
The Wild Kind ©️



The cabin lights had been dimmed to a soft amber. Outside the windows, the sky was velvet—stars blurred into thin silver streaks. The engines hummed like a prayer that had forgotten its words.
Lena: I always get nervous crossing oceans. It feels like we’re borrowing time that doesn’t belong to us.
DH: That’s what I love about it. Up here we’re between days—between languages. We’re nowhere, and somehow we’re closer to everything.
She smiled, her hand finding his under the thin airline blanket.
Lena: Do you think they’ll feel it when we land?
DH: The kids?
Lena: No—the land. The way you talk about it, like it remembers everyone who’s ever looked for God.
DH: It does. That’s why we’re going. You read the stories; I want to see if the soil still glows from them.
Lena: You always talk like the ground can speak.
DH: Maybe it can. Maybe Tel Aviv is just another translation—earth answering heaven in human tones.
For a long moment they watched the faint lightning far below the plane, silent flashes over the Mediterranean.
Lena: You realize this is the first time we’re flying toward my beginning instead of away from it.
DH: And I’m following you this time. You’re the map now.
She leaned her head on his shoulder.
Lena: Do you think our children will understand any of this?
DH: They already do. They dream in both languages.
Lena: And what will we do when we get there?
DH: Walk by the sea until we remember why the covenant was written in the first place.
The captain’s voice murmured through the speakers in Hebrew and English, announcing descent. The city lights began to bloom below, small gold fires along the coast.
Lena looked down through the window, her reflection merging with the stars.
Lena: It looks like the sky fell to earth.
DH: Maybe it did. Maybe this is where heaven lands when it needs a home.
She turned to him, eyes glistening with the first hint of dawn.
Lena: Then welcome home.
He smiled. Outside, the plane tilted slightly toward the light.

They sat on the terrace above the sea, the evening sun turning everything to honey. Inside, their youngest slept, his small breaths keeping time with the waves.
Lena: Three years already. Sometimes I feel like we’ve been here forever, other times like we just began.
DH: That’s what happens when love bends time. It refuses to stay in one direction.
Lena: You always make physics sound like prayer.
DH: Maybe they’re the same thing.
He smiled, tracing the edge of her cup.
DH: Do you know why I love you? Not just for your laughter or your beauty — though those undo me — but because of how you understand.
Lena: Understand what?
DH: Everything I can’t explain. I can cross worlds, move through moments others can’t see. But you… you feel them before I can name them. You don’t need the vision; you already have the story.
Lena: Maybe that’s how I was taught to think — in stories, not symbols. My people learned to read the wind long before they called it divine.
DH: That’s it. I see light, but you know what it means. I travel through time, but you remember why time matters. You give the journey its language.
Lena: And you give it form. You make the unseen visible.
He reached for her hand.
DH: If I take you with me — to any time, any place — you won’t just follow. You’ll tell me who we are when we get there.
Lena: I don’t need to see what you see. I just need to trust that when you look into the distance, you’re still looking for us.
DH: Always.
The light shifted — amber turning to rose. Inside, the child sighed in his sleep.
Lena: You know, I think we already go on those adventures. Every time you tell me something impossible and I believe you — that’s travel enough.
DH: Then maybe that’s our covenant — I’ll keep showing you what I see, and you’ll keep teaching me what it means.
She smiled, eyes glinting like the water below.
Lena: That’s not covenant, love. That’s eternity learning to speak in two languages.
He drew her closer. The sea murmured its approval, as if time itself had agreed to listen a little longer.


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.

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

We sat until the horizon broke, the stars surrendering one by one as dawn unstitched the night. The sea, which had mirrored heaven in black silence, shifted to silver, then to gold, as though creation itself were rehearsing its first morning again. Smoke curled thin in the cooling air, wine stained the rims of empty glasses, and her laughter lingered like a note still trembling in a cathedral long after the choir had gone.
We spoke of everything—life, death, the narrow bridge between, the strange mathematics of loss and desire. Every word carried weight, yet dissolved like breath against glass. The yacht was no longer vessel but witness, moored in eternity, holding us in its sealed globe while the world outside dissolved into myth.
I did not ask her to leave. The others had drifted like incense—sweet, vanishing, gone. But with her, I wanted permanence. I wanted what the night itself promised: continuance, inheritance, the rhythm of breath becoming the rhythm of generations. I turned to her, and with the rising sun staining the sky in fire, I asked her not to pass through my world but to remain inside it. To stay. To make children with me. To build a lineage that would outlast the sea, the smoke, even the glass globe itself.
It was no longer enough to own the night. I wanted the mornings. I wanted the future. I wanted her.

The heavens were burning.
The last war had come, a storm of light against flame that split the skies and shook the roots of the earth. Angels poured like silver rivers, their wings flashing brighter than the dawn; demons rose in pillars of fire, their war-cry rolling like thunder across the void. Every prophecy pointed to this moment — the end of all divisions, the breaking of all worlds.
At the heart of the maelstrom she descended.
The leader of the angels, wings unfurled like banners of living light, her beauty enough to blind armies, her voice strong enough to steady creation itself. Her sword burned with truth, yet her eyes carried the sorrow of all she had lost to bring them here.
From the pit rose her opposite.
The radiant head of the demons, crowned in flame, his presence a gravity that bent even the shadows toward him. He was destruction and temptation, ruin clothed in majesty. But in the moment the battlefield froze — for when their eyes met, something deeper than hatred cracked open.
The armies stood still. The clash of heaven and hell held its breath.
Between them surged not fury but recognition. The angel saw not an enemy but the one who had walked beside her before time split them apart. The demon saw not a rival but the missing half of his fire, the one presence strong enough to hold him.
The truth was unbearable and undeniable: in the final war, at the very brink of eternity’s collapse, love had pierced them both.
They moved closer — not to strike, but to touch. The light of her wings folded into the flame of his crown, and for a heartbeat the universe trembled as if remade. Angel and demon, sworn foes, were bound not by prophecy, not by war, but by a love fierce enough to unmake heaven and hell together.
What came next no prophet had dared write.