The Letter Purge: Kate’s Tears, Diana’s Lost Words, and the Palace Reckoning
It began with whispers in Windsor’s corridors — twenty-three letters, written by Princess Diana in the final months of her life, suddenly missing. By sunrise, the vault that held them was bare, and by nightfall, smoke rose from Clarence House.
Princess Anne had quietly preserved digital scans of four letters. When Kate Middleton read them, she broke down in tears. “You are not made of noise,” Diana had written. “You are made of steel wrapped in kindness.” The words became Kate’s vow.
Hours later, Prince William confronted Camilla in a moment described by staff as “the loudest silence Buckingham has ever heard.” He accused her of erasing his mother a second time. Anne sided with him. The palace split — one side defending tradition, the other fighting for truth.
From the ashes came reform. Every royal document now requires two signatures; every archive, dual custody. And Kate’s sapphire brooch — Diana’s — gleamed at every appearance, a silent reminder that memory burns brighter than fire.

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