“And it was I who advised him,” said Maria Theresa, turning pale.
Madame said not a word in reply; but one of those smiles which were peculiarly her own flitted for a moment across her lips, without passing over the rest of her face; then, immediately changing the conversation, she continued, “We shall find Paris precisely the Paris we quitted; the same intrigues, plots, and flirtations going on.”
“Intrigues! What intrigues do you allude to?” inquired the queen-mother.
“People are talking a good deal about M. Fouquet and Madame Plessis-Belliere.”
“Who makes up the number to about ten thousand,” replied the queen-mother. “But what are the plots you speak of?”
“We have, it seems, certain misunderstandings with Holland to settle.”
“What about?”
“Monsieur has been telling me the story of the medals.”
“Oh!” exclaimed the young queen, “you mean those medals struck in Holland, on which a cloud is seen passing across the sun, which is the king’s device. You are wrong in calling that a plot—it is an insult.”
“But so contemptible that the king can well despise it,” replied the queen-mother. “Well, what are the flirtations which are alluded to? Do you mean that of Madame d’Olonne?”