"Your Majesty?"
Empress Augusta looked at Jerome Bonaparte, who had hurried in, with a face of confusion, and then shifted her gaze to Vilnius behind him.
At this moment, Vilnius, like a chick meeting an eagle, timidly released Jerome Bonaparte's arm.
Jerome Bonaparte's gaze had never left the two ladies sitting next to Augusta since he entered the room.
The identities of these two ladies were too special, one being Jerome Bonaparte's long-uncontacted lover, Marchioness Aile, and the other being his "good friend" Eugenie.
All three of them had relations with Jerome Bonaparte, and now they could "sit together peacefully," which was somewhat beyond Jerome Bonaparte's expectations.
