Secrets of the Stone
The stone tablet burned like a live coal in his conscience. It bore the sigil of the Aten—an ancient god of light—and promised, according to the old seer, the power to overthrow the Hyksos soldiers who held Thebes in their iron grip. But it also came with a cost: betrayal. The words of the seer echoed in Akhem’s mind: Only the guilty can shape the hands of the divine. Akhem had barely understood what the wizened woman meant as she pressed the stone into his hands. Now, with the Nile’s currents murmuring around him, the phrase crawled under his skin.
“My father’s throne,” he muttered under his breath, “or Neferet’s freedom?” The stars above offered no guidance.
They found her in the middle of the month of Peret, the season of growing. Neferet, younger by two years, had been a force of nature—a wild beauty with sharp eyes and a sharper tongue. Too sharp, it turned out. When the Hyksos tax collectors demanded half the harvest, she hurled a clay jar at them. Akhem could still hear the crack of the jar, the curses of the soldiers, and the way her effortless laughter turned into a scream as they dragged her away.
The Encounter
The waters shifted suddenly, tugging the boat sideways. Akhem’s heart hammered as he swung his head toward the ripples, reaching instinctively for the curved dagger strapped to his waist. A flash of silver skin broke the surface, and a voice, soft yet commanding, pierced the silence.
“You hold the Aten’s blessing, mortal. Do you think it will come without its shadows?”
From the depths of the Nile emerged a figure unlike any Akhem had ever seen. She was a vision of ethereal beauty—a creature with hair like braided dusk and eyes gleaming like golden coins freshly minted. Her torso was bare, skin shimmering faintly like a fish’s scales, but instead of legs, her lower half curled into the long, sinuous body of a serpent. A sacred being—a Wadjet—guardian of Egypt.
Akhem’s throat went dry. He had never been one to pray, but the sight of her made him reconsider the wisdom of his lapsed devotion.
“I don’t care for the Aten’s blessing,” he spat, though his voice wavered. “I only want to save my sister.”
The Wadjet tilted her head, disappointment flickering like a shadow across her face. “Minds such as yours crumble beneath ambition. Beware, Akhem—with each move you make, this path will demand a sacrifice greater than the last.”
Before he could respond, she vanished beneath the water, her parting words swirling in his mind like silt in a tempest.
The Betrayal
By the time Akhem reached the banks of Thebes, the city was cocooned in the deep violet of pre-dawn. The streets were empty save for the occasional flicker of torchlight from patrolling guards. A cold wind whispered through the market stalls, making him wish for one of the heavier cloaks sold by the merchants. But he had no time to think of comfort.
The seer had told him where the Hyksos commander, Horemheb, would be. A man like that would never turn down the opulent feast hall tucked into the palace walls. If Akhem timed it right, he could slip in unnoticed and plant the tablet in Horemheb’s chambers. The seer promised the stone’s presence alone would invoke the Aten’s wrath, cracking the foundations of the Hyksos empire.
But as he crept through the palace gardens, past date palms that rustled like restless souls, Akhem froze. Out of the shadows emerged a familiar figure, her wrists bound, her gait fierce despite the weight of her chains. Neferet. Her captors shoved her forward, and although her face was bruised, her gaze caught his. Akhem felt the fire of her defiance warm the hollow in his chest.
All plans fell apart in that instant. The stone tablet slipped from his hands and fell into the dirt with a muffled thud. He unsheathed his dagger, stepping fully into the light, voice trembling with unspent rage.
“You keep her for one more second, and I’ll feed you to the crocodiles myself!”
The Twist
His rage was his undoing. The guards swarmed him before he could make it three paces. A brutal crack of a cudgel stole the breath from his lungs, and the world blurred, but not before one final sight: the stone tablet, glowing faintly with a light of its own. The guards stumbled back in awe as the sigil of the Aten burned bright.
And then… darkness.
The Dawn
Akhem awoke to the weight of chains and the rancid stench of a holding cell. Neferet was there, her fingers tracing patterns along the walls. She turned to him, her face streaked with tears, but her eyes—those fierce and unyielding eyes—told him she had not yet given up.
“They will destroy us, Akhem,” she said, her voice softer than he had ever heard it. “But you…” Her hand rested lightly against his chest. “The Aten has chosen you. I can feel it.”
And in the growing light of day, for the first time, he allowed himself to believe that his sister might be right.
The war for Thebes was far from over, but the shadows that veiled the Nile now whispered with something new: hope.
Genre: Historical Fantasy
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