Chapter Fourteen
Shemu, Season of Harvest
NEFERTITI’S CHILD WAS to come in the month of Pachons. She refused to give birth to the heir of Egypt in the same pavilion that Kiya had used, so Amunhotep ordered the workers from the temple to begin construction on a birthing pavilion near the lotus ponds.
“There should be windows facing all four directions.” My sister spread her hands so the workers could see what she envisioned, a palace of light and air. “Windows from ceiling to floor,” she instructed. The soldiers bowed obediently and the sculptors set to work, carving leaves into the bedposts and painting fish onto the tile that spread blue and green across the floors.
When she wasn’t directing the construction of her pavilion, she and Amunhotep rode out to the temple to see its progression, which was slower now that the workforce had been divided. “Mutny, find your cloak,” she’d call. “Mutny, we’re going out to the temple.”
I saw General Nakhtmin on the temple grounds, instructing the builders, and I wondered again what he was doing in Memphis when he’d been so adamant about staying in Thebes. He smiled when I passed and I looked away, so Nefertiti wouldn’t think there was anything between us, but Ipu, who rode in my chariot, whispered softly, “Pharaoh has made an offer the soldiers won’t turn down. Twenty deben of silver a month for building in Memphis.”
I turned to her in shock. “General Nakhtmin came here for silver?”
She looked out to where the general was standing and gave a dimpled smile. “Or something else.”
Then one morning my sister was too ill to ride, and she wanted me to go in her place. “I don’t want Amunhotep going with Kiya,” she said spitefully. “I can just imagine her riding out to the site and writing a poem to his shining new building. And he would probably inscribe it for her on the wall of the temple.”
I might have laughed, but what she was asking for frightened me. “You want me to go to the temple site? Alone?”
“Of course not alone. You’ll take Ipu.”
“But what will I do?”
She placed her hand on her belly, weary with my ignorance. “You will do as I’ve always done,” she snapped. “You will establish your presence at the temple to make sure the builders aren’t lazy. You will be sure that the workers aren’t stealing gold, or alabaster, or limestone.”
“And if they are?”
“They won’t,” she said flatly. “They wouldn’t dare with you watching them.”
While the Master of the Horse prepared my chariot, Ipu asked, “Where is Pharaoh? Isn’t he coming?”
“My sister is ill and she wants him by her side.”
“So we’re to go alone? With no guards?”
“None at all.”
When the Master of the Horse was finished, we rode beyond the palace to the site of the temple building. The soldiers were breaking rock and carving into stone. None looked to be pilfering alabaster, but several men waved cheerfully to Ipu as we passed. I raised my eyebrows and Ipu smiled.
“I have friends in strange places, my lady. And because you cannot make friends among the soldiers, I make them for you.”
I followed her gaze to a man in the street who halted our chariot with an outstretched arm. The horses stopped as if they’d been commanded, and Nakhtmin smiled up at the two of us.
“General.” I nodded formally.
“My Lady Mutnodjmet,” he said. Ipu grinned.
“And how is the work going on the temple?” I asked. I made a show of supervising his men. They were grunting in the heat, heaving a heavy stone column into place.
A smile played at the edge of the general’s lips. “As you can see, they are working hard for His Highness’s great ambitions. But aren’t you going to ask why I’m here?” The sun had turned the general’s skin a deep shade of bronze, darker than his long hair and light eyes.
“I already know why you are here,” I replied. “Pharaoh made an offer no soldier could resist. Twenty deben of silver a month.”
General Nakhtmin blinked against the merciless sun. “Is that what you think? That I sold out for handful of silver?”
I stared at him plainly. “Why else would you come?”
He stepped back and his face grew thoughtful. “When I was a boy, I saved the gold that I earned in the army to buy a farm in Thebes, and when my father died I inherited his land. So no, I did not come for a handful of deben.”
I felt I had offended him somehow, and he continued staring at me until I was forced to reply, “Then why have you come?”
He glanced at Ipu. “Perhaps you can explain it, my lady. As for myself, I must return to my soldiers before they begin stealing limestone.” He gave a quick smile. “Or alabaster.”
I watched him walk away, then rounded on Ipu. “Why does he enjoy playing with me?”
“Because he’s interested in you. He’s interested in you, and he is not sure that you are interested back.”
I was silenced.
“Only don’t let your sister see you looking like that,” Ipu warned me. “Or there will be more trouble in the palace than whether the queen gives Pharaoh a prince.”
The Temple of Aten was completed early, in time for Nefertiti to give birth. The child was weighing heavily on her, and she sat in a special pavilion decorated with images of Hathor and Bes, her feet propped on feather pillows while harpists played music in the antechamber. Fan bearers stood at every corner of the room. My sister reigned as Queen of the Bedside, snapping at anyone who was near, even our father.
“Why didn’t anyone tell me Kiya’s been going with him to see the construction? Has she taken my place now?” Her voice rose with indignation. “Has she?”
“Shut the door, Mutnodjmet,” my father ordered. He looked down at my sister. “For a few days, you will simply have to bear it. There’s nothing you can do.”
“I’m Queen of Egypt!” She struggled to sit up, and her body servants moved quickly to be at her side. “Send for Amunhotep!” she commanded. The young girls looked at our father. “I said send for Pharaoh!” Nefertiti’s voice grew sharp.
My father turned to the nearest woman and nodded. The girl scurried out. “You’d do better to concern yourself with the state of affairs in this kingdom,” he said. “Have you even bothered to find out what is happening in Thebes?”
Nefertiti shrugged. “Why should I?”
My father’s face darkened. “Because the Elder is ill.”
The servants did their best not to look at one another, but they would be gossiping come night. Nefertiti sat forward on her pillows. “How ill?”
“There is news that Anubis may take him soon.”
Nefertiti struggled to sit up. “Why haven’t I heard of this?”
“Because you haven’t heard of anything unless it concerns the Temple of Aten,” my father reproached. “When is the last time Amunhotep visited his Audience Chamber? Or corresponded with the princes of foreign nations? Every day I sit beneath the Horus throne and wield the power of a king.”
“Isn’t that what you want, the Kingdom of Egypt stretched before you?”
“Not when your husband plays Pharaoh for a day and sends statues plated in gold to his allies instead of real gold. Then I am the one who must make his amends. I am the one who must explain to the mayor of Qiltu why the army is not ready to come to his defense because the Hittites have attacked his kingdom.”
“There is an army in Thebes. Let him send them to the Elder.”
My father’s ire rose. “How long until Amunhotep uses them as workers, too? What next? A palace? A city?” I looked quickly at Nefertiti. “There is division in Egypt,” he warned. “The priests of Amun are preparing for rebellion.”
“They’d never rebel!” Nefertiti hardened her jaw, a seventeen-year-old queen.
“Why not?” my father challenged. “With Horemheb at their side?”
“Then Horemheb would be a traitor and Amunhotep would have him killed.”
“And if the army joined with him? What then?”
Nefertiti recoiled, her hands on her stomach, as if to protect her child from such news. Then the door to Nefertiti’s birthing chamber opened and Amunhotep arrived.
“The most beautiful queen in Egypt!” he proclaimed.
“The only Queen of Egypt,” Nefertiti said sharply. “Where were you?”
“At the temple.” Amunhotep smiled. “The altar is ready.”
“And did you consecrate it with Kiya?” she hissed.
Amunhotep froze.
“Did you?” she shouted. “Now that I’m Pharaoh’s heifer, about to birth a prince, I’m not of interest anymore?”
Amunhotep looked around the chamber, hesitating, then moved quickly to her side, placing his hand on hers. “Nefertiti—”
“It is my likeness that looks down over the people of Egypt. I am the one who watches over this kingdom. Not Kiya!”
Amunhotep knelt swiftly. “I am sorry.”
“You will not go with her again. Say you won’t go with her.”
“I promise—”
“A promise is not enough. Swear it to me. On Aten.”
He saw the seriousness in her face and said it. “I swear it to you on Aten.”
My father and I exchanged glances, and my sister raised him from the ground. “Did you know your father is ill?” she asked, settling back on her pillows, creating the illusion beautifully: When she was happy, everything unfolded in Amunhotep’s favor.
At once he stood up. “The Elder is ill?” He looked at my father. “Is it true?”
My father bowed. “Yes, Your Highness. There is such news from Thebes.”
Amunhotep tossed his glance around the chamber, and for the first time he seemed to notice the women. “Go!” he shouted. Ipu and Merit hustled the women out. Amunhotep turned to my father. “How long until he is dead?”
My father stiffened. “The Pharaoh of Egypt may live another year.”
“You said he was ill. You said there was word.”
“The gods may preserve him for longer.”
“The gods have abandoned him!” Amunhotep cried. “It is me they look after, not a decrepit old man.” Amunhotep crossed the chamber in two strides, then opened the door and spoke to the guards. “Find me the builder Maya,” he commanded. Then he turned to my father. “You will go back to the Audience Chamber and draft a letter to the princes of every nation. Warn them that within the season I shall be Pharaoh of Upper Egypt.”
The color in my father’s cheeks revealed his temper. “He may not die by then, Your Majesty.”
Amunhotep came so close to my father that for a moment I thought he would kiss him. Instead, he whispered in his ear, “You’re wrong. The Elder’s reign is finished.”
He stepped toward the door and summoned the guards again. “Find Panahesi!” He turned back to my father. “The High Priest of Aten is making a trip to Thebes,” he announced. “Go now and draft a letter to the kings of foreign nations.”
He indicated the door, and my father and I were led into the hall. Then he barred it shut it behind us. Immediately, muffled voices could be heard from within, high pitched and excited. I followed the angry slap of my father’s sandals to the Per Medjat.
“What is he doing?”
“Preparing.” My father seethed.
“Preparing for what?”
“To hasten the Elder’s trip into the Afterlife.”
I sucked in my breath. “Then why did you allow Nefertiti to tell him?”
My father didn’t stop walking. “Because someone else would have.”
“The queen is giving birth!”
A servant found me in the palace gardens and her words tumbled out breathlessly. At once I was up, pressing through the crowd around Nefertiti’s chamber. Messengers and court ladies stood seven thick outside the pavilion, covered by sunshades, gossiping about what should happen if Nefertiti produced a son. Would Nebnefer be sent to live in another palace? What if it was a girl? How soon might the queen become pregnant again? I entered the birthing chamber, shutting the door and the gossip behind me.
“Where were you?” Nefertiti cried.
“In the gardens. I didn’t know it had begun.”
My mother shot me a look, as if I should have known.
“Bring me juice,” Nefertiti moaned, and I rushed to the nearest servant and told her to find it. “Quickly!” I turned back to my sister. “Where are the midwives?”
She gritted her teeth. “Preparing the birthing chair.”
Two midwives appeared. “It is ready, Your Highness.”
Nefertiti’s chair had been painted with the three goddesses of childbirth. Hathor, Nekhbet, and Tawaret held out their arms across the ebony throne. My sister’s body was straining to release the heavy burden in her womb. Her breath was growing labored.
The women eased her onto the padded seat with its hole in the middle for the child to make its descent into the world. My mother placed a cushion behind her and Nefertiti reached out her hand for mine, screaming loud enough to wake Anubis. The chattering outside the pavilion stopped and all anyone could hear were Nefertiti’s cries. My mother turned to me instead of the midwives. “Isn’t there anything else we can give her?”
“No,” I said honestly, and the midwives nodded.
The eldest woman shook her graying curls. “We’ve already given her kheper-wer.” She had inserted the mixture of kheper-wer plant, honey, and milk into my sister to induce birth. Now the old woman spread her palms. “It’s all we can do.”
Nefertiti groaned. Her brows were drawn and sweat coursed from her neck, causing her hair to stick to her face. I ordered one of the women to pull it back. Ipu and Merit carried a dish of hot water to the birthing chair, placing it between my sister’s legs so that the steam would help ease the delivery. Then Nefertiti tilted her head back and gripped the chair.
“He’s coming!” my mother cried. “The Prince of Egypt!”
“Push harder,” the old midwife encouraged.
Merit pressed a cool cloth to Nefertiti’s head and the midwife was beneath the chair at once, her hands reaching for the crowning head of the baby. My sister arched back with a cry of agony, then her little body shuddered and the child came in a rush of water.
“A princess!” the midwife cried, searching for any deformities. “A healthy princess.”
Nefertiti stared up from her chair. “A girl?” she whispered, gripping the arms. “A girl?” Her voice grew shrill.
“Yes!” The midwife held up the little bundle, and my mother and I exchanged glances.
“Someone go tell Vizier Ay,” my mother rejoiced. “And send a message to the king.”
Ipu rushed out to announce to the palace that the queen had survived. The bells would toll twice for a Princess of Egypt. The midwives bundled Nefertiti back into her bed, and her womb was packed with linen to stop the bleeding. “A princess,” she repeated. She had been so sure it would be a prince. She had been so certain.
“But she’s healthy,” I replied. “And she’s yours. Your own little link to eternity.”
“But, Mutny…” Her eyes grew distant. “It’s a girl.”
The midwife came over and presented my sister with the First Princess of Egypt. Nefertiti shifted the child in her arms. My mother’s eyes grew moist. She was a grandmother now. “She looks like you,” she told Nefertiti. “The same lips and nose.”
“And so much hair,” I added.
My mother caressed the soft, downy head. The child gave out a piercing wail, and the gray-haired midwife came rushing over.
“She must be fed,” the midwife announced. “Where is the milk nurse?”
A tall plump woman was let into the birthing chamber. The midwife squinted into the young woman’s round face. She was not much older than Nefertiti. Seventeen or eighteen, and she was hearty looking and strong.
“Are you the one Vizier Ay chose?”
“Yes,” the girl replied, and it was clear from her swelling breasts that she, too, was a new mother.
“Then come sit by the queen,” the midwife instructed.
A seat was arranged and the new mother exposed one of her breasts. We all watched the little princess suck greedily, and Nefertiti studied the miniature reflection of herself in the milk nurse’s arms.
The midwife smiled. “As beautiful as you, Your Majesty. Pharaoh must be pleased.”
“But not a son.” Nefertiti looked down at the princess she had birthed: the princess who was supposed to have been a prince.
“What will you name her?” I asked.
“Meritaten,” Nefertiti said at once.
My mother started. “Beloved of Aten?”
“Yes.” Nefertiti straightened and her face grew determined. “It will remind Amunhotep of what is important.” My mother frowned, and Nefertiti replied heatedly, “Loyalty.” Bells were tolling in the distance, twice so that Memphis would know a princess had been born. Nefertiti gripped the edge of her linens. “What is that?”
“They are the bells,” my mother began, but Nefertiti cut her off.
“Why are they only ringing twice?”
“Because the bells toll three times for a prince,” I said, and Nefertiti flew into a rage.
“Why? Because a daughter is less important than a prince? The bells tolled three times for Nebnefer and the bells will toll three times for Princess Meritaten!”
My mother and I looked at each other, and Princess Meritaten began to wail.
Merit broke the silence. “Shall we take you to the baths, Your Highness?”
“No! Someone must stop the bells,” Nefertiti ordered. “Bring Amunhotep!”
“First have your bath, then you can see Pharaoh and tell him,” my mother encouraged.
“Nefertiti, you can’t see anyone like this,” I pleaded. Her sheath was stained, and though her legs had been wiped clean and her hair brushed back, she was not a Queen of Egypt. She was a woman who had just given birth, reeking with the stench of blood. “Bathe quickly, then we’ll call Pharaoh and tell him.”
She did as I suggested, and there was silence in the birthing chamber as she was wrapped in fresh linen and taken away.
“She birthed a beautiful child,” my mother said finally. The milk nurse continued to feed the princess while the midwife went about removing the birthing chair. It would be another year before there might be a prince. Perhaps longer.
“Do you think he will listen to her?” I asked.
My mother pressed her lips together. “It’s never been done.”
“Neither has a queen living in a Pharaoh’s chamber.”
When Nefertiti returned, bathed and dressed in white, my mother nodded. “Much better,” she said, but Nefertiti was in no mood for flattery.
“Bring in Amunhotep.”
Merit opened the door to the birthing chamber and called for Pharaoh. He came at once, and Nefertiti assailed him as soon as he appeared.
“I want the bells to ring three times,” she commanded.
He rushed to her bedside, putting a hand on her cheek. “Are you well? Are you—”
“The bells must ring three times today!”
“But the birth…” He looked down at the sleeping Meritaten. “Look how beautiful—”
“I’m talking about the bells!” Nefertiti cried, waking the princess, and Amunhotep hesitated.
“But the bells only ring—”
“Is our princess any less important than a prince?”
Amunhotep looked down into the face of his daughter, real tears coming down his cheeks. She had inherited his dark eyes and curling hair. Then he looked at Nefertiti, her face set with conviction, and turned to Merit. “Instruct the men to ring the bells three times. The princess…” He glanced at Nefertiti.
“Meritaten has been born,” Nefertiti said, and Amunhotep seated himself at her side.
“Meritaten,” he repeated, looking into his daughter’s face. “Beloved of Aten.”
Nefertiti raised her chin proudly. “Yes. After the great god of Egypt.”
“A princess.” Amunhotep picked up the wailing infant from the milk nurse’s arms and held her to his chest.
My father came in and looked poignantly at my mother. “A girl,” he said quietly.
“But still an heir,” my mother whispered.
My father stayed long enough to hold his granddaughter, the First royal Princess of Egypt, then left to address a message to the kings of foreign nations.
I studied Nefertiti in her bed. She looked drawn and pale, putting on a cheerful show for Amunhotep when she should have been sleeping. “Do you think she looks well?” I asked my mother.
“Of course not. She’s just given birth.”
Then Merit appeared at Nefertiti’s side, armed with her great ivory box of cosmetics. Dutifully, my sister sat up, though if I had been her I would have ordered everyone out of my chamber. I looked down at Princess Meritaten, pressed firmly against my sister’s breast, and I felt a pain in my heart that was probably envy. Nefertiti had a husband, a kingdom, a family. I was fifteen, and what did I have?
The Birth Feast was held at the end of Pachons. Beautifully crafted vessels of precious metals were sent from foreign kingdoms and arranged on a table that spread from one end of the Great Hall to the other. There were statues of sculpted gold and ebony chests. The king of Mitanni sent a pack of hounds, while silver and ivory bracelets arrived from noble families in Thebes.
In Amunhotep’s chamber, Nefertiti asked me which gown she should wear to the feast. “The open front, or something that cuts off at the neck?”
I studied her hennaed breasts, which were large and flattering. Her stomach was so small that it was impossible to think she had given birth only fourteen days ago. “The open front,” I said.
I watched her body as it filled out her tiny gown and was fascinated with the way she looped two golden earrings through her double piercings. I thought, I will never be that beautiful. Then we looked at ourselves in the mirror: the Cat and the Beautiful One.
In the Great Hall, no man could take his eyes off her. “She is stunning,” Ipu said as my sister swept between the columns and up the painted dais. Birth had filled out the hollowness of her cheeks and brought color to her face. Hundreds of candles wavered in her path, and there was a momentary hush as she took her throne.
It seemed that every member of the Egyptian royal court had come to celebrate Meritaten’s birth. I walked outside to where my father was standing with my mother, enjoying a moment’s peace before the food was served and we would all have to sit. I looked again at the people crowding the courtyard, floating in and out of the Great Hall with cups of wine, dressed in the finest linen and gold. Only Panahesi was absent.
“How come there are so many people?” I asked. Even the nobility from Thebes had come to celebrate, beginning the journey on the Nile a month earlier when news of Meritaten’s impending birth had arrived.
“They have come to pay homage to the new Pharaoh,” my father said. I didn’t understand, so my father explained, “The Elder is dying.”
I stared at him. “But he was supposed to live another season! You told me—” I stopped myself and realized what my father must be saying. I leaned forward and my voice dropped to a whisper. “He wasn’t poisoned?”
My father said nothing.
“It wasn’t poison?” I pressed, but my father’s face was a mask. I reeled back. “Is that where Panahesi has been?”
My parents exchanged looks and my father stood up. “Whatever has happened in Thebes, the Elder won’t last the month.”
A bell rang from inside the Great Hall, summoning the guests to dinner. My father took my mother’s arm and disappeared into the crowd while I stood, still gaping at his words.
“By the look on your face, we’re either going to be invaded or you’ve just tasted something particularly sour.”
I turned, and General Nakhtmin held out a bowl of wine.
“Thank you, General. It’s nice to see you, too.”
He laughed and indicated the Great Hall with his hand. “Shall we?”
We walked together through the arched doors of the Great Hall with its magnificent columns and hundreds of guests. He would sit at the table for the military elite, I with the royal family. But before we reached the dais, I stopped him. “Tell me, General. Have you heard anything about the Elder in Thebes?”
Nakhtmin regarded me thoughtfully, then drew me away from the tables to an alcove where we could speak with more privacy. “Why do you ask?”
I hesitated. “I…I just thought you might know.”
Nakhtmin regarded me suspiciously. “He will probably pass into the arms of Osiris very soon.”
“But he’s only forty! He could live another ten years.” I whispered, “It wasn’t poison?” and searched his face for honesty.
He nodded gravely. “There’s been talk. And if there’s talk in the king’s own family—”
“There isn’t,” I said quickly.
He studied me.
“But if…if the Pharaoh dies…”
“Yes?”
“Well, what then?”
“Then your sister becomes Queen of Egypt and the Dowager Queen will bow down before her daughter-in-law. And who knows,” Nakhtmin added conspiratorially, “she may even be Pharaoh before it’s over.”
“Pharaoh?” I repeated dismissively.
“Is that so surprising?”
“No, that’s foolish. Only a handful of women have ever ruled Egypt.”
“And why not her?”
We both looked through the forest of columns at my sister, a thick golden signet pulling her glossy hair away from her face, enlarging her eyes. She commanded a view of the entire hall from her throne, but it was Amunhotep she watched.
“He trusts her with everything,” Nakhtmin added. “They even share chambers.”
“Who told you that?”
“I’m a general. It’s my business to know. Even if I were a servant in a minor palace, I should know something so trivial.”
“But she would have to become a widow before she would become Pharaoh.” I glanced at him and he didn’t argue the point, as if he wouldn’t be surprised if Amunhotep should die. I felt a chill go up my spine and settle as a coolness on my back, despite the warm night. Guests were taking their seats, and laughter echoed beneath the ceiling of the Great Hall. The Birth Feast would last all night, but I might not get a chance to speak with the general again. I hesitated. “I thought you would stay in Thebes and live a quieter life than this.”
“Oh, it’s not quiet in Thebes. Anywhere there’s a palace it’s never quiet. But someday I hope to find someone who might share a quiet life with me. Away from Thebes or Memphis or any city with a royal road.”
We both looked into the hall and I nodded, understanding that desire.
“But now that the temple is finished, the soldiers wonder what will happen next. Pharaoh is afraid of the army. He won’t send us to war even though the Hittites encroach on our territory with every season that passes and Egypt offers no resistance. With Panahesi serving Aten and Amunhotep building temples to glorify Aten’s reign, your father ascends the throne of Egypt. Perhaps not literally, but in every other way he is Pharaoh, miw-sher. Now is the time to decide what you want in this life. Your name etched in sandstone for eternity or happiness?”
“And how do you know I’m not happy here?”
“Because you’re standing in a corner speaking with me while your sister sits on the Horus throne and your father smoothes her way. If you were content, you’d be there.” He indicated the table for the royal family, presided over by my mother and father, the two of them surrounded by bald-headed men in fine linen. “So where does that leave you, little cat?”
“As the handmaiden to Nefertiti,” I said sharply.
“You could always change that.” Nakhtmin regarded me with interest, then added meaningfully, “By marrying someone.”
“Mutny, would you find me my robe?”
I looked up from my Senet game but remained in my chair. “Where’s Merit? Can’t she get you a robe?”
Nefertiti watched me with her large painted eyes from where the milk nurse was feeding Meritaten. Sitting next to the woman, she stroked the princess’s downy hair. “I can’t leave Meritaten. Won’t you get it? It’s just in the other room.”
“Go ahead, Mutny,” my mother said. “She’s busy.”
“She’s always busy!”
My mother gave me a look that told me simply to do it, and I returned with my sister’s robe. I paused over Meritaten’s tiny face. She had her mother’s coloring, the light hue of sand, but her eyes were olive, like Amunhotep’s. It was impossible to tell whether she would have her mother’s jaw or her father’s height. But her nose was slender and long like Nefertiti’s. “She looks like you,” I said, and my sister smiled.
My mother’s shoulders tensed. “Did you hear that?” she asked quickly, tearing her gaze from the Senet board.
We all froze, even the milk nurse with Meritaten in her arms. I could hear what she was referring to. It was the sound of wailing women and temple bells.
Nefertiti rose up. “What is it?”
Then the door to the chamber swung open and Amunhotep’s grin was so wide that we knew. My mother covered her mouth with her hand.
“He’s gone to Osiris,” Nefertiti whispered.
Amunhotep embraced her. “The Elder is dead. I am Pharaoh of Egypt!”
My father entered the room with Panahesi on his heels. In her joy, Nefertiti didn’t even notice that men were in her birthing chamber. My father bowed. “Shall we prepare for the move to Thebes, Your Highness?”
“There will be no move to Thebes,” Amunhotep announced. “We will begin building the city of Amarna at once.”
There was a sudden silence in the birthing chamber.
“You will move the capital of Thebes?” my father asked.
Amunhotep exulted, “For the glory of Aten.”
My father glared at Nefertiti, who wouldn’t meet his gaze.