“Fuck,” Wei whispered.
“Yeah,” Abel agreed.
“So you need to put up the door,” Wei stated.
“Yeah, and find a way to be with her and give her what she needs without takin’ from her what I need, takin’ her away. Because I go in the way I need to go in, she’ll be lost to me.”
“You gotta get your mind off it,” Wei advised.
He’d tried that, doing it by jacking off in the shower before taking off to get the shit he needed to make things more comfortable in his space for Delilah.
His self-induced orgasm was a piss-poor idea. He’d obviously done it visualizing her and it only made it worse.
Hanging the rod and curtain and installing the door wasn’t helping either, mostly because all he could think about was her naked in the shower, him with her, and what he’d do if he was.
“Didn’t find that wolf,” Wei said, and Abel focused on him again.
“What?”
“Xun and me went around, did some asking, on the down low got folks on the lookout, and Chen made calls. So far nothing. He’s vapor.”
When they moved from one location to the next, there was a reason why they did it the way they did. Understandably, Jian-Li had to come first to find and set up the space she needed for her restaurant and where she wanted to live. She did this always of a mind that Abel would need his space close to her, and she found all of that with Chen helping.
Chen was friendly, social, and—even built and able to take care of himself in a serious way that anyone could see from just looking at him—he could come off nonthreatening. They never went anywhere without setting up their network, and it was Chen who started that job so they knew everything about their location. Looked into the local politicians and business owners, researched crime rates and who was committing them, and made connections on both sides of the law.
Xun and Wei came later, laying more groundwork. This was mostly making themselves available, offering services, providing favors, establishing trust, proving themselves capable at a variety of shit, and amassing a fuckload of markers.
Abel followed last, never the face of anything they did, connecting with humans very minimally. He received his briefings prior to coming but got fully briefed after he arrived.
But he did the quiet work. The work that needed to get done that no one could see.
And he did it well.
All of this was done because he knew that something would happen eventually and they needed to be prepared in any way they could when it did.
Something had happened, and luckily, they were prepared when it did.
“After lunch, we’ll all go back out,” Abel declared.
“You sure that’s a good idea?” Wei asked. “You goin’ with us, I mean. You said you sensed more vamps. If they got your skills, Abel, they can get a lock on you too.”
“I’ll be careful.”
“Gets you away from Delilah,” he guessed.
“And hopefully turns my mind.”
Wei nodded just as his phone rang.
But his phone rang at the same time Abel’s phone rang.
They both tensed, looking into each other’s eyes while grabbing their phones.
Abel looked away first, to the screen, and saw it was Xun.
He took the call and put the phone to his ear.
“What?”
“Problem, brother. We’re on it, but we need you upstairs in Ma’s apartment. Like, now.”
Wei was talking on his phone, but Abel was out the door and in Jian-Li’s apartment within five seconds.
He got there and saw Delilah sitting on the couch, wide eyes to him, reacting to his speed and him coming into focus from a blur (something he was able to ignore, seeing as he’d had plenty of experience with that in his life). But one sight of her, his cock twitched, his jaw set, and he forced his gaze to Chen.
“What?” he barked.
“One of the waiters noticed them, told me. I looked. Two men outside. SUV like last night, according to Xun. And they are makin’ no bones about the fact that they’re casin’ the place.”
Chen was at the window, off to the side, peering around the sheers but doing it out of the way so no one could see him looking.
It was then he noticed that Jian-Li was busy lighting incense. A lot of it.
Masking his scent.
He moved with his natural speed to the window and stood behind Chen, who moved out of the way.
And he saw them.
Vampires. He knew it because he’d seen one of them last night. The one who was talking with the police officer, not the one talking on his phone who’d seen Abel. But today he had another one with him, big, built, but blond.
He couldn’t believe he hadn’t sensed them when he was downstairs. Up at Jian-Li’s place with that incense interfering, he could see. But he had a finely honed ability to detect danger.
Fuck. His need for Delilah was totally fucking him up in a variety of ways.
He stared through the window.
They were both in nice suits and they both had eyes trained to the restaurant, the blond one leaning casually against the back of the SUV, the dark one standing on the sidewalk, his frame stiff like he was the kind of guy who had a stick up his ass.
“You think they caught your scent?” Chen asked quietly, and Abel looked to him.
“Yeah.”
“Fuck,” Chen whispered.
“Language,” Jian-Li warned.
The door opened and Wei came in. “Covered the grate,” he announced, shutting the door. “Far’s I can tell, no eyes on the alley. But figure they’re here because they caught your scent, so they sniff it out, they’ll find your lair.”