Egipt - Francja -

“Unless a descendant of the man who drew the line chooses to erase it.”

Now, Lena stood at the edge of the City of the Dead, a vast cemetery in Cairo where the living and the dead shared crumbling walls. The map led her to a mausoleum that didn’t exist on any modern GPS. Its door was painted French blue, peeling like old skin. A man waited there. He was tall, Nubian, with eyes the color of the Nile after a storm. Francja - Egipt

He smiled, and for a moment, he looked impossibly old. “Then Auguste will finally land. And the plague he tried to trap—the plague of empires, of lines that divide, of time that marches only forward—will be released. Or healed. We never know until the glass breaks.” “Unless a descendant of the man who drew

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. A man waited there

Outside, the call to prayer began, a wail that seemed to bend the air. Lena looked at the red hourglass. Inside, at the very top, a single grain of sand shimmered—not like mineral, but like a star.

He introduced himself as Tariq, a historian of the forgotten. “Your ancestor did not desert,” he said, pushing the door open. Inside, the air smelled of jasmine and decay. Shelves lined the walls, not with books, but with hourglasses—hundreds of them, each frozen mid-fall. Sand suspended in glass like amber-trapped flies.