Cole Mellark, the Boy On Fire, has survived, even though his home has been destroyed. There are rebels. There are leaders. A revolution is unfolding.
After supposedly being rescue from the horrid Quarter Quell, Cole is taken to Section N, also known as District 13, which still stands strong after the once revolution. Now, another one has began, and Cole is supposed to be the face of it all, like his grandmother. Cole is to become the Blue Jay, and unite the sections to fight against the Capitol once again.
However, Cole has his mind set on other things. A revolution could mean the end of Panem, as barely enough of the population had survived the last one nearly sixty years ago. And with the other victors, including Rye, captured in the Capitol, he needs to do whatever he can to rescue them and bring them to him safely, which means being responsible for countless lives, and being the rebels' greatest weapon.
(The third and final book to the Mockingjay Games)
Cameron Cole has a plan.
After yet another relationship ends because of certain shortcomings-literally-Cameron decides it's time to swear off dating and focus her energy into her junior year at the University of Charlotte. There's an internship up for grabs and there's no way she's letting that slip through her fingers. But then she's goes and makes one impulsive mistake that changes everything.
Wesley Reed has it all.
As the golden boy of the Charlotte Colts football team, he's got the talent, the looks, and a future so bright it's practically blinding. Girls throw themselves at him, professors let things slide, and the world bends to his will.
But when a required freshmen paper threatens his eligibility, the two are brought together in a sick twist of academic fate. Cameron can't get him out of her head and Wesley isn't making it any easier with his cocky smirk and insistent charm. Their arrangement teeters on the edge of disaster as unresolved tension and late-night study sessions give way to a steamy, no-strings-attached deal.
But in the game of love and lust, someone always has to loose-and the stakes have never been higher.