


Meanwhile, feisty Melchor and annoyingly passive Caridad have various adventures while the author treats us to large doses of historical background poorly incorporated into his eventful fiction. There’s no question about who’s in the right, as Pedro proves to be a rotten husband who, when Milagros’ talents as a dancer and singer take them to Madrid, starts by cheating on her and ends by pimping her out by force to aristocrats, then branding her a whore. They are separated by the mass roundup of gypsies in 1749: Ana, like thousands of others, is jailed and endures years of torment from prison, she disowns Milagros for marrying Pedro García, whose family has an ancient blood feud with the Vegas. Most of the action involves this odd couple, plus Melchor’s daughter, Ana, and granddaughter, Milagros.

She’s rescued after weeks of abuse at the hands of various brutal white men by Melchor, patriarch of the Vega clan of gypsies. The busy tale begins with the arrival in Cádiz of Caridad, an African slave from Cuba liberated but stranded by the shipboard death of her master. Another historical epic from best-selling Falcones ( The Hand of Fatima, 2011, etc.), this one set among Spain’s fiery gypsies.
