A fisherman finds a bowl while hunting and takes it to Thutmose. Rekhmire hides the papyrus of Idris's teachings from the Pharaoh. Thutmose is shocked by the death of his wife, despite the priest Senope's prediction of her recovery.
Joseph's brothers are upset after Jacob preached the prophecy to him, so they decide to throw him into the pit. Thutmose besieges the city of Megiddo. A merchant passing through the desert finds Joseph and decides to sell him. Zuleikha asks Potiphar to separate because he is not able to have children.
Potiphar buys Joseph from the market for his wife. The priest Senope is surprised by Thutmose's rude treatment due to the death of Neferure, despite his prediction of her recovery. The Prince of Kadesh obeys the advice of his wife, Hasnaa, to escape from Megiddo to get rid of the siege.
The Prince of Kadesh and his wife escape, and Megiddo falls thanks to Thutmose. Thutmose discovers that Senope is inciting the temple workers against him. Zuleikha decides to confess her love to Joseph, and Senope cooperates with Hatshepsut II to marry Thutmose.
Hatshepsut is surprised when Thutmose finds out that she asked Senope for help. Zuleikha's attempt to dissuade Joseph from himself fails, and Potiphar discovers his wife's love for Joseph.
Zuleikha gathers the women who spoke ill of her, and when Joseph comes out, they cut off their hands because of his beauty. Potiphar complies with his wife and Senope’s request and imprisons Joseph. Potiphar still refuses Zuleikha’s request to separate from her.
Jacob loses his sight out of sadness for Joseph, and Zuleikha is surprised by Joseph's refusal to leave prison, so she asked for Senope's help to nominate her for marriage to User. User is declared a governor of Egypt, and he asks Samar to marry him.
Joseph interprets Nebo's vision by proving his innocence in addition to Melheb's conviction. Samar agrees to marry User. All the prisoners and guards believed in Joseph's call for them to embrace the monotheistic religion. Hatshepsut gives birth to Amenhotep II.
Zuleikha loses her speech after discovering that the priest Senope stole the gold she had collected. Senope succeeds in imprisoning Zuleikha and her maid in a room adjacent to his room so that Thutmose will not find out about him. User marries Samar.
Thutmose prepares to fight the prince of Kadesh. User and Rekhmire discover the plot of Senope and Bazu against him. Thutmose orders Senope to stay in the temple until the time of his death because he verbally assaulted him after he refused to offer sacrifices to the gods.
As the Jurhum tribe is still in control of Mecca, the Almohads leave to protect themselves from their evil. Zuleikha regains her ability to speak as soon as she discovers the location of the gold. Thutmose besieges the city of Kadesh in preparation for his invasion.
The Prince of Kadesh is unaware of his wife's infidelity to him with Hasron, the commander of his armies. Senope incites his men to claim to the public that Thutmose lost his battles with the Prince of Kadesh due to the outbreak of a civil war inside Egypt.
Bazu informs Rekhmire and User of Senope's claims to the temple priests that Thutmose is involved in wars that would destroy Egypt. Samar gives birth to a girl, and Zuleikha pays a bribe to the guard to get out of prison and travel to Nubia with Senope's gold in her possession.
Zuleikha hires a servant named Deth and his wife Amber to serve her in a house on the bank of the Nile. User discovers that Hatshepsut went to the priest Senope, contrary to what Thutmose ordered. Zuleikha meets the merchant Mirqab, who proposes to marry her.
Thutmose is able to storm Kadesh and is surprised by its prince’s request to duel him. Senope refuses to return the gold he took from Hatshepsut, and Zuleikha impersonates a merchant named Nur al-Qulub.
The Prince of Kadesh is forced to accept surrender after losing the duel to Thutmose. Hatshepsut seeks protection from Rekhmire from Senope's threats to kill her and her son. Rekhmire's embrace of monotheism as a form of worship surprises Hatshepsut.
Carth is appointed governor of Kadesh, and Mitanni's king sends a warning message to Thutmose to leave Kadesh. Thutmose pardons Senope in response to his wife's wishes, and Thutmose prepares for war on Mitanni.
The Prince of Kadesh seeks the help of Salishtar's ruler to provide him with funds to prepare an army with which to fight Thutmose. Thutmose's men prepare wooden planks to build ships to cross the Euphrates River to wage war against the Mitanni
Thutmose travels to Kadesh to supervise the preparations of the army and warships to cross the river. Hasnaa is surprised when the Mitanni gives money to the prince of Kadesh in exchange for having her.
Mitanni falls into Thutmose's hands, and he arrests Hasron with the counterfeit Mitanni money. Hatshepsut builds two obelisks to celebrate her husband's victory. Senope is surprised by the disappearance of the gold and the escape of Zuleikha.
Senope is able to reach the island where Zuleikha lives to steal the gold. He meets Zuleikha and mutilates her face, and everyone in the temple is surprised by Senope’s claim that he has been robbed.
Thutmose issues a decree appointing Bazu as a priest of the Temple of Amun instead of Senope. Thutmose is surprised that Senope built a weapons factory. Bazu performs surgery on Zuleikha, and he still does not know her true identity.
Zuleikha refuses to marry Mirqab. Thutmose issues a comprehensive pardon to Joseph after interpreting his prophecy. When Joseph refuses to leave prison until after a fair investigation by the Pharaoh to reveal his innocence, Thutmose asks for Zuleikha so he can investigate her.
Zuleikha confesses to her crime before the Pharaoh, while Mirqab is shocked at what she has committed against Joseph. Hatshepsut is surprised at Thutmose’s appointment of Joseph as his first advisor to the country, and the news of Joseph’s prophecy spreads.
Thutmose orders the construction of his tomb on the condition that it is impossible to reach. Samar is astounded by Joseph's choice of an unmarried woman to marry, and Joseph forgives Zuleikha.
Mirqab's adoption of monotheism as a religion surprises Zuleikha. Joseph suggests constructing dams and reservoirs to preserve the water of the Nile. Thutmose supervises the storage of food and the construction of the dam to preserve the water in preparation for the lean years.
As Mirqab's marriage to another woman surprises Zuleikha, Zuleikha refuses to marry Carth. Thutmose orders land reclamation to increase crops, and Samar participates in awareness campaigns against extravagance.
The rat attack on the crop stores shocks everyone, forcing Samar to ask Senope for assistance in preparing poison for the rats. Jacob advises his sons to go to Thutmose in Egypt at the beginning of the seven lean years.
Joseph stipulates that his brother Benjamin be present to honor the other brothers. During a discussion that Thutmose III orders, Joseph describes the monotheistic religion, and the arguments put forth by Bazu and the other priests fail to convince.
Joseph meets his brother Benjamin and honors his brothers despite what they did to him. Senope dies following the monotheistic religion. When Jacob meets Joseph, his sight is restored.