story:
The night Anubis refused to speak.
It began with a death that should never have happened — the fall of a child-king whose name was erased from stone and time. His tomb was hidden, rushed, unfinished. No priests were called. No rites were sung. The boy's soul wandered alone, trapped between the worlds, calling out — but none answered. Except Anubis.

He descended into the underworld not as a god, but as a shadow — walking a path no other deity dared. He followed the child’s voice into the Black Desert, a place outside the judgment halls, where the dead dream and never wake.
There, Anubis met something older than death — a being who fed on forgotten souls, drawing power from those whose names were never spoken again. It offered Anubis a bargain:
“Give me your silence, and I will return the child’s name to the world.”
Material:
Pharaonic schist:
Refers to a variety of metamorphic stones widely used by the ancient Egyptians from 3100 to 30 BC. This stone is characterized by its layered composition, which facilitates its shaping and carving. Schist is composed of minerals such as mica, chlorite, and talc, giving it a lustrous sheen and a smooth surface. These qualities made it a valuable material for fine sculptures, ritual objects, and funerary items. The ancient Egyptians preferred schist for its ability to support intricate carvings, making it a prime material for temple statues, stelae, and tomb artifacts, which often held religious significance.
DIMENSIONS:
L: 2.4 inches
D: 4 inches
H: 9.5 inches
weight: 1.6 lb