinates me about this fact is how our perspective—not just the experience, but the way we see and process that experience—shapes the stories. Moulds them. Lets them grow. I believe Bella Andre just sits down and writes her stories, fully formed. So there’s clearly another layer of evolution that happens in the process of writing itself.

Isn’t that just fascinating?


What Inspired the First One

The first story I officially published was the short story A Day of Celebration.

It was by no means the first short story I ever wrote. More like the thousandth. But it was the first one I had the guts to put out into the world.

And the story behind that story? That comes from real life.

I’ve not written about this before, so here goes.

A Day of Celebration was inspired by the time my husband was diagnosed with cancer. We were in our twenties—newly married, new parents—and out of the blue, we had to deal with the Big C.

I’ve written a lot about life experiences—the good and the bad. But that experience? That one shaped everything. We were thrown into a whirlwind of doctors and medicine and hospitals and treatments and a whole horde of protocols. We were so young. It was a beast to deal with.

This was decades before the enormous self-care and mental health movement started going mainstream. So what did we do?

We just got on with the shit. Life happened, and I pulled up my big girl panties and got the work done. That’s what you did back then.

I got up. Went to work. Raised our son, who’d just turned two. Nursed my husband after the operation and chemo. Tried to negotiate and understand all the medical mumbo jumbo. All while thinking, “I’m too young to be a widow.”

Because of all the things I imagined at twenty-five, “widow” was never one of them.

Years later, I sat down to finally try and write out those feelings—feelings I felt, but never really processed. There was panic. Overwhelm. Fatigue. Relief. Confusion. Sadness. And more.

It started as a journaling session—back before I even understood what journaling was. I tried to catch what I could, and instead of writing it from my point of view, I wrote it from a character’s perspective.

When I read this story now, I can feel the flatness. The deadness. The numbness I felt when I wrote it.

An editor once read the story and said it was terrible. “No emotion, no feeling,” she told me. And she wanted me to change it.

But I said no.
I wanted it to be “bad.”
I wanted it to be dead.
I wanted it to be numb.

Because that’s what it was. That’s what it felt like.


About the Story

In A Day of Celebration, a little bit of my realism, pessimism, and natural negativity is pretty real.

Maggie is probably based on me. When you meet her, she’s numb. Then again, she stays numb throughout the story.

Because here’s the truth: when you go through big life events, you don’t just bounce back once everything is magically okay again.

Then there’s Stanley. He’s very much based on my husband. He could do many things while recovering, long before my brain could even register that he wasn’t an invalid anymore.

As for the financial impact of everything, we do touch on that here and there. In the story, Maggie and Stanley’s medical journey is a dream. We still believed in mainstream medicine like it was gospel. But over time, we learned there are alternatives.

So when I wrote this, I found myself fantasising about everything I’d learned in the decade and a half after the fact. Funny how that happens.

Hubby and I love walking and hiking. We love parks and park benches. So writing this felt like a little throwback to life before the Big C. And a glimpse into what might be possible after it. You’ll spot a park bench on the book cover.

Even though those things we loved together still exist, there’s a grey hue now. A few cracks. And it’s still there. To this day.


Ask yourself today… 🤔✨

I would say there’s 3 things to me at this time:

  • meditation
  • journaling
  • therapy 😉

What does your self-care look like this season? Let me know in the comments👇

Your turn! 💬📚

#autumnchat #LetMeKnow #ReaderConnection

Here’s the Blurb

She struggles to find foods that he can tolerate after chemotherapy has destroyed his appetite. As she experiments with different recipes and supplements, she discovers a whole new world of alternative treatments. The couple’s relationship with their oncologist deteriorates, and they move away from mainstream medical options. Despite the costs and the toll it takes on her, she perseveres, taking things one day at a time.

In this heartwarming story, the woman finds hope and joy in the small victories, even as she faces the reality of her husband’s illness.

When a loved one lives with sickness, in most cases, those closest to them are the ones suffering more. In silence. We stand by as treatment fails. We witness how our beloved partner, child, parent dwindles to a shadow. Hope slowly ebbs from our bones.

But sometimes, hope flows back. Sometimes, the promise of being whole, happy, and alive again nudges us forward. And that’s what happened to Sarah when she received a life-changing phone call.


Where You Can Read It

This story is available everywhere books are sold.
But here’s a UNIVERSAL LINK so you can choose your favourite store.

I’m especially proud that you can buy it directly from me in my AUTHOR SHOP, or you can read it as part of my password-protected BLOG A STORY section—if you’re subscribed to my newsletter.

At some stage, the #BAS posts will move to the membership section of my site. But until then—please enjoy.


That’s It for Today

The new blogging challenge—the third one since I started daily blogging—suggested that Thursdays be a form of throwback.

And what better way to throw back than to tell you about the stories I’ve published?

That’s it from me for today.

Until tomorrow, then.

Cheers,
Anne

**Please send me an email with your feedback at anne@annecwest.co.za. Comments vanish and get missed, hence emails.**