Philip could not read behind the strange, shrivelled face. Instinct could help him much, but it could not interpret that parchment. He did not know whether his intended reply would alienate the Duke or not, but if it did, then he must bear it. He had come, as he thought, to the crux of this adventure. All in a moment he was recalled again to his real position. The practical facts of his life possessed him. He was standing between a garish dream and commonplace realities. Old feelings came back—the old life. The ingrain loyalty of all his years was his again. Whatever he might be, he was still an English officer, and he was not the man to break the code of professional honour lightly. If the Duke’s favour and adoption must depend on the answer he must now give, well, let it be; his last state could not be worse than his first.
So, still standing, he answered the Duke boldly, yet quietly, his new kinsman watching him with a grim curiosity.
“Monsieur le prince,” said Philip, “I am used to poverty, that matters little; but whatever you intend towards me—and I am persuaded it is to my great honour and happiness—I am, and must still remain, an officer of the English navy.”
The Duke’s brow contracted, and his answer came cold and incisive: “The navy—that is a bagatelle; I had hoped to offer you heritage. Pooh, pooh, commanding a frigate is a trade—a mere trade!”
Philip’s face did not stir a muscle. He was in spirit the born adventurer, the gamester who could play for life’s largest stakes, lose all, draw a long breath—and begin the world again.
“It’s a busy time in my trade now, as Monsieur Dalbarade would tell you, Duke.”
The Duke’s lips compressed as though in anger. “You mean to say, monsieur, that you would let this wretched war between France and England stand before our own kinship and alliance? What are you and I in this great shuffle of events? Have less egotism, less vanity, monsieur. You are no more than a million others—and I—I am nothing. Come, come, there is more than one duty in the life of every man, and sometime he must choose between one and the other. England does not need you”—his voice and manner softened, he leaned towards Philip, the eyes almost closing as he peered into his face—“but you are needed by the House of Bercy.”
“I was commissioned to a warship in time of war,” answered Philip quietly, “and I lost that warship. When I can, it is my duty to go back to the powers that sent me forth. I am still an officer in full commission. Your Highness knows well what honour claims of me.”
“There are hundreds of officers to take your place; in the duchy of Bercy there is none to stand for you. You must choose between your trade and the claims of name and blood, older than the English navy, older than Norman England.”
Philip’s colour was as good, his manner as easy as if nothing were at stake; but in his heart he felt that the game was lost—he saw a storm gathering in the Duke’s eyes, the disappointment presently to break out into wrath, the injured vanity to burst into snarling disdain. But he spoke boldly nevertheless, for he was resolved that, even if he had to return from this duchy to prison, he would go with colours flying.