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Mermaid Beach

Moonlight Harbor Series Book 7

by Sheila Roberts

Publisher: MIRA

Pages: 384

Genre: Womenโ€™s Fiction/Romance

Blurb:

Bonnie Brinks and her all-woman band, The Mermaids, are the pride of Moonlight Harbor. They’re the house band at The Drunken Sailor, and that’s just the right amount of fame for Bonnie. A lifetime ago, she went to Nashville to make it big, but she returned home with a broken heart and broken dreams. Now she’s got a comfortable life and a brilliant daughter, Avril, who plays for The Mermaids alongside Bonnie and Bonnie’s mother, Loretta. 

Avril has big dreams of her own. Her life in Moonlight Harbor is good–she loves singing and playing guitar with The Mermaids, and she has the sweetest, most loyal boyfriend a girl could ask for–but it all feels so…small. She can’t help wondering if there’s something more out there for her. And she doesn’t understand why her mom won’t support her going to Nashville to find out. 

Meanwhile, Bonnie threw in the towel on her love life long ago, but Loretta sure hasn’t. She’s determined to be swept off her feet, and she wants the same for her daughter. When the hunky new owner of The Drunken Sailor turns the tables on the band and Avril announces she’s leaving Moonlight Harbor, Bonnie’s comfortable life seems to be drifting away. Will these three generations of Mermaids find their happy endings on the Washington coast? Or will the change in the winds leave them all shipwrecked?

“Blooming with heartfelt charm and swoon-worthy moments…” Womanโ€™s World Magazine

Release Date: April 25, 2023

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*****

Excerpt:

LOVE AT FIRST SIGHT? MEET J.J. AND BONNIE

It was a pleasant ride to the beach. Once he was off I-5 he was on highways that took him through stands of evergreens and logging towns with small houses, many of them forty years old, many of which were being refurbished.

Then he hit Moonlight Harbor with its crazy stone pillars at the entrance, still standing from when the town was first developed in the sixties. The place was a mixture of funky old and upbeat new, the buildings from both eras catering to visitors with restaurants, moped rentals, shops and a fun plex that offered bumper cars and go-carts for entertainment. A family of deer grazed on the grass in the meridian between the two one-way streets running through the town.

Another ten minutes and he was pulling into the driveway of Leeโ€™s beach digs, a three-bedroom rambler with rock for lawn encased in a white picket fence. Lee and his wife were ready for him with a proper Thanksgiving leftover meal of turkey sandwiches, dressing and gravy, and cranberry sauce. Seeing the way they looked at each other about gave him heartburn. 

His ex had looked at him like that about a million years ago. Stupid, fool him. He was a walking morality tale, an example of what happened when a man wound up married to his job instead of his woman. If only sheโ€™d given him a fair chance to right that ship. 

โ€œHowโ€™s your sandwich?โ€ Glinda asked.

โ€œGreat,โ€ he said. โ€œThanks. And thanks for inviting me down.โ€

โ€œSometimes a manโ€™s gotta get some new scenery,โ€ said Lee.

After they ate Glinda made them clean up the kitchen and left to check on things at the pub for Lee and hang out with some girlfriends. 

โ€œSheโ€™s a great woman,โ€ J.J. said. 

โ€œThat she is,โ€ agreed Lee. โ€œTheyโ€™re still out there, dude.โ€

J.J. gave a cynical chuckle. โ€œYeah, Iโ€™m holding my breath.โ€

โ€œWhile youโ€™re holding your breath letโ€™s play some cribbage. Tomorrow Iโ€™ll take you out to eat.โ€

They settled down with whiskey and cards and it was a pleasant evening. It sure beat sitting around the condo wondering if he ought to check out an internet dating site.

Saturday found him out on the beach in boots and a thick jacket with his buddy, working a clam gun to capture the elusive razor clam. A weak sun was out and the sand was damp and muddy and the air was crisp. A perfect day. They werenโ€™t the only ones who thought so. The beach was thick with people, all in search of the same delight. 

โ€œYou should move down here,โ€ Lee said, as he tossed a clam in their bucket. He wasnโ€™t much taller than J.J. and was built like a tank. In their college days heโ€™d mowed down his opponents on the football field just like one. Heโ€™d gotten his education thanks to a college scholarship. J.J. had waited tables and worked in restaurant kitchens. Glinda had already informed him he would be in charge of making the clam chowder for lunch.

โ€œYeah? So I can grow moss like you? Itโ€™s always wet.โ€

โ€œNot in the summer.โ€

โ€œYeah, well let me know when you figure out how to make it summer all year long,โ€ J.J. said.

โ€œOh, come on. You know you loved it when we went over to Westhaven and went fishing.โ€

โ€œJust thinking about that halibut we caught makes my mouth water,โ€ J.J. said.

โ€œFishing, clamming, kayaking on the canals, golfing โ€“ itโ€™s the life.โ€

J.J. brushed the sand off his hands and studied his friend. โ€œWhy do I feel like Iโ€™m sitting in on a time share pitch?โ€

Lee shrugged and chuckled. โ€œJust sayinโ€™ itโ€™s a good life down here.โ€

โ€œFor you. You got a great wife and your daughters live nearby.โ€

Lee sobered. โ€œIt sucks that things went sideways with Eloise.โ€

โ€œItโ€™s been three years. Iโ€™m over it.โ€

โ€œYeah? You sure?โ€

โ€œSure Iโ€™m sure. My lifeโ€™s good. I like my freedom. Got no woman nagging me, no obligations.โ€

โ€œThat bad, huh?โ€

J.J. gave a rueful smile and shook his head. โ€œOkay, so itโ€™s not perfect.โ€

โ€œMaybe you need a change.โ€

โ€œOkay, whatโ€™s the hidden agenda?โ€

โ€œNo hidden agenda,โ€ Lee said and suddenly got busy checking to see if theyโ€™d reached their limit of clams.

Yep, there was a hidden agenda.

Glinda proved it when, after lunch she said, โ€œArenโ€™t you tired of city living yet, J.J.?โ€

He set down his glass of beer and looked from one to the other. โ€œSpill, you two. Whatโ€™s up?โ€

They exchanged guilty looks. โ€œWell,โ€ Lee said, โ€œJust thought you might be interested in a new business opportunity.โ€

โ€œOh, no. You got sucked into a pyramid scheme,โ€ J.J. said in horror. 

Lee made a face. โ€œNo.โ€

โ€œThe pubโ€™s failing. You need a silent partner. No problem.โ€ It would be the least he could do. Heโ€™d helped his buddy get into this mess.

J.J. had come down to Moonlight Harbor ten years earlier when his pal had told him about the little beach town pub he wanted to buy, had looked over the books with Lee and the owner, then given it a thumbs up, although heโ€™d been concerned about Lee getting into the restaurant business. 

โ€œItโ€™s a tough business,โ€ heโ€™d cautioned. โ€œWhen you buy a restaurant, it owns you.โ€ He knew that from personal experience. 

โ€œI can make a go of it,โ€ Lee had said. โ€œWe want out of the city and Glindaโ€™s up for it.โ€

โ€œOkay, then,โ€ J.J. had said.

Heโ€™d shared his expertise with his friend and Lee had done okay. But they hadnโ€™t talked much in the last couple of years. Between getting divorced and getting his feet back under him J.J. had been a little distracted. Obviously, Leeโ€™s investment had gone south.

โ€œThe pubโ€™s doing great,โ€ Lee said. 

Well, so much for that conclusion. โ€œThen whatโ€™s up?โ€

โ€œWhatโ€™s up is that itโ€™s time to sell the business. The girls are grown and oneโ€™s had the nerve to move out of state. Glinda wants to start traveling.โ€

โ€œYou want your life back.โ€

Lee chuckled. โ€œSomething like that. I was thinking maybe you might want yours back, too.โ€

So this was where they were going. J.J. held up a hand. โ€œOh, no. No more restaurants. Too much work.โ€

โ€œYeah, and youโ€™re so busy.โ€

โ€œIโ€™ll admit Iโ€™m kind of at loose ends, but I donโ€™t think I want to work that hard.โ€

โ€œIโ€™ve already done all the hard work.โ€

โ€œYeah, right.โ€ When you owned a business, it owned you. And restaurants โ€ฆ

โ€œNever mind,โ€ said Lee. โ€œLetโ€™s go play some pool. You can check out the house band.โ€

โ€œYou got a house band? What are they, a bunch of grungy kids in their twenties?โ€

Lee smiled at that. โ€œNot quite. Itโ€™s a chick band.โ€

โ€œA chick band. Interesting. So, three grungy chicks in their twenties.โ€

โ€œNope. Mother, daughter and granddaughter. They had another but sheโ€™s off to Nashville to try and become a star. Theyโ€™re still good though, especially the lead singer. That woman sings like an angel, sometimes like a little devil. And she is something fine to look at. Theyโ€™ve really been packing in the crowds on the weekend.โ€

โ€œThatโ€™s good.โ€

โ€œThe place is doing well,โ€ said Lee. โ€œI know you shouldnโ€™t do business with friends, but since you were in the restaurant business and since youโ€™re the man with the business degree, I thought Iโ€™d give you first crack at it.โ€ He suddenly looked wistful. โ€œI kind of hate to let the place go. Itโ€™s like losing a part of me.โ€

J.J. nodded. โ€œI know how you feel. I hated to let go of my places. Did it all for nothing,โ€ he said bitterly.

His words brought on an awkward silence. He should have kept his shit to himself. He shook off the downer moment. โ€œLetโ€™s shoot some pool.โ€

โ€œGood idea,โ€ said Lee. โ€œAnd, J.J., I get you not wanting to get sucked into this business again. Iโ€™d have liked you to be the one who takes over The Drunken Sailor, but no worries. The right owner will show up.โ€

Maybe the right owner had showed up, J.J. thought as they drank beer and waited their turn at one of the pool tables. The place was packed. Lots of out of towners, but Lee said he had a ton of regulars who came in during the week as well. Line dancing lessons were offered on Sunday afternoons followed by line dancing. A lot of the old guys came in mid-week to play darts and Lee had recently started a Ladies night, with half-off on drinks on Tuesdays and pool lessons taught by some of the better players, including a guy named Seth Waters, who had been regular before he got married. According to Lee, he still came in to play pool on Sundays while his wife and her girlfriends line danced.

โ€œYouโ€™ve done a great job of making this the place to be,โ€ J.J. said as they moved to take their turn at a table that had opened up.

โ€œI like to think so,โ€ said Lee. โ€œThank God I got lots of good free advice from a pro when I first started.

โ€œWhat are friends for?โ€ J. J. responded. He selected a cue stick and chalked it up.

โ€œGo ahead and break,โ€ Lee said. 

J.J. took aim at the cue ball, sending it clacking into the others. He sunk one of the striped ones and then proceeded to clean the table.

โ€œSave some for me,โ€ Lee protested.

โ€œOh, yeah, I canโ€™t let you lose. It would hurt your delicate feelings,โ€ J.J. taunted.

โ€œAnd then Iโ€™d hurt your delicate nose,โ€ Lee shot back.

J.J. did miss the next ball. He stood back and let Lee take his turn.

It was the end of the game for him because he caught sight of a woman with long, red hair, a face that would launch a thousand ships, and legs that wouldnโ€™t quit walking into the place. She wore a short black leather jacket, hanging open to reveal a lowcut green top cover a very nice rack. Those fine legs were encased in tight jeans. She wore black boots that made him think of pirates and was carrying a guitar case. Holy Moly! Was that a member of the band Lee had told him about?

Lee caught him staring. โ€œThatโ€™s Bonnie Brinks, one of The Mermaids.โ€

โ€œI wouldnโ€™t mind hooking her on my line.โ€

โ€œFat chance. Sheโ€™s a smiling ice maiden. Been single for years.โ€

โ€œMaybe sheโ€™s tired of being single,โ€ J.J. mused.

โ€œDonโ€™t hold your breath. But hey, she sure dresses up the place.โ€

โ€œThat was probably about all she did. Lee had a tin ear. Heโ€™d probably hired the woman for her looks.

Behind her came a younger woman, tall like Bonnie but with darker coloring. Also a looker. And next to her walked a woman whoโ€™d never gotten the memo that she was a senior citizen, also wearing tight jeans and heels high enough to trip Tina Turner. She sported spiky white hair and the tips of the spikes were colored green. The mother. His mother sure didnโ€™t look like that. This woman probably had every old geezer in the place ready to take her out. With all three women being so striking maybe nobody cared what they sounded like.

โ€œHad enough pool?โ€ asked Lee.

โ€œI think Iโ€™ll go over to the bar and get another drink,โ€ J.J. said.

He snagged the last seat at the bar, one near the end next to a scruffy old dude in faded jeans and a peacoat, ordered another beer, and watched as the women tuned up. They couldnโ€™t sound as good as they looked.

โ€œThe bandโ€™s good,โ€ the old guy said. โ€œThey sing good, too,โ€ he said and chortled over his crack.

โ€œYou know them?โ€ J.J. asked.

โ€œOf course. Everybody knows everybody here,โ€ the old guy informed him.

โ€œLooks like this is a popular place,โ€ J.J. observed.

โ€œBest burgers in town. Plus they have a senior menu.โ€

Lee came up behind J.J., hovering like a salesman in a used car lot. โ€œHey there, Pete. I see youโ€™ve met my pal J.J. This is Pete,โ€ Lee said to J.J. โ€œHeโ€™s one of our regulars. He won our last darts tournament.โ€

โ€œBeat out all the young pups,โ€ Pete bragged. โ€œYou play darts?โ€ he asked J.J.

โ€œDonโ€™t take the bait,โ€ said Lee. โ€œHeโ€™ll just sucker you into a friendly wager and take your shirt.โ€

โ€œAw, there you go, spoilinโ€™ my fun,โ€ Pete complained.

A full house and steady patrons. It would be kind of cool to own this pub. A lot of work and time consuming, but it wasnโ€™t like he had much going on in his life anyway other than some day trading, hitting the gym and reading. In the last year heโ€™d bought enough books to stock a small library. He needed something more to do. Lately, he felt like he was drifting with no purpose, no adventure on the horizon. What kind of adventures could he have here in Moonlight Harbor?

At nine on the dot the hot redhead stepped up to the mike and said, โ€œHey everyone, letโ€™s get this party started.โ€ She looked back at the granny on the drums, who began to bang her drumsticks together, counting off the beat, then the young girl hit the bass and the redhead began to bend those guitar strings all to hell. People rushed to the dance floor as she started to sing. โ€œGet off your chair and get out here and shake your booty. You gotta start this party, so get out there and do your duty.โ€

J.J.โ€™s heart went into overdrive. This place was a goldmine and Bonnie Brinks was the gold. What a voice! The woman was a super star. He wondered what she was doing buried in the sand of a small beach town.

โ€œSo whaddya think? The place is a good investment, right?โ€

โ€œIโ€™d say so,โ€ said J.J. โ€œLooks like the band is bringing in a lot of customers.โ€

โ€œWe had a lot of customers even before the band,โ€ Lee said. โ€œPeople want to eat at a casual place with lots of atmosphere when theyโ€™re at the beach.โ€

โ€œYou definitely got the atmosphere,โ€ J.J. said. The goofy carved pirate statues were an obvious hit. Heโ€™d seen several people taking pictures with them. The pool tables had been in constant use since theyโ€™d walked in and the beer was flowing. Lee did have a going concern. The band and dance floor were a bonus. And what a bonus it was.

The women finally went on break, the older one stopping at a table to say hello to some people. The younger one went to plop down next to a super -sized young buck at a table near the band stand where a glass of pop was already waiting. A boyfriend, of course. The guitar queen headed for the bar, stopping for a quick word here and there, deflecting a fat lounge lizard, nodding and smiling at something another patron said.

She came up to the end of the bar next to J. J. and Lee. โ€œGreat job as always, Bonnie,โ€ Lee said.

โ€œThanks,โ€ she said. Then to the bartender, โ€œGot my Diet Coke, Madison?โ€

โ€œOn its way,โ€ the woman said and got busy getting her drink.

โ€œYouโ€™ve got a great band,โ€ J. J. said to Bonnie.

โ€œThanks, we try,โ€ she said. Her smile was stop sign. Not Interested so donโ€™t even try.

What did he look like? Some middle-aged, desperate horn toad? He was just being friendly. There was no need to give him the ice treatment. 

He decided to turn the charm up a notch. โ€œI always wanted to meet a mermaid.โ€

โ€œNow you have,โ€ she told him, still with the stop sign smile. The bartender set down her glass and Bonnie thanked her, the ice melting from her smile. But it was back again for J.J. โ€œTry the garlic fries here,โ€ she said to him. โ€œTheyโ€™re great.โ€ Then she left before he could get in another word.

Mermaids were not so easy to catch. 

โ€œDonโ€™t put her on the welcoming committee,โ€ J.J. muttered.

โ€œTold ya,โ€ said Lee.

Slick and charming and no ring on his finger, which, considering his age which she figured to be somewhere around hers, probably had to mean heโ€™d ditched a wife somewhere along the way, Bonnie decided as she walked to the band table. With those blue eyes and that red hair and matching, neatly trimmed beard, he looked like some kind of troubadour from the Elizabethan era. Add broad shoulders and a well sculpted chest and he was a regular pheromone factory. 

And that stupid line about catching a mermaid. Oh, yes, he was a charmer.

Who did that remind her of? Rance Jackson, of course. 

Letโ€™s get to know him, urged her sex-starved hormones.

Not happening, she informed them. This was the kind of man who broke hearts โ€“ trouble in Levis. There would be no getting to know him.

Put a Mr. Yuck sticker on him and stay far away.

*****

Review:

Mermaid Beach definitely falls more into the women’s fiction category than romance. Yes, the characters get their HEA, and it is a very satisfying one, but the story is really about them finding their way. The three generations that make up our story are all immensely talented musicians, but life seems to have other plans for them.

Loretta met the love of her life and settled down to raise a family. Widowed at an early age, she hasn’t given up on finding someone new to share her life with. Bonnie tried to make a go of it in Nashville, but betrayal sent her home, vowing to never trust another man again. Avril is ready to give Nashville a try, regardless of what her mother says, but can she leave everything from the life she’s made in Moonlight Harbor behind.

Loretta’s zest for life and willingness to find the positive in everything makes her my favorite, I think. She’s so spunky and so brave about putting herself out there. And the love and encouragement she shows her daughter & granddaughter at every turn is the best. Bonnie might be a bit harder for some to take as she’s not an easy woman and has definitely let her past bring her down but with a little faith and support, she will find her way. Avril has had that support from both her mother and grandmother, so she heads off on her adventures with a pretty solid head on her shoulders. It gives her the courage to reach for her dreams and the ability to recognize the right thing to do.

Following the lives of our Mermaids has us going at a bit slower pace. Things are pretty complicated for all of them, with lots of bumps and surprises along the way, but it’s a good journey. One of self-discovery, facing the past AND the future, and figuring out what would truly bring them happiness. It’s not easy to take chances and to trust in others, but with friends and family behind them these three just might figure out what they really want.

(This is my first in the Moonlight Harbor series and while it easily stands alone, I know there are a lot of people that I would know more about if I’d read the other stories. It didn’t impact anything, just gave me a feeling that there’s more going on here that I’m not aware of.)

*****

Author Info:

USA Today and Publishers Weekly best-selling author Sheila Roberts has written over fifty books under various names, ranging from romance to self-improvement. Over three million books have been sold to date. Her humor and heart have won her a legion of fans and her novels have been turned into movies for both the Lifetime and Hallmark channels. When sheโ€™s not out dancing with her husband or hanging out with her girlfriends, she can be found writing about those things near and dear to womenโ€™s hearts: family, friends and chocolate.

Website: http://www.sheilasplace.comย 

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/funwithsheila/ย 

Tiktok: https://www.tiktok.com/@sheilarobertswriter

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/sheilarobertswriter/

*****