"The Juans of Vendee?"
When Louis heard this term, he did not show the joy that Arthur had expected.
On the contrary, this young ambitious man appeared very hesitant, so much so that he didn't even question Arthur about why he would make such a suggestion.
Although Arthur did not understand the reason for his hesitation, it did not matter, because ever since joining the Foreign Office, Arthur's intelligence sources were no longer limited to his personal relationship with Louis.
As a senior intelligence officer stationed overseas by the Foreign Office, Arthur enjoyed considerable confidentiality privileges.
Therefore, he could easily acquire information about the Bonaparte family that the spies of the Foreign Office had painstakingly gathered.
After Napoleon's son passed away from tuberculosis in Vienna, the position of the head of the Bonaparte family naturally fell to Louis's uncle—Joseph Bonaparte, the former King of Spain residing at Regency Crescent in London.