'Yes, majesty.'
Pharaoh grunted. 'I'm going to die one day, you know.'
'Yes, majesty.'
Amunhotep smiled at her. 'Thank the gods. No sniveling, and no protests that I'm divine and will live forever. Come closer. Are you frightened?'
'No, majesty.'
'Don't lie. You're scared. You don't know what's going to happen to you.'
Pharaoh called for a hot cloth. Tiye brought one, and the king put it to his swollen cheek. All the while, Nefertiti remained kneeling beside the bed with an easy familiarity that gave Ay some comfort.
Amunhotep moved the hot cloth so that he could speak unhindered. 'Nefertiti, you're not a fool, so I know you're frightened. You should be. Akhenaten is intolerant and arrogant in his beliefs. I'm not saying his ideas about creation aren't sensible, but he goes too far. He'll cause much havoc if his excesses aren't controlled. I lay the task of managing him upon you. Tiye and your father will guide you.'
It was a test of his will, but Ay held his tongue even though his daughter looked as if her ka-her soul-had flown from her body. The color drained from her face, making the lines of paint on her eyes stand out like the colors on a relief.
The girl wet her lips. 'I know nothing of governance, majesty.'
'Quiet, girl. I haven't the patience to argue, with this tooth plaguing me. You'll obey the commands I give you and prepare yourself to become queen of Egypt.'
Nefertiti inclined her head, then lifted her gaze to stare straight into pharaoh's eyes. 'I will be queen of Egypt.'
There it was! Ay nearly smiled when he heard that defiant tone, a tone that grasped pharaoh's scepters-the crook and the flail-and pulled them from his hands. She had always been part goddess, part night fiend, his little Nefertiti. Pharaoh was going to be surprised that his chosen tool was far from the docile innocent he assumed her to be.
Chapter 1
His wife had always hated the night, for demons and lost spirits of the dead roamed in the darkness, but Bakht had always liked it. Night was the time of coolness, when Ra's solar bark vanished into the underworld. Besides, he'd never met a demon or disgruntled dead one while on guard duty in his many years as a royal soldier.
Bakht hefted his spear on his shoulder and paced slowly beside the perimeter wall of the royal menagerie. Beyond that wall and behind several others, far higher, lay the royal palace. Inside, surrounded by his most trusted bodyguards, the young king slept. He would need his rest, for the feast of Opet approached, a time of ceremony and celebration that would take pharaoh to Thebes. Bakht was looking forward to the days of feasting and merriment. His special place as a favored guard of pharaoh allowed him to be one of those to escort the king to the great city.
His bare feet slid over the packed earth, kicking aside pebbles. Bakht sniffed a pungent vegetable odor and stepped aside to avoid a dung pile. He glanced across the menagerie, a vast area filled with cages, biers, pens, and stalls and sheltered by palms, sycamores, and acacias. Accompanied by the rhythmic snarls of a male lion, Bakht walked by a giraffe pen. Far away from the peaceful animals lay the heavily reinforced domain of the predators-not just the lions but cheetahs, leopards, and Syrian bears.
Bakht heard his name called and turned to see the new guard, Khawi, approach. Khawi was young and in awe of his new responsibilities, and even more confounded by Bakhts position as the oldest regularly serving soldier at the palace. Ever since he'd learned that pharaoh often sent for Bakht to hear stories of expeditions to Nubia, raids against Libyan bandits, and other tales, Khawi had treated Bakht with the reverence due a great one.
Bakht tried not to grin as Khawi marched toward him with meticulous correctness. 'Amun's blessings upon you, young one.'
'And upon you, Guard Bakht.' Khawi dipped his head and saluted at the same time.
'Admit it, young one. You thought this old man would forget to relieve you.'
Khawi's eyes widened, and he-shook his head vigorously. 'Oh, no, Guard Bakht. Never would I think such a disrespectful thing.'
Bakht took pity on the boy, who was no more than sixteen and far too naive for his own welfare. 'Walk with me awhile, young Khawi. Someone's got to rid you of this habit of puppylike trust. It's a bad trait for a soldier, especially a royal guard.' As Khawi fell in step with him, Bakht swept his arm around to indicate the menagerie, the pleasure gardens, the palace itself. 'If you want to be like me and serve under many pharaohs-may they live forever-then you listen to me.'
'They say you have served since the time of the father of Amunhotep the Magnificent,' Khawi said with awe.
Bakht snorted, disturbing the rest of a red junglefowl. 'Donkey-witted, that's what you are. I wasn't born until year nine of the Magnificent. But those were days of glorious happenings. I traveled into Nubia to serve the viceroy, and we crushed a mighty gathering of rebel tribes.'
'Nubia,' Khawi breathed. 'Is it truly a savage and dangerous land?'
'Some of it.'
Whipping around to face Bakht, Khawi gripped his spear in a stranglehold and danced from one foot to the other. 'Tell me about the golden ones, Bakht. Tell me about the kings.'
They had reached the ostrich pens. Pretending reluctance, Bakht rested his spear against a fence and spread his arms wide, stretching muscles that had grown slack with age.
'Please,' Khawi said.
'I suppose I can spare a few moments,' Bakht said as he leaned against the fence. 'Of course, the Magnificent was the greatest of all. He built the mighty halls and gates of the Theban temples, and statues.' Bakht pointed at the sky. Great figures of himself as high as that star. Cunning as a crocodile, was the Magnificent. Chose the most brilliant ministers, the wisest and most beautiful of wives.'
'The great royal wife Tiye.'
'Ah, she was clever, was Queen Tiye. Played those cursed foreign kings against each other, kept them distrusting one another.'
'Why?'
'So they didn't make trouble for Egypt, boy.'
'But they did make trouble,' Khawi insisted with the stubborn lack of tact of the young. 'My father said that Pharaoh Akhenaten-'
'Shhhhh.'' Bakht hissed and clapped the young soldier on the side of his head. 'I was right. You have the wits of a donkey and the flapping tongue of a green monkey. Be off with you, and try to cultivate a clever heart before you get yourself into trouble.'
Babbling apologies, Khawi scurried away. Bakht heard the main gate open and shut behind the boy as he resumed his rounds. His many years and his experience allowed him to take a familiar view of the family of living gods whom he served, but such an attitude was improper in a youth.
Muttering to himself of the carelessness of young ones today, Bakht trudged by the thick mud-brick walls of the rhinoceros enclosure without making his usual stop to admire the beasts. He would not allow the flapping tongue of Khawi to disturb his tranquillity. After all, he had survived three pharaohs-the Magnificent, the heretic Akhenaten, and poor Smenkhare, who had barely ruled before dying and leaving the throne to his brother Tutankhamun, may he have life, health, and prosperity.
Yes, he had survived, and prospered too, through serving the living gods of Egypt. And of those he'd served, the Magnificent had been the most interesting. He'd been the embodiment of the grandeur of Egypt. The Magnificent had been the first to advance Bakht, rewarding him for saving the life of a royal relative on that Nubian expedition. The Magnificent's eldest son, Thutmose, had been as gracious as his father. A pity he'd died. And of all