The Bachelor. Marie Ferrarella

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on their side a lot more than the people who come to Jordan’s firm do.”

      Eric wondered if this was something she truly believed in, or just something she felt she should be giving lip service to. So many men and women involved in charities only did so by remote control. They kept their hearts completely out of the affair.

      Because the noise level was rising, he leaned forward across the table. “So you’re saying the poor need more justice than the rich?”

      It felt as if his face was inches from hers. She could feel his breath along her skin. Could feel the inside of her body coiling, ready to spring. Not that she ever would. She was too terrified to make a move.

      It took her a second to find her voice. “No, I’m saying the poor are just as much entitled to it as the rich and because they’re poor, they don’t get it.”

      His eyes held hers. She had nice eyes, he thought. Sincere eyes. He began to believe her. Or at least believe that she believed herself. “Except for you.”

      He was smiling again. Was that indulgence? Gas? Or something more meaningful?

      She struggled not to sink into his expression. “I’m not the Lone Crusader here. There are others, although not nearly enough.” The sigh escaped her before she realized it had been hovering in the wings.

      The last time he’d heard anyone sigh like that, it was the man next to him at the blackjack table. The man had lost ten thousand dollars at a single turn of the cards. “That sounded pretty intense. Care to elaborate?”

      Before she knew it, Jenny found herself doing just that.

      Eric, she realized, had the ability to draw words out of her despite the fact that they had to get past a blank mind and a thick tongue. She concluded that the man was nothing short of a magician. The kind who pulled on a single scarf only to draw out another and another while the audience looked on in awe.

      But maybe he was just being polite. She didn’t want to bore him with details. “It’s just gotten a little harder since Russell left.”

      “Russell?”

      She nodded. Since he hadn’t yawned or had his attention drawn away by the voluptuous redhead who was unabashedly staring at him from across the room, Jenny continued.

      “Russell Riley. He was one of the founders of Advocate Aid, Inc.” Russell had been the one to recruit her, straight out of law school. The ink hadn’t dried yet on her diploma when he’d told her about the fledgling law firm that he and his friends had put together so that they could practice “real” law as he’d put it. “He just up and quit one day.”

      A wry smile played on her lips as she recalled the scene in her head. Recalled progressing from guarded amusement when she thought Russell was kidding, to disbelief, to utter sorrow. And finally to anger because he was deserting them after getting her so caught up in the concept.

      “He said he’d had enough of tilting at windmills. That the windmills had won and he was taking an offer from a firm that could actually help him pay his bills at the end of the month.” She supposed she couldn’t fault the man. After all, she had never been in that position herself. Maybe she would have thought differently if it was a matter of choosing between paying her rent and eating that week.

      Finished with his espresso, Eric toyed with the empty cup, his eyes on her. “Don’t you ever feel that way?”

      “My bills are paid at the end of the month.” At times, the admission almost embarrassed her. It was what separated her from the people she was trying to help. They were poor and she was far from it, even if she didn’t take a cent from her parents. That was because of the inheritance. “I had a very generous grandmother who left me more than enough money in her will.”

      Eric shook his head. One strand of brown hair fell into his eyes and she had to curve her fingers into her palms to keep from reaching out and sweeping the strand back into place. “No, I meant tired of tilting at windmills.”

      She smiled. “Sometimes.” She was unaware that exhilaration entered her voice. But he wasn’t. “But then, those wonderful times when the windmills lose—and they do lose—make it all worth it. So does the expression on the face of my client, a person who thought no one cared and that he was doomed to be the one that everyone else stepped on.” Forgetting who she was talking to for a moment, she warmed to her subject, to her unending quest. “I deal in hope and there’s no greater high than to see it actually take root and spread.”

      She realized that he’d gotten quiet. Not bored, just quiet. He was looking at her as if she was saying something he was actually interested in.

      Also his gift, she thought.

      She’d heard women say that Eric Logan could instantly make them feel as if they were the only ones in a room crowded with people. It was true. The coffee shop he’d brought her to was fairly full with a post-lunch crowd milking the last minutes of their break before returning to whatever they had to return to. She’d seen more than one woman look Eric’s way as they walked past table after full table. Attractive women sitting across from attractive men.

      But then, Eric was in a class all his own. He had a certain something. Magnetism, she thought it was called.

      It could have been called Oscar for all she knew, Jenny thought. The only thing she was certain of was that it still had a deep effect on her.

      He was smiling at her, really smiling. Not indulgently, the way a person did when they pasted on a smile and counted off the minutes until someone was through talking to them, but genuinely.

      Or was that only wishful thinking on her part? “What?” she finally asked.

      Eric sobered ever so slightly. He didn’t want her thinking he was laughing at her. “It’s just that Jordan never mentioned any of this. The only time he talked about you was to say you were chairing some charitable event. I had no idea Jordan’s little sister had turned into Joan of Arc.”

      Self-consciousness returned in droves. Once again she was that little girl in the living room with two left shoes on. It had taken her years to live that down. Her mother kept it in her arsenal, ready to pull out at a moment’s notice.

      “Did I just sound too pompous?”

      He read her expression quickly and with regret. In his opinion, there weren’t enough true do-gooders in the world. “I’m sorry, I didn’t mean to make it sound as if I was poking fun at you, I was just impressed. My parents would have been, too. They believe very strongly in the concept of giving back.”

      A light turned on inside of her, burning brightly. He was impressed. Eric Logan was impressed with her. Never mind that it was for something she did as routinely as breathing, he’d taken notice of her. She felt lighter than air.

      “It’s not so much a matter of giving back as it is just trying to balance the odds.” She caught her lower lip between her teeth. “I’m sorry, I didn’t mean to go off on a tangent like that.”

      “It wasn’t a tangent,” Eric protested. “As I remember, I asked you a question.”

      She tried not to flush and mentally upbraided herself for her reaction when she did.

      What was it about the way the man spoke, looked, hell, breathed, that negated

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