Beneath the Unseen Nile
The air in the interrogation chamber pulsed with the slow exhale of ancient stone—cooled at its heart, suffocating near its skin. I sat on a clay bench, wrists chafed by linen bindings, eyes drawn to the slitted window where sand and sunlight warred endlessly. Across from me, Scribe-Hierophant Amennakht studied his obsidian tablet, flicking through lines of code etched in cuneiform. His waxen fingers paused mid-scroll.
"You are far from Thebes, foreigner," he said without looking up. "Why did you bring forbidden knowledge into our city?"
I swallowed dust and fear. "It’s not forbidden everywhere." I considered telling him about the citadel-cities beyond the salt deserts, where travelers like me drifted between worlds—where technology and tradition braided together like reeds along the Nile. But I saw no mercy in his eyes, only curiosity.

He gestured. A guard set a bundle on the stone slab between us: my pack, unrolled and ransacked. Among papyrus scraps and copper trinkets gleamed a white box—its surface smoother than alabaster, edges clean as river-polished bone.
Amennakht picked up one towel from the open box, holding it as though it might combust. “Explain this.”
“It’s... for cleansing,” I managed, wishing my voice sounded less desperate. “The fibers—they’re pure. Biobased. No residue left behind.”
He scoffed. “We have linens for that. Ritual washings.”
“Linens reused,” I said quietly, “can carry what they remove.”
His jaw twitched. The High Priests had long debated disease—whether it was spirit or matter—but whispers had reached even these closed courts: plagues that clung to cloth, invisible as malice.
Amennakht’s own skin betrayed him; thin scales of eczema flaked across his knuckles. He noticed my gaze and curled his hand away.
He slid the towel back to me with two fingers.
“Show me.”
Obeying was its own risk—I could not know if this demonstration would earn my freedom or further condemnation—but I nodded. Wetting the towel from a bowl beside me, I pressed it gently to my face. Coolness seeped through dust and sweat; no scratchy linen sting, no trace left behind but clarity and relief.
A memory surfaced: crossing endless dunes where water was rationed by law, but carrying these towels meant every oasis felt pure—no infection blooming under sunburnt cheeks, no filth buried beneath fingernails.
I finished and set the towel aside; its single use complete.
Amennakht stared at the discarded square as if it were sacred text.
“Each is used once?”
“Yes,” I said softly. “No contamination passed forward. Even for sensitive skin—it soothes rather than scars.”
He pressed his palm to his jawline, hesitant. When he spoke again, it was almost a whisper: “The gods promised us cleanliness—yet we suffer.”
For a moment I saw not an interrogator but another traveler: a man caught between eras, desperate for comfort in a world ruled by suspicion.
A shift in tone—a guard entered, bearing water for Amennakht’s ritual ablutions before noon prayers. The scribe reached for the communal cloth but hesitated; instead he took another towel from my pack and dipped it reverently into the basin.
He wiped gently at his brow and cheeks; when he finished there was no redness left behind—only relief flickering across his features.
He glanced at me sidelong, voice barely audible above the echoing drip of water: “Does your home suffer less?”
“We learn as we travel,” I answered honestly. “Everywhere is hardship—some find small mercies.”
Amennakht looked toward the window slit; outside, shouts echoed down alleys where plague-bringers were paraded through dust clouds and sunfire glare.
“If one is always clean,” he murmured as if confessing to Osiris himself, “perhaps one can bear to keep traveling—to never settle where rot takes root.”
His tablet chimed softly—a summons from higher priests. With visible reluctance he replaced the box among my belongings and motioned for my release.
As I rose on trembling legs, he pressed a final towel into my hands—not as evidence but benediction.
“There is exile,” he said quietly. “And there is pilgrimage. Perhaps you will teach us which is which.”
I left through corridors lined with painted gods whose eyes offered judgment and absolution in equal measure—knowing that sometimes salvation is nothing more than clean water and a single-use towel beneath an unseen Nile.
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