He had, however, been too often in physical danger to lose his nerve at this moment. The instant was big with peril; it was the turning point of his life, and he felt it. His eyes dropped towards the spot of ink at the point of the pen the Duke held. It fascinated him, it was destiny.
He took a step nearer to the table, and, drawing himself up, looked his princely interlocutor steadily in the eyes.
“Of course there is no marriage—no woman?” asked the Duke a little hoarsely, his eyes fastened on Philip’s. With steady voice Philip replied: “Of course, monsieur le duc.”
There was another stillness. Some one sighed heavily. It was the Comtesse Chantavoine.
The next instant the Duke stooped, and wrote his signature three times hurriedly upon the deeds.
A moment afterwards, Detricand was in the street, making towards “The Golden Crown.” As he hurried on he heard the galloping of horses ahead of him. Suddenly some one plucked him by the arm from a doorway.
“Quick—within!” said a voice. It was that of the Duke’s porter, Frange Pergot. Without hesitation or a word, Detricand did as he was bid, and the door clanged to behind him.
“Fouche’s men are coming down the street; spies have betrayed you,” whispered Pergot. “Follow me. I will hide you till night, and then you must away.”
Pergot had spoken the truth. But Detricand was safely hidden, and Fouche’s men came too late to capture the Vendean chief or to forbid those formal acts which made Philip d’Avranche a prince.
Once again at Saumur, a week later, Detricand wrote a long letter to Carterette Mattingley, in Jersey, in which he set forth these strange events at Bercy, and asked certain questions concerning Guida.