
Swoony · Funny · Magical · Heartwarming · Charming
These fairy godmothers are very good at granting everyone else’s happily-ever-afters.
Their own? Absolutely hopeless.
Whether it’s turning up magically pregnant in a city called Chicago or spending sixteen years visiting the boy she loves for exactly one day a year — the fairy godmothers of this series have a talent for impossible situations, fish-out-of-water chaos, and falling for exactly the person they were never supposed to touch.
Sweet, funny, genuinely emotional, and impossible to put down. This is the series readers keep comparing to Disney’s Enchanted — and they’re not wrong.
Happily Ever After? Not Exactly. — two fairy godmothers, two impossible love stories, zero rule-following
Clean, cozy, and completely charming — fairy tale romance for readers who still believe in magic. Each book stands alone, features a different couple, and can be read in any order. Start wherever calls to you.

Book 1 – Stand-Alone
Hidden
Magically pregnant from a dream. The father’s human. How many men named John could possibly live in Chicago?
Ciera has spent her entire career granting wishes and proving herself in a world that underestimates purple fairies. She’s earned her title. She’s earned her reputation.
And she’s about to lose everything — because she’s pregnant. With a human baby.
In the fairy realm, that’s not just a scandal. It’s grounds for losing her magic, her status, and everything she’s worked for. Which means Ciera has exactly one option: find the baby’s father in a little village called Chicago before her glamour spell fails completely, hand over the child, and get back home like none of this ever happened.
Simple enough. After all, how many men named John could possibly live there?
A lot, as it turns out. A bewildering, overwhelming, magicless lot.
Hidden pregnancy · Portal fantasy · Fish out of water · Unlikely pairing · Sweet paranormal romance · Standalone
Book 2 – Stand-Alone
Trapped
One day a year. Sixteen years of waiting. This birthday changes everything.
For sixteen years, Mila has used her birthday wish the same way — to spend one perfect day with Lincoln, the human boy who saved her life. He was nine when they met. Now he’s twenty-five, broad-shouldered, kind-eyed, and completely off-limits.
Fairy godmothers don’t fall in love with humans. They definitely don’t visit the forbidden human world every year in secret. And they absolutely do not spend the other three hundred and sixty-four days of the year thinking about a man they can never have.
Mila has broken every one of those rules.
This birthday, she’s finally going to tell Lincoln the truth.
Except Lincoln has news of his own. He’s getting married.
Friends to lovers · Forbidden romance · Slow burn · Secret love · Impossible love · Childhood friends · Standalone


FREE Short Story
The Fairy Flu
A short story (included in the Quick Escape Short Story Collection) set in the fairy realm.
A sick fairy confronts a childhood rival who threatens the kingdom. Free with newsletter signup — the perfect amuse-bouche before you dive into the series.
This series is for you if…
- Disney’s Enchanted is one of your favorite films and you’ve been looking for its book equivalent ever since
- You love sweet, clean romance — all the swooning, none of the explicit content
- Fish-out-of-water humor is your love language
- Forbidden romance where the rules genuinely matter makes the payoff so much sweeter
- You want a book you can finish in one sitting and immediately want to press into someone else’s hands
- Friends-to-lovers with sixteen years of slow burn sounds like the most satisfying thing you’ve ever heard
- Cozy magical worlds that feel warm and safe are exactly what you need right now
- You’d like to read something your daughter could read too — or your mom
Readers keep comparing it to Enchanted. We’ll take it.
“Stories like this remind me why I read. We humans have a great capacity to be kind.” ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
“A humorous clean romance with a twist — the characters are sweet, but not perfect.” ⭐⭐⭐⭐
“Just say ‘Dibbity, Dobbity, Doo!’ and click the buy link.” ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
“A beautifully wrought tale of love and growing up — such simple truths.” ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
“Sweet and romantic — a second chance romance between two best friends from two different worlds.” ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
“Appropriate for younger readers — it doesn’t come across as written for children only.” ⭐⭐⭐⭐
“A little Piers Anthony, a little Terry Brooks, and some Fractured Fairytales.” ⭐⭐⭐⭐
“I could see this as a Disney production — it wouldn’t even need the sanitizing most traditional fairy tales need.” ⭐⭐⭐⭐
“It would make a great mother-daughter share.” ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
The Rules of the Fairy Realm — and the godmothers who broke them
(Exclusive to this page. Consider this your orientation before you start reading.)
The fairy realm has exactly three rules that matter most. They are clearly posted. They are firmly enforced. They have been broken by the fairy godmother in this series without a moment’s hesitation.
Rule 1: Humans are forbidden in the fairy realm. This includes half-human babies. This includes falling in love with humans. This includes visiting them every year for sixteen years on your birthday. The Fairy Council is very clear on this point. The fairy godmothers are very clear that they don’t particularly care.
Rule 2: A fairy godmother’s magic is for granting wishes — not for personal use. Using your birthday wish to travel to the forbidden human world to spend one perfect day with the boy who saved your life is, technically, personal use. Mila has done this sixteen times. She regrets nothing.
Rule 3: What happens in the human world stays in the human world. Ciera would like everyone to know that she absolutely intended to follow this rule. The magical pregnancy was not part of the plan.
The thing about fairy godmothers is this: they spend their entire existence making sure everyone else gets their happily-ever-after. They are expert wish-granters, talented miracle-workers, and completely hopeless at recognizing when their own heart is the one doing the wishing.
Both books in this series are about that moment — the moment a fairy godmother realizes the wish she’s been ignoring is the most important one of all.
The Fairy Council would like it noted that they do not endorse any of the choices made in either of these books. The fairy godmothers would like it noted that they don’t answer to the Fairy Council.
Ready to believe in a little magic?”
Stripped of her powers, soaking wet, and very, very pregnant — this is not how Ciera’s story was supposed to go. It’s so much better.
Note: All three stories stand alone and you can start wherever you like.
Finished the fairy realm and want more warm, funny portal fantasies?

Dragons are a Girl’s Best Friend
Ruby never asked to be a witch. She definitely never asked for a dragon.
But when her long-buried magic wakes up at the worst possible moments — hexing her ex in economics class, erasing a spilled drink in front of a very observant stranger, and reuniting her with a golden dragon who was absolutely not imaginary — freshman year at college stops being about a fresh start and starts being about survival.