and of what quality. After a moment, he shook his head. Another time , he thought.
A few blocks farther westâhe thought it was west, anyhowâhe heard noise he couldnât ignore. Half a dozen men, maybe more, came toward him without bothering in the least about stealth. He shrank back into a doorway. Maybe that was a patrol. On the other hand, maybe the men were English bandits, numerous and bold enough to take on a patrol if they ran into one.
They turned a corner. The fog couldnât hide their torches, though it tried. Lope tensed as those pale beams cast a shadow across his boot. Then he recognized the sweet, lisping sounds of Castilian.
â ¡Gracias a Dios! â he exclaimed, and stepped out into the roadway.
The soldiers had had no notion he was there. They jerked in surprise and alarm. One of them swung an arquebus his way; another pointed a pistol at him. âWho are you, and what are you doing out after curfew?â their leader growled. âAdvance and be recognizedâslowly, if you know whatâs good for you.â
Before advancing, before becoming plainly visible, de Vega slid the rapier back into its sheath. He didnât want anyone to start shooting or do anything else he might regret out of surprise or fear. When he drew near, he bowed low, as if the sergeant leading the patrol were a duke rather thanâprobablyâa pigkeeperâs son. âGood evening,â he said. âI have the honor to be Senior Lieutenant Lope Félix de Vega Carpio.â
âChrist on His cross,â one of the troopers muttered. âAnother stinking officer who thinks the rules donât matter for him.â
Lope pretended not to hear that. He couldnât ignore the reproach in the sergeantâs voice: âSir, we might have taken you for an Englishman and blown your head off.â
âIâm very glad you didnât,â Lope de Vega replied.
âYes, sir,â the sergeant said. âYou still havenât said, sir, what youâre doing out so long after curfew. We have the authority to arrest officers, sir.â He might have had it, but he didnât sound delighted at the prospect of using it. An officer with connections and a bad temper could make him sorry heâd been born, no matter how right he was. Lope didnât have such connections, but how could the sergeant know that?
âWhat was I doing out so late?â he echoed. âWell, she had red hair and blue eyes andââ His hands described what else Maude had. He went on, âWhile I was with her, I didnât care what time it was.â
âYou should have spent the night, sir,â the sergeant said.
âI would have liked that. She would have liked that, too. Her husband . . . alas, no.â Lope shook his head.
âHer husband, eh?â The sergeantâs laugh showed a missing tooth. A couple of his men let out loud, bawdy guffaws. âAn Englishman?â he asked, and answered his own question: âYes, of course, a heretic dog of an Englishman. Well, good for you, by God.â
âAnd so she was,â de Vega said, which got him another laugh or two. With the easy charm that made women open their heartsâand their legsâto him, he went on, âAnd now, my friends, if you would be so kind as to point me back to the barracks, I would count myself forever in your debt.â
âCertainly, sir.â The sergeant gestured with his torch. âThat way, not too far.â
â That way?â Lope said in surprise. âI thought that way led south, down toward the Thames.â The soldiers shook their heads as one man. Heâd seen it done worse on stage. He gave them a melodramatic sigh. âPlainly, I am mistaken. Iâm glad I ran into you men, then. I got lost in this fog.â
âThe Devil take English weather,â the sergeant said, and his men nodded with as much unity as theyâd shown