Follow our Telegram channel to get notified instantly whenever new books are published.
Coffee Cats And Romance – Kit Morgan (1)

TJ moved tables while Lila and Mary arranged chairs. Lila was surprised at how quick Mary could move and marveled when the woman caught a chair that nearly tipped over. “Be careful,” Lila warned. Mary laughed. “I’m always bumping into things, ye know, but I do all right. At least I don’t fall over.” “Let’s hope not,” Lila muttered. The last thing she needed was for someone to break a hip. Would they sue Tilly and Jack? She pushed the thought aside and kept working. Once TJ finished with the tables, he set up the big projection screen they’d fetched from Tilly and Jack’s garage.
Everything was ready now: a freezer full of ice cream, plenty of pie, and the borrowed industrial-sized air popper. It was enormous. Lila had never seen anything like it. Doc, Grandma, and Paddy were crowded around it, examining the bag of kernels. She figured they could handle it, so she didn’t interfere.
Customers began trickling in, grabbing seats and ordering coffee while others waited for the popcorn or a slice of pie. “All right,” Paddy said, rubbing his hands together. “This should be fun. Doc, open the bag.” “The idea,” Grandma said. “Is to pour the kernals into the thing, plug the contraption in, and off it goes. We need a big bowl, or a bucket,” she added, looking around.
“And a scoop to fill the bags. What were we selling them for again?” “We weren’t. It’s free,” Mary said, joining them. Irene and Wilfred came through the door just then. “Well, will you look at this,” Irene patted her purple hair. Wilfred groaned at the action. “Oh, stop your griping,” she shot back. “It’s a needed necessity.” Lila wasn’t sure what that meant and didn’t ask. Instead, she checked that they had everything they needed.
“Are you ready to go?” “As ready as we’ll ever be,” Paddy said cheerfully. “Go on, take care of yer guests and get the movie started.” Lila set up the laptop at one of the front tables while the old crew argued over the popper. “Put a few more kernels in,” Irene insisted. “The machine can handle it!” Lila heard the metallic clink of kernels raining into the machine.
She smiled and shook her head. TJ was right. They were adorable… and terrifying. “Somebody plug it in!” Paddy called. “I’ll do it!” Wilfred said.
© 2025 Kit Morgan All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form, except for brief quotations in printed reviews, without permission in writing from the publisher. All characters are fictional. Any resemblances to actual people or livestock are purely coincidental. Formatted with Vellum 1kitap1.com/en License Note This book is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This book may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient.
If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please return and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author. 1kitap1.com/en Contents Chapter 1 Chapter 2 Chapter 3 Chapter 4 Chapter 5 Chapter 6 Chapter 7 Chapter 8 Chapter 9 Chapter 10 Chapter 11 Chapter 12 Chapter 13 Chapter 14 Chapter 15 Chapter 16 Chapter 17 Chapter 18 Chapter 19 Epilogue About the Author 1kitap1.com/en Chapter One Clear Creek wasn’t your ordinary town.
It might look ordinary, but it was far from it. It had a long history of oddities, miracles, and strange residents. Most people figured the stories were just hullabaloo and blew them off, but others knew better. Some folks swore they’d seen UFOs over the valley. There was even talk of alien abductions, though most dismissed it as nonsense. The town was founded in 1849 by Cyrus Van Cleet, owner of the Van Cleet Shipping Company in Boston.
His wife, Polly, was a delightful woman, or so the town’s history book says, along with the notes about her in the museum. The museum itself sat inside Doc and Grandma Waller’s old house on Main Street in Old Town. Their actual names were Abijah and Sarah Waller, and they’d come west on the same wagon train as Cyrus and Polly.
With them were Paddy and Mary Mulligan and Irene and Wilfred Dunnigan. Paddy and Mary built and ran the saloon, while Irene and Wilfred started Dunnigan’s Mercantile.
This is a short excerpt from the opening of “” by Unknown, quoted for review and introduction purposes. All rights belong to the copyright holders.
Book Information
- Unique ID: fd7ee333d6d930bb
- File Extension: .pdf
- File Size: 1,357,110 bytes (1.294 MB)
- Title: –
- Author: Unknown
- Pages: 142
- Language: English (en)
Reading & Word Statistics
- Estimated Reading Time: 209.44 minutes
- Total Words: 41,889
- Total Characters: 236,280
- Average Words per Page: 294.99
- Average Characters per Page: 1663.94
Most Frequent Words
lila (453), said (376), grandma (265), irene (215), back (175), like (147), i’m (126), coffee (115), well (113), one (112), it’s (112), time (107), don’t (106), right (103), get (100), that’s (100), good (97), know (94), now (91), going (90), didn’t (85), you’re (83), smiled (82), eyes (81), sure (80), maybe (79), yes (79), something (77), still (76), town (72), look (71), polly (71), see (70), around (70), tilly (70), paddy (68), counter (67), turned (66), door (65), need (65), little (64), got (62), long (61), way (61), looked (60), head (58), he’d (58), fine (58), we’re (58), asked (58), behind (57), toward (57), clear (56), old (56), creek (55), laughed (55), two (54), smile (54), come (53), place (53), want (53), take (53), i’ll (52), mother (51), they’re (51), wasn’t (50), thought (50), make (49), booth (49), think (48), shop (48), she’d (48), hand (48), things (47), nodded (47), cyrus (46), came (46), help (46), took (46), beans (45), pie (45), even (44), day (44), made (43), everyone (43), heart (43), gave (42), hands (42), pies (42), left (42), another (41), work (41), voice (41), jones (41), thing (40), pleasant (40), front (40), lila’s (40), chapter (39), man (39).
