
"Indeed, yes," he said. "There is likely to be a fair in progress before the end of the week, or so I have heard."
"So it is not idle rumor," Amy said, smiling in satisfaction. "What do you think of that, Judith?"
Judith was not given a chance to express her opinion. The children had come running up, Kate to grasp her cloak and half hide behind the safety of its folds, Rupert to admire the marquess's horse.
"Will he kick if I pat his side, sir?" he asked. "He is a prime goer."
A prime goer! The phrase came straight from Maurice's vocabulary. It sounded strange coming from the mouth of a six-year-old child.
"Stand back, if you please, Rupert," she said firmly.
"He is a prime goer," the marquess agreed. "And I am afraid he is likely to kick, or at least to sidle restlessly away if you reach out to him in that timid manner and then snatch your hand away. You will convey your nervousness to him."
Rupert stepped back, snubbed.
"However, you may ride on his back, if you wish," the marquess said, "and show him that you are not at all afraid of him despite his great size."
Judith reached out a hand as Rupert's eyes grew as wide as saucers.
"Really, sir?" he asked. "Up in front of you?"
The marquess looked down at the boy without smiling so that Judith felt herself inhaling and reaching down a hand to cover Kate's head protectively.
"I don't believe a big boy like you need ride in front of anyone," Lord Denbigh said. And he swung down from the saddle, dwarfing them all in the progress. He looked rather like a rider from hell, Judith thought, with his black cloak swinging down over the tops of his boots, and his immense height.
