his fellows?’
‘’Tis no great art,’ said Leonard. ‘He is a proper man in every aspect with fair hair and a beard of like description. And though he lives among players who are practised at catching the eye, he is the tallest and the best of them.’ He beamed with nostalgia. ‘Master Bracewell is my friend. I know him by his kindness and good fellowship.’
His companion thanked him and drifted away. He had heard enough to identify his target. Preparations had to be made. There must be no margin of error this time.
Nicholas Bracewell was the first to arrive at Ludgate Hill. Having spent the night at a friend’s lodging in Southwark, he was up early to make the last arrangements for the departure of Westfield’s Men. Taking a company out on the open highway was always a hazardous enterprise and it obliged them to travel armed and ready to repel attacks from one of the many bands of robbers, outlaws and masterless men who roved the countryside.The quality of their venues would fluctuate drastically, and their audiences would be neither as large nor as well tuned to their work as those in London. Bad weather would only hinder a performance at the Queen’s Head. It could cause the company far more inconvenience if it struck them suddenly on some lonely road, soaking their costumes and sapping their morale. Nicholas Bracewell knew that wet, unhappy actors are far more inclined to friction than those who are dry and content.
‘Good morrow, Nick!’
‘Welcome!’
‘A plague on this damnable tour!’
‘Yes, Owen,’ said Nicholas, ‘and yet it is the one tour that is not forced upon us by the plague. London is having a healthy summer and there is no cause to close the theatres and throw us out of our occupation. Fire drives us away.’
‘And it may keep us there in perpetuity.’
‘The Queen’s Head will be restored when we return.’
‘But will that miserable maggot of a landlord allow us near the place? Diu! It gives me the sweating sickness just to look upon Marwood, yet for all that, I’d sooner endure his woebegone hospitality than drag my talent the length and breadth of England.’
Nicholas smiled. ‘What about Wales?’
‘That is different. I would gladly lead Westfield’s Men across the border to the land of my ancestors.’
Owen Elias was an exuberant Welshman, who was becoming one of the mainstays of the company. Dark and manic, he was a gifted actor whose career had been held back by a quickness of temper and a fatal readiness to acquaint people with his true opinion of them. Wearied by his lack of progress, Elias had defected to his company’sarch-rivals, Banbury’s Men, and he was only brought back by the promise of promotion to the rank of sharer. Now that he had a real stake in Westfield’s Men, his forthrightness was slightly diminished, but he still enjoyed a rancorous dispute when he felt – as he did without fail – that he had right on his side. Nicholas Bracewell was very fond of the Welshman and knew that his talent was strong enough to bear the extra weight that a tour placed upon it. A sturdy, fearless character of middle height, Owen Elias was also an extremely useful man to have at your side in a brawl or a swordfight.
‘How now, gentlemen!’
‘Hail, sirs!’
‘I am glad to see your worships so well.’
‘God save you all!’
‘A thousand welcomes.’
‘Farewell, dear London!’
‘Owen, you rogue!’
‘Nick, dear heart!’
Greetings assailed them as the company arrived, singly or in pairs, many with tearful wives or sweethearts clinging to their arms and a few, like Lawrence Firethorn, with their entire family. It would be a poignant leave-taking. The Bel Savage was an apposite location. Standing outside Ludgate itself, it was a big, sprawling, cavernous building that had been in existence for over a hundred and forty years and which occupied its site with half-timbered familiarity. Savage’s Inn, as it had initially been called, was also
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