Ryder: #4 (Allen Securities) (9 page)

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Authors: Madison Stevens

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BOOK: Ryder: #4 (Allen Securities)
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Irene chuckled. It was easy to laugh about, but she’d bet that it wasn’t that far from the truth.

They pulled out the bread and peanut butter from the day before. Irene set to work on making food for them while they were hiking. There might not be the chance to do it later on.

“Hell, Ryder, these women thought of everything,” Havoc said from behind her. She turned around. He grinned at her. She passed a sandwich up to him, which he took happily.

She watched the huge pony-tailed biker for a moment. In any other circumstance, she’d probably be intimidated by him, but Ryder seemed to trust him, and anyone Ryder trusted, she trusted. Besides, it helped to have another huge man to protect them.

He continued gobbling up his sandwich. Everyone ate their sandwich like it was the best thing they had ever tasted.

Irene pulled out Victoria’s pack. “I’m going to consolidate.”

Victoria nodded from the floor.

A part of her wanted to just ditch the bags, but it didn’t seem wise. With the three men still out there, assuming Havoc hadn’t seriously injured one in the firefight, if they didn’t make the meeting point, they would be stuck without anything.

She packed what she could and left the rest.

She watched as Ryder pulled rope from one of the bags he packed for her and wondered what else he had thought to send. Taylor put the bag back in her pack.

“I’m going to pick her up and place her on Havoc’s back,” Ryder said. “One of you will need to keep her foot steady while the other ties her on.”

Irene walked over to Taylor and pulled her away from everyone.

“I’ll tie. You hold,” she said. “This is going to hurt, and I don’t think she’s going to be able to sit still for it. You’re stronger than I am,” she said.

Taylor looked over to Victoria.

“You’re right,” she said. “Just make it fast. I don’t know how long I can stand to do that.”

Irene came back with rope in hand.

“I’ll do the tying,” she said.

Ryder nodded. While he lifted, Taylor held. Irene looped the rope in a criss-cross pattern across Havoc’s chest, under Victoria’s thighs and across her back. She looped it as tight and as many times as it would go before tying it off.

Victoria breathed heavily against Havoc and only cried out a few times. Irene’s heart twisted at the gut-wrenching sound.

She held her breath when Ryder let go of Victoria and was relieved when the rope held.

“Good,” Ryder said. “We’re burning day. Let’s get out of here.”

 

* * *

 

They had been traveling for hours and still weren’t even close to the meeting place. They were moving too slowly for Ryder’s taste, and as much as he offered, Havoc wasn’t sharing in the duty of carrying Victoria. Ryder wasn’t sure if the biker’s actions were more about nobility or just trying to prove he was the most bad-ass man there. Either way, Ryder was impressed, but they still needed to pick up the pace.

As they sat in the shade resting, Ryder gave it another shot, if anything for Victoria.

“We need to trade off, or we’ll never make it,” he said quietly.

Havoc glanced over to Victoria sitting in the grass.

“It’s my fault,” he said.

Ryder frowned. “You couldn’t have grabbed her.”

Havoc shook his head.

“My damn brother,” he said. “He’s my problem, and he caused this shit.”

Ryder sighed. “You can’t control what other people do,” he said. “And if you want to help her, you should want to make sure we get her there as fast as we can. Then, you can go find your brother and settle things.”

Havoc nodded. “You’re right.”

“Ryder,” Irene called. “The fire.”

He turned to see the sea of orange and red just below them.

“Fuck,” he groaned. “Quick, tie her on.”

They all but sprinted into action.

“To the water,” he shouted. “It will take us to the clearing and keep us safe.”

At least he hoped it would. There was little chance the fire would jump the bank, but one ill-timed wind could change everything.

Smoke choked the air as they raced to escape. Victoria cried quietly at his back, and he knew how much it must hurt to have him run like that, but there weren’t any options.

They reached the water. He sighed in relief. Being in the water meant they were still in the game, which was something.

 

* * *

 

Irene watched the skies from her position at the water bank. They reached the clearing with just enough time to spare, but she was anxious to get out of there. Victoria had started to run a fever and was looking worse by the minute. Any longer on the mountain, and she wasn’t going to make it out.

So far they hadn’t seen a sign of any of the men. She knew they were out there. Wolf or Kert or whatever he wanted to be called wasn’t one to just let them go. Paco might, judging by what she overheard at the cabin, but she doubted he even had a way to get off the mountain with all the fires. Blitz was the odd man in all this. He really didn’t have much vested, aside from pissing his brother off from what she could tell, but she didn’t know him or what he might do.

She sighed. This could all go wrong very fast.

The putter of the helicopter in the distance hit her ears.

“This is it,” Ryder said from behind her.

They watched the sky, waiting for it to come into view. She turned to her cousin, who was standing very close to Victoria.

“How’s she doing?” Irene whispered.

Taylor shook her head. “The painkillers are barely helping.” She swallowed back her tears. “I’m just glad we’re getting her out of here.”

Irene couldn’t agree more.

When the helicopter came into view, she felt a weight being lifted. It kicked up the dirt around them, and she had to shield her eyes while it landed.

“Won’t it turn off the propellers?” she shouted.

Ryder shook his head. “We need to make this quick,” he said. “We’re lucky they came up here as is.”

The crack of a gunshot ripped through the air.

Irene’s heart leapt into her chest. They were so close.

“Fuck,” Havoc shouted. “They’re shooting at the goddamn chopper.”

“Go,” Ryder said and positioned himself behind a rock to take aim. Another bullet went flying, and he returned fire.

The helicopter lifted slightly off the ground and started pulling away.

“No, no, no!” Ryder grabbed out the walkie-talkie.

“Charlie, we’re taking fire, and the chopper is trying to leave on us,” he yelled over the noise.

“Maybe we can pick a new safe spot,” Charlie came in over the mic.

Ryder shook his head, and they all looked to Victoria, who was strapped to Havoc and unconscious.

“She’s not going to make it,” he yelled. “If you’re on my side, you get them back here. Five minutes, that’s all we need.”

Silence met him on the other end, and Irene prayed that Charlie would be able to work some magic.

Ryder laid down the walkie-talkie and fired a few more shots in the direction the enemy attack seemed to be coming from.

The helicopter stopped pulling away. Another exchange of gunshots followed. The helicopter started descending again.

They all held their breath until the helicopter came back to the ground.

“Five minutes,” Charlie said. “Run.”

Ryder turned to them. “Go. I’ll lay enough cover for you to get there.”

Havoc nodded. “One of you in front of me and the other behind,” he said to Irene and Taylor.

“No,” Irene said and turned to Ryder. “I’m staying with you.”

“Damn it, Irene! We don’t have time for this,” he shouted.

“So, don’t argue then.” She stood tall. “Two laying cover is better than one, and we’ll have an easier time making it out of here, if Victoria makes it on there.”

He was angry. She could see it with every move he made, but there wasn’t time.

Havoc handed Taylor one of his guns. “You take the rear. Fire in any direction but the one we came from.”

Taylor nodded.

Ryder handed Irene his second piece.

“Do you even know how to fire a gun?” he asked.

“It’s not rocket science,” she said quietly. “Can’t say I’ll hit anything, but that’s not the point.”

She hugged Taylor tight. “Run,” she said. “Run as fast as you can.”

They let go and took position.

Another gunshot cut through the air.

She looked to Ryder.

“I’ll take left. You take right,” he said. “Keep firing until they are on. Then, we run like hell.”

She nodded.

Havoc took a deep breath and locked hands with Taylor. Irene couldn’t tell if it was to give him strength or her, but it seemed to help.

“Go,” Havoc said.

Irene watched out of the corner of her eye as her baby cousin raced along, firing a gun like she’d been doing it her whole life. Irene’s own gun skills weren’t as amazing. She was helping to lay cover, but that was about it. The kickback was more than she expected, and she was constantly having to shift her position. Besides, she didn’t even see anyone to fire at.

“Almost there,” Ryder said. “Get ready to run.”

Irene watched as the others reached the helicopter, and when they had all climbed on, she let out a sigh. Victoria would get to a hospital and get the help she needed. The break had been nasty, but at this point, Irene suspected that there was something internal that was causing an infection. It was the only explanation she had for the fever. With all the rough hiking, it was no surprise though. She was more than certain that you weren’t supposed to move that much on a broken leg, even when you were being carried.

Ryder put a hand on her hands firing the gun and lowered them. He pulled the piece from her.

“Run,” he said.

She hopped up off the ground and grabbed her pack. It was feeling heavier and heavier each time she had to put it on, but at least she still had things in it. A part of her wished she had made Taylor leave her pack, so she could go through it, but it was too late for that. It wasn’t on the top of her mind, and even if there had been time, who knew if anything would have been useful.

Ryder grabbed her hand and pulled her fast through the woods. This wasn’t about being quiet. This was about escaping.

“Shouldn’t we go back to the water?” she panted.

“They expected us,” he said. “We’re going to have to go up.”

Her legs and lungs burned from the run. After the last day’s grueling pace, this was the last thing she was ready to do. She was certain that none of them had been drinking enough, and good sense told her not to drink from the creek, but more than once she debated it. At least she still had a little food and some water. It might be enough to get them through. If they made it stretch, they could likely go a few days on it.

Part of her cringed. She really hoped it wasn’t going to be days. Stuck here on this mountain being hunted by these mad men for days? It was like some sort of horror movie. All they needed were some zombies, and it would set the scene.

She screamed when someone jumped out of the brush. After a second, she realized it was Paco. Ryder leveled his gun and squeezed off a shot.

Paco dropped to the ground. The light in his eyes almost seemed to flicker out as the blood blossomed over his heart.

She gasped. “He’s dead.” She put her hands over her mouth.

Ryder pulled her to keep running, and she followed in shock.

“You shot him dead,” she said.

He stopped, his face etched in fury. “You’re goddamn right I did. And I’d do it again in a heartbeat. What the fuck do you think he was going to do to us? To you? I’d kill fifty men if it meant saving you.”

She stared at him in shock. It was the first time she’d seen him so angry at her.

“We need to keep moving before those other two find us,” he said.

Irene nodded and followed him, trying not to think about the man whose life he’d just taken.

 

Chapter Nine

 

 

Ryder hated this. Irene couldn’t just take her cute little ass and put it on the chopper like he wanted. Of course, she had to do the most dangerous thing possible, stay with him.

Now, he was a giant dick. A giant dick who killed a man and then yelled at her because she couldn’t be as cold as him about it. They didn’t have time to think about this. Kert and Blitz were still out there, and he was damn sure that the two of them wouldn’t be so easy to kill.

They trudged on for hours up the mountain. It was different work from the cliff, but the effort was just as hard. The sun had hung low in the sky, already threatening to set, when the helicopter came to pick the others up, and the chill of night now touched them. Irene shifted her hands in his, and for the first time, he noticed how like ice they were.

He looked back. The moonlight barely filtered in through the dense forest, with the occasional flicker from the fire. The smoke might still be playing a factor. How much, he really couldn’t say.

Irene was trembling. She was cold and had been for some time.

“Damn it,” he said.

He stopped and pulled his coat from his bag. When he wrapped her in it, he could hear her teeth chatter.

“Why didn’t you tell me you were cold?” he asked. It came out a bit angrier than he intended, but she needed to tell him these sorts of things, especially now.

“We were running,” she said between chattering.

He cursed his asshole attitude. Maybe if he had been a little nicer, this wouldn’t have happened.

Ryder looked around for shelter. Up further he spotted a large tree. It wasn’t ideal, but really nothing here was going to be. It was not like a convenient cabin would just appear for them in middle of the forest. Kert and Blitz weren’t going to do much tracking of them in the middle of a dense forest at night. It was a good time to stop.

He eyed the tree again. Maybe there was something they could use.

“This way,” he said quietly.

Irene followed, her hand still in his. They made their way to the tree, and he was relieved to see that part of an evergreen had been hit by a storm and rested on the lower part of the large tree. Its giant fan-like branches created a sort of canvas for them to rest under.

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