He was going to be EXECUTED at dawn for a crime he didn’t commit, but a RAT saved his life…

He was going to be EXECUTED at dawn for a crime he didn’t commit, but a RAT saved his life…

He was going to be EXECUTED at dawn for a crime he didn’t commit, but a RAT saved his life…

Condemned to die in a dungeon for a crime he did not commit, he shared his last piece of bread with a rat. He never imagined that this little animal held the key to his freedom.

Bruno was a man of wealth, but he possessed the greatest treasure a human being can have. A clear conscience. He worked as a valet in the mansion of the governor, a powerful and stern man who ruled the region with an iron fist. Bruno was known for his unwavering honesty.

He could find a gold coin on the ground and return it without hesitation. However, in a world driven by ambition, honesty often arouses the envy of dark hearts. Gaston, the chief butler, hated Bruno. He hated him because the young man’s integrity highlighted his own corruption. Gaston had been stealing small quantities from the governor’s pantry and wine for months, and he knew that sooner or later Bruno’s attentive eyes would discover it. He decided to strike first.

One afternoon, the governor’s signet ring, a unique piece of gold and rubies, disappeared. Chaos took over the mansion. Gastón, with a performance worthy of a theater, found the ring hidden under the mattress of Bruno’s humble bed. “Here he is, sir,” Gaston shouted with false indignation. “The serpent that he fed in his own house has bitten his hand.” Bruno, paralyzed by shock, could barely stammer his innocence, but the evidence planted was damning.

The governor, red with anger, did not even want to listen. He felt betrayed by the servant he trusted most. “Take him away,” the governor ordered, “let him rot in the tower of oblivion and give him nothing but bread and water until he confesses or dies.” The trial was swift and brutal, if it could be called a trial at all. There were no lawyers or witnesses in favor, only Gastón’s poisonous word against Bruno’s desperate crying. He was sentenced to life in prison.

In the deepest cell of the city’s prison, a place reserved for murderers and traitors, a stone hole from which it was said that no one came out alive. As the guards dragged him through the cobblestone streets toward the prison, the townspeople, who had once greeted Bruno with affection, were now throwing rubbish and spit at him. “Thief!” they shouted hypocrites at him. The pain of injustice was sharper than the chains that tightened on his wrists.

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