The air grew drier, harsher, carrying the bite of scorched stone and ancient dust.
Then the horizon changed.
There, rising from the smoldering wastes like the finger of a god piercing the sky, stood Skyspear.
Satakhetem burned with quiet fury and something sharper: entitlement. This place should have welcomed her as its missing daughter, instead it stood silent and imposing, as though it had already chosen its rulers. A vein throbbed at her temple.
How dare they,she murmured, voice low and edged with ruinous calm. The words were for herself alone, yet they carried the weight of heka.
They have built a throne upon a monument and named it theirs while I wandered lost between worlds.
The shadow did not look back at her escorts. They had served their purpose. Now the monolith—and the kingdom it housed—would answer to her.
She stopped a short distance from the grand approach, ears forward, nostrils flaring to catch the mingled scents of desert wolves, incense, and power. Satakhetem stood tall before the towering pyramid, the molten gold threading her dark coat gleaming like living fire under the desert sun. Let them come.
Let them see what had been displaced… and what would no longer be denied.

