True Alpha (25 page)

Read True Alpha Online

Authors: Ranae Rose

Tags: #werewolf romance, #ranae rose, #shiftershaper, #werewolf, #Paranormal Romance, #half moon shifters, #Erotic Paranormal Romance, #shapeshifter romance

BOOK: True Alpha
4.37Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Jack shook his head as cold disbelief flooded through his veins, chilling him to his core. “They’ve been after you all this time, and you led them here just so you could get a glimpse of your daughter?”

The iciness went out of Michael’s gaze, and he lowered his eyes again. “Yeah.”

“Why the hell—”

“It wasn’t right,” Michael interrupted. “I see that now, and I wish to God I’d never come. I hadn’t seen hide nor hair of my hunters for nearly a year – that’s the longest I’ve ever gone without any sort of confrontation. Things were quiet, and I got it into my head that they’d really lost track of me. As you may’ve noticed, I’m not exactly a pup anymore, and I knew that if I was gonna finish the Gruens, I had to do it soon, before I got any older and they managed to produce another generation of hunters. I decided to launch one last attack – all or nothin’, and I knew there was a good chance I wouldn’t survive it. I was all right with that, ‘till I heard a rumor of a shifter living in these mountains bearing my last name.”

“You wanted to see her before you died,” Jack said, his heart as hard as his voice.

Michael nodded.

A bitter taste filled Jack’s mouth. “I reckon you’ll get what you wanted in the first place – I’ll end the Gruen family line, or die tryin’. You’d better hope that your daughter survives it.”

Michael looked more hurt than he had when Jack had struck him.

“You’ve been dealin’ with these Gruens for years. You got any information that might be useful to us?”

“Some, but I don’t know where she is. If I did, I’d be there now.”

Yeah, Jack would bet a paycheck that he’d be there – for the sake of his own personal revenge-agenda, not for his daughter. Michael’s statement spiked Jack’s ire, but he had to keep a handle on it – for Mandy’s sake, and for the baby’s. He’d deal with this jackass later. “Do you know why they’d take her right out from under my nose without bothering to even try to kill me? That doesn’t seem like typical shifter behavior.”

“I can’t say for sure, but they want me, bad. They’d do anything to get to me. They’re probably using her as bait – next to me, you’re an afterthought. They know you’ll come running to her rescue and probably decided they’d rather gun you down then than bother with you from the get-go.”

Jack drew a deep breath as Michael’s words crashed around him, crushing just about every hope he’d been hanging on to. His stomach might as well have been turning itself inside out, spilling acid into his veins and making him want to vomit. He clenched his jaw, ground his teeth and fought the urge. Up to half a dozen hunters, all of them anticipating the arrival of an angry rescue party? Mandy’s odds didn’t sound good, and yet, Michael was right – Jack would come running to her rescue, no matter what.

“You reckon she’s still alive?” Jack forced himself to ask the question and nearly choked on the bile that had risen into his throat.

“The only good hostage is a living hostage. If they’d only wanted to kill her, they would’ve done it right away, and taken you out too. Seems to me that they’re scheming on a grander scale, and probably using her as bait, maybe even as a bargaining chip.”

God, if only he could be sure that Michael’s words were his honest thoughts and not just an attempt to comfort him or keep him from snapping the neck of the bastard who’d brought this misery down on the pack. He searched Michael’s eyes, seeking out any indication of honesty, though it hurt to look into them because they were so damn similar to Mandy’s. The exact same color, though they were distinctly the eyes of a hunted man, a haunted man, a violent man – not Jack’s sweet mate. “Do you have any idea where they might be?”

“I can only guess, but if they’re really trying to draw me to them, they’re probably somewhere nearby.”

“And probably in a location that puts them at an advantage,” Noah said, stepping forward to stand at Jack’s side. “Somewhere where they’ll be able to see anyone who approaches and stop them before they get there.”

Jack nodded and broke eye contact with Michael. His gaze settled on Kimberly, who stood at Michael’s side for God-knew-what reason. How could she want anything to do with the man who’d abandoned her while she’d been carrying his child and returned to endanger the life of not only her daughter, but her unborn grandbaby? Silent tears were streaming down her cheeks. Maybe Michael had approached her with news of Mandy’s abduction and she’d talked him into coming here instead of running away. Maybe she only wanted to find Mandy and would do whatever it took – just like Jack.

“Some of these structures are on high ground,” Ronnie said, raising the map. “We should check those first.”

Chapter 13

 

The nail wiggled in its socket like a loose tooth as cramps wracked Mandy’s arms, causing her muscles to bunch and ache as she slowly worked the nail up and down, pulling it out bit by bit. A hard yank might have freed it all at once, but she didn’t dare. If her captors heard the board the nail was stuck in groan or saw it tremble from the outside, they might suspect that she was up to something. So she continued with careful, persistent tugs. It would’ve been so much easier if she’d been pulling on the head-end of the nail instead of the pointed end; as it was, she had to pull the flat head through the board, which was only possible because the wood had rotted so badly.

She erred on the side of caution and stopped working each time her captors came within a short distance of that side of the shack, walking by on their patrols. Presumably, they were waiting, guns at the ready, for someone to show up to try to rescue her. It was a stomach-churning thought, especially when she knew Jack and the rest of the pack had to be looking for her. That was exactly why she needed to free the nail as soon as possible; she’d come up with a plan while bloodying her fingers – a plan that might save the lives of her mate and the other Half Moon shifters.

As for her father, she hardly shared her kidnappers’ faith that he’d make an appearance. If he’d cared about her at all, he wouldn’t have led her captors to her, and she was pretty sure that was what he’d done. After all, he’d described his pursuers as violent and ruthless, monsters who’d kill women and children in a heartbeat. At the time, she hadn’t realized that they were still after him. Clearly, they were, and he’d known. He’d led them right to her, and for what? To satisfy his curiosity – to get a glimpse of the daughter he’d heard was living in the Smokies? Maybe all those years of running and hiding had worn him down; maybe he’d simply stopped caring about the family he’d left behind, and maybe – no, definitely – there was a hell of a lot more to his story than she knew.

Her hands slipped, and the sharp end of the nail sliced through the pad of one finger. It didn’t matter – she almost had it. Wincing, she gripped the narrow steel shaft between her sore fingers and pulled with steady, fierce pressure.

It popped free with a last weak
snap
of splintering wood and she froze, her heart picking up speed as she strained her ears for any sign that she’d been heard.

None came; she could hear her captors’ footsteps, about halfway through the looping patterns of their patrol routes, if she wasn’t mistaken. She waited for them to creep a little farther away, not daring to pause for even a moment to celebrate her bloody little victory before she proceeded with the next step in her plan.

After taking a deep breath, filling her lungs with precious oxygen, she did what her kidnappers clearly thought she was too smart to try – she shifted.

The entire transformation from human to wolf took place in the blink of an eye; in less than a second, every muscle and bone in her neck was screaming with pain. Her eyes bulged and watered as the collar dug into her throat, choking her brutally. She focused as best she could through the pain, moving as quickly and desperately as possible, shaking the rope bonds so they’d slide over her paws. The knotted coils dropped easily off of her front paws, but the ties around her back legs were more stubborn. She jerked and flailed, losing balance and toppling onto her side. With a desperate kick, she managed to free one foot, and promptly shifted back into her human form.

The ordeal had left her lying on her side in the dirt, her robe gaping open and her eyes streaming with tears. Her neck ached and throbbed as if she’d just been strangled within an inch of death, which she very nearly had been. She exhaled and took a deep breath, drawing fresh air into her burning lungs and reveling in the fact that she was free. Her joints popped as she flexed her wrists and ankles fully for the first time since she’d been abducted. A loose loop of rope hung around one of her ankles; she pulled it off quickly and shoved it against the wall, along with the other one. Then she sat up, hiding them with her body. She left the tape over her mouth too – removing it would’ve been a dead giveaway to her abductors.

Sitting with her legs folded beneath her body was uncomfortable and put her at an increased risk for blood clots, but she had no choice; the position was the only way she could hide the fact that her ankles were free. Concealing her wrists was easy – she only had to hold them behind her back, just as they’d been tied. Before she did so, she raised her hands to her aching throat, exploring the collar that circled her neck. It was made of thick leather, just as she’d suspected, and was unfortunately secured with a small, sturdy padlock. She’d counted on that, the worst case scenario. Calmly, she lowered her hands and began combing the dirt behind her back. It didn’t take long to find the nail she’d dropped, and when she did she gripped it tightly in one fist, holding her hands against the small of her back so that when one of her captors entered the shack, he wouldn’t suspect a thing.

 

****

 

Jack’s heart seemed to stop for what must’ve been the hundredth time that day as he approached the cave that gaped from the face of a steep cliff somewhere in the heart of a mountain several miles outside of Half Moon territory. Though he was practically going crazy with the urge to see inside, he’d circled around and was slinking with one furry shoulder brushing the rock face, stepping carefully as he inched his way up a narrow ledge. Noah and April were behind him, following carefully and silently.

Ronnie waited below, crouched behind a bush in his human form, his rifle trained on the cave opening, ready to sniper off anyone who might appear – other than Mandy, of course.

Michael and Kimberly were also crouched below in the bushes – a fact that set Jack’s teeth on edge and made him want to snap his fangs in irritation. Without Mandy’s father and her unfortunate mother, the search group would’ve divided evenly into two competent teams of four. Michael had absolutely refused to let Kimberly out of his sight for fear that she’d be taken too.

So Jack had allowed them both to accompany his team. Kimberly was a liability that he needed like he needed a hole in the head, but he needed Michael’s knowledge of the Gruens, and it was true that Kimberly needed protecting. Plus, he wanted to make sure Michael was around when the ordeal came to an end so he could personally rip him to pieces. If Mandy and the baby both survived and escaped with no serious injuries, he might just let the jerk live. Barely.

A breeze drifted through the forest, blowing over the cliff face and combing through Jack’s coat. He sniffed, on red-alert for any whiff of Mandy that the wind might carry as it rushed past the cave mouth. All he caught was a faint odor of dampness. Unsure of whether to be deeply disappointed that he hadn’t scented her or relieved that he hadn’t smelled anything damning, like death or blood, he continued. He wasn’t going to turn around without seeing the interior of the cave with his own eyes. If he had to, he’d roam each ever-loving mile of the Smoky Mountains, checking every nook and cranny and overturning every last rock until he dropped dead.

With his next step, his paw dislodged a pebble that rolled off the ledge and bounced down the cliff face. No one rushed out of the cave or even poked a head out to see what had made the soft sound. It was going to be empty. That was ninety-nine percent certain, but his stomach was a hard ball of nerves anyway as he crept closer, approaching the edge of the opening. Every muscle in his body tensed, ready for action as he extended his muzzle, scenting the air as he rounded a corner of jagged rock and stepped into the mouth of the cave.

The odors of dampness and staleness flooded his senses, but nothing else. Still, he continued forward as Noah and April’s toenails clicked on the stone behind him. They walked at his flanks, following him into the darkness.

The cave was shallow and just as empty as Jack felt as he exited it, making his way back down the ledge as quickly as he could without slipping and tumbling over the edge. When he reached the bushes where the others waited, Ronnie placed a hand firmly on Jack’s shoulder, saying nothing as he slung his rifle over his back again with the other.

Jack met Ronnie’s gaze for the briefest of moments and saw the disappointment he felt reflected in his friend’s eyes. Ronnie was a good friend, like a brother to him and every bit as much a part of the pack as the others. Jack was lucky to have him on the search, and fortunate to have Will leading the other team. Had they found anything yet?

Other books

Irish Folk Tales by Henry Glassie
The Gilded Web by Mary Balogh
The 30 Day Sub by Alaska Angelini
Honor Among Orcs (Orc Saga) by Dillin, Amalia
A Captive of Chance by Zoe Blake
Venetian Masks by Fielding, Kim
Burned by Hope, Amity
A Good Marriage by Stephen King
Hunte by Warren, Rie