💋 Mills and Swoon™

Sarnia de la MarĂŠ FRSA

💌 Mills & Swoon — Romance, Essays & Stories https://taletellerlove.blogspot.com/ 📚 Tale Teller Club Press — Books, Podcasts & Creative Projects https://taletellerclub.com 🎧 More podcasts and storytelling projects Produced by Tale Teller Club Press. https://taletellerclub.com 💋 Mills & Swoon™ by Sarnia de la MarĂŠ FRSA Smart, romantic, and a little bit wicked —💋 Mills & Swoon™ delivers flash-fiction “Love Bites” and full-length audio dramas from the Tale Teller Club Press.Produced by Tale Teller Club Press Evergreen storytelling — not for the algorithm, but for the ages.🫦🧬 Love Bites and Sci-fi Bites featuring 60 second stories đŸ“– Each story is drawn from the printed page and adapted for the ear with cinematic sound, live instruments, and iServalan’s original compositions.☕️ Expect humour, seduction, and the art of storytelling itself — from coffee-bar flirtations to scandal in silk. Featured genres: modern and historical romance, feminist satire, sci-fi love stories, and the occasional mystery guest from the 916 Cinema universe.🔗 Read | Watch | Wear the stories at TaleTellerClub.comAbout This Podcast This podcast explores the strange, beautiful, and sometimes chaotic world of human love. Through short essays, historical stories, and reflections on modern relationships, each episode looks at the psychology of attraction, the history of romance, and the many ways people search for connection.  Alongside these explorations, the series occasionally steps into the role of a modern-day agony aunt — examining common relationship dilemmas, emotional patterns, and the timeless mysteries of the heart. Episodes range from psychology and cultural analysis to true love stories, romantic myths, and reflections on the art of love throughout history. Explore More Produced by Tale Teller Club Press.

  1. MAR 10

    ♥️ Virginia Woolf and Vita Sackville-West: The Love Story Behind Orlando #truelove #romance

    Welcome to the History of True Love Romance at Mills and Swoon.Tonight’s story takes us to the salons and drawing rooms of early twentieth-century London, where literature, art, and scandal often mingled freely among the cleverest minds of the age. It was here, in the unconventional world of the Bloomsbury Group, that one of the most intriguing love affairs in literary history unfolded between two remarkable women: Virginia Woolf and Vita Sackville-West.Virginia Woolf was already establishing herself as one of the most innovative writers of her generation. Brilliant, thoughtful, and deeply introspective, she was fascinated by the workings of the mind and the subtle movements of emotion. Her novels challenged the rigid storytelling traditions of the Victorian era and replaced them with something more fluid, more psychological, and more daring.Vita Sackville-West was different in almost every way. Tall, glamorous, and aristocratic, she moved through society with a confidence that Virginia found both amusing and irresistible. Vita was a writer too, though her life was also filled with travel, social engagements, and the complicated freedoms of an unconventional marriage.Both women were married when they met in the early 1920s. Virginia’s husband, Leonard Woolf, was a thoughtful and supportive partner who shared her intellectual world. Vita’s husband, Harold Nicolson, was a diplomat and writer who understood and accepted her romantic independence.Their marriages, unusually for the time, allowed a certain emotional freedom.When Virginia and Vita were introduced, the attraction between them grew quickly. Vita was captivated by Virginia’s mind and wit, while Virginia found Vita’s confidence and physical presence deeply compelling.Soon they began exchanging letters.The letters reveal a relationship filled with admiration, affection, and unmistakable flirtation. Vita often wrote with playful boldness, while Virginia responded with a mixture of humour and emotional vulnerability.At times their language was teasing and light; at others it became intensely affectionate.Their relationship eventually became romantic, though it was never simple. Vita travelled frequently and had other relationships, while Virginia struggled with periods of mental illness that made emotional intensity difficult to sustain.Yet the connection between them remained powerful.Virginia once described Vita as possessing a kind of aristocratic magnetism, writing that she admired not only her beauty but the self-assurance with which she moved through the world. Vita, in turn, adored Virginia’s intelligence and often praised the brilliance of her writing.One of the most extraordinary results of their relationship was a novel.In 1928 Virginia Woolf published Orlando, a playful and imaginative story about a nobleman who lives for centuries and eventually transforms into a woman. The novel moves across time, identity, and gender with a lightness that was revolutionary for its time.Though whimsical on the surface, the book was in many ways a love letter to Vita.The character of Orlando was inspired directly by her: adventurous, aristocratic, and strangely timeless. Vita recognised herself immediately and was delighted by the tribute.Their romantic relationship eventually softened into deep friendship, but the affection between them never truly faded. They continued writing to one another and remained part of the same intellectual circle until Virginia’s death in 1941.Today their letters offer a fascinating glimpse into a relationship that was at once romantic, creative, and intellectually rich. It was not a conventional love story, but perhaps that is precisely what makes it enduring.Virginia Woolf and Vita Sackville-West remind us that love does not always follow the rules of its time. Sometimes it appears in unexpected places—between two writers exchanging letters, ideas, and admiration—and leaves behind something lasting not only in memory, but in literature itself.Their story is a reminder that romance can inspire creativity as powerfully as it inspires the heart. And in this case, it produced one of the most original novels ever written, born from the meeting of two extraordinary minds. About This Podcast This podcast explores the strange, beautiful, and sometimes chaotic world of human love. Through short essays, historical stories, and reflections on modern relationships, each episode looks at the psychology of attraction, the history of romance, and the many ways people search for connection.  Alongside these explorations, the series occasionally steps into the role of a modern-day agony aunt — examining common relationship dilemmas, emotional patterns, and the timeless mysteries of the heart. Episodes range from psychology and cultural analysis to true love stories, romantic myths, and reflections on the art of love throughout history. Explore More Produced by Tale Teller Club Press. 💌 Mills & Swoon — Romance, Essays & Stories https://taletellerlove.blogspot.com/ 📚 Tale Teller Club Press — Books, Podcasts & Creative Projects https://taletellerclub.com 🎧 More podcasts and storytelling projects Produced by Tale Teller Club Press. https://taletellerclub.com

    5 min
  2. MAR 9

    ♥️ Napoleon Bonaparte a young officer hopelessly in love with his Joséphine: True Love Romance at Mills and Swoon™

    Welcome to the History of True Love Romance at Mills and Swoon. Tonight’s story takes us to the turbulent years of the French Revolution and the rise of a man who would one day rule much of Europe. Yet long before Napoleon Bonaparte became an emperor, he was simply a young officer hopelessly in love. The woman who captured his heart was JosĂŠphine de Beauharnais. JosĂŠphine was not the obvious match for a rising military man. She was older than Napoleon by six years, a widow with two children, and already well known in Parisian society for her charm and elegance. During the violent years of the Revolution she had narrowly escaped execution after her first husband was sent to the guillotine. By the time she met Napoleon in 1795, she had learned how fragile fortune could be. Napoleon, by contrast, was intense, ambitious, and still relatively unknown. He was brilliant on the battlefield but socially awkward, prone to sudden bursts of emotion and fierce devotion. When they met in Paris, he fell in love almost immediately. JosĂŠphine, however, was slower to surrender. She was accustomed to admiration and had lived through enough upheaval to distrust sudden passion. Yet Napoleon’s intensity was difficult to resist. Within a few months they were married. Almost immediately, Napoleon was called away to command the French army in Italy. It was during this separation that his feelings became immortal. Napoleon wrote to JosĂŠphine constantly, often with breathtaking emotional urgency. His letters were not the measured correspondence of a future emperor. They were the confessions of a man entirely consumed by love. “I wake filled with thoughts of you,” he wrote. “Your image and the intoxicating memory of last night’s pleasures leave my senses no rest.” In another letter he confessed his frustration at the distance between them. “Since I left you, I have been constantly depressed. My happiness is to be near you.” The letters reveal a man whose ambition and emotional life burned with the same intensity. While conquering Italian cities and reshaping the political map of Europe, Napoleon remained preoccupied with the woman he had left behind in Paris. But the love story was not as simple as his letters suggested. While Napoleon fought his victorious campaigns in Italy, rumours began to reach him that JosĂŠphine was not entirely faithful. In the glittering salons of Paris she continued to live a lively social life, surrounded by admirers. For Napoleon, who had placed his heart so completely in her hands, the possibility of betrayal was devastating. Yet even when anger appeared in his letters, it was quickly followed by longing. His attachment to JosĂŠphine was profound and complicated, a mixture of passion, jealousy, admiration, and emotional dependence. When Napoleon eventually returned to France, their marriage continued, but it carried the scars of those early years. Their love endured through triumphs and tensions as Napoleon rose from general to emperor. Ironically, the greatest tragedy of their relationship was not infidelity but the absence of an heir. JosĂŠphine was unable to give Napoleon the child he believed necessary to secure his dynasty. In 1810, after years of emotional struggle, Napoleon made the painful decision to divorce her. The separation was formal and political, yet deeply personal. Witnesses recorded that both Napoleon and JosĂŠphine wept during the ceremony that ended their marriage. Even after the divorce, Napoleon never truly abandoned her emotionally. He continued to care for her, and she remained an important presence in his life. When JosĂŠphine died in 1814, Napoleon reportedly spoke her name as one of the final words he uttered years later on his deathbed. History remembers Napoleon Bonaparte as a conqueror, a strategist, and an emperor. Yet the letters he wrote during those early campaigns reveal another side of him entirely: a young man whose heart was captured by a woman who could both inspire and torment him. Their story reminds us that even the most powerful figures in history were not immune to the complicated forces of love. And sometimes the most revealing record of a great life is not written in military victories or political treaties, but in letters written late at night to the person one cannot stop thinking about. You have been listening to History of True Love Romance at Mills and Swoon. About This Podcast This podcast explores the strange, beautiful, and sometimes chaotic world of human love. Through short essays, historical stories, and reflections on modern relationships, each episode looks at the psychology of attraction, the history of romance, and the many ways people search for connection.  Alongside these explorations, the series occasionally steps into the role of a modern-day agony aunt — examining common relationship dilemmas, emotional patterns, and the timeless mysteries of the heart. Episodes range from psychology and cultural analysis to true love stories, romantic myths, and reflections on the art of love throughout history. Explore More Produced by Tale Teller Club Press. 💌 Mills & Swoon — Romance, Essays & Stories https://taletellerlove.blogspot.com/ 📚 Tale Teller Club Press — Books, Podcasts & Creative Projects https://taletellerclub.com 🎧 More podcasts and storytelling projects Produced by Tale Teller Club Press. https://taletellerclub.com

    5 min
  3. MAR 9

    💋 The Letters That Became a Love Story: Elizabeth Barrett and Robert Browning #truelove #audiobooks

    Welcome to the History of True Love Romance at Mills and Swoon. The Letters That Became a Love Story: Elizabeth Barrett and Robert Browning In the middle of the nineteenth century, when England still believed that respectable women should remain quietly indoors and poets were expected to suffer nobly in obscurity, a love story began with a letter. Elizabeth Barrett was already a celebrated poet by the time Robert Browning first wrote to her in 1845. She was also chronically ill, deeply sheltered, and living under the suffocating authority of a domineering father who forbade his children to marry. From her room in Wimpole Street she lived a life that was intellectually rich but physically constrained, surrounded by books, manuscripts, and the protective concern of family members who feared that even mild excitement might worsen her fragile health. Robert Browning was very different. Younger, energetic, and not yet widely recognised, he admired Elizabeth’s poetry intensely. After reading her work, he sent her a letter that has since become one of the most famous opening lines in literary romance. “I love your verses with all my heart,” he wrote. It was bold, perhaps even presumptuous, but it was sincere. Elizabeth, who had spent years believing that illness had closed the door on any conventional romantic future, was both surprised and intrigued. Their correspondence began cautiously. At first the letters were polite exchanges between two poets discussing literature and ideas. But gradually the tone changed. Admiration deepened into affection, and affection into something far more powerful. Over time the letters became confessions of emotional dependence, intellectual companionship, and a growing sense that each had discovered in the other a rare kind of understanding. Eventually Robert asked to meet her. Elizabeth was nervous. She had been an invalid for years and was convinced that she was too fragile, too pale, too confined to inspire real affection. Yet when Robert arrived at her home in Wimpole Street, the meeting transformed both their lives. He was captivated not only by her poetry but by her mind. Elizabeth, in turn, discovered that Robert’s admiration was not a fleeting literary enthusiasm but something more steadfast and determined. Their relationship, however, faced a formidable obstacle. Elizabeth’s father, Edward Barrett, ruled his household with absolute authority and had forbidden all his children from marrying. The reasons for this strange decree have never been fully understood, but the effect was unmistakable. None of the Barrett children dared defy him. Elizabeth knew that if her father discovered the romance, the consequences would be severe. And yet the relationship continued. For months Robert visited her secretly while their letters grew increasingly passionate. Slowly Elizabeth’s health seemed to improve, as though emotional hope itself were a form of medicine. Finally, in 1846, the couple decided that secrecy could no longer sustain them. They would marry. The wedding itself was quiet and almost conspiratorial. Elizabeth slipped away from her father’s house one morning and met Robert at St. Marylebone Church, where they were married in a simple ceremony. But the real drama came afterwards. For a week Elizabeth continued living at home, pretending nothing had happened. Then one day she gathered her courage, left the house with her small dog Flush, and joined Robert. Together they fled England for Italy, where they settled in Florence. Edward Barrett never forgave her. He refused to see her again and returned all her letters unopened. Yet the marriage that had cost Elizabeth her father’s approval became one of the most celebrated literary partnerships in history. In Florence the couple lived a life filled with writing, conversation, travel, and mutual encouragement. Elizabeth’s health improved dramatically, and she produced some of her most famous work during these years. Among her poems was a sequence that would become perhaps the most famous love poetry in the English language: Sonnets from the Portuguese. One line in particular has echoed across generations: “How do I love thee? Let me count the ways.” It is easy to forget that the poem was not an abstract meditation but a declaration written to the man who had once sent a daring letter to a woman he had never met. Robert Browning loved Elizabeth Barrett not only as a poet but as a person who had believed her life would be confined to a single room. With him she travelled, wrote, laughed, and discovered that love could be both an emotional rescue and an intellectual partnership. Their story reminds us that romance is not always about dramatic gestures or sudden passion. Sometimes it begins quietly with admiration, grows through conversation, and survives through courage. And occasionally, it begins with a single letter from one poet to another, confessing with charming simplicity: “I love your verses with all my heart.” You have been listening to a true love podcast by Tale Teller Club Publishing. About This Podcast This podcast explores the strange, beautiful, and sometimes chaotic world of human love. Through short essays, historical stories, and reflections on modern relationships, each episode looks at the psychology of attraction, the history of romance, and the many ways people search for connection.  Alongside these explorations, the series occasionally steps into the role of a modern-day agony aunt — examining common relationship dilemmas, emotional patterns, and the timeless mysteries of the heart. Episodes range from psychology and cultural analysis to true love stories, romantic myths, and reflections on the art of love throughout history. Explore More Produced by Tale Teller Club Press. 💌 Mills & Swoon — Romance, Essays & Stories https://taletellerlove.blogspot.com/ 📚 Tale Teller Club Press — Books, Podcasts & Creative Projects https://taletellerclub.com 🎧 More podcasts and storytelling projects Produced by Tale Teller Club Press. https://taletellerclub.com

    5 min
  4. 💋 The Big Issue Man Who Wrote Me a Love Poem - A modern Mills & Swoon romance short by Sarnia de la Maré

    MAR 8

    💋 The Big Issue Man Who Wrote Me a Love Poem - A modern Mills & Swoon romance short by Sarnia de la Maré

    Blue Eyes and Beating Hearts. A Mills & Swoon Modern Short. In the polished glass corridors of London’s trendier office districts, there exists a species of woman who has learned to walk quickly. Quickly past coffee queues, cyclists, and, most efficiently of all, quickly past inconvenient human realities wherever her Manowla heels clicked on London's sidewalks. Charlotte Briggs was one of these women. At thirty-five she possessed excellent hair, excellent shoes, and an excellent job in public relations—an industry that specialised in polishing other people’s reputations while quietly eroding one’s own soul. Every morning she stepped out of the tube station, checked her phone, and moved with professional determination toward the gleaming lobby of the agency where she worked. The tall black glass like a judgement on those that could not enter. "Big Issue, madam."  Charlotte as usual declined not really sure what the Big Issue was exactly but well aware that sellers were usually down on their luck. Charlotte was not unkind. She had been taught to be kind and gracious but she always had meetings. Her boyfriend, Oliver, had often remarked that she possessed an admirable ability to “filter distractions.” Oliver was a financial analyst, which meant he had never filtered anything more morally complicated than a spreadsheet. Charlotte tolerated him with the mild patience one reserves for reliable appliances. She was expecting him to propose in around six months, she would say yes to shut her parents up, two babies in two years, wam, bam thankyou mam. She would turn around and they would be gone and she would be left with the analyst. Her life was as predictable as death.  It was raining—one of those London drizzles that appears designed purely to destroy a Vidal Sassoon hair appointment. Charlotte was juggling an umbrella, a phone call, and the vague dread of a nine-o’clock pitch meeting when it happened. She actually bought the Big Issue. "Oh, I wasn't expecting that." He appologised and taking her money glanced into Charlotte's eyes. Then something weird happened. It was subtle but huge, invisible but energised. A twinge originating from some unknown part of her brain that sent messages to every neuron, every cell, and bounced around searching for a place to rest. Blue, his eyes were the bluest blue like an Albanian sea and a Brazilian sky. An azurean tsunami of passion and waves that could fell trees, and more to the point, women. Charlotte dropped her gaze immediately and hurried inside the building. Ridiculous, she thought. Entirely ridiculous. After all, the man was unemployed. Probably living in a shelter. Maybe even in rehab. Oliver, who owned twenty nearly identical suits, believed passion was something that one scheduled annually on holiday. But his reliability and ambition were central to a controlled future. Still, the next morning Charlotte found herself glancing toward the pavement before she even reached the office. He was there, the man with Blue eyes. Sketchbook balanced on his knee. A small pile of magazines beside him. He caught her glance and smiled—not eagerly, not pleadingly, a simple smile and a flutter of lashes teased the blue into her morning. And so it went on, a morning ritual with Blue, it probably wasn't his name but that is what she called him. A nod, a smile, and a new copy whenever the Big Issue came out. Three months later Charlotte discovered Oliver cheating on her with a yoga instructor named Celeste. A frenemy sent her an image of them wrapped around each other in glittery lycra like some alien insect. Under the instagram photo “Last night's yoga class was incredible.” There is something uniquely humiliating about heartbreak in your mid-thirties. One feels old enough to know better and young enough to still care. By the time Charlotte reached the office the next morning her eyes were swollen and her dignity was hanging by a thread. But at least she would not be seen dead in glittery lycra. Blue looked up. “Rough morning?” he asked gently. Charlotte laughed once—a broken sound that cracked into sobs. “My boyfriend,” she said vaguely, “appears to have developed extracurricular hobbies. Yoga, to be specific, with a leggy woman in pink lycra” Blue closed his sketchbook. I tell you what, this is my last day, let's celebrate in the pub. “Last day?” “I got a job.” Charlotte blinked. “Oh, congratulations, doing what?” "I sold my book, London publisher, they even gave me a PR agent...." Blue was laughing. His eyes reflecting the sun like mirrors into her soul." He tilted his head. “Come for a drink with me.” Charlotte stared at him. “You don’t even know me.” “True,” he said. “But you look like someone who could use a cheer-up drink. And I happen to be in a celebratory mood.” She hesitated. Then, quite unexpectedly, she heard herself say: “Alright then.” The drink became two. The two became three. By ten o’clock they had wandered into a tiny bar in Soho where someone was hosting an open-mic poetry night. Charlotte, who was now pleasantly drunk, found the entire situation thrilling. "This is my first time," she said. Blue smiled.  "Needless to say, I have been around the block a few times."   They both laughed at the insinuation. Later Blue was on the small stage with the intimate crowd sharing in the joy of his presence. The poem was about a woman who moved through the world too quickly. About a woman with sharp heels and sharper intelligence who pretended not to notice kindness because it disrupted her schedule. About a woman whose sadness sat behind perfectly applied lipstick. Charlotte felt something dangerous happen inside her chest. The room had gone quiet. And when he finished, every person in the bar applauded. Charlotte was staring at him, swooning pathetically like a teenager and drinking with the panic of lust suddenly exposed. Later that night Blue walked her home. When she reached the bed she collapsed sideways, still wearing one shoe. Blue gently removed the shock red Manolo and covered her with a blanket. Then he quietly left leaving the poem on the bedside table. When Charlotte woke the next morning she had a headache, mascara on the pillow, and the terrible suspicion that she had embarrassed herself in Soho. The days were back to normal and a few days went by. Where could she find Blue. No phone number, no address, no Instagram. And Blue wasn't even his real name!  Charlotte asked the man at the ethnic street food wagon. Then the new Big Issue seller, and she even rang the Big Issue head office. They were sympathetic but firm. “Data protection,” the woman explained. “If we see him we’ll pass along your message, but we can’t give you any details.” Days passed. Then weeks. Charlotte tried to return to normal life. But she found she hated her job. Hated her empty flat. And hated the quiet absence outside the office doors each morning. Some nights she fell asleep clutching the poem. By now she knew it by heart. Then one evening she stepped out of the building and stopped. He was standing across the street. Except he no longer looked like the man she remembered. And his posture carried the relaxed confidence of someone entirely at home in the world. He crossed the street slowly. Charlotte stared. “You disappeared,” she said. "I seem to be in high demand, " he laughed. Then he stepped closer. The blue eyes washed her with an indescribable urge and they kissed. “Charlotte,” he said gently, “would you like to go on a date? No pressure, no promises, and definitely no unsolicited poems, unless you ask of course.” Charlotte studied him for a moment. Then she smiled. "I hereby consent to you writing me love poems for the rest of my days." Š2026 Sarnia de la MarĂŠ   About This Podcast This podcast explores the strange, beautiful, and sometimes chaotic world of human love. Through short essays, historical stories, and reflections on modern relationships, each episode looks at the psychology of attraction, the history of romance, and the many ways people search for connection.  Alongside these explorations, the series occasionally steps into the role of a modern-day agony aunt — examining common relationship dilemmas, emotional patterns, and the timeless mysteries of the heart. Episodes range from psychology and cultural analysis to true love stories, romantic myths, and reflections on the art of love throughout history. Explore More Produced by Tale Teller Club Press. 💌 Mills & Swoon — Romance, Essays & Stories https://taletellerlove.blogspot.com/ 📚 Tale Teller Club Press — Books, Podcasts & Creative Projects https://taletellerclub.com 🎧 More podcasts and storytelling projects Produced by Tale Teller Club Press. https://taletellerclub.com

    8 min
  5. MAR 7

    💋 The Widow From Bath Who Borrowed Husbands Mills & Swoon Short by Sarnia de la Maré

    The Widow Who Borrowed HusbandsIn the polite districts of Bath there existed a woman whom respectable matrons referred to only in whispers. Mrs Arabella Devereaux. A widow of three years, excellent posture, alarming wit, and a reputation for borrowing husbands the way other ladies borrowed shawls. Not permanently, you understand. Just for an evening. Arabella herself considered the arrangement perfectly civilised. A husband, she reasoned, was a dreadful thing to own outright — expensive, noisy, and inclined to develop opinions. But borrowing one occasionally? Delightful. Her system was admirably organised. Thursdays were reserved for supper companions. Saturdays for dancing partners. Sundays, naturally, for philosophical discussions about the nature of love, which most gentlemen agreed were best conducted near a sofa. The wives of Bath, however, were less appreciative of Arabella’s intellectual curiosity. “She is dangerous,” declared Mrs Hardwick at the Pump Room, clutching her smelling salts with theatrical urgency. “Why?” asked a younger lady. Mrs Hardwick lowered her voice. “Because she makes the men laugh.” This, as every married woman knows, is the most dangerous trick of all.The situation might have continued indefinitely had Captain Nathaniel Graves not returned from the continent.Tall. Broad-shouldered. Recently decorated for bravery. And, most inconveniently, completely immune to flirtation. Arabella encountered him at a musicale and immediately recognised the problem. He did not stare. He did not blush. He did not attempt to compliment her shoulders, her eyes, or her scandalously confident posture. Instead he looked at her with calm amusement and said: “Mrs Devereaux, I have been warned about you.” “How efficient of society,” she replied smoothly. “And have they advised you to run?” “No,” he said. “They advised me to guard my heart.” Arabella laughed. “My dear Captain, that is entirely unnecessary. I never keep them.”Over the next fortnight something deeply inconvenient occurred.Captain Graves refused to be borrowed. He attended dinners, conversed charmingly, and escorted elderly ladies to their carriages — yet whenever Arabella attempted her usual game of glittering seduction, he simply observed her with that infuriating half-smile. “You enjoy this,” she said one evening. “Very much.” “Why?” “Because,” he said calmly, “you are waiting for someone who will not leave at midnight.” Arabella raised an eyebrow. “How perceptive.” “And how wrong.” But for the first time in three years, she did not borrow a husband that evening. Instead she walked home beside the one man who seemed entirely unwilling to be temporary.At the edge of her garden gate he paused.“You could marry again,” he said gently. Arabella studied him. “And lose my excellent reputation?” He smiled. “I suspect it would improve.” She leaned closer, eyes glittering. “Captain Graves… what are you proposing?” “Nothing, yet, a gentleman never assumes too early.” “How disappointing.” “Let's say, I am merely conducting reconnaissance.” Arabella laughed, the sort of laugh that made men think of intimacy. “Well then,” she said softly, “you may borrow me tomorrow evening.” The Captain bowed and kissed her gloved hand pulling her body towards him. She felt the rising power in his stiff loins and gasped. The thought of him inside her was almost too much to bear. She gasped again, lips wet and opening, like her heart. About This Podcast This podcast explores the strange, beautiful, and sometimes chaotic world of human love. Through short essays, historical stories, and reflections on modern relationships, each episode looks at the psychology of attraction, the history of romance, and the many ways people search for connection.  Alongside these explorations, the series occasionally steps into the role of a modern-day agony aunt — examining common relationship dilemmas, emotional patterns, and the timeless mysteries of the heart. Episodes range from psychology and cultural analysis to true love stories, romantic myths, and reflections on the art of love throughout history. Explore More Produced by Tale Teller Club Press. 💌 Mills & Swoon — Romance, Essays & Stories https://taletellerlove.blogspot.com/ 📚 Tale Teller Club Press — Books, Podcasts & Creative Projects https://taletellerclub.com 🎧 More podcasts and storytelling projects Produced by Tale Teller Club Press. https://taletellerclub.com

    4 min

About

💌 Mills & Swoon — Romance, Essays & Stories https://taletellerlove.blogspot.com/ 📚 Tale Teller Club Press — Books, Podcasts & Creative Projects https://taletellerclub.com 🎧 More podcasts and storytelling projects Produced by Tale Teller Club Press. https://taletellerclub.com 💋 Mills & Swoon™ by Sarnia de la MarĂŠ FRSA Smart, romantic, and a little bit wicked —💋 Mills & Swoon™ delivers flash-fiction “Love Bites” and full-length audio dramas from the Tale Teller Club Press.Produced by Tale Teller Club Press Evergreen storytelling — not for the algorithm, but for the ages.🫦🧬 Love Bites and Sci-fi Bites featuring 60 second stories đŸ“– Each story is drawn from the printed page and adapted for the ear with cinematic sound, live instruments, and iServalan’s original compositions.☕️ Expect humour, seduction, and the art of storytelling itself — from coffee-bar flirtations to scandal in silk. Featured genres: modern and historical romance, feminist satire, sci-fi love stories, and the occasional mystery guest from the 916 Cinema universe.🔗 Read | Watch | Wear the stories at TaleTellerClub.comAbout This Podcast This podcast explores the strange, beautiful, and sometimes chaotic world of human love. Through short essays, historical stories, and reflections on modern relationships, each episode looks at the psychology of attraction, the history of romance, and the many ways people search for connection.  Alongside these explorations, the series occasionally steps into the role of a modern-day agony aunt — examining common relationship dilemmas, emotional patterns, and the timeless mysteries of the heart. Episodes range from psychology and cultural analysis to true love stories, romantic myths, and reflections on the art of love throughout history. Explore More Produced by Tale Teller Club Press.

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