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Alexander Gordon Smith - Furnace 4: Fugitives

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Alexander Gordon Smith Furnace 4: Fugitives

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Praise for

FURNACE

Fresh and ferocious, Furnace will hook boys with its gritty, unrelenting surprises. James Patterson

Furnace is hotter than hell and twice as much fun! Sign me up for a life sentence of Alexander Gordon Smith! Darren Shan

Alexander Gordon Smith employs tight, gutsy language to tell Alexs story This is a punch-between-the-eyes kind of read, punishing in every sense, Gothic in its horrors, darkly claustrophobic ... Readers may find the wait between volumes a long stretch. Financial Times

[Furnace] will be addictive and gripping for teenage readers who like their villains really, really bad and the fear factor ramped up high. The start of an adventure series but not for sensitive souls. Daily Mail

Fears of imprisonment are a strong strain for older readers, and Alexander Gordon Smiths Furnace: Lockdown, a prison where death is the least of your worries, is an adrenalin-packed thriller for teens that grumpy boys will gulp down as escapism. Amanda Craig, Sunday Times

To Gran Baird
Thanks for everything
And to Grandad Baird
I wish we could have shared our stories

Im grateful that theres so much of both of you in me

I wish I could tell you that my story ended here I wish I could tell you that - photo 1

I wish I could tell you that my story ended here.

I wish I could tell you that this was my happy ever after.

Because it should have been, right? I mean, we were out. Wed been to hell and back but the important thing was that we had made it back. Wed slit open the belly of Furnace Penitentiary, spilled its guts all over the streets. It was dead, and wed been born again, taking our first steps in a world we thought wed lost forever. It had to be over. This had to be the end of it. All we had to do was run for the hills and live out the rest of our lives on fresh air and freedom.

But can a story like mine ever have a happy ending?

Does somebody like me ever deserve one?

There wasnt much time for looking back as we ran from the broken gates, ushered on by the blinding brightness of the rising sun. But I couldnt help it. Even as the sound of the siren faded into birdsong my mind replayed everything that had happened. I dont know why, exactly. All I wanted to do was forget it, put everything behind me, pretend that it had never happened. But Furnace wasnt going to let me. I may have found a way out of the prison but the prison was still buried deep inside my head, locked in every thought, every memory.

I pictured myself as a kid, walking streets just like these a lifetime ago, so obsessed with money that I didnt care that I was a thief, a bully. I saw myself and Toby a friend whose face I could no longer picture but who I would never forget breaking into a house, hoping that wed strike it rich. I saw us being cornered by the blacksuits, Furnaces hulking guards with their cruel silver eyes. I watched them shoot Toby in the head, the same way Id watched it a hundred times before; a thousand. I saw myself framed for his murder and sentenced to life without possibility of parole in Furnace Penitentiary. I saw it all in shades of black and grey and red that seemed so much brighter than the world through which I was running.

The flashbacks kept coming, bleeding into my vision like some kind of haemorrhage. It felt as though I relived every single second of my incarceration the early days where I thought the only escape Id make was jumping off the eighth level; my cellmate Donovan and my best friend Zee the only ones keeping me sane; lying in bed at night waiting for the blood watch to come, for the wheezers to drag me into the tunnels below; then discovering that crack in the chipping-room floor and blowing our way to freedom only to find ourselves recaptured and snared by the darkness of solitary confinement.

There, with the weight of the world on our shoulders, we uncovered the truth about Furnace the experiments that the warden and the wheezers were doing on the kids. They were pumped full of nectar, a black liquid full of tiny golden flecks, like distant stars. Then the wheezers cut them open and stitched them back together into something completely different. I still dont know exactly how the nectar worked. If it was successful, then it turned its child victim into a superhuman blacksuit, packed tight with muscle and able to survive an injury that would kill a mortal. You had no memory of who you were, your past life. You became one of the wardens soldiers. Thats what had happened to Donovan, but Id killed him Id freed him before he could turn completely.

The nectar didnt work with everybody, though. Sometimes it had no effect at all, and other times it would go wrong, poisoning its victims soul, reducing him to a mindless, razor-clawed freak that stalked the corridors feasting on blood. A rat.

But that wasnt the worst of it. Some prisoners didnt turn into blacksuits or rats. They became something else, something that shouldnt be possible. The nectar chose them, flooding their bodies and causing them to mutate into immense beasts of unimaginable fury, killing machines known as berserkers.

There was no telling what youd become with nectar inside you. It was the wardens poison that decided your fate.

Zee and I had been down there, in solitary, for what seemed like forever, rescued by a kid called Simon whod managed to escape the wheezers knives. Hed been halfway to becoming a blacksuit, his torso and one arm packed with muscle, his eyes turned silver, but hed been discarded before the procedure could be finished. Once again wed made a bid for freedom climbing the incinerator chimney and once again wed failed. This time wed fallen right into the wardens lap.

The warden. I could see his face now: every time I blinked he flashed up before me, his mouth twisted into that soulless smile, his eyes black pits that promised nothing but pain. He had let his wheezers cut me open with their filthy tools and pump me full of their poison. He had let them stuff me with someone elses muscles, someone elses flesh. He had turned me into one of them. Hed given me silver eyes and a black suit and for a moment for a single, horrific second Id almost given myself to him, Id almost called him Father and myself a Soldier of Furnace

But something had stopped me. Something had kept me human. And instead of making me one of them the warden had given me the strength I needed to make a final bid for freedom. Zee, Simon and I, we fought our way up from the tunnels back into the main prison. The blacksuits hadnt been able to stop us, the mutant, skinless dogs had cowered with their tails between their legs, the wheezers had been powerless, even the warden had run out of tricks.

No, only one person had come close to ending our dream of freedom. Alfred Furnace himself, the mysterious man behind the prisons darkest secrets. He had sent two berserkers to stop us, and only by injecting myself with more of the wardens poison, the nectar, had I been able to stop them. The battle may not have cost me my life, but it stripped away all but the last remnants of my sanity. Now the nectar is the only thing keeping me alive, but its also trying to turn me into one of them. Its what drives the freaks of Furnace and freaks like me.

Picture 2

With the help of the inmates we cracked the gates and stormed out into the world, hundreds of us, shouting and screaming as we flooded the streets, bleeding the prison dry. We were out. We were free.

That should have been it, shouldnt it? That should have been the end of my story. But how could it be? Even now I can hear the sound of gunfire as the police start to round us up, the

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