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Freedom For The Damned

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Blurb

Twenty-three-year-old Ava Cross is serving a life sentence for a murder she did not commit.

Betrayed by her stepmother, abandoned by her fiancé, and branded a killer by the world, Ava has spent three years rotting in Blackthorn Women's Prison until the night she was chosen for the Ascension Trials.

A secret tournament that the government denies exists.

One hundred prisoners.

Deadly survival games.

One winner earns freedom with a new identity and an unimaginable wealth.

Everyone else disappears.

Forced into the arena, Ava finds herself surrounded by dangerous men with secrets of their own. But as bodies pile up and the trials grow deadlier, she uncovers a terrifying truth: her father's death, her conviction, and the Ascension Trials are all connected.

Someone powerful put her in prison for a reason.

And if she wants to survive, she'll have to uncover the truth before it kills her.

In a game where everyone is a criminal, trusting the wrong person could be the deadliest mistake of all! Will she make it out alive?

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PART ONE: BLACKTHORN
For everyone who was told "you are guilty" before you ever opened your mouth. "The most dangerous prisons are the ones built from other people's lies." PROLOGUE Three Years Before the Trials The night her father died, Ava Cross wore a white dress. She remembered that detail with horrible clarity — the way the silk had felt against her skin, cool and weightless, the way it had caught the candlelight at his birthday dinner as she lifted a glass of champagne to her lips. She remembered laughing at something her father said, remembered the warmth of his hand over hers, remembered thinking that despite everything — the stepmother she despised, the distance that had grown between them like a slow fog — they still had this. These evenings. These small, bright pockets of him. She did not know they were the last. The fire started at 2:17 in the morning. She knew the time because the investigators told her afterward, with their careful, neutral voices and their eyes that had already decided. She had been asleep in her childhood bedroom on the third floor of the Cross estate, dreaming about something she could never recall afterward, when the smoke found her. She remembered waking to the sound of crackling. Remembered the orange glow at the window. Remembered running down the hallway, screaming her father's name, the heat pressing against her like a wall of solid force. She remembered the locked door to the master bedroom. She remembered how it would not open, no matter how she beat her fists against it. She remembered the hands that pulled her away — the estate's night security, dragging her toward the stairs, toward the cool night air, away from the smoke and the terrible sound of the fire eating through sixty years of her family's history. She remembered standing on the front lawn in her white dress, watching the house burn, and screaming until her throat gave out. Elliot Cross died in that fire. And somehow, impossibly, the evidence pointed to his daughter. The accelerant traces near his bedroom door. The insurance policy she hadn't known existed, with her name on it. The phone calls she'd allegedly made in the weeks before — calls she had no memory of, to numbers she didn't recognize. The testimony of her stepmother, Vivienne Cross, delivered to the courtroom in a Chanel suit and a voice that never once trembled, painting a picture of a daughter consumed by greed and resentment, a daughter who had argued viciously with her father over his estate just weeks before his death. Ava had argued with him. That part was true. He had been changing his will — she'd found out from his lawyer, who had called her by mistake. The new will would have left nearly everything to Vivienne. She had confronted her father about it. They had fought. She had said things she regretted. She had not killed him. But the jury took four hours to decide that she had. And Marcus — her fiancé of two years, the man who had held her hand through her father's funeral, who had whispered I believe you against her hair while she sobbed — Marcus stood up in court and delivered the testimony that sealed her fate. He had heard her say it, he told the jury. In a moment of rage, after the argument with her father. I wish he were dead. She had said those words. She admitted that. People say things like that when they are angry. It didn't mean anything. It meant everything. She was twenty-three years old when they sentenced her to life in prison. She was twenty-three years old when she learned what it meant to be truly, absolutely alone.

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