Today I’m sharing the cover and blurb for A Distant Moon Ago, my new Kingsmill Courtships novella which will be included in the Once & Nevermore Camelot Anthology. This anthology comes out in May, and I’m still waiting for a preorder link and exact date. Meanwhile there is an awesome website where you can learn more about all of the authors and their stories, including A Distant Moon Ago which is a contemporary retelling of Percival and The Grail Question.

A Distant Moon Ago
Two scarred souls rediscover the road that leads them home… only to learn it’s the hardest ride of all.
Six years after a betrayal left Eve Mosby emotionally scarred, she’s rebuilt a life in Kingsmill, VA, deep in the Shenandoah Mountains, with newborn twins and a husband who keeps secrets. When the Devil’s Renegades outlaw MC shows signs of regrouping and a frightened teen is chosen for an initiation at Kingsmill’s old mill, Eve pieces together a truth her husband Kane hasn’t shared—the MC has asked Kane to return as their president.
Now, under moonlight and between river rapids, she must decide whether to stand behind Kane’s shield or stand beside him as he wrestles with the club he once led and the life he’s desperate to leave behind.
This is a story of a town built on dynasties and danger, of a wife who won’t be protected into silence and of a man who must choose between the patch he once wore and the family he nearly lost. When the mill’s ritual begins at midnight Eve’s answer will determine who survives the night and whether love can fix what blood and loyalty broke.
This novella will be included in the Once and Never More Anthology coming May 2026!

Once & Nevermore
Camelot was never just a kingdom. It was an idea. Across eras and genres—contemporary, mafia, romantasy, high fantasy, and more — this multi-author anthology reimagines the legends of Arthur, Guinevere, Merlin, the Round Table, and beyond in stories where power is contested, love is dangerous, and destiny refuses to stay buried.
Some Camelots rise. Some are tested. Some are reborn in unexpected forms. Each tale stands alone. Together, they prove one thing: The legend of Camelot is not finished. It’s evolving.