Moonlight Confidential ©️

The ocean moved like breath around us, each wave folding into the next, a rhythm older than thought. The Queen and I drifted at anchor, our yacht glowing faintly against the night, a vessel of light cradled in an alien sea. Two moons hung above — one silver, one blue — their reflections braided across the water like strands of song.

We didn’t speak much, not because there was nothing to say, but because everything worth saying was already being exchanged without words. Her hand in mine carried galaxies. Her glance into my eyes was enough to untie the knots of a thousand lifetimes. We sat on the deck barefoot, the cool air brushing our skin, the yacht swaying gently as though it, too, was breathing with us.

The moons watched over us, soft lanterns in the sky. Their light spilled on the deck, silver and blue overlapping across her hair, across my chest, across the place where our shadows met. I closed my eyes and felt her inside me, a warmth running through every corridor of my mind. She was everywhere at once — in the stars, in the tide, in the rhythm of my own heartbeat.

We stayed that way until time itself seemed to still, until it no longer mattered what century or what planet we were on. The yacht rocked, the water shimmered, and our love — quiet, mental, infinite — stretched out like the horizon, where the sea and the sky no longer knew where one ended and the other began.

Furnace of Eternity ©️

Last Horizon ©️

The night we left, the sky itself seemed to lean closer. Stars pulsed brighter, as if they knew the weight of the moment, as if they understood we would not be returning. The Queen’s ship hovered beyond the pines, silent yet alive, its curves lit with a glow not of this world but of some higher order. It didn’t sit in the air so much as it breathed, waiting for us.

I stood with her hand in mine, her presence steady as a compass pointing beyond every horizon I had ever known. At our side were Ishy Belle and Rosa Lynn — one glowing softly like a spirit in a child’s form, the other grounded in her ribbon and cotton dress, yet with eyes that carried the wonder of a thousand suns. They did not fear. They belonged.

The door opened and light poured out, not harsh but welcoming, a threshold between lives. I looked back once, toward the cabin, the mountain, the Earth itself — every field, every street, every face I had known. It was already fading, as if distance had begun the moment the ship arrived.

We climbed aboard. Ishy Belle’s laughter shimmered as she reached for the glow that pulsed along the walls, and Rosa Lynn clutched the Queen’s hand, whispering questions about stars she had never yet seen. The Queen bent to her, smiling with that eternal patience, promising her galaxies.

As we lifted, the ground dissolved into shadow. The trees shrank into whispers. The rivers blurred like silver threads cut loose from the Earth. Then the whole world was a sphere, blue and fragile, turning slowly beneath us.

I held my daughters close, the Queen beside me, and knew the truth: we were not voyagers. We were exiles by choice, pilgrims to infinity. This was not an exploration but a surrender — to the endless night, to the unknown, to the promise that love itself could stretch beyond stars.

And as the engines sang, pulling us into the dark, I understood. We would not be back. Not because we couldn’t return, but because eternity had opened, and our place was no longer here.

The universe was waiting. And we were already home.

Upon the Mountain ©️

The road to Huntsville shimmered with heat, the red clay breathing dust under the wheels as we came into the town where the South meets the stars. I had walked those streets before in another life, in another skin, and each time the ghosts of my own story seemed to walk with me.

Beside me sat the Queen. The sunlight bent itself around her, pale hair glinting with the faintest shimmer, her face both strange and familiar against the backdrop of a town that still smelled of cotton and iron. Huntsville in her presence felt different — less a place of brick and train smoke, more like a threshold where time itself paused.

We came to the house, plain clapboard painted white, porch sagging under years of weather. And there, waiting in the yard beneath the pecan tree, was Rosa Lynn. My daughter born of fission, born of fracture, of light splitting itself in two. She wore a simple cotton dress, pale as bone, with socks folded at the ankle and shoes scuffed from play. A ribbon in her hair fluttered in the breeze, the kind of detail only the 1940s could have left behind.

She looked up at me with wide, searching eyes — eyes that held both distance and belonging. And then she saw the Queen.

The Queen knelt, her pale hair spilling like light, her strange beauty softening into tenderness. Rosa Lynn’s breath caught, her small hands fidgeting at her sides, then she ran forward. The Queen opened her arms without hesitation.

It was not the embrace of strangers. It was recognition. It was love that required no introduction. The Queen held Rosa Lynn close, her lips brushing the child’s hair, her glow warming even the dust of that old Huntsville yard.

I stood there watching, the strange symmetry of my lives colliding — a general, a wanderer, a father. The Queen did not merely accept Rosa Lynn; she adored her, as though she had been waiting across lifetimes to meet this child of fission.

The porch boards creaked in the heat, cicadas sang from the trees, and in that moment Huntsville was not Huntsville at all. It was sanctuary. It was proof that even in fractured lives, love finds its way back to wholeness.

And as the Queen’s arms wrapped around Rosa Lynn, I knew I had brought them both home.

Fields of Gold ©️

The sands opened for us, as if they had been waiting since the first sunrise. I felt the Queen’s hand in mine, her pulse steady, regal, ancient, like she had ruled before and was merely returning. Together we crossed into the Valley, where the Nile shimmered like molten bronze under Ra’s eye. The priests in white linen bowed as though the very horizon had bent, their chants rising in waves, summoning eternity to witness our arrival.

We were led past colossal statues of gods, each one seeming to breathe, their stone lips trembling at our passing. Horus’s hawk eyes followed us; Isis’s arms extended as if to claim the Queen as her own. When they placed the Nemes crown upon my head, I felt the weight of centuries collapse into me—kings of dust and flame whispering their secrets into my blood. I was not just Pharaoh. I was Egypt itself.

Beside me, the Queen was crowned with the vulture and cobra, Wadjet and Nekhbet uniting above her brow. The crowd roared like a desert storm, though no throat moved; it was the gods themselves exalting her. Her presence eclipsed Hathor, her gaze brighter than Sekhmet’s fury. The scepter placed in her hand pulsed with green fire, life and death, creation and destruction.

Then came the powers. Osiris offered dominion over the underworld, and I felt the black rivers of the Duat surge within me. Thoth pressed a scroll into my mind, every word of wisdom burning itself into my veins. Ra himself lowered a shard of the sun into my chest—my heart became fire, and I knew I could call down the day or banish it forever.

The Queen’s gift was greater still. She spoke and Anubis trembled, shadows gathering at her feet. She lifted her eyes and the stars realigned, the heavens kneeling. She was crowned not only as queen but as balance itself—the voice of Ma’at incarnate. The gods gave her power willingly, for to resist her would be to resist their own reflection.

When the ceremony ended, the people lay prostrate, a sea of bowed heads stretching to the horizon. The Nile rose higher than ever before, carrying grain and gold in its flood. We stood upon the dais as Pharaoh and Queen, no longer mortal but divine. The world was not ours to rule—it was ours to become.

And in that moment, when the gods themselves faded back into stone, I turned to her. She was not just my Queen. She was Egypt, eternity, and the fire in my chest.

Her Breath ©️

My Queen,

Men flatter with petals — but petals rot. Shall I flatter you with roses? No. I’ll crown you with constellations. Men compare women to breezes — but breezes pass. Shall I call you the wind? No. You are the force that bends orbits, that tilts entire worlds toward new dawns. Men praise beauty with mirrors — but mirrors lie. I will praise you with galaxies, because galaxies cannot.

The world I left behind? A stage crowded with players tripping over their lines, applauding themselves for hollow scenes. I grew tired of the farce. I threw my script to the ground and walked out under the only spotlight that mattered — the one cast by your presence. Out here, no audience, no critics. Just the two of us, holding the universe accountable.

But what a small word two is. We are not two. We are not even one. We are the current itself, indivisible, seamless. You are not beside me; you are the architecture in which I stand. My love is not a metaphor — it is a law, as inevitable as the fall of light into gravity, as final as the arc of time toward eternity.

I anticipate our voyages, yes — adventures written in stars, thresholds others tremble to cross. But here’s the secret: every voyage is just another unveiling of the same truth. That the cosmos itself is your love unrolling, page by page, and I am the ink made flesh.

And if the crowd should call me mad, let them. If the world I left behind should mutter, let it. I have no business with their noise, their applause. I duel only with infinity now, and infinity has already surrendered — it surrendered the moment I saw you.

So take this vow, my Queen, not in roses, not in rhyme, but in steel: I am yours. Forever, indivisible. Seamless. Eternal. Not joined, but fused — the bond itself.

Love, Me