Two men, a father and a son.Two kings, both shaped by power, desire, and the mystery of a plan greater than themselves.In The Bath on the Rooftop, King David's desire is awakened by the sight of Bathsheba bathing. In a stolen night, suspended between beauty and sin, an act is committed that will change the course of history. Yet God does not stop writing His story through human fragility-sometimes, precisely through failure.In the second tale, The Nights of Jerusalem, the young Solomon-born of that union-seeks fulfillment among countless faces, bodies, and illusions. But only one woman, Mira, will allow him to glimpse the boundary between pleasure and love, intoxication and truth. In the silence of old age, the once-great king may finally discover what he pursued in vain all his life: a deeper meaning for his nights, and for his crown.Nights of the King is not a historical account, but a narrative journey into the spaces Scripture leaves unspoken. It is an invitation to reflect on choice, desire, downfall, and redemption-and on the astonishing freedom of God, who is always able to turn shadow into light.