Milly, and said: âI shouldnât have put on these garments. It was always an unlucky piece. Iâm a vain old fool.â And he went away and changed and had an attack of gastroenteritis, poor thing. It must almost be time I thought of walking back to the station, mustnât it?â
âIâll drive you,â Troy said.
Thomas protested mildly, but Troy overruled him brusquely when the time came, and went off to start her car. Thomas said goodbye politely to Katti Bostock.
âYouâre a clever chap, Mr Ancred,â said Katti grimly.
âOh, do you think so?â asked Thomas, blinking modestly. âOh, no! Clever? Me? Goodness, no. Goodnight. Itâs been nice to meet you.â
Katti waited for half an hour before she heard the sound of the returning car. Presently the door opened and Troy came in. She wore a white overcoat. A lock of her short dark hair hung over her forehead. Her hands were jammed in her pockets. She walked self-consciously down the room looking at Katti out of the corners of her eyes.
âGot rid of your rum friend?â asked Miss Bostock.
Troy cleared her throat. âYes. Heâs talked himself off.â
âWell,â said Miss Bostock, after a long silence, âwhen do you leave for Ancreton?â
âTomorrow,â said Troy shortly.
CHAPTER TWO
Departure
T ROY WISHED THAT Thomas Ancred would say goodbye and leave her to savour the moment of departure. She enjoyed train journeys enormously, and, in these days, not a second of the precious discomfort should be left unrelished. But there stood Thomas on the Euston platform with nothing to say, and filled, no doubt, with the sense of tediousness that is inseparable from these occasions. âWhy doesnât he take off his hat and walk away,â Troy thought fretfully. But when she caught his eye, he gave her such an anxious smile that she instantly felt obliged to reassure him.
âI have been wondering,â Thomas said, âif, after all, you will merely loathe my family.â
âIn any case I shall be working.â
âYes,â he agreed, looking immensely relieved, âthere is that. I canât tell you how much I dislike many actors, and yet, when I begin to work with them, sometimes I quite love them. If they do what I tell them, of course.â
âAre you working this morning?â And she thought: how unreal the activities seem of people one leaves behind on railway stations.
âYes,â said Thomas, âa first rehearsal.â
âPlease donât wait,â she said for the fourth time, and for the fourth time he replied: âIâll just see you off,â and looked at his watch. Doors were slammed farther down the train. Troy leant out of the window. At last she was off. A man in uniform, peering frenziedly into carriage after carriage, was working his way towards her. âNigel!â Troy shouted. âNigel!â
âOh, God, there you are!â cried Nigel Bathgate. âHallo, Thomas! Here! Troy! I knew I wouldnât have time to talk so Iâve written.â He thrust a fat envelope at her. A whistle blew. The train clunked, and Thomas said: âWell, goodbye; they will be pleased;â raised his hat and slid out of view. Nigel walked rapidly along beside the window. âWhat a go! You will laugh,â he said. âIs this a novel?â Troy asked, holding up the envelope. âAlmost! Youâll see.â Nigel broke into a run. âIâve always wanted toâyouâll seeâwhenâs Roderickâ?â âSoon!â Troy cried. âIn three weeks!â âGoodbye! I canât run any more.â He had gone.
Troy settled down. A young man appeared in the corridor. He peered in at the door and finally entered the already crowded carriage. With a slight twittering noise he settled himself on his upturned suitcase, with his back to the door, and opened an illustrated