🎬 PART 2: «The Princess Raised as a Servant»

Mara shook her head, wet hair clinging to her tear-streaked face.

“No,” she whispered. “I’m nobody.”

The king’s expression broke.

“That is what someone wanted you to believe.”

He removed the royal pendant from beneath his cloak. Engraved into the gold was the same phoenix now shining on her skin.

“When you were born, the palace healer placed this mark upon you,” he said through tears. “It appears only under freezing water. No impostor could ever claim your name.”

Mara looked around the ballroom she had spent years cleaning on her knees.

The gold walls.
The velvet curtains.
The noble faces that had laughed while she shivered.

“This is my home?” she asked, her voice small and broken. “Then why was I sleeping beside the kitchens?”

The king had no answer.

Celeste did.

“She should have died in the fire,” she snapped.

The ballroom froze.

The king turned slowly.

Celeste realized too late that fear had spoken before caution.

Mara stared at her.

“You knew me?”

Celeste’s face hardened with desperation.

“My mother knew what your birth meant. With you alive, I would always be nothing more than a cousin begging for scraps from your crown.”

The king stepped toward her, horror filling his eyes.

“Your mother started the nursery fire?”

Celeste laughed bitterly.

“She started it. I finished what she could not.”

Mara wrapped her arms around herself, trembling harder now.

“You poured water on me because you knew?”

“I poured it on you because I wanted everyone to see a servant humiliated,” Celeste spat. “I never thought the mark would return.”

The words cut deeper than the cold.

All her life, Mara had wondered why Celeste singled her out. Why she was assigned the dirtiest chores. Why every small kindness shown to her was punished.

It had never been because Mara was worthless.

It had been because Celeste knew she was not.

The king moved toward Mara carefully.

“I searched for you.”

Her tear-filled eyes lifted to his.

“You searched for a princess,” she said. “Did you ever look at the servants crying in your own halls?”

The king stopped.

That question stripped the crown from him more completely than any accusation could.

“No,” he whispered. “And I will carry that shame for the rest of my life.”

Guards appeared around Celeste.

She pulled away from them, furious.

“You cannot put her on a throne! Look at her. She is dripping on the floor in rags!”

Mara slowly looked down at the soaked dress, the reddened hands, the bare feet she had hidden beneath serving trays her whole life.

Then she raised her head.

“The rags are not my shame,” she said quietly. “They are proof of yours.”

No one laughed now.

The guards took Celeste by the arms.

As she was dragged past the spilled ice and shattered glass, the king removed his royal cloak and placed it gently around Mara’s trembling shoulders.

She stiffened beneath his touch.

He did not try to pull her close.

He understood he had not earned that yet.

Instead, he lowered himself to one knee before the drenched servant girl.

Before his daughter.

Before the rightful heir his palace had allowed to suffer in plain sight.

A cry escaped Mara’s throat.

All the hunger.
All the loneliness.
All the nights she had dreamed of a mother or father who might have wanted her.

She looked at the old man kneeling before her and whispered, “Was I loved before they took me?”

The king’s eyes overflowed.

“More than this entire kingdom.”

Mara closed her eyes as tears mingled with the water still falling from her hair.

The phoenix on her skin glowed softly beneath the royal cloak.

And in the ballroom where she had just been humiliated as a servant, every noble in the kingdom bowed to the girl they should have recognized long before magic forced them to see her.

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