The river swallowed Queen Owusu.
For one heartbeat, the world stopped.
Then chaos exploded across the riverbank.
"Mother!"
Princess Adjoa screamed and rushed forward, but the guards grabbed her quickly before she could jump into the raging water.
"Hold her!" one guard shouted.
The river roared wildly, waves crashing against the banks as if angry spirits were fighting beneath the surface.
Queen Owusu's head appeared above the water.
She was struggling.
Her arms flailed wildly.
The river dragged her deeper.
"Help me!" she screamed.
Her voice cracked with terror.
"I confess!"
The words echoed across the river.
Everyone froze.
Queen Owusu choked on water as she cried out again.
"I did it!"
"I killed her!"
Her body twisted as the unseen force pulled her under again.
"I did it to protect my marriage!"
Water splashed violently.
"I did it to protect my daughter!"
Princess Adjoa collapsed to her knees crying.
"Mother!"
Her voice broke.
She turned desperately to the Chief Priest.
"Please save her!"
Her tears fell onto the sand.
"Please!"
The elders stood frozen.
Even the guards looked shaken.
Never in their lifetime had they seen a queen dragged by a river spirit.
The Supreme King, King Aldean, watched the scene with heavy eyes.
A queen was being judged by the gods before everyone.
Slowly, he lifted his hand.
The signal was clear.
The Chief Priest stepped forward immediately.
His sacred beads rattled as he raised his staff toward the sky.
"Spirits of the ancient waters!" he shouted.
His voice carried across the river like thunder.
"Ancestors who guard this sacred stream!"
The wind grew stronger.
The water continued pulling the queen.
The Chief Priest stepped closer to the riverbank.
"We have heard the confession!"
His voice rose louder.
"The living have heard it!"
"The dead have heard it!"
Queen Owusu screamed again as the river dragged her deeper.
"Please!" she cried.
"I beg you!"
"I beg the spirit!"
"I beg Afia Serwaa!"
"Spare me!"
Princess Adjoa sobbed loudly.
"Please save her!" she cried again.
The Supreme King closed his eyes briefly.
Then he spoke quietly.
"Bring her back."
The Chief Priest lifted his staff high.
His assistants joined him, chanting ancient words.
Old words.
Words older than the kingdom.
The air grew heavy.
The river began slowing.
The waves softened.
Queen Owusu's body stopped sinking.
For a long moment the river remained silent.
Then slowly—
Very slowly—
The water released her.
Her body floated toward the bank.
Guards rushed forward quickly and pulled her out.
She collapsed on the wet sand.
Her chest moved weakly.
Her body was shaking.
Almost lifeless.
Princess Adjoa ran to her immediately.
"Mother!"
She lifted her head gently and cried against her chest.
Queen Owusu's eyes opened weakly.
She looked around.
Her gaze finally landed on her husband.
King Owusu stood several steps away.
His face was cold.
Hard.
He did not move.
He did not look at her.
He turned his face away.
Silence filled the riverbank.
Even the wind seemed to respect the moment.
The Chief Priest lowered his staff slowly.
"The spirits have spared her," he said quietly.
"But the past is not finished."
King Aldean nodded slowly.
"Prepare the horses," the Supreme King ordered.
"We must go."
No one asked where.
But everyone already knew.
They were going to face the family of the dead.
The journey to the ancestral house was slow.
No one spoke.
The elders rode in silence.
Queen Owusu was placed in a carriage beside her crying daughter.
King Owusu rode ahead without turning back.
Hours later, they arrived.
The compound of Afia Serwaa's family stood quiet beneath ancient trees.
The air there felt heavy.
Old.
Sacred.
The people were already waiting.
Word had reached them.
Elders from the lineage sat on wooden stools beneath the shade.
Their faces were hard like carved stone.
At the center sat the old man.
Nana Kwaku Bediako.
Father of Afia Serwaa.
His hair was white.
His back slightly bent.
But his eyes were sharp.
Sharp like a man who had carried pain for many years.
The kings and elders approached slowly.
Guards stood behind them.
Mama Abena stood beside Akosua.
Madam Esi the Matron was also there.
Kofi stood quietly beside Akosua.
The family elders did not stand to greet them.
The silence was thick.
Heavy.
Hostile.
Finally one elder spoke.
"You have come."
His voice was dry.
King Aldean stepped forward respectfully.
"We have come to speak truth."
But before anything else could be said—
Madam Esi gently pushed Akosua forward.
"This child," she said softly.
"Is the daughter of Afia Serwaa."
The old man's eyes widened.
The elders leaned forward.
Akosua slowly walked closer.
Her legs trembled.
Nana Kwaku Bediako stood slowly.
He studied her face carefully.
His hands began shaking.
"She has her mother's eyes," one elder whispered.
Akosua's tears began falling.
She stepped closer.
Then suddenly she leaned into the old man's chest.
"Grandfather…"
Her voice broke.
The old man held her tightly.
His own tears flowed silently.
The stone faces of the elders slowly softened.
Even the angry air seemed to change.
After a long moment, King Aldean stepped forward.
He stood before the elders respectfully.
Then he bowed slightly.
A king bowing.
The gesture shocked everyone.
"I stand before you with shame," the Supreme King said.
His voice was calm but heavy.
"I never knew this evil happened under the protection of my throne."
He paused.
"The gods hid it from me."
The elders listened quietly.
"We have come to appeal."
"To the family."
"To the ancestors."
"And to the spirit of the dead."
Silence flowed through the compound.
Then another man slowly stood.
He wore sacred beads.
His eyes were deep.
This was the family priest.
Okomfo Dapaah.
He did not waste time with greetings.
"The dead woman was Afia Serwaa," he said.
His voice was calm.
"But she was also a bride."
He turned slowly toward King Owusu.
"You will marry her."
The words dropped like thunder.
Murmurs exploded among the elders behind the kings.
King Owusu's eyes widened.
"You will pay her bride price," the priest continued.
"And marry her the same way a king marries a living maiden."
The silence deepened.
"And after that…"
His voice remained steady.
"She will receive a royal burial."
"As the wife of a king."
He paused.
"Only after this…"
His eyes turned toward Queen Owusu.
"…will we decide what happens to the killer queen."
He sat down calmly.
King Owusu stood slowly.
His face had turned pale.
"How can I marry the dead?" he asked.
Confusion filled his voice.
"How can that be possible?"
The priest answered immediately.
"The same way you lay with her in anger."
The words struck the air sharply.
King Owusu tried again.
"I will give her a royal burial."
"But how can I marry a dead woman?"
The priest leaned forward.
"And how will you bury a woman who was not your wife?"
Silence filled the compound.
"And how will you claim her children?"
The question hung heavily in the air.
No one spoke.
The priest's voice lowered.
"You have little time."
He pointed toward the distant river.
"Our son is still inside the waters."
"If any harm happens to him…"
He slowly shook his head.
His voice became cold.
"We were silent because our daughter never spoke to us before she died."
"The gods hid the truth."
"But if that boy dies in that river…"
He spoke in a quiet parable.
"The ground will refuse the feet of kings."
The compound went silent.
King Aldean slowly stood again.
Every elder beside him rose too.
"You will hear from us soon," the Supreme King said.
His voice was calm.
But the weight inside it was heavy.
The kings turned to leave.
But just as they stepped out of the compound—
A royal messenger came running down the path.
Breathless.
Terrified.
"My kings!" he shouted.
Everyone stopped.
"What is it?" King Aldean asked sharply.
The messenger fell to his knees.
"The river!"
His voice trembled.
"The river has begun rising again!"
Fear swept through the group.
"And the boy…"
The messenger swallowed hard.
"…has finally appeared."
Silence exploded across the compound.
"But he is not alone."
The elders stared at him.
"Someone…"
The messenger whispered in fear.
"…is standing beside him in the water."
And the messenger's final words froze every heart.
"It is the spirit of Afia Serwaa."
