Riversent

Darkly cosy, softly romantic, and full of ancient myth.

The Riversent series is a series of interconnected stories set in the world of Esk.

Each can be read as standalone, though it is recommended to read them in order.

Companion Novella (2025)

Untitled Book Two (2026)

All Woven With Ivy

a fantasy romance

Bi M/F with soft academia, scholar x socialite, and Orpheus & Eurydice undertones.

“I go places only the dead would easily go, or so they say.”

He's as glittering and enchanting as the ballrooms he commands.  She is as shadowed and quiet as the catacombs she studies. And yet his gaze finds her through every crowd. 

Historian Zanthi Ilyston has never been likeable. She is too quiet, too plain and her strange eyes, while they allow her to see the unseen, unnerve others. All she wants is to disappear into a quiet life of research. Madoc Casca, heir to the famed healing Gardens, and Esk’s most notorious socialite, has other plans. He needs her help.

The healing waters of the Gardens are failing, and the secret to saving them is hidden in an ancient myth that refuses to be remembered. As she delves deeper into the dark waters of the past, her quiet life becomes as impossible to reclaim as Madoc is to ignore. He is everything she has never let herself want, but if she can't untangle the secrets of a forgotten history, she might lose him forever.

 Because there is very little Madoc won’t sacrifice for his Gardens, and if the healing waters vanish into darkness, Madoc will too.

All Woven With Ivy is a fantasy romance with light academia, medium stakes, darkly cosy vibes, Orpheus & Eurydice undertones, and a glittering society steeped with the creeping unease of underworld myth. 
It is the first book in the interconnected and overlapping Riversent series. Each book follows a different couple and has a HEA.

  • Open door/fade-to-grey sex scenes between consenting adults, drinking, swearing, ritual death, poison, mild consensual non-monogamy, mentions of parental death, fantasy religion, mild violence, emesis, and drowning. The story has Orpheus & Eurydice themes, and so includes death and the underworld.

    A note about the romance: the love interest is a flirt, and his social nature and professional duties have him occasionally kissing a pretty face. No boundaries are crossed, no feelings are hurt, and consent and expectations are communicated. If this is a hard no for your reading tastes, this book might not be the best fit.