🎬 PART 2: «The Woman He Buried Before the Wedding»

Edmund could not breathe.

The cathedral blurred around him as the bride slowly removed the heavy wooden helmet from her head.

Her face was pale. A thin scar crossed her temple. But there was no mistaking the eyes that had once looked at him with love before they filled with terror.

“Clara…” he whispered.

Guests began murmuring.

The king’s jaw clenched.

The bride looked at Edmund with tears shining in her eyes.

“That was my name before you threw me from the bridge.”

A woman in the pews gasped.

Edmund shook his head violently.

“She’s lying! Your Majesty, this woman is not your daughter!”

The king’s expression hardened.

“No,” he said. “She is not.”

The bride flinched, as if the words still hurt even though she already knew them.

The king turned to the crowded cathedral.

“My daughter died years ago,” he announced. “And Lord Edmund knew it.”

Silence crashed through the hall.

Edmund’s face turned gray.

Clara’s voice shook, but she forced herself to continue.

“I was her maid. The princess discovered Edmund planned to marry her, take the throne, then arrange her death.”

She looked toward the wooden helmet lying on the cathedral floor.

“She tried to warn the king. Edmund silenced her first.”

The king’s hands began to tremble.

“When my daughter vanished, Edmund told me she had run away,” he said. “Then he brought me this terrified girl, beaten and nearly drowned, who had heard everything.”

Edmund backed away from the altar.

“You believed a servant?”

Clara let out a broken laugh.

“No. He hid me.”

She looked toward the king, pain filling her face.

“He locked me behind that mask for three years, telling the kingdom his daughter lived… so you would still marry her and reveal what you had done.”

The guests stared at the king in shock now.

Clara had been saved only to become bait.

The king stepped toward Edmund.

“I needed your confession.”

Clara’s eyes filled with fresh tears.

“And I needed my life back.”

She reached beneath her lace sleeve and removed a small silver locket.

Inside was a tiny portrait of the real princess, smiling beside Clara when they were both young.

“Before she died,” Clara whispered, “she gave me this and begged me to tell the truth.”

Edmund suddenly lunged for the cathedral doors.

Royal guards blocked him at once.

As they seized his arms, he turned desperately toward Clara.

“I loved you!”

She stood perfectly still, tears sliding down her scarred cheek.

“You loved me until I heard your secret.”

The king lowered his head.

“Clara, I promised you justice.”

She turned toward him slowly.

“Justice would have been setting me free the day you found me.”

The old king had no answer.

Clara lifted the wooden helmet with both hands and set it on the altar beside the abandoned wedding crown.

Then she walked away from the groom, the king, and the cathedral that had watched her suffer in silence.

At the doors, she paused only once.

“For years, everyone feared the face behind the mask,” she said quietly. “They should have feared the men who put it there.”

And for the first time since the night she was thrown from the bridge, Clara stepped into the light with her face uncovered.

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