Francja - Egipt -

She hadn’t come to Egypt for the pyramids. She had come to find the ghost of her great-great-grandfather, Auguste Delacroix, a junior officer in Napoleon’s ill-fated Egyptian campaign of 1798. Family lore painted him as a deserter, a coward who melted into the Sahara rather than face the plague or the British cannons. But Lena had found his journal in a trunk in her grandmother’s attic in Dijon. The final entry, dated 1801, wasn’t about retreat. It was about love. “Pour elle, je deviendrai sable.” For her, I will become sand.

Lena’s throat tightened. The map in her hand trembled. “The journal said ‘become sand.’” Francja - Egipt

She let go.

He handed her a smaller hourglass. Inside, the sand was not gold or white, but a deep, arterial red. “Auguste did not fall in love with a woman. He fell in love with a wound. He met a priestess of Sekhmet, the goddess of plague and healing. The British had just bombed a village near Rosetta. The priestess was trying to collect the souls of the dead—to trap them in glass so they wouldn’t wander. Auguste helped her.” She hadn’t come to Egypt for the pyramids

She understood. The line between France and Egypt was not a border on a map. It was a scar on time. Her ancestor had not drawn the Nile. He had drawn a cage. And now, she had to decide: keep the hourglass frozen in its beautiful, tragic fall, or shatter it. But Lena had found his journal in a