In the last week he was very loyal to his tailor.
Many a young man would have commanded new clothes after, not before, his arrival in London. But Cyril had faith in his creator.
On the day of departure the household, the very house itself, was in a state of excitation.
He was to leave early.
He would not listen to the project of her accompanying him as far as Knype, where the Loop Line joined the main.
She might go to Bursley Station and no further.
When she rebelled he disclosed the merest hint of his sullen-churlish side, and she at once yielded.
During breakfast she did not cry, but the aspect of her face made him protest.
"Now, look here, mater!
Just try to remember that I shall be back for Christmas.
It's barely three months."
And he lit a cigarette.
She made no reply.
Amy lugged a Gladstone bag down the crooked stairs.
A trunk was already close to the door; it had wrinkled the carpet and deranged the mat.
"You didn't forget to put the hair-brush in, did you, Amy?" he asked.
"N--no, Mr. Cyril," she blubbered.
"Amy!" Constance sharply corrected her, as Cyril ran upstairs,
"I wonder you can't control yourself better than that."
Amy weakly apologized.
Although treated almost as one of the family, she ought not to have forgotten that she was a servant.
What right had she to weep over Cyril's luggage?
This question was put to her in Constance's tone.
The cab came.
Cyril tumbled downstairs with exaggerated carelessness, and with exaggerated carelessness he joked at the cabman.
"Now, mother!" he cried, when the luggage was stowed.
"Do you want me to miss this train?"
But he knew that the margin of time was ample.
It was his fun!
"Nay, I can't be hurried!" she said, fixing her bonnet.
"Amy, as soon as we are gone you can clear this table."
She climbed heavily into the cab.
"That's it!
Smash the springs!" Cyril teased her.
The horse got a stinging cut to recall him to the seriousness of life.
It was a fine, bracing autumn morning, and the driver felt the need of communicating his abundant energy to some one or something.
They drove off, Amy staring after them from the door.
Matters had been so marvellously well arranged that they arrived at the station twenty minutes before the train was due.
"Never mind!" Cyril mockingly comforted his mother.
"You'd rather be twenty minutes too soon than one minute too late, wouldn't you?"
His high spirits had to come out somehow.
Gradually the minutes passed, and the empty slate-tinted platform became dotted with people to whom that train was nothing but a Loop Line train, people who took that train every week-day of their lives and knew all its eccentricities.
And they heard the train whistle as it started from Turnhill.
And Cyril had a final word with the porter who was in charge of the luggage.
He made a handsome figure, and he had twenty pounds in his pocket.
When he returned to Constance she was sniffing, and through her veil he could see that her eyes were circled with red.
But through her veil she could see nothing.
The train rolled in, rattling to a standstill.
Constance lifted her veil and kissed him; and kissed her life out.
He smelt the odour of her crape.