Read Alpha Pack 4 - Hunters Heart Online
Authors: J.D. Tyler
mound.”
“I vote we hit while they’re full and sleepy from dinner
and booze. August doesn’t allow them to drink on duty, but
that hasn’t ever stopped them from sneaking a few rounds
after he goes to bed.”
“Good to know. Stick close to me.”
Crouching low, Ryon led them from their post at the
front gate around to the back. Hugging the wall, he located
the approximate place he’d entered the estate a few days
before. Using the thick vines as handholds, he hauled
himself up and over the wall, then dropped to the ground
on the other side.
Blazing fire shot through his injured leg, and he gritted
his teeth to keep from making a sound. With an effort, he
fought down a wave of nausea and dizziness. Daria had
been right. He was fast becoming a serious liability. If
they were forced to make a run for it, he wasn’t sure he’d
make it to the pickup point. For Daria’s sake he had to try,
and if she had to go on without him, at least the mission
would be complete.
Daria dropped beside him with a soft thud, and he
caught her around the waist to steady her. Once the guard
on the other side of the swimming pool turned to amble in
the other direction, he readied the M16 and headed for the
pool house. At the moment, it was locked tight, windows
dark. They crept across the porch to the door, which
sported nothing more than a simple lock. Ryon picked it
easily with his pocketknife and let them inside, shutting the
door behind them.
He walked past the wet bar and into the tiny storeroom.
Once inside, he shut them in pitch blackness before turning
on his penlight. Daria’s anxious whisper sounded beside
him.
“What are you doing? There’s nothing in here, unless
you’re planning to get back at him by drinking all of his
guests’ wine.”
Ryon flicked the penlight at the modest wine rack that
covered the left wall of the room. “That’s what you’re
supposed to think. Nick told me where to look, remember?
Watch this.”
Striding to the rack, he braced the rifle on one hip, and
slid his hand along the right edge until his fingers found the
latch and pressed. The rack gave a pop and he swung it out
to reveal a hidden door.
Daria was suitably impressed. “Well, I’ll be damned.
The wine rack serves as a fake wall. Does this lead where
I think?”
“Even better. The stairs behind this door descend
straight underground to a lighted corridor, which travels
toward the estate for about forty yards. At that point, it
branches off. The left corridor continues to the main
house, the right one to his computer room.”
She arched a brow. “That’s damned good intel your
boss has.”
“I’m sure being able to see the future helped a bit.”
“True,” she agreed.
“I wonder why he built access through the pool house.
That’s pretty risky.”
“Nick said August likes to have a hidden route out of
the main house in case of emergency, like a raid or a house
call from a dangerous enemy. Besides, nobody knows it
exists except his current right-hand man, August, and now
us.”
“Is the corridor monitored by camera?”
“Motion sensors. No cameras, unless he’s added them
recently. Getting inside isn’t the difficult part, if you know
the route. Once we’re in, though, if they discover us, the
danger of being trapped down there is pretty high.”
“I don’t like this.”
He linked their fingers. “Me, either. Personally, I think
the whole deal stinks. Do you want to quit? Whatever you
decide, it’s now or never.”
“I want to get the rest of those files and watch him hang,
but you’re—”
“Then it’s settled.” He pressed a kiss to her lips, cutting
off further protests about his health. Releasing her, he
turned and went to work on the door. In short order, they
were standing at the top of a steep, narrow staircase. He
left the exit behind them open a slight crack for their return
trip.
“Follow me. When we get to the bottom, stay to the
right,” he instructed. “Don’t stray toward the center of the
hall. The motion sensor beam runs straight down the
middle. August likes it positioned that way so he can make
a quick escape without worrying about setting off his own
alarms and alerting the enemy as to which direction he’s
taken. Anyone else wouldn’t know not to walk down the
center and they’d get busted.”
“And if he’s changed the sensors?”
“We’re screwed. But if we make it to the computer
room, I think I’ve got us covered.”
With that mysterious pearl of wisdom, he started down,
weapon ready. Once at the bottom, they followed the
corridor to the intersection, then veered right. So far so
good. No shouts or pounding footsteps rushing to intercept
them.
A massive metal sliding door dominated the end of the
corridor. A control panel mounted on the wall to the right
resembled the cockpit of a small plane with its array of
buttons.
“Terrific,” Daria muttered. “How do we get in?”
Ryon smiled grimly. “With the override code Nick’s
security contact was able to provide, since August uses
one of the same systems they serve. What’s more, the code
deactivates the sensors until the doors close again.
Brilliant, huh?”
She peered over his shoulder and frowned. “I wouldn’t
get too cocky if I were you.”
“Why?”
“Because the room is empty.”
Ryon spun and stared in disbelief. He walked inside,
fists clenched. Solid concrete walls and nothing else.
“Son of a bitch.”
“No telling how long ago he cleaned it out. Apparently
Nick’s all-seeing eye isn’t foolproof. Any other brilliant
ideas?” She waited, glancing around nervously.
“I’m open to suggestions,” he bit off. He felt like a fool.
Of course August would’ve moved his files the instant he
learned that his estate had been breached. Ryon’s mistake
had cost him and Daria time they couldn’t afford to lose.
“I think the files in his office are the real ones,” Daria
speculated. “Dad said he’s been really preoccupied with
some sort of construction off the far wing. He told Dad he
was adding on to the estate, but now I think it’s possible
that he’s building a better headquarters for his
transactions.”
“Makes sense, but why wouldn’t he just leave the files
down here until the new facility is ready? His data is more
secure here than upstairs.”
“He’s a spider waiting to spring his trap. The million-
dollar question is, do we take the bait?”
Every instinct he possessed was urging him harder than
ever to get Daria the hell out, forget the whole thing. But
he longed for August to roast for what he’d done to Ben,
and to other humans and shifters. If nothing else, he could
give Daria that much.
Ryon waved a hand. “We’ve come this far. Let’s do it.”
“Wait,” she said softly. Stepping close, she laid her
palm on his chest. “I’m sorry I pushed you into coming
back here, especially now. You’re sick and I don’t want
anything to happen to you.”
“It’s all right, baby. If I didn’t want to try again, you
couldn’t have made me.” He gave her a quick kiss. “We’re
going to accomplish what we came to do and get out of
here, trust me.”
Daria looked deeply into his eyes, as if trying to discern
his sincerity. After a minute, she stepped back, satisfied.
“All right. So, did Nick say what part of the house the
corridor leads to?”
“The kitchen pantry.”
Her jaw dropped. “You’re kidding.”
“Nope. What better place to hide the other entrance than
behind a wall of food? We can restock our packs, too.”
“Clever,” she admitted.
“We’ve got to hurry.”
Every cell in his body alert, Ryon padded toward the
house, Daria pressed to his back like a second skin. The
narrow confines of the bright corridor made him more
uneasy than before. He half expected the passage to be
booby trapped, then dismissed the notion. A man like
August would prefer to mete out pain himself and witness
the results.
They reached the stairs and ascended slowly. Ryon
found the latch, and the mechanism emitted an audible pop,
the wall creaking when released from position. He tensed.
After a minute, he used the tip of his rifle to inch the gap
wider. Light from behind them flooded the large walk-in
pantry. Quickly, he stepped inside and motioned for Daria
to close the panel behind them. If anyone in the kitchen had
seen the strange light below the door, he and Daria would
soon find out.
Nothing. Breathing a sigh, Ryon used the tiny penlight to
scout for food to replace what they’d consumed. Being a
man of finer tastes, August didn’t allow the cook to buy a
lot of junk. However, Ryon did locate several packages of
crackers, jerky, and a few granola bars. With a grimace,
he stowed them in Daria’s pack, thinking he’d give his
small fortune for a juicy steak and a baked potato. An open
case of bottled water rested on the floor and Daria put
several bottles in his pack. Ryon figured he’d rather
collapse from carrying the extra weight than to starve or
dehydrate. What a choice.
This done, he flicked off the penlight and opened the
pantry door an inch. All was quiet. A clock on the wall
revealed the hour to be one thirty in the morning. His tired,
aching body felt every minute of it.
They made their way from the kitchen into the open, airy
living room, placing their steps carefully, keeping to the
perimeter. Moonlight filtered in through the floor-to-
ceiling glass windows overlooking the pool on one end of
the room, the front lawn on the other. A burly guard stood
next to the patio door with his back to the glass, facing the
pool, shifting restlessly.
August’s office wasn’t far, just across the living room
and a few feet down the hallway. Ryon barely made the
safety of the shadows in the hall and turned to beckon for
Daria to hurry, when the guard suddenly pressed his face
against the window. The big man jerked upright in
surprise, shouldering his rifle.
Shit, he’d spotted her!
Daria saw him, too, and froze, the SIG trained on the
man’s broad chest as he strode inside, stalking her. His
cocky smile flashed in a sliver of light. Totally ignoring
her gun, he lowered his own weapon and pressed his body
against hers.
“Well, what do we have here? August’s sweet little do-
gooding niece can’t shoot, so what are you going to do?
Shall we work out a trade for my silence?”
Ryon’s wolf snarled in rage, and he barely kept the
sound from escaping. The claws on his hand lengthened,
and he waited.
Daria didn’t answer, but began to back away, bringing
the guard closer to Ryon’s hiding place.
Good girl. Just a
bit more
. Ryon clenched his teeth as the dirtbag crowded
her and cupped a breast, confident in his ability to
overpower her. A sloppy fool, smelling faintly of
whiskey. And groping his mate. It would be his last
mistake.
“Very nice,” the man laughed, low and nasty. “You’re
going to come with me, open your pretty legs, and learn
how to treat a real man. Then I might be persuaded to
forget you were here—”
Ryon had heard enough. Moving silently, he came at the
goon from behind, reached around him, and delivered a
vicious, lethal swipe to his neck. Blood sprayed over the
pristine floor, and he could muster no sympathy for the
slimy bastard.
Working fast, he lowered the huge man to the floor, laid
the rifle on his chest, took him by the ankles, and dragged
him away. The living room offered no place to stash the
body, so he secreted it inside the pantry. Next, he grabbed
a couple of kitchen towels and quickly wiped as much of
the blood as possible from the floor. A hurried inspection
would pass in the darkness, but the guard would be missed
eventually. After relieving the man of his shirt, pants,
handgun and bullets, he rejoined Daria.
She hadn’t moved, but stood like a small, pale ghost
with wide, fathomless eyes that he couldn’t see in the
dark. Only the firm line of her unsmiling mouth gave voice
to her thoughts. He touched her cheek.
“I had no choice, baby. He would’ve killed us both.”
“I know.”
But her tone was dull. She was coming to terms with the
fact that the man she loved was a natural-born killer. He
wasn’t some romantic commando from a Stallone movie,
but the real thing, and he had other abilities tacked on for
good measure. Knowing that and witnessing it were
different matters. Heart heavy, he dropped his hand and
turned to head for the office.
Daria swept in ahead of Ryon, and he left the door
cracked a bit before joining her at the computer. She
settled into August’s black leather chair, retrieving the
thumb drive case from her pack. She wiggled the mouse to