It seemed something about her reply to his idea, had caused a shift in Sorin and Kasmina found this odd. She realized he'd likely spoken in jest at least a tad but it had been his idea, and not one she'd even considered at all before he'd said it. Still there was something about the man before her that she found uncommonly attractive and it wasn't his looks nor status as an immortal being. Instead she was blinded by the kindness and care he seemed to show for her and that made anything he had to offer worthwhile for her. Even so, she felt the need to explain at least a little of herself in this moment because she realized what he'd offered even before he properly explained it. "Sir, I did not make that decision without giving it full consideration. If my faith were so easily broken I would have been damned long before now," she said thinking of times when she was much younger and dragging her father out of taverns as he gambled away their livelihoods unable to cope with the death of her mother. Even if it wasn't her own actions that would damn her, she did consider the process itself might be harmful but that she'd also considered, in that moment much like many when assessing a situation, she twisted the ring around her index finger as a form of solidifying her thoughts.
"That as an aside, the Scotsman said that woman you fed on before could not be blessed but you are a pious man so I get the feeling you did that yourself. If her soul is safe I need not fear for mine," she said of the first part of his statement taking a solid and full breath before continuing to the apparent curse which he found immortality to be. "I am very young so I am not sure what sort of curse immortality could be. But up to this point I have lived my life as cattle with my impending wedding as sale and slaughter, so I feel it would be a rather easy adjustment. This is especially true with you to keep me company as such a marriage implies," she had to say. As for the commentary about being a prime target of vampire hunters she could only sigh. "Vampire hunters are hardly worth more care than all the rest... for similar reasons," she finished her commentary with a level of affirmation and the same look on her face that was generally present when she won a hand of cards. It seemed like she was resolute and trusting of the man before her, regardless of his status as a vampire, and happier with the idea of a marriage to him than anyone else.