Read Alpha Pack 4 - Hunters Heart Online
Authors: J.D. Tyler
She stood, fists clenched, holding his gaze. Clearly she
hated backing down.
“I’m proud to have such a brave mate,” he murmured,
curling a hand under her chin. “But it’s not worth the risk.”
“Yes, it is!” Angry, she jerked from his grasp. “Ben is
worth the risk! He’s a good man who doesn’t deserve
what they did to him!”
His gut churned. Ben again. Always that goddamned
Ben Cantrell, standing smack between him and his mate.
Did the man have any idea of the gift he’d so carelessly
lost? Her long raven hair was pulled back into a
serviceable ponytail and hung halfway down her back.
Her large brown eyes were set in a face that would put
any angel from heaven to shame. Tiny laugh lines at the
corners of her lips evidenced a passionate woman who
often found much joy in her world. The coldness in her
stare right now made him loathe the argument that had
recently wounded it.
“You know, Ben is part of your past,” he said stiffly,
striving to keep the hurt and jealousy out of his voice. And
failing. “Keep looking into the past and your future just
might pass you by. Didn’t someone say something similar
to me recently?”
She stilled. “You’re going to throw that in my face
now?”
“Maybe you should figure out once and for all what it is
you want, that’s all. Let’s go.”
God, this was going to be a long hike. He could feel
Daria glaring holes in his back.
Arrogant jackass!
“What did you say?” he called over his shoulder.
“Nothing.” He could practically hear her grit her teeth
in annoyance.
No. He wouldn’t let her anger get to him. Better that she
was mad at him than to have her uncle’s men catch up with
them.
“How far do we have to walk? I assume you’ll do your
Telepath thing and have the team pick us up?”
“Eventually. We’re off the route we took coming in.
From the map, we’ve got thirty miles to go, give or take.”
Daria’s protest was swift. “Thirty miles? That’s sheer
lunacy!”
“What other option do we have? Our wolf forms could
handle the trip better, but we have to forgo that because
we need our supplies. Besides, you’re fit,” he pointed out.
“You spend half your year in the Shoshone doing
research.”
“Yes, but I’m not typically fleeing through it at a
breakneck pace.”
“Need I remind you that you insisted on coming along?”
A huff of annoyance was his only answer. “When we
reach the rendezvous point, I’ll contact the team and
they’ll pick us up. And for the record, I don’t like giving
up any more than you do.”
Silence, thick and heavy.
He wasn’t capable of forcing her to talk any more than
he was able to make her see retreat was for the best. So he
started walking, keeping the pace brisk but making certain
she was close behind. As they went, he reached out to his
commander.
Nick? The op was a bust. We got inside, but somehow
August knew we were there.
You two okay?
Yeah, but it was a close call. We’re using the alternate
escape route, but it will take us a day or more to get to
the rendezvous point.
All right. Let me know when you get close and we’ll be
on our way. And Ryon, be careful.
He smiled at the real concern in Nick’s tone.
Will do.
He wasn’t sure how long they’d been under way, but it
must’ve been hours before her breathless voice cut into his
brooding.
“Can we rest for a minute?”
He stopped and turned to face her, wry amusement
tugging at his lips. “And give August a chance to catch up?
Sure, why not. Maybe he’ll be so overjoyed to see you that
he’ll just kill me and spare you. It’ll be a regular family
reunion.”
Ignoring his teasing, Daria shrugged off her backpack,
snatched her canteen from inside, and took a draw, careful
to conserve the precious water. When finished, she
replaced the cap and squinted up at Ryon, who watched
her without comment.
“Tell me the story of how you and your SEAL team
were turned in Afghanistan,” she said quietly.
He sucked in a breath, wondering if this was some new
strategy to prove her point. But he sensed no deception,
just an honest desire to know his beginnings as a shifter.
“I’m not sure you’re ready to hear—”
“Stop protecting me! Trust me to know when I’m
ready.” Her eyes narrowed, her jaw set.
“All right. When we make camp, I’ll tell you everything
you want to know.”
“Fair enough.”
Ryon tensed, then narrowed his gaze in the direction
from which they’d come. “Break’s over. We’d better get
going.”
The heat and humidity of the day escalated as they
walked until there wasn’t a dry thread left on either of
their bodies, which didn’t do much for their already
touchy dispositions.
Ryon pushed on, indifferent to her temper. They stopped
only once more for a quick drink of water. “You hungry?”
“Unless you have a T-bone steak hidden in your pack,
I’ll pass.”
“Nope. But I have dried beef, MREs, and energy bars.
Or we could always skin a lizard.” He waggled his
brows, and with a snort, she grabbed her pack and started
walking again.
That was the end of the subject of lunch.
Daria was visibly relieved when he announced they’d
better find a place to make camp. His chest swelled with
pride as he studied his brave mate. She was making the
best of an unavoidable—but temporary—situation.
“Right here,” he said, pointing.
Ryon led the way into a gnarled mass of vines and
overgrown foliage. About twenty yards in, he located a
spot where the grasses on the forest floor and the
surrounding plants had formed a bowl-shaped bubble
perfect to hide them.
Leaving the M16 slung across his back, he swung the
large pack to the ground and retrieved a rolled-up piece of
canvas strapped in a side holder. He popped it open with
a snap and in short order had a small tent in place just big
enough for two.
Ryon looked at her and nodded. “It will be hotter than
Hades with the thing zipped up, but we should be
relatively safe from things that walk, crawl, and slither.”
“We could just sleep outside in wolf form,” she noted.
“It would be cooler.”
“It would, but if your uncle’s men catch up we’ll have
to run and leave all of our stuff behind.” He shrugged.
“We could do that, I suppose. We’d just have to drink out
of streams and hunt like real wolves to eat.”
She wrinkled her nose. “As much as that idea pleases
my wolf, the idea of tearing into raw animal flesh doesn’t
do a thing for me.”
“Then we camp like humans.”
She glanced around. “Shouldn’t we start building a fire
before it gets dark? To keep the other critters away.”
“Not unless you want to post a message in neon lights
telling August where to find us.” He gave her a
considering look. “Or maybe you want to have it out with
him.”
“I do, but not out here, like this.”
A flicker of remorse went through him. Heaving a
weary sigh, he strode to his pack without a word. He
fished around and brought forth two silver packets of
MREs, followed by two small metal bowls and spoons
used for camping. Placing the bowls on the ground, he
knelt and tore the tops off both packets, then poured one
into each bowl. Last, he added a bit of water to each and
stirred. Finished, he sat cross-legged and held out one of
the bowls.
“Your dinner awaits, madam.”
Daria walked over and sat beside him. “It only looks
slightly better than freshly slaughtered rabbit.”
“Sorry. The Four Seasons seems to have misplaced my
reservation for this evening.”
Sitting beside him, she laid a hand over his. “I don’t
mean to sound like such a bitch. You’re doing the best you
can under the circumstances and I’ve given you a hard
time. I want you to know that
you
are the most important
thing to me.”
He swallowed hard, trying not to appear as vulnerable
as he suddenly felt. “Am I?”
“Yes.” She paused. “Tell me what happened that day.”
“This is hard for me to talk about.” Encouragement
shone in her whiskey eyes. After a long moment, he began
his story as the shadows lengthened in the forest.
“There were six of us on the SEAL team together—me,
Jax, Aric, Zander, Micah, Phoenix, and Raven. It was so
hot that day, we were about to melt.” He laughed softly,
the pain always there, under the surface.
“Little did we know that more than half of us were
about to die. But not at the hands of any enemy we’d ever
seen in our worst nightmares . . .”
• • •
6 years earlier . . .
“Jesus Christ, I’m rank,” Raven bitched, scratching at his
crotch. “When I finally get to change this underwear, it’ll
probably walk off.”
Micah grinned. “With assistance from the crabs you
caught from that woman in the last village.”
“Shut up, needledick. She did
not
give me crabs.”
A few of the guys chuckled but Ryon wasn’t paying
much attention. He was thinking about his mom and sister,
wondering whether he’d make it out of this godforsaken
hellhole to see them again. Forget sex. Sweet baby Jesus,
what he wouldn’t give for a huge bowl of his mom’s peach
cobbler smothered in vanilla bean ice cream.
Would he be home by Christmas? As they trudged
onward, he dreamed of how great the reunion would be. If
he got leave, he’d surprise them. Just show up at the house
and watch Mom and Lisa screech with joy when he came
through the door. He’d bring lots of presents, champagne,
and—
“Hold up,” Jax whispered, coming to a halt. Tensing, he
studied the mountain forest around them, and frowned.
Somewhere hidden in the greenery, a footstep crunched to
their left. Another to their right. And one from behind.
Ryon and Micah exchanged a fearful look. This area
was supposed to be clear, and they couldn’t have reached
their target’s stronghold already. God, they were
surrounded!
Then, the forest went silent. Those few heartbeats that
followed the utter stillness, those seconds before their
lives changed forever, as he locked gazes one by one with
Aric, Raven, and the others would haunt him forever.
Thud, thud, thud.
The ground trembled and the leaves shook. When a
deep-throated roar split the air, Aric jumped, pointing the
muzzle of his M16 into the trees, hands rock steady, a bead
of sweat dripping off his nose.
“Fuck,” Micah whispered. “What the fuck is that?”
Ryon stared in horror. The thing that broke through the
foliage to their left stood erect on two legs, and was more
than seven feet tall. Covered with a thick mat of grayish
brown fur, it had a long torso, two arms, muscular
shoulders, and a head sporting two upright ears and a long,
snarling snout full of sharp teeth.
It looked like a creature that was half man, half wolf.
He and his team stared, mouths open, fingers frozen on
their triggers.
How things might have been salvaged, disaster averted,
they’d never know. Because their buddy Jones started
screaming, pumping bullets into the beast’s chest. After
that, everything went to shit.
The creature staggered backward and then rallied
quickly, rushing Jones. With a swipe of a paw the size of a
dinner plate, the big bastard ripped out Jones’s throat,
tossing him aside like a twig. Then it pounced on Raven,
biting into the vee of his neck and shoulder as the man
screamed.
They opened fire just as several more of the beasts
emerged from the forest. It quickly became apparent that
while their bullets could wound, it would take something
with far more power to kill them. Aric dropped into a
crouch and desperately palmed a grenade as his friends
fell all around him, waging a battle they couldn’t win. The
one who’d killed Jones shook Raven like a rag doll,
released him, and ran toward Aric, who let a grenade fly.
It hit at the target’s feet and exploded, sending the damned
thing to hell. But it wasn’t enough.
Micah went down, his knife in hand, slitting one’s
throat. But another jumped on him, and his struggle was
short-lived, his scream terrible. Jax fell next, then their
CO Prescott, Zan, Nix, and so many others. All of them,
one by one. Dead or dying.
Unsheathing his own knife, Aric spun to face the beast
coming up on his flank. “Come on, bitch,” he hissed.
“Let’s dance.”
Ryon lost track of the battle around him as one of the
creatures rushed him. Barreled into him like a freight train
and took him to the ground. His M16 was knocked into the
air, raining a spray of bullets into the trees. The weapon
landed several feet away, useless.