Read Alpha Pack 4 - Hunters Heart Online
Authors: J.D. Tyler
you ever see him?”
“Not often. We call once in a while, send Christmas
cards. I really should make more of an effort since the man
helped raise me, but we were never all that close. What
about your dad? Your father must be a special man.”
“He’s the best. When he retired from studying wolves, I
couldn’t wait to take over where he left off. We’re very
close, but we don’t get to see each other as much as we’d
like.”
“After we’ve put Ben to rights, we’ll visit him.”
If we
aren’t forced to destroy Ben first
went unsaid.
Daria gave him a wan smile. “I’d like that, and so
would Dad.”
Neither of them felt much like talking after that. In
silence, they cleaned their bowls and utensils with leaves,
which they buried to avoid attracting unwanted nighttime
guests. With nothing else to do, they readied themselves to
bed down. Daria changed into a pair of shorts, muttering
that it was too hot to sleep in her pants.
Ryon tried not to stare as she emerged, and failed. Her
long legs were slender, toned, and tanned. He could
imagine them wrapped around his waist while he pounded
into her with precision. He never tired of fucking her. Not
tonight, though. They needed rest.
“God, I wish I could risk even one ounce of our water
supply to wash off.” She spared a longing glance for the
canteen next to her pack.
“I’ll try to find us a safe place tomorrow. With any luck,
we’ll run into one of the tributaries branching off of the
river.”
“Ohh, that would be
fantastic
.”
Idiot! Had he lost his mind? Facing a firing squad
would be less torture than guarding Daria while she
bathed. They’d never reach his team if he banged her all
the way across the forest.
They settled into the shelter, lying on their backs,
neither one speaking. The quiet between them was
companionable.
If only he could silence the chaos in his mind so easily.
If he had to kill Ben, she would hate him forever.
You don’t know for sure! She’d forgive you. Right?
Ryon couldn’t handle the truth. Not now. He shoved it
away, but it loomed. As deadly as the coral snake, waiting
to strike, to poison his blood. His soul.
Damn you, Ben Cantrell.
He slid into fitful dreams, the
echo of Cantrell’s screams winging him into the darkness.
• • •
Ryon surfaced by slow degrees. He couldn’t move.
Pressure on his legs, his chest. The waking dream collided
with his nightmare. He called out.
Daria? No!
But the cry reverberated only in his mind. His lips
wouldn’t move.
Where was his mate? Trapped. Blood. Soaking his
clothes, his hair. Drowning in a crimson river.
Ryon!
Forgive me, forgive me . . .
“Ryon!”
He came awake with a jolt and the nightmare broke
apart, the tendrils of unspeakable terror receding into the
gloom. The pressure on his body remained, and he
realized that someone was half draped across him. A hand
was clamped over his mouth.
“Shh,” Daria whispered, urgent.
Ryon tensed, listening. Nothing at first, and then . . . The
distant call of a night bird to the north, and an answering
call to the west. The rest of the forest had gone unnaturally
still. A chill of fear zinged down his spine. Christ, August
had his goons searching for them before dawn!
They were so close his wolf could practically smell
them. Waiting. Footsteps crept through the brush around
them, so furtive the slight movements might never have
awakened him. Sweat streamed down the sides of his face.
Daria removed her hand from his mouth but remained
motionless on top of him, breasts crushed against his chest
through the fabric of their T-shirts. The thundering of her
heart matched his own.
Ryon stretched out an arm and felt for his M16. His
fingers found the stock and closed around it, but the
weapon’s presence gave him little relief. They were
sitting ducks. If their hideout was discovered, he’d take
out as many of them as he could, but he’d be firing blind.
No doubt, they were well equipped with night vision
goggles, and his pair was stowed in his pack. He didn’t
dare risk making noise by digging for them.
The footsteps receded and the calls faded, melting into
the returning blurbs and shrieks of the forest’s nocturnal
inhabitants. Long, agonizing minutes inched by, became an
hour. Finally, Daria slid off him, slow and careful. When
the first gray streaks of dawn began to lighten their view,
Ryon put a finger to his lips and motioned his intent to take
a look around.
Daria gave a small nod and mouthed
be careful
. He sent
her what he hoped to be a reassuring smile, then palmed
the rifle and crawled from the tent opening on his belly.
Bracing the rifle against his shoulder, he half expected his
appearance to draw fire.
Nothing.
Only the busy chatter of day creatures awakening all
around them. The men had probably moved on. He waited
several more minutes, then rose to one knee. Still nothing.
He stood, then made a quick sweep around the area.
Satisfied, he returned to the shelter.
“Come on out. It’s clear.”
Daria joined him, glancing around. “Are you sure?”
“Yeah. They’ve gone. The problem is, they’re fanned
out, moving in a straight line in the same direction we
want to go—toward our rendezvous point. And now
they’re
ahead
of us, or at least this squad is, rather than
behind.”
Her brown eyes widened. “Oh, God. That means we’re
literally surrounded.”
“We can assume so. The good news is they don’t know
that, or we would already be dead.”
“Somehow, honey, I don’t find that very promising.”
“We’re breathing. For now, that will have to do.” Ryon
paused, considering the wisdom of his next move. “You
need a weapon.”
“I’m not exactly a marksman.”
“Desperate times.” Bending, he retrieved the handgun
strapped to his ankle. Straightening, he held it out to her,
butt first. “Three fifty-seven SIG. Can you handle it?”
Daria took it from him, mouth falling open. “You’re
trusting me with this?”
“I’m not worried about your abilities. Just point and
shoot if you have to, but watch the recoil.”
She studied it dubiously. “All right. I’ll do my best.”
“That’s all either of us can do,” he said quietly.
“Ready?”
“We’re keeping to the plan? This would be the perfect
time to turn back and get the evidence we need,” she said
eagerly. “August would never expect it.”
Grabbing his pack, Ryon stood for a moment, thinking
of the pros and cons. With the majority of August’s men
out searching for them, she was right. He just didn’t want
to admit it. After a long moment, he let out a sigh. “You
make a really good point.”
Her eyes widened and she stepped into him, placing her
palms on his chest. “You mean that?”
“Yeah. I do.” At last, he forced himself to swallow his
pride and jealousy. It was a bit rough going down. “Ben is
important to you, so he is to me, too. I want to help him
and anyone else out there who’s been hurt by those
experiments.”
She flung her arms around his neck and kissed him
soundly. He had to force his mind from taking her then and
there, no matter how badly he wanted to do it. Reluctantly
he let her go and they got ready.
Daria changed back into her dark fatigues for the day’s
hike, tucking the gun into the waistband. Then she took two
protein bars from her pack and handed one to Ryon.
“Here. Quick energy before we go.”
“Thanks. Until now, I can’t remember when I’ve ever
looked forward to eating compressed sawdust.” He
unwrapped the bar and consumed half of the nasty thing in
one bite. “I’m so hungry, I’d give my firstborn for a plate
of bacon and eggs.”
“Think about something else. How’s the arm?”
Ryon glanced at the scratch. “A little sore, that’s all. I’d
nearly forgotten it.”
She stuffed the rest of the bar into her mouth, then
peered at his arm. “Looking good. No sign of infection.”
“Thanks, Doc.” His lips turned up. “You are a woman
of many talents, my mate.”
“You have no idea,” she teased, hefting her pack.
“Oh, I think I do.”
As they headed back, making a wide berth to avoid any
of the goons that might’ve been behind them, he reached
out to Nick.
Change of plans, boss. Most of August’s men passed
us, so we’re going back to take one more crack at
getting that evidence.
All right, but be careful. There’s been a development.
Ryon tensed.
What’s going on?
The creature isn’t here in the Shoshone anymore. We
don’t think he’s anywhere around, in fact.
He let that sink in, and his blood chilled.
You think he’s
coming here?
I’d say it’s highly possible.
How fast can he possibly get here on foot?
Pretty damned fast if he was given any Tracing
abilities during the experiments. The park rangers here
have reported three more kills that are less than a day
old—and each kill is more than twelve miles apart. No
way could he have covered that wide an area on foot in
one night.
Shit! But why would he come here?
I’m guessing he’s going after August, or you and
Daria. Perhaps he senses that Daria is gone. Keep your
eyes open.
Very funny, boss. He’s fucking invisible!
Not totally,
Nick reminded him.
Watch for irregular
patterns around you, like a clear kaleidoscope effect.
You can spot him.
Thanks for the pep talk.
Hang in there. Shoot us the information the second
you break into his files. If there’s a cure present, we’ll
give it to the lab and have them get right to work on it.
Then, when we get the word from you, we’ll go wheels up
and head out to retrieve you both.
Thanks, Nick.
Talk soon.
“Daria, hold up.” She stopped, looking at him
questioningly. “Bad news—Ben is on the move.”
“In his beast form?” she asked in a quiet voice.
“Unfortunately, that’s likely the case. Nick thinks he
might be headed this way, maybe coming after us or your
uncle.”
Her face paled. “Now we’ve
got
to get that cure. We’re
running out of time and we’ve got nothing effective to fight
him with.”
He nodded. “Seems you were right all along and I’ve
been a fool.”
“Give yourself a break. We were being pursued and
shot at. You were protecting me.”
“Thanks, sweetheart. Ready?”
“As I’ll ever be.”
As they started off again, a shadow passed over his
soul. This was a suicide mission.
And even Nick wasn’t saying whether Ryon would
make it home alive.
Twelve
For hours, Daria trudged along behind Ryon, staring at
his perfect backside. How wonderful was her mate for
seeing this through? She craved justice against August for
what he’d done to Ben, and she’d have it. Ben had been a
fine man, a good friend. As lovers, however, she and Ben
were all wrong for each other and the parting had been
painful.
But she’d done her share of grieving, and had come out
the other side. After a long, desolate stretch, Ryon had
awakened the longing to be touched, held. Wrapped in
Ryon’s arms, she finally knew what it meant to find the
other half of her soul.
“Check this out.”
Ryon halted in his tracks, staring ahead. The trail had
led them to a small pond about a quarter of the size of a
football field. The thick foliage surrounding the banks
made it seem much smaller, more secluded. Sunlight
filtered through the forest canopy, causing lovely dappled
patterns across the greenery and glassy surface. Huge old
trees stood sentry at the perimeter of the bank, their dark
roots extending into the water like bony fingers. Several
azure butterflies floated on the air, some drinking from
large flowers.
“Oh, wow! It’s gorgeous!” Daria tugged on his arm, as
excited as a child. “I’m
so
hot and grimy, could we cool
off?
Please?”
“I don’t know.” He scowled, taking in the area. “Let me
try something first. Give me a bit of your jerky.”
“What for?” Curious, she wasted no time setting down
her pack and fetching the beef, especially if it meant a
bath. She opened the bag, tore off a piece, and handed it to