middle-aged.â
âYouâre not middle-aged. Youâre ripe. Like a hothouse peach.â
âNonsense,â she muttered, annoyed by the fact that his flattery, empty as it was, had caused a faint stirring of pleasure in her. Perhaps it was the wine, or the knowledge that he was a stranger whom she would never see again after this evening, but she suddenly felt free enough to say anything she wanted to him. âI was ripe ten years ago. Now Iâm merely preserved, and before long Iâll be buried back in the orchard with the other pits.â
Jack laughed and set aside his wine, then stood to remove his coat. âPardon,â he said, âbut itâs like a furnace in here. Do you always keep the house so hot?â
Amanda watched him warily. âItâs damp outside, and Iâm always cold. Most days I wear a cap and a shawl indoors.â
âI could suggest other methods to keep yourself warm.â Without asking for permission, he sat right beside her. Amanda huddled back against her side of the settee, clinging to the remnants of her composure.
Inwardly she was alarmed by the solid male body so easily within reach, the unfamiliar experience of sitting next to a man in his shirtsleeves. His fragrance teased her nostrils, and she drew in the alluring smellâ¦male skin, linen, a light pungent note of expensive cologne. She had never realized how nice a man could smell. Neither of her sistersâ husbands possessed this pleasing aroma. Unlike this fellow, they were both stodgy and respectable, one a professor at an exclusive school, the other a wealthy town merchant who had been raised to knighthood.
âHow many years have you?â Amanda asked impulsively, her brows drawing together.
Jack hesitated a fraction of a second before replying. âThirty-one. Youâre rather preoccupied with numbers, arenât you?â
He was a young-looking thirty-one, Amanda reflected. However, it was an unfair fact of life that men seldom showed their age as women did. âTonight I am,â she admitted. âHowever, tomorrow my birthday will be over, and I shanât give it another thought. I shall sail on into my remaining years, and try to enjoy them as I may.â
Her pragmatic tone seemed to amuse him. âGood Lord, woman, you talk as if youâre teetering on the edge of the grave! Youâre attractive, youâre a celebrated novelist, and youâre in your prime.â
âI am not attractive,â she said with a sigh.
Jack laid his forearm along the back of the settee, not seeming to care that he was occupying most of it and crowding her into the corner. His gaze swept over her with disconcerting thoroughness. âYou have a beautiful complexion, a perfectly shaped mouthââ
âItâs too large,â she informed him.
He stared at her mouth for a long moment. When he spoke again, his voice was a bit gruffer than before. âYour mouth is well suited for what I have in mind.â
âAnd Iâm plump,â Amanda said, now determined to explain all her defects.
âPerfectly so.â His gaze dropped to her breasts in the most ungentlemanly inspection she had ever been subjected to.
âAnd my hair is wretchedly curly.â
âIs it? Take it down and let me see.â
âWhat?â His outrageous command caused her to laugh suddenly. She had never met such a presumptuous scoundrel in her life.
He glanced around the cozy room, and then his devilish blue gaze returned to hers. âNo oneâs here to see,â he said softly. âHavenât you ever taken your hair down for a man before?â
The stillness of the parlor was underlaid with the gentle snapping of the fire in the hearth and the sounds of their breathing. Amanda had never felt this way before, actually fearful of what she might do. Her heart was beating so hard that it made her dizzy. She gave a stiff little shake of her head.