
In 1590, in the French town of Montargis, records mention a young servant named Cendrine Duvall — orphaned, working for her stepmother after her father’s death. She lived in the cellar, covered in soot from the household fires. Locals called her Cendrine des cendres — “the girl of ashes.”
Her stepmother, the widow Isabeau Duvall, was cruel, obsessed with status. She forced Cendrine to clean chimneys and wash chamber pots until her hands bled. Yet she had two daughters of her own — pale, powdered, and useless.
One winter, a royal courier announced a masquerade hosted by Prince Louis de Valois, seeking a bride. Isabeau locked Cendrine inside while her daughters left for the palace. But that night, neighbors swore they saw a woman in silver walking barefoot across the snow, leaving no prints behind.
At the ball, the prince danced only with her. But when the clock struck twelve, she fled — leaving behind not a glass slipper, but a shoe carved from mountain crystal, engraved with her initials.
Days later, a royal search began. The shoe fit no one — until a messenger found Cendrine near the river, the other crystal shoe in her hand. She was trembling, her lips blue, her breath faint. The story ends there — no wedding, no palace.
When the Grimm brothers collected the tale centuries later, they softened it. But in Montargis, villagers say that when snow falls, you can still see footprints made of ash and ice leading to the river — and hear a woman whisper: “I made it home before midnight.”



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