I Know Who Cut My Mother’s Seatbelt
“I know who cut my mother’s seatbelt!!” William roared, his voice echoing like thunder through the grand, dimly lit hall. His hands trembled violently as he clutched a yellowed piece of paper—the letter that had lain hidden for decades. The ink was faded, but the truth was unmistakable. His late mother’s fears, her suspicions, her cry for help—Diana’s secret confession—had finally come to light.
Across the room, Camilla’s face drained of color. She froze in her seat, her lips parting in silent horror. Her composure, the careful mask she had worn for years, crumbled in an instant. The Queen Consort, once the symbol of resilience, now looked like a ghost staring into her own reckoning.
“William…” she whispered, but no words of denial followed. Her trembling hands clutched at her pearls, as though the cold stones could shield her from the truth that had risen from the grave.
The silence that followed was unbearable. Only the heavy ticking of the antique clock reminded them that time still moved forward, even as their world collapsed.
At last, King Charles stirred. He did not meet his son’s blazing eyes. Instead, he lowered his head, shoulders sagging under the weight of a crown that suddenly felt like a curse. In a voice hoarse with regret, he whispered:
“I’m sorry, son… it wasn’t an accident.”
The words shattered the air like glass. William’s grip on the letter tightened until his knuckles whitened. His heart pounded in his chest, a storm of rage and grief.
“You knew,” William said, his voice breaking. “You knew what happened to her—and you let the world believe it was fate. You let me grow up haunted by lies!”
Charles closed his eyes, tears gathering at the corners. “I was young, weak… and terrified of what the truth would do to the monarchy. Your mother—she was too bright, too beloved. They feared her light would eclipse the crown. And I… I let them convince me.”
Camilla flinched, as though the confession itself were a blade. Her silence spoke louder than denial.
William stepped forward, his fury uncontained. “So you cut her seatbelt. You ensured she would not walk away that night. And you expect me to stand here and carry your legacy? To wear your crown as though it is not stained with her blood?”
“No!” Charles cried, his voice cracking. “I never touched her car. But I knew. I knew of the plan, and I said nothing. My silence was the blade.”
William’s chest heaved, his vision blurred with tears. The boy who lost his mother stood before the man who could have saved her, and the abyss between them was unbridgeable.
The monarchy, built on centuries of power and silence, trembled under the weight of one truth. A son betrayed. A father broken. A stepmother exposed.
For the first time in centuries, the palace walls did not feel eternal—they felt fragile, ready to crumble under the storm of truth.
And William, still clutching his mother’s letter, vowed that he would never let her voice be silenced again.