"I'm loving you", she said. not "I love you", which is what most people say, which is what I would have said -- "I'm loving you." because it was an ongoing action, not just a passive state, because she was loving me while I was reading, or cooking. it wasn't something like "how do you feel?" "I feel good." "what do you love?" "you, dear." -- no. no, loving is a verb, an act, one that takes patience and time and perseverance. "I'm loving you", she said, and her tone was casual or almost indifferent, maybe, as if she had said "I'm cleaning the house", as if it should follow "what are you doing today?", she said the words as if they were positively ordinary, but they weren't. people tend to ask "do you smoke?" or "do you drink?" or "what do you believe in?" -- habitually, passively -- and she said "I'm loving (and loving and loving) you."