Maybe It's Me

I Hate To Keep U Waiting

Don't Be Dumb

Heroes & Villains

Maybe It's Me • I Hate To Keep U Waiting • Don't Be Dumb • Heroes & Villains •

Trilogy Unfolds

  • Maybe It's me

    A raw, emotional story about guilt, grief, and the silence between brothers. Elijah tries to hold it all together after a devastating loss, but when the truth finally comes out—it’s not what he expected. Sometimes, breaking down is the only way through.

  • I Hate Keep U Waiting

    Bailey finally takes the mic. This is her side—her love, her pain, her patience stretched to the edge. Love doesn’t always fix the broken parts of us. But when it’s real, it makes you fight harder, even when you don’t know if it’s worth it anymore.

  • Don't Be Dumb

    Travis has been quiet for too long. In this explosive third chapter, he speaks—but some truths hit harder when they’re too late. Family, failure, forgiveness—it’s all on the line. And not everyone’s walking away whole.

  • Heroes & Villains

    You thought you knew the story. But this is about the people in the background—the overlooked, the misunderstood, the ones who were painted wrong. In the final installment, everything comes full circle. No more good guys. No more bad ones. Just people trying to survive.

  • I didn’t write this series to be perfect. I wrote it because I was falling apart.

    Maybe It’s Me came from a place I didn’t want to admit existed. The version of myself that smiled in public and broke down in private. That book isn’t fiction—it’s survival dressed in story form. I wrote it because I needed to understand my own pain, and somehow Elijah helped me speak when I didn’t have the words.

    Then came I Hate to Keep U Waiting. That one was for the people who stay. The ones who sit with you while you're numb, who love you even when you make it hard. Bailey’s not just a character—she’s a reminder that patience is powerful, but it’s not painless.

    Don’t Be Dumb is personal too. It’s about the weight we carry when we run from the truth, and how hard it is to come back from that. Travis’s silence? That used to be mine.

    And Heroes and Villains—that’s for everyone who’s ever been labeled something they’re not. The misunderstood. The forgotten. The ones who changed everything without anyone ever noticing. It's the final chapter because it speaks to the part of us that’s still trying to figure out who we really are.

    These books are messy on purpose. Real on purpose. I didn’t want to write perfect characters. I wanted to write people who feel like your brother, your girl, your own damn self. Because if there's one thing I’ve learned, it’s this:

    You don’t always get the apology. Sometimes you have to heal without it.

    And I hope these stories help somebody else start that process too.

Meet the Cast

Bailey

Travis

Elijah

Luna

  • Elijah carries everything he doesn’t say like it’s stitched into his shoulders. He’s the type to check on everyone else while quietly falling apart. Bailey, on the other hand, is the heartbeat—steady, loyal, and just angry enough to keep everyone honest. Travis is the ghost in the room, avoiding eye contact and confrontation like it’s a sport, but you can tell he’s hurting even when he won’t say it. And then there’s Luna—soft-spoken, all heart, and the unexpected center of gravity in a story that never gave her a fair chance. She’s wise beyond her years, even if everyone keeps saying she still looks like a baby. (She does. But don’t tell her that—we’re trying to keep the peace.)

This Isn’t Just a Story

Because this series isn’t about perfect endings.
It’s about the mess in the middle. The nights you didn’t say anything but still hoped someone would notice.
It’s about holding on when you don’t even know why anymore.
It’s about love that hurts, silence that screams, and healing that doesn’t always come with closure.

If you’ve ever felt that—
You belong here.