A jealous woman who had an unrequited crush on Charming attacks Cinderella with a knife, clearly intending to kill her. Cinderella manages to wrest the knife away from the woman and turn it on her. She dies from her injuries. When Charming finds his wife covered in blood, having killed a woman in self defense, he immediately worries for her sanity. She is, after all, a frail, delicate woman. He basically confines her to bed rest, and sends doctor after doctor to her, expecting them to tell him that his wife has suffered irreparable mental damage, or gone into a perpetual state of shock. She hasn't. Cinderella did what she had to do to survive. She doesn't regret it, nor does she feel guilty for it. And she certainly isn't re-evaluating her health, or even her entire life, on actions that would invite the bat of an eye if a man had committed them.
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