Read Alpha Pack 4 - Hunters Heart Online
Authors: J.D. Tyler
speak.
“Always gotta be a hero, huh?” She stroked his face,
cutting off his second effort to talk. “Rest. You’re going to
be all right now.”
He closed his gorgeous blue eyes, heaved a deep
breath, and lost consciousness. His body was bathed in
blood, his hair matted with it. He must’ve gotten those
injuries when the creature threw him to the ground. Her
hand trembled as she smoothed back the strands of blond
hair. Long lashes rested against his cheek. God, he was
burning with fever.
“Christ Almighty,” Jax murmured. “Somebody get a
stretcher. We’ve got to get him home.”
Micah took off.
Nick’s hand landed on her arm and squeezed gently. His
eyes were calm. “He’s going to be okay. Trust me.”
She searched the commander’s face for any sign of
deception. “Is that your word as a PreCog?”
“It is. He’ll have a rough go of it, and it’ll be a near
thing, but he’ll survive.”
“I have a feeling that’s more than you usually say to
people about the future.”
He gave her a faint smile. “You’re right. But then, I
think you’ve earned the truth, especially if it’s good
news.”
She swiped at her tears. “Thank you.”
“No, thank
you
.” He winked. “And I have a feeling Ben
will be full of gratitude, too.”
Micah returned with the stretcher and, working together,
they got Ryon situated. She was hardly aware of another
group off to the side working on Ben. Her sole concern
right now was for her mate. Inside, her wolf paced
anxiously.
Ducking well clear of the whirling blades, Jax and
Micah got Ryon into the helicopter. Then Micah gave her a
hand up and a shy smile that pulled at his scarred face. As
though realizing how he might appear to her, the man
turned away and busied himself with Ryon. She was
saddened that Micah was going through such a tough time,
and she prayed he was getting better.
And not relying so much on the pills she’d seen him
popping more often than maybe he should. But she
couldn’t dwell on that at the moment.
“Go, go!” Jax yelled to Aric, and then they were
airborne.
She stayed by Ryon’s side and prepared for the two-
hour flight home. The compound,
home
. Such an odd
concept. But it filled her with warmth to realize she was
about to make her place with such awesome people.
Reaching down, she took one of Ryon’s big hands in
hers. His palms were as hot as the sands of the Sahara.
His face was deathly pale, eyes closed. Although the
helicopter’s deafening noise prevented her from hearing,
she could see the jerky rise and fall of his chest as he
fought to breathe. Despite Nick’s prediction, she couldn’t
help but be fearful. She tried their mind-link.
Come on baby, stay with me.
Tightening her grip on his fingers, she pressed a hand
over his heart. Every sluggish beat pulsed as though mired
in glue. As the sun rose higher, and the minutes ticked by,
the deep, telltale rattle in his chest worsened. She
remembered something he’d told her not long ago, when
Micah had been hurt and she’d been so afraid.
I’ll always move heaven and hell to come home.
Now her fears had come to pass.
Aric’s anxious voice filtered through their headsets.
“How’s he doing?”
Jax shook his head. “Hurry, man.”
Aric pushed the bird full throttle, eating the miles
rapidly. But as the forest below rolled by, Daria could
feel Ryon slipping away in spite of his fierce battle. In
spite of the commander’s words. His breathing had
become shallow, his features slack. She couldn’t stop
touching him. His hair, his face. As if she might somehow
keep his soul bound to this world.
“I love you, my mate. Please don’t go,” she whispered,
even though he couldn’t hear. The men were listening
through their headsets, but she didn’t care. She kept talking
to him.
Her brave wolf gave it everything he had, right until the
compound came into view far below. Any minute, Ryon
would be in good hands.
Daria gazed down at him, and froze. Underneath her
palm, his chest had gone completely still. No rattle, no
movement at all. He wasn’t fighting any longer, wasn’t
breathing. Horror washed over her.
“Oh, baby,
no, no
! Jax, my God!”
“Come on, buddy, Nick’s never wrong. Don’t do this,”
Jax begged. He looked at Micah, his face white. “Get his
head. I’ll do the compressions.”
They worked together, each passing minute an eternity,
carrying a man they all loved beyond reach. Their frantic
efforts met with failure, and by the time Aric put the
chopper down, it seemed hopeless.
Ryon was gone.
As long as she lived, the sight of Mac and the others
rushing away with his lifeless body would remain burned
in her memory. Hardly aware of her actions, she stumbled
after them, a zombie. A moan built in her chest, and
escaped in a painful wheeze.
Halting in her tracks, she clapped her hands over her
ears. “Nooo.”
Suddenly, Nick was there. His strong arms were pulling
her backward, enfolding her. She buried her face in his
chest and let the black wave take her. How long they clung
to each other, sharing their terror of the news that she was
certain would come, and the stark anguish, she couldn’t
have said.
Finally, Nick stepped back and raked a hand through his
dark hair. “You love Ryon, and he’s a good friend. One of
my best men. Remember, I said he’d have a battle, but that
battle is
not
lost. We’ll face this together, okay?” He held
out a hand.
The simple gesture touched her. “Absolutely,” she
whispered, and put her hand in his.
Together, they walked inside.
• • •
Under the watchful eye of Ryon’s many friends, Daria
paced the small waiting room. Prayed harder than she ever
had in her life. She couldn’t stop trembling.
The doctors had resuscitated him, but only after the
promised battle. And they were saying damned little about
his chances, despite what Nick had said.
Complications from the creature’s bite and the gunshot
wound in his leg were the ultimate concern. The bacterial
infection had spread through his bloodstream, ravaging his
internal organs. He’d developed pneumonia, and his fever
had climbed to a frightening one hundred and eight
degrees.
Anyone but a shifter would’ve been dead.
They were pumping him with massive doses of
antibiotics, along with painkillers. After several hours
with no change, Nick left to make a few phone calls. One
of which included notifying General Jarrod Grant of
August’s claims. Daria had pulled Nick into a room and
told him in private every single hateful word August had
gleefully related to them. Nick’s blue gaze had darkened
with every word.
“I knew absolutely nothing about this,” he had said in a
low, dangerous voice. “But I will get to the bottom of it,
take out August and everyone invoved in this horror, if it
takes the rest of my life.”
And she believed him. She didn’t envy Nick and the
general the unpleasant task of starting that investigation.
Nick returned shortly, taking a seat across from the group.
Jax eyed him. “What’s up?”
“When Ryon’s out of danger, I’m calling a meeting and
I’ll tell all of you at the same time.” He exchanged a
knowing look with Daria that the others didn’t miss. But
they didn’t push.
Daria rubbed her arms and shivered as Mac appeared,
her expression kind. Daria’s stomach dropped to her toes.
“Ryon can have visitors now. One at a time, and keep it
brief.”
Daria lurched to her feet. “Please, how is he?”
“Hanging in there,” she said with a gentle smile. “That
man has the willpower of an ox.”
Jax nodded at her. “You go first, honey. We’ll wait.”
“Thanks.” She studied each of them, taking at least some
comfort in the way they were rallying around her. In a
short time, these wonderful men had become very
important to her. She could see why Ryon was close to
them.
Daria turned and made the walk down the corridor, the
longest of her life.
And tried desperately to convince herself that, if the
worst happened in spite of Nick’s prediction, she would
be strong enough to say good-bye.
• • •
He was suffocating. Drowning in an ocean of pain. He
tried letting himself sink and fall forever into the darkness
just to escape it. But each time, they tormented him,
pulling him to hover just below the surface. To stare into
the soothing peace of death on one side, the beautiful light
of life on the other, allowing him to reach neither.
“I want my mate,” he told them, repeatedly. Or dreamed
he did. Perhaps they heard, because each time he
whispered the word, something strange and pleasant
swirled through him, chasing away the agony if only for a
while.
He clung to that lifeline, the word and the warm feeling
after. It was all he had to hold on to. All that mattered.
Until he heard her voice.
She told him to hang on, that she loved him. Would
always love him. She said so many things, but all he
grasped was
I love you
. Harder than ever, he fought to rise
from the endless void. For her.
“Daria?”
“Hush, baby. You’re very sick, but you’re going to get
better. Just rest and get stronger. I love you so much.”
“Don’t leave me.”
“I won’t,” she whispered. “Nobody can make me,
staying right here. Sleep.”
Ryon drifted, relishing Daria’s cool fingers raking his
hair, messaging his scalp. Stroking his face and lips. When
the pain became almost too much and his soul was tempted
to slip from its exhausted shell, he called to her. A soft
touch, the quiet strength of her presence became his reason
to cling to this earth.
Slowly, however, the fog began to part. His thoughts
became more lucid, awareness of his surroundings
sharper. His eyelids still refused to budge and his limbs
were encased in cement, but he sensed that Daria did
leave for short periods of time. He understood.
She never stayed away for long. She was steadfast,
urging him to get well.
For his mate, anything.
• • •
“Hey, you.”
For a full minute, Ryon didn’t comprehend that he’d
awakened and opened his eyes. The fog parted gradually
as he rose to the surface. Gentle light filtered through the
filmy haze covering his vision. By slow degrees, the haze
dissipated, and he found himself staring into a pair of huge
brown eyes.
“Baby,” he rasped.
Eyes that immediately filled with tears. Happy ones, he
guessed, from the way she beamed down at him. Her smile
crinkled her nose, and she grasped one of his hands tightly.
“I thought I’d never hear you call me that again,” she
half-sobbed, choking on the last word. “You shaved a
couple of decades off my life, mate.”
“That close, huh?”
She leaned over and brought his hand to her face,
rubbing it against her cheek. “You weren’t breathing when
they brought you in. We thought you were gone.” She gave
a watery laugh. “Except for Nick, of course. He swore
you’d make it. Guess we should learn to trust him.”
“Guess so.” Jesus, his head was muzzy and he hurt all
over. Ryon attempted a smile, but his face wouldn’t
cooperate. “How long have I been out of it?”
“Four long days. Everyone’s been visiting, and taking
bets on who’d end up in here next. Meanwhile, Nick has
been on the phone nonstop with General Grant.”
“Really?” He tried to sit up, but vertigo and nausea
swamped him. “What did Nick say about all that
government conspiracy shit? Did he know about it?”
Daria eased him back. “Whoa, no sudden moves, big
guy. To answer your questions, Nick didn’t know a thing
about it, and he was furious. He and the general aren’t sure
how much of what my uncle claimed is true, if any of it,
but they’re starting an investigation.”
“A real quiet one, I’ll bet.”
“You bet right. Nick had a meeting and told the team
about it, and they were shocked and upset, as you can
imagine.”
“The day we were turned was one of the worst of my
life,” he murmured. “All of our lives. Even if August was
lying about some of it, a lot of what he said makes sense.”
“Like how it happened that all of you ended up in
Afghanistan, in the same unit?”
“And how those of us who survived each have a Psy
gift. I know we won’t rest until we have the truth of who
was behind it all.” He paused, and asked a question that
was burning in his gut. “Have you seen Ben?”
Giving him a soft smile, she shook her head. “No,
honey. He’s been asking for me, but I wanted to wait until
you woke up.”
That surprised him. “Why?”