Discover millions of ebooks, audiobooks, and so much more with a free trial

Only $11.99/month after trial. Cancel anytime.

Bringing Home the Ice Prince
Bringing Home the Ice Prince
Bringing Home the Ice Prince
Ebook67 pages42 minutes

Bringing Home the Ice Prince

Rating: 0 out of 5 stars

()

Read preview

About this ebook

Author Cole Stanton is hiding in the backwoods of rural North Carolina, nursing grief and an overwhelming sense of loneliness when Eric Sartori shows up on his doorstep. Eric—his editor and friend—is there to get Cole back home to the bustling metropolis of New York. But Eric will have to melt the ice around his prince’s heart to keep Cole from spending his Christmas in silence and regret.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateDec 1, 2011
ISBN9781613722817
Bringing Home the Ice Prince

Related to Bringing Home the Ice Prince

Related ebooks

Romance For You

View More

Related articles

Related categories

Reviews for Bringing Home the Ice Prince

Rating: 0 out of 5 stars
0 ratings

0 ratings0 reviews

What did you think?

Tap to rate

Review must be at least 10 words

    Book preview

    Bringing Home the Ice Prince - Jana Downs

    Bringing Home the Ice Prince

    Alone. It was the story of his life. Colton Stanton, Cole for short, took a sip out of his polar bear coffee mug and let the hot chocolate warm his insides. The flames crackled in the fireplace; despite the warmth emanating from therein, he’d have to add wood soon. He could already feel the heat ebbing as his fire lost energy. He sighed deeply, set his mug on the coffee table, and stood. No matter how warm he made his house, it wouldn’t warm the ice that seemed to encase his soul.

    Cole had left his North Carolina prison as soon as he’d turned eighteen. NYC had seemed like the Promised Land for someone like him, a place where he could lose himself in the anonymity of the city. A place where no one would care that he was a foster brat. A place to start over. He’d worked hard to put himself through school, managing to snag two scholarships sponsored by the state after his first semester. He’d always pushed himself academically. All the sappy Lifetime movies he watched told him that education was the only way out of a penniless existence. He’d gotten his master’s degree in literature and taught part time at a community college as he worked on getting noticed for his writing. Cole had always been a writer and often lost himself in the worlds in his head. His fiction tended to be heartrending depictions of love and loss with happy endings, in stark contrast to what he actually knew of reality. Finally, in his late twenties, he had sold one of his manuscripts to a major publisher, and his life had completely changed. He filed that under the how the hell had that happened? column in his mind. Then he’d filled his world with all the things he’d lacked in his childhood. Well, almost everything. Some things were still missing.

    Dragging himself out from the shit swirling in his head like the world’s largest toilet bowl, he threw another log on the fire and stared into the crackling flames, contemplating the moment he’d decided to abandon New York and everything about his life there. I should probably shoot Eric an e-mail to let him know I’m still alive, Cole thought, going back to his plush green couch and burrowing under his red fleece blanket. He and Eric had worked together for the past five years, ever since his first book was accepted for publication, and somewhere along the way he’d become more than an editor. He’d become a friend. A copy of Lisa Jackson’s latest thriller lay open on the armchair, waiting. Cole rubbed his eyes and yawned. Maybe he’d e-mail Eric tomorrow. His eyes were heavy and his body warm beneath the soft blanket. Before he could convince himself to cross the wood floor and pour himself into the cool bed in the other room, he was asleep.

    A hard knock on the front door jolted Cole out of his rest. He stretched with a groan of pain as his cramped muscles protested the movement after sleeping in an uncomfortable position on the couch all night. The fire had long since died, and the hardwood floor was freezing on his feet as he stood.

    I’m coming! he barked at the door. He wondered briefly who could be banging on his door this early in the morning. Nestled in the rural North Carolina mountains, his home rarely received visitors. He had surprised himself by buying a home in the place he’d once called a prison. He’d first returned on the insistence of a friend who wanted to visit the Biltmore House in Asheville. Despite his bad memories of the state, Cole had found himself falling in love with the quaint historical charm of the town like so many other city dwellers did, and he decided to buy a vacation home near there. The seclusion and natural beauty acted like a calming balm to him after a hard write, and he’d made it into his own rural retreat. Not many people knew who he was or even that he lived in the area. In fact, the only other person he’d had at his home in months was the elderly Mrs. Bryant, who hobbled up the hill every Sunday to bring Cole a home-cooked Sunday dinner—against his adamant protests, of course. It couldn’t be Mrs. Bryant, though, because unless Cole had lost his ever-loving mind, it was Thursday.

    Cole smoothed his hands down the front of his sleep-wrinkled shirt and swung open the heavy oak door. He blinked several times in confusion. Was he still asleep? There on his

    Enjoying the preview?
    Page 1 of 1