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The Weight of Innocence

The Weight of Innocence

img Billionaires
img 10 Chapters
img Alexandra Brown
5.0
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About

She survived five years in prison for a murder she didn't commit. Now she'll dismantle the empire that put her there. Anastasia Ubud lost everything the night Marcus Chen died. Her tech company, her freedom, her future. Convicted by his powerful prosecutor mother and sent to prison while the truth stayed buried, she emerged broken but not defeated. Six months after release, Marcus's brother leaves her to die in a burning warehouse. Her unexpected savior? Billionaire Ethan Morrison, who sees what no one else does: her innocence. As Ethan's dying grandfather connects her with a wrongful conviction lawyer, the conspiracy unravels. Marcus wasn't just Anastasia's abuser. He was a serial predator with seven victims, all silenced by family money and corruption. And the night he died? Anastasia didn't kill him. She was unconscious when his jealous brother struck, then let her take the fall. Now, with explosive evidence and an army of survivors stepping forward, Anastasia fights not just for exoneration but for justice. But the Chen family's corruption runs deeper than one murder, and they'll destroy anyone who threatens their secrets. Caught between assassins, courtroom battles, and a slow-burn romance with the man who saved her life, Anastasia must decide: will she settle for freedom, or burn down the entire system that tried to bury her? From wrongful conviction to Nobel Peace Prize. From broken survivor to founder of a movement that frees hundreds. This is the story of a woman who refused to stay silent, and the empire of justice she built from the ashes of her shattered life. Some weights are meant to be carried. Others are meant to crush those who created them. A legal thriller romance about survival, systemic corruption, and the unstoppable force of a woman who transforms her trauma into a revolution.

Chapter 1 Left to Die

The cold hit me first.

Not the kind of cold that makes you reach for a blanket. The kind that seeps into your bones and makes you wonder if you are already dead.

My head throbbed. Each pulse sent a sharp pain through my skull, like someone was driving nails into it. I tried to lift my hand to touch the spot that hurt, but my arms would not move.

That was when I realized my hands were tied.

My eyes snapped open. Darkness pressed in from all sides, broken only by thin strips of gray light slipping through gaps in the walls. The air smelled wrong. Rust, mold, and something chemical that burned my nose.

Where was I?

I blinked hard, fighting through the fog in my mind. Slowly, shapes began to form. Metal beams overhead. Concrete floor beneath me. Broken crates stacked in corners. A warehouse. An abandoned one.

My wrists burned. Rope dug into my skin, wound tight and deliberate. My ankles were bound too. I was sitting on the floor with my back against something solid. A support beam, probably.

How did I get here?

Fragments surfaced. A courtroom. A gavel coming down. Voices shouting. Prison bars. The smell of disinfectant and sweat.

Prison.

That part was clear. Everything after that was a blur.

Then I heard it. A voice. Low, cold, and unmistakable.

"You should have stayed buried."

Vincent.

His name hit me like a punch. Vincent Hale. The memories came fast. Not just the trial and the verdict. Him. Standing outside the prison gates. Smiling.

He had been waiting for me.

My breath quickened. I yanked at the ropes, ignoring how they scraped my skin. The beam behind me did not budge.

"Vincent." I tried to shout, but my throat was dry and the word rasped out.

No answer. Only the echo of my own voice.

Footsteps followed. Heavy boots on concrete. Moving away.

"Wait." Louder this time. "Vincent, wait."

Nothing.

Somewhere far in the building, a door creaked. Not the sound of someone arriving. The sound of someone leaving.

Panic clamped around my chest. I twisted against the ropes. Pain flared in my head and warm liquid trickled down my cheek.

Blood.

How hard had he hit me?

Outside, an engine rumbled to life. A familiar sound. Vincent's black SUV. The same one he had driven the day everything fell apart.

"No. No, no."

I pulled harder, skin tearing, wrists slick with blood. Useless.

The engine faded. He was driving away. He was leaving me here.

I forced myself to stop and think. Look around. Anything sharp. Anything at all.

My eyes adjusted further. Broken glass. Rusted machinery. A metal shelf on its side. All too far away.

I tried to stand. Pain shot through my left ankle and dropped me instantly.

Sprained. Maybe broken.

Think, Anastasia. Think.

How long had I been unconscious? Minutes? Hours? The last clear memory was walking out of the prison gates. Squinting into sunlight. Breathing air that did not taste like recycled fear.

Then Vincent had been there.

"Congratulations on your release," he had said. Smiling. Not friendly. Triumphant.

I should have run. Should have screamed. Should have done anything but get in his car.

But I was tired. Hollow. And a small, foolish part of me had still hoped he was not the monster I knew he was.

Now I was tied in a forgotten warehouse, bleeding and alone.

The engine was gone now. Completely.

And then I smelled it.

Smoke.

At first I thought it was a hallucination. Panic fog playing tricks on me. But then thin wisps curled through the wall slats, gray fingers creeping into the room.

My heart froze.

No.

I scanned the warehouse. There. Near the entrance, about twenty feet away. A flicker of orange light. Small at first, then growing.

Fire.

The smoke thickened fast, climbing the walls and spreading across the ceiling like it belonged there. The chemical scent sharpened, burning my eyes.

"Help." My voice cracked. "Somebody help me."

The flames crackled louder than my voice. Fast. Hungry.

I pulled at the ropes again, harder than before. Pain did not matter. Blood did not matter. Nothing mattered except getting free.

The knots held.

The fire spread at an impossible speed. It raced along the walls, feeding on old wood and forgotten chemicals. Heat rolled over me in waves.

Smoke burned my throat. Coughs doubled me over. My eyes stung.

This could not be how it ended. Not after everything. Not after surviving the trial, the conviction, and five years in a cell for something I did not do.

Vincent was taking all of it from me. Even my chance to prove the truth.

The flames reached higher. Burning debris dropped from the ceiling. One piece cracked on the floor nearby, glowing red. Another fell closer.

I shifted, grinding the rope against the rough beam at my back. A splinter jabbed my skin. Painful, but sharp.

I pressed the rope against it and started to see. Back and forth. Again and again.

Smoke thickened. Every breath scraped like sandpaper. My lungs spasmed. My vision blurred.

Keep going.

The flames climbed the ceiling. Bits of burning wood rained down. Sparks scattered around me.

My wrists screamed with every movement. The rope fibers scraped, strained, and resisted.

Another beam collapsed somewhere in the building. The structure shuddered under the impact.

This place was going to fall.

I sawed faster. Harder. My arms trembled. My head spun. Parts of the warehouse were collapsing now, pieces dropping like fire raining from the sky.

The rope loosened. Barely. But enough to make me move faster.

A larger section of ceiling crashed behind me. Heat surged forward.

The rope snapped.

My hands flew free. I immediately clawed at the ropes around my ankles. My fingers were weak, clumsy, nearly numb, but adrenaline forced them to work.

The knots slipped loose.

I tried to stand. My left leg buckled and sent me crashing to the ground. I would not be able to walk.

I had to crawl.

Smoke swallowed everything. The heat pressed down from above. The air tasted like burning metal.

I dragged myself forward. Each inch tore at my muscles. Each breath stole more of the oxygen I needed.

Where was the door? I had lost my bearings completely. Keep going. Forward. Just forward.

My palm slid across something wet. Blood. I did not know if it was mine.

The roar of the flames grew louder, or maybe it was my heartbeat. It all blended together.

Something exploded behind me. Chemicals igniting. The impact shoved me forward across the concrete.

Move. Keep moving.

Black crept into the edges of my vision. Not smoke. Not heat.

This was the edge of consciousness.

I was dying.

After everything I had endured. After years of being blamed for a crime I did not commit. After holding on when everyone expected me to break.

This was how it ended.

Vincent had won.

My arms collapsed. My body hit the floor. No more strength. No more air.

The last thing I saw, through flames and smoke and blurring vision, was the small window high on the wall. A glimpse of the night sky.

A single star.

Freedom. Close enough to see. Too far to reach.

Then everything went dark.

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