May 10th, 2024
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Discover May's Best New Reads: Stories to Ignite Your Spring Days.

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"COLD FURY defines the modern romantic thriller."�-�NYT�bestselling author Jayne Ann Krentz


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Romance writer and reluctant cop navigate sparks during fateful ride-alongs.


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Free on Kindle Unlimited


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A child under his protection�and a hit man in pursuit.


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Courtney Kelly sees things others can�t�like fairies, and hidden motives for murder . . .


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Reunited in danger�and bound by desire


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Journey to a city that�s full of quirky, zany superheroes finding love while they battle over-the-top, evil ubervillains bent on world domination.


Excerpt of Chill Factor by Sandra Brown

Purchase


Simon and Schuster
July 2006
Featuring: Lilly Martin; Ben Tierney; Dutch Burton
560 pages
ISBN: 0743466772
Paperback (reprint)
Add to Wish List

Romance Contemporary, Romance Suspense

Also by Sandra Brown:

A Secret Splendor, August 2024
Mass Market Paperback
Out of Nowhere, August 2023
Hardcover / e-Book / audiobook
Tomorrow's Promise, July 2023
Mass Market Paperback / e-Book
Overkill, April 2023
Paperback / e-Book
Two Alone, April 2023
Mass Market Paperback / e-Book
Blind Tiger, November 2022
Mass Market Paperback / e-Book
Overkill, August 2022
Hardcover / e-Book / audiobook
Blind Tiger, April 2022
Paperback / e-Book
Blind Tiger, August 2021
Hardcover / e-Book / audiobook
Thick as Thieves, August 2021
Mass Market Paperback / e-Book
White Hot, December 2020
Mass Market Paperback / e-Book
Thick as Thieves, September 2020
Hardcover / e-Book
Outfox, August 2020
Mass Market Paperback / e-Book (reprint)
Outfox, February 2020
Paperback / e-Book (reprint)
Outfox, August 2019
Hardcover / e-Book
Tailspin, July 2019
Mass Market Paperback / e-Book (reprint)
Tailspin, February 2019
Trade Size / e-Book (reprint)
The Switch, December 2018
Paperback / e-Book (reprint)
Rainwater, December 2018
Trade Size / e-Book (reprint)
Tailspin, August 2018
Hardcover / e-Book
Seeing Red, July 2018
Mass Market Paperback / e-Book (reprint)
Fat Tuesday, April 2018
Mass Market Paperback / e-Book (reprint)
Seeing Red, August 2017
Hardcover / e-Book
Sting, August 2017
Mass Market Paperback
Tomorrow's Promise & Above and Beyond, June 2017
Mass Market Paperback (reprint)
Sting, February 2017
Paperback / e-Book (reprint)
Unspeakable, November 2016
Mass Market Paperback
Sting, August 2016
Hardcover / e-Book
The Witness, April 2016
Paperback / e-Book (reprint)
Friction, February 2016
Paperback / e-Book (reprint)
The Alibi, November 2015
Paperback / e-Book
Mean Streak, August 2015
Mass Market Paperback / e-Book (reprint)
Friction, August 2015
Hardcover / e-Book
Breath of Scandal, April 2015
Mass Market Paperback / e-Book (reprint)
Mean Streak, February 2015
Paperback / e-Book (reprint)
Love Beyond Reason, December 2014
e-Book (reprint)
A Treasure Worth Seeking, December 2014
e-Book (reprint)
Mean Streak, August 2014
Hardcover / e-Book
Eloquent Silence, May 2014
e-Book (reprint)
Love's Encore, May 2014
e-Book (reprint)
Deadline, February 2014
Trade Size / e-Book (reprint)
French Silk, December 2013
Trade Size / e-Book (reprint)
Deadline, October 2013
Hardcover / e-Book
The Switch, September 2013
e-Book (reprint)
The Alibi, September 2013
e-Book (reprint)
Envy, August 2013
Mass Market Paperback / e-Book (reprint)
Envy, August 2013
e-Book (reprint)
Standoff, May 2013
Mass Market Paperback / e-Book (reprint)
Love is Murder, March 2013
Paperback / e-Book (reprint)
Low Pressure, September 2012
Hardcover / e-Book
No Rest For The Dead, July 2012
Paperback / e-Book
Lethal, July 2012
Mass Market Paperback / e-Book (reprint)
Love Is Murder, June 2012
Hardcover / e-Book
Slow Heat In Heaven, March 2012
Mass Market Paperback / e-Book (reprint)
Lethal, February 2012
Trade Size / e-Book (reprint)
Lethal, October 2011
Hardcover / e-Book
Tough Customer, June 2011
Paperback (reprint)
A Secret Splendor & Above and Beyond, April 2011
Trade Size (reprint)
No Rest For The Dead, April 2011
Hardcover
The Texas! Trilogy, March 2011
Paperback (reprint)
Texas! Sage, January 2011
Hardcover (reprint)
Rainwater, December 2010
Mass Market Paperback
Tough Customer, August 2010
Hardcover
Smash Cut, July 2010
Tall (reprint)
Texas! Chase, January 2010
Hardcover (reprint)
Texas! Lucky, November 2009
Paperback (reprint)
Rainwater, November 2009
Hardcover
Smash Cut, August 2009
Hardcover
Smoke Screen, July 2009
Paperback (reprint)
Tomorrow's Promise, October 2008
Hardcover (reprint)
Smoke Screen, August 2008
Hardcover
Play Dirty, August 2008
Paperback (reprint)
A Whole New Light, December 2007
Hardcover
Temperatures Rising, November 2007
Mass Market Paperback (reprint)
Ricochet, August 2007
Paperback (reprint)
Play Dirty, August 2007
Hardcover
Two Alone, March 2007
Hardcover (reprint)
Temperatures Rising, November 2006
Hardcover
The Alibi, November 2006
Paperback (reprint)
Ricochet, August 2006
Hardcover
Long Time Coming, August 2006
Paperback (reprint)
Chill Factor, July 2006
Paperback (reprint)
A Secret Splendor, March 2006
Hardcover
Long Time Coming, December 2005
Hardcover
Chill Factor, August 2005
Hardcover
White Hot, July 2005
Paperback (reprint)
Treasure Worth Seeking, April 2005
Paperback (reprint)
Love's Encore, April 2005
Paperback / e-Book (reprint)
Love Beyond Reason, April 2005
Paperback (reprint)
Eloquent Silence, April 2005
Paperback (reprint)
Temptation's Kiss, April 2005
Paperback (reprint)
Tempest in Eden, April 2005
Paperback (reprint)
Words of Silk, April 2005
Paperback (reprint)
Led Astray, March 2005
Hardcover (reprint)
Demon Rumm, December 2004
Hardcover (reprint)
Sunny Chandler's Return, November 2004
Paperback (reprint)
Best Kept Secrets, September 2004
Paperback / e-Book (reprint)
White Hot, August 2004
Hardcover
Hello, Darkness, July 2004
Paperback
Not Even for Love, April 2004
Paperback
Above and Beyond, March 2004
Hardcover (reprint)
The Rana Look, December 2003
Paperback (reprint)
The Crush, August 2003
Paperback (reprint)
A Kiss Remembered, March 2003
Paperback (reprint)
Thursday's Child, October 2002
Paperback (reprint)
Envy, July 2002
Paperback (reprint)
Seduction by Design, March 2002
Paperback (reprint)
Riley in the Morning, November 2001
Paperback (reprint)
The Switch, August 2001
Paperback (reprint)
Standoff, April 2001
Paperback / e-Book (reprint)
Fat Tuesday, June 1998
Mass Market Paperback
Dangerous Men And Adventurous Women: Romance Writers On The Appeal Of The Romance, June 1996
Mass Market Paperback (reprint)
Charade, July 1995
Mass Market Paperback
A Whole New Light, July 1992
Paperback
Texas! Sage, February 1992
Paperback
Breath Of Scandal, July 1991
Mass Market Paperback / e-Book
Mirror Image, June 1990
Mass Market Paperback / e-Book

Excerpt of Chill Factor by Sandra Brown

Chapter 1

The grave was substandard.

The storm was forecast to be a record breaker.

Little more than a shallow bowl gouged out of unyielding earth, the grave had been dug for Millicent Gunn — age eighteen, short brown hair, delicate build, five feet four inches tall, reported missing a week ago. The grave was long enough to accommodate her height. Its depth, or lack thereof, could be remedied in the spring, when the ground began to thaw. If scavengers didn't dispose of the body before then.

Ben Tierney shifted his gaze from the new grave to the others nearby. Four of them. Forest debris and vegetative decay provided natural camouflage, yet each lent subtle variations to the rugged topography if one knew what to look for. A dead tree had fallen across one, concealing it entirely except to someone with a discerning eye.

Like Tierney.

He took one last look into the empty, shallow grave, then picked up the shovel at his feet and backed away. As he did, he noticed the dark imprints left by his boots in the white carpet of sleet. They didn't concern him overmuch. If the meteorologists were calling it right, the footprints would soon be covered by several inches of frozen precipitation. When the ground thawed, the prints would be absorbed into the mud.

In any case, he didn't stop to worry about them. He had to get off the mountain. Now.

He'd left his car on the road a couple hundred yards from the summit and the makeshift graveyard. Although he was now moving downhill, there was no path to follow through the dense woods. Thick ground cover gave him limited traction, but the terrain was uneven and hazardous, made even more so by the blowingprecipitation that hampered his vision. Though he was in a hurry, he was forced to pick his way carefully to avoid a misstep.

Weathermen had been predicting this storm for days. A confluence of several systems had the potential of creating one of the worst winter storms in recent memory. People in its projected path were being advised to take precautions, stock provisions, and rethink travel plans. Only a fool would have ventured onto the mountain today. Or someone with pressing business to take care of.

Like Tierney.

The cold drizzle that had been falling since early afternoon had turned into freezing rain mixed with sleet. Pellets of it stung his face like pinpricks as he thrashed through the forest. He hunched his shoulders, bringing his collar up to his ears, which were already numb from cold.

The wind velocity had increased noticeably. Trees were taking a beating, their naked branches clacking together like rhythm sticks in the fierce wind. It stripped needles off the evergreens and whipped them about. One struck his cheek like a blow dart.

Twenty-five miles an hour, out of the northwest, he thought with that part of his brain that automatically registered the current status of his surroundings. He knew these things — wind velocity, time, temperature, direction — instinctually, as though he had a built-in weather vane, clock, thermometer, and GPS constantly feeding pertinent information to his subconscious.

It was an innate talent that he had developed into a skill, which had been finely tuned by spending much of his adult life outdoors. He didn't have to think consciously about this ever-changing environmental data but frequently relied on his ability to grasp it immediately when it was needed.

He was relying on it now, because it wouldn't do to be caught on the summit of Cleary Peak — the second highest in North Carolina, after Mount Mitchell — carrying a shovel and running away from four old graves and one freshly dug.

The local police weren't exactly reputed for their dogged investigations and crime-solving success. In fact, the department was a local joke. The chief was a has-been, big- city detective who'd been ousted from the department on which he'd served.

Chief Dutch Burton now led a band of inept small-town officers — yokels outfitted in spiffy uniforms with shiny badges — who had been hard-pressed to catch the culprit spray-painting obscenities on the trash receptacles behind the Texaco station.

Now they were focused on the five unsolved missing persons cases. Despite their insufficiencies, Cleary's finest had deduced that having five women vanish from one small community within two and a half years was, in all probability, more than a coincidence.

In a metropolis, that statistic would have been trumped by others even scarier. But here, in this mountainous, sparsely populated area, the disappearances of five women were staggering.

Further, it was a generally held opinion that the missing women had met with foul play, so finding human remains, not the women themselves, was the task facing the authorities. Suspicion would fall on a man carrying a shovel through the woods.

Like Tierney.

Up till now, he had flown under the radar of Police Chief Burton's curiosity. It was crucial to keep it that way.

In pace with his footsteps, he clicked off the vital statistics of the women buried in the graves on the summit. Carolyn Maddox, a twenty-six-year-old who had a deep bosom, beautiful black hair, and large brown eyes. Reported missing last October. A single mom and sole supporter of a diabetic child, she had cleaned rooms at one of the guest lodges in town. Her life had been a cheerless, nonstop cycle of toil and exhaustion.

Carolyn Maddox was getting plenty of peace and rest now. As was Laureen Elliott. Single, blond, and overweight, she had worked as a nurse at a medical clinic.

Betsy Calhoun, a widowed homemaker, had been older than the others.

Torrie Lambert, the youngest of them, had also been the first, the prettiest, and the only one not a resident of Cleary.

Tierney picked up his speed, trying to outrun his haunting thoughts as well as the weather. Ice was beginning to coat tree limbs like sleeves. Boulders were becoming glazed with it. The steep, curving road down to Cleary would soon become unnavigable, and it was imperative that he get off this goddamn mountain.

Fortunately, his built-in compass didn't fail him, and he emerged from the woods no more than twenty feet from where he'd entered it. He wasn't surprised to see that his car was already coated with a thin layer of ice and sleet.

As he approached it, he was breathing hard, emitting bursts of vapor into the cold air. His descent from the summit had been arduous. Or perhaps his labored breathing and rapid heart rate were caused by anxiety. Or frustration. Or regret.

He placed the shovel in the trunk of his car. Peeling off the latex gloves he'd been wearing, he tossed them into the trunk as well, then shut the lid. He got into the car and quickly closed the door, welcoming shelter from the biting wind.

Shivering, he blew on his hands and vigorously rubbed them together in the hope of restoring circulation to his fingertips. The latex gloves had been necessary, but they hadn't provided any protection against the cold. He took a pair of cashmere-lined leather gloves from a coat pocket and pulled them on.

He turned the ignition key.

Nothing happened.

He pumped the accelerator and tried again. The motor didn't even growl. After several more unsuccessful tries, he leaned back against the seat and stared at the gauges on the dashboard as though expecting them to communicate what he was doing wrong.

He cranked the key one more time, but the engine remained as dead and silent as the women crudely buried nearby.

"Shit!" He thumped both gloved fists against the steering wheel and stared straight ahead, although there was nothing to look at. A sheet of ice had completely obscured the windshield. "Tierney," he muttered, "you're screwed."

Excerpt from Chill Factor by Sandra Brown
All rights reserved by publisher and author

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