- Egypt. Franz Ferdinand, age 32, nearly dies of fever. Locals fear burying an archduke in the Valley of Kings. He recovers.
Days later, he poses as a mummy—laughing. His guide asks, “Why mock death after almost meeting it?” Franz replies, “Because I survived. Today I celebrate life.”
He loved archaeology. Traveled ten months across Asia.
Eighteen years later, in Sarajevo, a bullet ends his life. World War I begins.
In 1920, his nephew finds the photo. “Uncle Franz played dead once. Then death played for keeps.”
Some joke about fate. Fate always gets the last word.

Egypt, 1896. Franz Ferdinand—32 years old—nearly dies of fever. Locals fear burying an archduke in the Valley of Kings.
But he recovers.
Days later, he poses as a mummy. Laughing.
His guide asks, “Why mock death after almost meeting it?”
Franz replies, “Because I survived. Today I celebrate life.”
He loved archaeology. Traveled ten months across Asia.
Eighteen years later, in Sarajevo, a bullet ends his life.
World War I begins.
In 1920, his nephew finds the photo. “Uncle Franz played dead once. Then death played for keeps.”
Some joke about fate.
But fate? Fate always gets the last word.