Welcome to a charming lakeside town where the bubble tea is sweet, the thrift store is slightly haunted, and the same twenty minutes won't stop happening.
Elliot just wants to run Harbor & Hem, Marrow Lake's coziest little thrift shop-fold sweaters, offer lemon drops, and keep the donation bay from becoming a portal to chaos. But when "perfectly normal" objects start showing up with matching tags, tidy handwriting, and far too much intention... Elliot's quiet life begins to snag like thread on a nail.
Then the time-loop seam makes itself known: a tug behind the eyes, a metallic taste of pennies, and the creeping sense that the town's doors and systems are turning into funnels-pulling people toward the same wrong choices again and again.
Luckily, Elliot isn't alone. Bea-bubble-tea queen and aggressively cozy crisis manager-will body-block doom with baked goods. Henry, the town librarian, brings calm competence (and emergency closure signs). And Onyx, a black cat with zero patience for nonsense, is determined to keep Elliot anchored in reality-whether Elliot likes it or not.
As an unseen antagonist weaponizes nostalgia, "official channels," and the town's soft spots, Elliot must solve the mystery the only way a thrift-shop witch can: with community, clever paperwork, and the stubborn belief that choice belongs to the people who live here.
Perfect for readers who love:
Paranormal Cozy Fantasy Mystery vibes (spooky-but-safe, comfort-forward)
Light-hearted humor + quirky, lovable side characters
Charming small-town settings (lakeside streets, bookish corners, cozy shops)
A witchy amateur sleuth learning as she goes
A talking animal helper / black cat familiar (sarcastic, loyal, chaotic-good)
Low-stakes, high-heart mysteries (no grimdark, no gore)
Slice-of-life coziness: bubble tea runs, shopkeeping, local gossip, craft-circle comforts
Plot-critical magic (rules, costs, misfires, and clever solutions)
Fair-play puzzle clues + satisfying reveals
Queer-inclusive cozy reads, featuring trans and gender-diverse themes and aroace representation without "fixing," with focus on devotion, mutual care, and found family