The Glass Waltz: The True Death of Aurora
She didn’t wake up. She was replaced.

In 1768, an epidemic swept through Provence — a “sleeping sickness” that left dozens of young women comatose but breathing. One of them was Aurélie Duval, a marquis’ daughter known for her beauty and her voice.
After weeks without waking, her family prepared her for burial. But the undertaker swore her eyelids trembled when he sealed the coffin. He buried her anyway.
Three nights later, her fiancé claimed she appeared at his window — eyes open, face pale as wax. She didn’t speak. She only danced, slowly, to a tune no one could hear.
By morning, he was dead — heart stopped, smile frozen.
When her tomb was opened a century later, her body was gone. In its place lay a mannequin carved of white marble, wearing her wedding gown. The sculptor’s name was lost, but etched beneath the statue were four words:
“She learned to stay awake.”



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