Introducing The Third Chair: A Cedar Mesa Polygamy Romance
A warm, emotional romance about plural marriage, sister-wife trust, childlessness, consent, and the courage it takes to make room at the table without asking anyone to disappear.
Introducing The Third Chair
Some love stories begin with a kiss.
Some begin with a look across a crowded room.
This one begins with a chair.
The Third Chair: A Cedar Mesa Polygamy Romance is the first book in my Cedar Mesa series, a warm contemporary romance set in a high-desert community where faith, family, privacy, and plural marriage shape the rhythms of everyday life.
At the heart of the story are Daniel and Ruth Calder, a devoted couple who have spent eight loving years together in a quiet, childless home. Their marriage is steady. Their bond is real. But they both believe their family may still be called to grow.
Then Naomi Hale steps into their lives.
Naomi is a gifted woodworker with steady hands, a sharp mind, and a heart that has spent too long being valued for what it can do rather than for who she truly is. When Daniel and Ruth begin courting her as a potential second wife, Naomi sees a chance at love, belonging, and a life of her own.
But nothing about making room for another wife is simple.
Ruth wants to welcome Naomi with grace, but she quietly fears being diminished in the home she helped build. Naomi is drawn to the Calders, but she refuses to be treated as the answer to their childlessness. Daniel wants to lead well, but he must learn that love cannot be protected by making decisions for the women he loves. It has to be built with them.
This is a romance about the emotional work of making space.
A place at the table.
A voice in the family.
A love chosen freely, carefully, and honestly.
What kind of romance is The Third Chair?
This is a warm, character-driven romance with a family saga feel. It is not dark romance. It is not erotica. It is not a sensationalized look at plural marriage.
It is a tender, domestic story about three consenting adults trying to build a family without letting fear, jealousy, fertility expectations, or community pressure decide the shape of their future.
Expect:
Slow-burn courtship
Sister-wife tension and trust
A tender existing marriage
Faith-shaped domestic life
Red-rock mesas, cedar sawdust, harvest light, and kitchen-table conversations
Infertility handled with dignity
Warm romantic tension
Meaningful touch and tender kisses
Adult family councils where every voice matters
A hopeful ending rooted in consent, belonging, and shared stewardship
Why Cedar Mesa?
Cedar Mesa is a quiet red-rock community in the rural Utah-Arizona borderlands, close to the land and mostly outside public attention. It is a place of orchards, workshops, gardens, schoolrooms, Sunday gatherings, family kitchens, and worn wooden tables where the most important conversations happen after the dishes are cleared.
I wanted Cedar Mesa to feel intimate and lived-in, not like a caricature or a scandal headline.
The people here are sincere. Imperfect. Sometimes too private. Sometimes too traditional. Often tender in ways they do not always know how to express. They are trying to live their beliefs while learning that faith does not have to mean silence, and leadership does not have to mean control.
The question at the heart of the book
Can love expand without making anyone smaller?
That question follows Ruth, Naomi, and Daniel from the first careful courtship conversation to the moment the third chair appears in the Calder kitchen.
For Ruth, the question is: Can another wife enter the family without erasing the marriage she and Daniel already share?
For Naomi, the question is: Can she be chosen for her heart, her mind, and her spirit, not for the children others hope she might someday have?
For Daniel, the question is: Can he become the kind of husband who listens before deciding, even when listening means admitting he was wrong?
The answer does not come all at once.
It comes through harvest work, quiet walks, hard conversations, awkward silences, honest apologies, and the courage to sit down at the table together.
Who should read this book?
You may enjoy The Third Chair if you like:
Contemporary romance with emotional depth
Small-town or close-community family sagas
Plural marriage and sister-wife dynamics
Stories about faith, consent, and chosen family
Gentle but high-stakes domestic drama
Romance that is sensual without being explicit
Characters who grow through conversation, tenderness, and hard-earned trust
If you are fascinated by plural-family stories but want something warmer, more romantic, and more character-centered, this book was written for you.
Read The Third Chair
The Third Chair: A Cedar Mesa Polygamy Romance is available now.
One table. Three chairs. A love chosen one voice at a time.