Hamskar is surprised when Manrea converts to Idris's religion. After Roda gives birth to Al Waled, she hides in Marjan's father's house, claiming to be his wife. Manrea changes his name to Abd Nour.
When the servant Nour is surprised by Prince Kawab's conversion to Idris' religion, he tells him his story. Marjan is tortured to confess Manrea's whereabouts. Kawab helps Manrea undergo an operation to change his facial features, and Kawab's plan succeeds in making Djedefre believe that Manrea has died.
Verso becomes suspicious of Katie. Djedefre's attempt to prevent his brother Kawab's marriage to Hotep fails. Meanwhile, Kawab's plan to free Marjan from prison succeeds. Nour and Kawab search for a way to obtain Idris's teachings, which are buried at the bottom of the Nile.
Kawab marries Hotep, and he seeks the help of the most skilled divers to reach the vessel that carries the teachings of Idris. Khufu rejects Kawab's request to spread the teachings of Islam for fear of the authority of the priests, and Hamskar arouses his men's hatred towards Khufu.
Marjan's father converts to the religion of monotheism. Khufu orders Kawab to be appointed to lead the country while he secludes himself in the pyramid to write a holy book. As Hamskar plans to get rid of him, Kawab discovers Hamskar's conspiracy against his father.
Khufu returns, and Djedefre's plan to kill Kawab succeeds. Hamskar obtains the book and distorts it. Djedefre becomes king after Khufu's death, and the Hyksos storm Thebes. Elsewhere, Hagar hands the original book to her maid, Sanad.
After a thousand years, Abraham appears, calling for the religion of monotheism in the land of Canaan. The Hyksos capture Hagar to present her to the ruler Sinan, and Sinan captures Sarah, Abraham’s wife.
Sarah, the wife of the Prophet Abraham, appears to Sinan in the form of a predatory beast, and he remains in place whenever he tries to approach her. Abraham and his monotheist men go to ransom Sarah for gold, and a friendship develops between Sarah and Hagar in prison.
Sinan secretly adopts monotheism after hearing Abraham preach about it. He destroys the wine vessels, frees the prisoners, and frees the female slaves. He orders his chief priest to come and debate the men of monotheism, but the priest is unable to keep up with them.
Sinan sends his wife and daughter, Menrides, to live with him in Egypt. Bathao and Sanad get married. Abraham leaves Egypt after thousands of Egyptians embrace the religion of monotheism. Abraham marries Hagar, and she gives birth to Ishmael, the Prophet of God.
Seqenenre Tao is crowned with the crowns of the North and South and prepares to wage war against Sinan. Abraham goes to Mecca to build the Kaaba with Ishmael, and Sinan defeats Seqenenre Tao and kills him.
The vizier Khyan embraces the religion of monotheism. Thebes falls into the hands of Sinan, and Seqenenre Tao's mother flees before the entry of the Hyksos army. Ahmose refuses to worship Amun-Ra after Seqenenre Tao sought help from him in his war against Sinan and was defeated.
Sanad is surprised by Sinan's return to wine and the pleasures of life. Al Dimashqi is taken aback to see Abraham slaughtering his son Ishmael in his dream. The leader, Amu, leaves Sinan after he abandons Islam. Ahmose is astounded by Canos' love for his beloved Nefertari.
Abraham finishes building the Kaaba with the help of Ishmael, and the towns of Nephros and Thebes fall into the hands of Canos, who dies as a result of the bite of a snake that the priest Sam-Ra planted on his bed. Ahmose is crowned Pharaoh of Egypt.
Ahmose marries Nefertari, who gives birth to Amenhotep. Hagar dies. Ahmose goes undercover as a merchant named Wanis to Memphis to monitor his enemy’s preparations, and on his way, he meets Menrides.
Menrides falls in love with Ahmose after he saves her from drowning. Ahmose is astounded by the Memphian people's animosity toward the Hyksos. Abraham dies, and Menrides declares her love for Wanis to her mother.
Ahmose discovers Nefer's plot to let Egypt fall into the hands of the Hyksos. Sans meets with Ahmose to make sure he is the one he saw in his sleep at night to rid Egypt of the Hyksos. Menrides is surprised by Wanis' departure without saying goodbye to her.
Sinan kills Kahraman because she fell in love with Khyan without his knowledge. Sinan suspects Wanis of being a spy for Ahmose, so he orders the army commander to be sent to pursue Wanis's ship. Nefer plots to overthrow Sinan.
Sinan's wife seeks Nefer's help after her husband's tyranny. Nefer takes advantage of her need and asks Menrides to be the high priestess, and Ahmose prepares his armies to attack Apophis.
When Menrides' mother refuses Nefer's request, he kills her. Apophis seeks the help of Khyan to appoint him as commander of his armies instead of Ammu. Apophis is surprised that his daughter escapes with Sanad so that she will not submit to Nefer.
The Holy Mother asks Nefertari to convince Ahmose to submit to Amun-Ra. Sanad and Menrides go to Sans to help them sail to Wanis, and Menrides is surprised by the death of her father. Khyan is crowned king with the help of Nefer.
The priest Sam-Amun spreads among the public Ahmose's disbelief in Amun-Ra. Sam-Amun takes advantage of Ahmose going to war, so he asks the Holy Mother to keep Nefertari next to him in the temple, and the Holy Mother and Sam-Amun die from the effects of the poison.
Sans convinces Menrides to stay at his house in Memphis until Wanis arrives. Menrides still does not know that Wanis is Ahmose, the leader. Memphis falls into the hands of Ahmose.
Menrides discovers Wanis's true identity and commits suicide. The priest Nefer's pledge of allegiance to Ahmose surprises Khyan. Ahmose besieges the city of Avaris to eliminate Khyan.
Ahmose expels all the Hyksos from Egypt and refuses to be installed as a god by the public. Nefer plots to assassinate Ahmose. The Prophet of God, Ishmael, advises Ahmose to build temples for monotheists of God without idols.
Sharuhen falls into the hands of Ahmose, and the priest Hemnefer claims that Ahmose incited the God Bast to distort his face. The ruler of the city of Crete seeks the help of Ahmose to get rid of the tyranny of the Hyksos in their country.
Ahmose is surprised when Bedouin tribes attack his southern borders. Prince Thutmose gets rid of the Hyksos in the city of Crete in fulfillment of Ahmose’s desire. Ahmose liberates Nubia from tyrants, and the priests are still trying to plant the idea of Ahmose’s divinity in the hearts of the public.
Everyone notices that Prince Amenhotep excels in music and playing. Ahmose tries to expose the ignorance of the priests, astrologers, and magicians in front of the public out of a desire to spread the worship of monotheism. The priest Har claims that Ahmose has embraced monotheism.
Ahmose becomes suspicious of Har, and he assigns someone to watch him. Ahmose’s mother dies after her health deteriorates. Nefer resorts to witchcraft, intending to kill Ahmose and Thutmose.
Ahmose decides to build the Amenhotep Institute to study music. Ahmose arrests Nefer and Hemnefer while they are escaping. Har confesses his plan to Ahmose after he converts to monotheism. Ahmose orders the priests to be thrown into the Nile on the day of the Nile Feast.