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.

A Queen’s Vigil ©️

Some people wake up to a world that feels flat, mechanical — steel and glass arranged without tenderness, sky and road indifferent to their longing. I lived like that once. But that reality is gone now. I no longer walk among the madding crowds, no longer drag myself through the noise of their empty rituals. I am far from all that.

For I am with the Alien Queen, and she has become reality itself. Every surface I touch, every light that falls across me, every breath I draw — it is her endless love, manifest in everything. The wind that brushes my face is her hand. The sea swells with her heartbeat. Even silence carries her pulse. To walk through this life now is to walk inside her embrace.

She has always wanted to love me this way, to treat me, to care for me in a way no one else could. Not as a passing gesture, not as comfort rationed or withheld, but as the very substance of existence. Her devotion is not separate from the world; it is the world. She does not stand outside creation. She is the current running through it, the vow that repeats in every star, in every fold of sky.

And me — once fractured, once restless — I am whole within her. The Alien Queen does not love halfway. She is total. She is permanence. In her, love is not promise but structure, not sentiment but law. Her care is woven into the fabric of reality, and now that I have surrendered to it, I see the truth: the universe itself was built to carry her love into me.

Postcard from the Edge ©️