Read Alpha Pack 4 - Hunters Heart Online
Authors: J.D. Tyler
Sure thing.
He wasn’t sure at all, but he kept moving. “Nick
contacted me,” he said hoarsely. “They’re coming.
They’ve got some serum for Ben.”
“Best news I’ve heard all week!”
Daria attempted to speak to him again, but he didn’t
really hear her. Couldn’t. He just walked until a weird
buzzing noise made him stop, cock his head, and listen.
Daria said something else. He couldn’t understand her
over the noise, like thousands of bees in his head.
The forest began to dim. His head tilted back and he
saw blue sky as his knees buckled. Sky?
Then nothing but darkness.
• • •
“Ryon, look!” Daria exclaimed, pointing. Just ahead, the
forest ended and a flat river delta widened before them for
at least a mile. Plenty of room for a helicopter to land!
“Better contact Nick and tell him about this place. Ryon?”
He’d stopped and was looking up, his head cocked—
then he folded and slumped to the ground.
“Shit!” She knelt at his side, slapped his face. “Come
on, don’t do this! We’re almost home free, so you can’t
quit.”
Ryon’s breathing was harsh and labored, his color gray
beneath his tan. Rolling him to his side, she worked the
pack off his shoulders and laid aside the rifle. After
settling him on his back, she fished through the pack and
retrieved a bottle of water.
Cradling his head in her lap, she placed the opening
between his lips and poured a tiny bit of the liquid into his
mouth. He sputtered and coughed, but opened his eyes to
slits and raised his head, seeking more. The next swallow
went down without difficulty now that he’d regained
consciousness.
“That’s it, easy now,” she crooned. “Hang in there,
okay? We’re at the edge of a clearing. Perfect place for
them to land. Couple of hours, maybe, and we’re home
free.”
He tried to smile. “That’s good. Nick will send a small
team in to find Ben. They’ll help him.”
She was beyond touched that he’d think of Ben at a time
like this—especially when it was Ben’s creature that had
put him in this condition. “I’m grateful they’re willing to
give it a shot.”
For a while, Daria sat running her fingers through his
hair. His skin was hot and dry as a desert, a sign of
dehydration. The infection had spread through his body
and was running its course. If he didn’t get medical
attention soon, shifter or not, he would die. Fear
threatened to overwhelm her.
“Drink more water.” She helped him, and he didn’t
resist. Still, his beautiful blue eyes were dull, his sensual
lips unsmiling.
“Daria, if August gets here before my team and I can’t
stop him, don’t let him take me alive.”
“God, Ryon, don’t even say that,” she gasped.
“I won’t fall into his hands and become one of his
experiments, not if I can prevent it. I saw what they did to
Aric, Micah, and Phoenix. Ben, too. I won’t let him do that
to me.”
She was spared from responding to his awful request
when he fell asleep. If August caught them, she knew she
wouldn’t take Ryon’s life, or her own. Not because she
was a coward, but because she wouldn’t give up hope that
they would get out of this mess. His team would come.
They always did. If he wasn’t so sick and was thinking
straight, he’d know it, too.
Daria combated the boredom by dozing lightly, keeping
an ear open for Ryon’s breathing, as well as any sounds
that didn’t belong. A friggin’ helicopter would be nice. A
big one or two loaded with wolves—and one panther—
and armed to the teeth.
One hour came and went. Two. Cramped, Daria had to
shift Ryon off her lap, stand and stretch. She made a tour
around the immediate vicinity to work out the kinks, not
straying far from him. Strolling to the edge of the tree line,
she admired the pretty green delta, the river snaking away
in the distance. An odd oasis smack in the middle of the
rain forest.
She started to turn, then froze.
That sound
. Could it be?
Whump-whump-whump.
The distinctive pumping of rotor blades, and just there,
a tiny speck in the distance. Then two specks that grew
progressively larger.
“Yes! Ryon!” she squealed. Pushing through the tangle
of vines, she ran back to him and dropped to her knees.
She shook him hard enough to rattle his teeth. “Wake up.
They’re here!”
Ryon sat up and blinked at her. “What?”
“The Pack is here! Hurry, get up.”
Blinking, he struggled upright. “Thank Christ. Where’s
our stuff?”
“Right here.”
A sharp crack split the air, followed by more. Bullets
were suddenly pelting the trees around them, men shouting.
Ryon staggered to his feet and shoved her pack into her
hands. “Run to one of the copters and don’t look back!”
The
whump-whump
from the big Hueys filled the air as
he pushed her forward and dove for his rifle. Daria ran
into the clearing, across the flat ground. Her heart
slammed in tempo with her feet as shouts drifted after her.
Bullets kicked the dirt beside her, plucked at her pack.
The helicopters loomed over the horizon, coming in fast
and low. The first pilot slowed, hovered, and set down
about fifty yards away. She saw that it was Aric, and he
left the blades whirling and ready to take off. Jax was
sitting in the open side door, holding an M16 like Ryon’s,
yelling and waving her on. The second Huey landed not
far from the first, Pack guys spilling out and sprinting to
back up their endangered comrade.
Almost there. Twenty feet, ten, five. And then she was
in, Jax yanking her clean off her feet. She landed inside
hard, but didn’t spare him a glance. She spun about to see
Ryon making a magnificent stand halfway between the tree
line and the helicopter. His muscles bunched as he
sprayed the forest with a steady onslaught of bullets,
pinning down the goons to cover her flight. His team was
coming up fast behind him.
One of the men coming to his aid, Micah, grabbed Ryon
and pushed him in the direction of the helicopters. Ryon
whirled, half-running, mostly limping, toward her. Strain
etched his face, but he kept coming. Aric held their
position as Jax fired past Ryon and the others into the
trees. The fight heated up as the two forces continued the
gun battle—and then something horrifying happened.
At the edge of the trees, August’s men began to pour
from their cover, straight into the Pack’s sights. A few
took hits and went down before the guys realized
something wasn’t right and ceased fire. Looks of confusion
at their enemy’s actions were replaced by shock as a body
came flying out of the brush, mangled and torn. Then
another.
“Aw, fuck me!” Aric shouted.
A huge section of the trees shook from side to side.
Split apart and was hurtled away. Then the unmistakable
translucent outline of the creature became visible, and it
paused just inside the clearing. Ryon looked back at that
moment and stumbled to a halt, mouth dropping open.
And as the creature advanced on them all, throwing its
head back to roar, Ryon turned and began to limp right
back toward danger.
“Nooo!” Daria launched herself toward the door, but a
strong arm wrapped around her waist.
“Stay here! I’ll get the serum and help them!” Pushing
past her, Jax leapt from the copter and ran, presumably to
the other aircraft to fetch the medicine.
August’s men were panicked, the survivors fleeing the
scene as fast as possible. The Pack let them go and
concentrated on the beast, firing on its massive bulk. That
accomplished nothing but turning its attention on them, and
pissing it off.
More than half of the men shifted, including Kalen into
his panther form. They ran circles around the beast,
keeping it occupied by taking turns running at it, snapping
and barking, staying just out of reach of its deadly claws.
She couldn’t help them. Ben wouldn’t recognize her in
this state, so she could do nothing but watch, hand over her
mouth, heart in her throat.
Ryon stripped and shifted, joining his friends in battle.
Then Jax ran toward the fray, legs pumping, a large
cylinder clutched in his hand.
When Ryon made a flying leap and attached himself to
the creature’s back, the thing went nuts. Grabbed and
swiped, trying to reach him, and when that failed, spinning
his body in an attempt to shake him loose.
Ryon was going to get himself killed. And there wasn’t
a damned thing she could do to stop it.
Fifteen
Ryon jumped onto the creature’s back, sinking his fangs
into the tough, leathery hide. It roared and tried to claw
him off. Twisted and turned.
“Shift and catch!” Jax yelled.
Ryon saw his friend run up, holding a large tube. The
spike on the end was long and silver, and if it was a
needle, it was the thickest, most wicked one he’d ever
seen. Then again, it would have to be to penetrate the
creature’s hide.
The shift was difficult, especially while riding an
enraged mutant lizard. In human form, he wrapped an arm
around the thing’s neck and held out the other. “Throw it!”
The first try missed, and he cursed when the tube sailed
past them and landed on the ground. It narrowly missed
being crushed by the creature’s webbed feet as it stomped
around, oblivious to the fact that they were trying to save
its life. Or rather, Ben’s life.
“We’re trying to save your ass, you fucker!” he yelled.
Jax threw the tube again, but it bounced off Ryon’s
fingers. The next second, he was thrown to the ground,
rolling to avoid being stomped or eaten. As he scrambled,
he saw the cylinder lying just a few feet away. He went
for it. Just as his fingers closed around it, he was yanked
backward.
The creature’s claws dug into his shoulder as it dragged
him to its hungry, gaping maw. Fetid breath wafted in his
face and he had an up-close and personal view of those
rows of deadly teeth that were ready to tear out his throat.
Flipping the tube in his grasp, spiked end toward the
creature, he drove the business end into the vulnerable
skin of its belly. The beast let out a roar as Ryon quickly
pushed the handle all the way in. He didn’t know if that
was the best spot, or even if it would work, but he’d done
his job.
It would have to be enough. He was finished.
The beast flung him away and he landed in the dirt hard.
Unable to move, he took in the monster standing in place,
shrieking in agony, no longer aware of anyone else in his
vicinity. Ryon felt a pang of sadness, knowing the creature
was not really evil. It didn’t possess that sort of thought
process. All along, it had simply been ravenously hungry.
Angry. Confused.
But never evil. Because the man underneath was good.
Incredulous, he saw the creature begin to shrink. Scales
became flesh, webbed feet and hands human ones. The
knobby skull returned to its regular shape, and a full head
of chestnut hair appeared. The distended torso became
taut, the stomach flat. In less than a minute, a man stood
swaying where the beast had been, blinking as though he’d
never seen them before. And indeed he hadn’t.
Ben Cantrell was tired, shell-shocked, worse for the
wear, but a man all the same. He crumpled to the ground.
Some of the team ran to Ben, and the others toward
Ryon. Nick and Jax appeared, looking down at him,
smiling.
“You did it, buddy,” Jax said, laying a hand on his
chest. “Great job.”
He tried to grin. “That’s why I get paid the big bucks.
August is getting away, though.”
Nick spoke up. “This time. Next time he won’t be so
lucky.”
Suddenly he remembered August’s terrible claims, his
story of betrayal that ran all the way to the presidency. He
wanted to ask if it was true, if Nick had known. But he
was too exhausted to talk anymore. Then Daria came into
his line of vision, and he’d never seen anything more
beautiful.
“Ryon?” Her face was wet with tears.
No sound would move past his throat.
“Always gotta be a hero, huh?” she said, stroking his
face. He tried again to reply, but she shushed him. “Rest.
You’re going to be all right now.”
He wasn’t so sure; everything hurt so bad. But he’d trust
her. With a deep sigh, he let the darkness close in, and
everything faded away.
• • •
Daria jumped from the helicopter the second the creature
began to change back into Ben. As her former lover
crumpled in the dirt, unmoving, she ran to her mate and
dropped to her knees. Ryon lay on his back, staring up at
the people around him. She could’ve sworn she’d seen
him talk, but he didn’t have the ability now.
“Ryon?” She put a shaking hand over her mouth. Hot
tears slid down her cheeks. His lips moved, but he didn’t