She laughed. "Thank you for being such a good sport about it."
"Thank you for letting me cook you dinner." He set his bags
down on the
counter and started removing the ingredients he'd purchased
on the way
there. "I should probably warn you that I haven't been on a
date in
quite a while, so I'm a little rusty."
Her eyebrows flew up as she transferred the cold foods to her
refrigerator. "How long has it been?"
"Longer than I care to admit. My job and odd hours tend to
make dating
difficult."
She nodded. "Being a single mom and working the night shift
does, too.
I haven't dated in a while either."
"Excellent. Then, if neither of us remembers the rules, we
don't have
to follow them."
"Sounds good to me." She closed the refrigerator door and
leaned her
hip against it, crossing her arms just beneath her breasts.
"Listen,
I'm sort of a
get-the-truth-out-there-so-when-it-comes-up-later-it-
won't-be-an-issue kind of gal, so there's something I wanted to
mention."
This couldn't be good.
She hesitated. "You know I'm older than you, right?"
Richart stared down at her and forced himself not to laugh
at the
irony. He may be over two hundred years old, but he looked
as if he
were in his late twenties, thirty at the most. And Jenna was
worried
that her being thirty-seven would be a problem?
"Honestly, I could not care less how old you are, Jenna," he
assured
her, all the while calling himself a bastard for not taking
the opening
she had provided and broaching the topic of who and what he
was. She
valued truth. If he continued to keep it from her . . .
A hint of insecurity entered her features. "I don't mean to
press this,
but . . . I dated a guy once—very briefly—who said the same
thing until
his friends found out and started to razz him about it. I'm
thirty-
seven. Are you sure that isn't a problem?"
"I don't know why his friends would tease him about dating
you unless
they were envious. You look like you're in your twenties,
Jenna. Not
much older than your son, in fact. And, if you looked like
you were in
your forties, guess what. I would be just as interested."
She smiled and closed the distance between them. "And if I
looked like
I were in my fifties?"
"Still interested."
"Sixties?"
"I happen to think laugh lines are hot."
She laughed. "Good, because I have a feeling you're going to
give me a
few."
"I should hope so," he said, telling himself not to think
about the
fact that he would still look and feel as he did now when
she was in
her sixties, seventies, and eighties and all of the problems
that would
generate.
You're getting ahead of yourself, old man. This is your
first damned
date. Not your engagement party.
"You don't mind that I'm older than you. You don't mind that
I'm a
single mom, putting a son through college." She shook her
head and
smiled up at him, expression soft. "You're a rare breed,
Richart
d'Alençon."
She didn't know the half of it.
Unable to resist, he dipped his head and touched his lips to
hers in a
gentle caress.
Her breath caught.
Lightning struck.
Both their hearts began to beat faster.
Resting a hand on her waist, Richart tilted his head and
explored those
smooth pink lips that had drawn his gaze so often, then drew
back
before his emotions could take over and make his eyes begin
to glow.
"Wow," Jenna breathed, staring up at him.
"I am so smitten with you,"" he admitted softly."