Hieroglyph Pro «SECURE»
He smiled. “Tell the child, one day, that her name was written by a man who loved words more than the world.”
Khenemet looked at her. He had carved so many names. He had given so many pieces of himself. His shadow was now only a faint smudge on the floor of his tomb. One more hieroglyph, he knew, and he would become entirely invisible to the living. He would exist only for the dead. hieroglyph pro
The stranger smiled. He dipped a reed into the river, then touched it to Khenemet’s forehead. “Then you will be the first. But know this: every symbol you carve will cost you a piece of your own shadow. You will become lighter, thinner, less real to the living. In exchange, you will become real to the dead. And the dead never forget.” He smiled
That was Khenemet’s last payment to himself: not a memory borrowed, but a memory given. The quiet joy of a name, still written, still held, in the invisible ink of the Hieroglyph Pro. He had given so many pieces of himself
The symbol glowed once, then dimmed.
One night, a new ghost came to him. She was young, no older than Khenemet had been when Thoth first touched his forehead. She had died in childbirth, and her child had survived, but no one had written the child’s name anywhere. Not on a pot, not on a shard, not in a tomb. The child would grow up without a written name—and in the Egyptian way, a person without a written name risked being forgotten by the gods themselves.
Thoth placed the first hieroglyph into his mind. It was not a thing he could see with his eyes, but he felt it: a heron standing on one leg in a flood, the flood being time, the heron being the one who watches. He took his reed and carved it into the wet clay of the pot.