Betrest

Flinders Petrie may have considered the first two glyphs as part of a title, and reads the name on the Cairo stone fragment as Tarset.

Her name appears in Line III on the Cairo stone fragment C1, where she bears the title Mut (meaning "mother").

[7] The name of the person on the stela included a ram-hieroglyph (which commonly reads "Ba") and the signs "s" and "t" are visible.

[3] Silke Roth and Toby Wilkinson point out, however, that the ram-hieroglyph was read differently in early times.

In sum the reading on the stela had to be Seret, which means "mother sheep" or "she of the ram".

The two chambers differ in size but both are visibly larger than the ordinary subsidiary tombs of retainers.