half-filled loom the only furnishing he could see beyond the bed, itself not much more than a mattress of straw. But from the soft, fretful cries, it seemed Eve had finally given birth to her baby.
Thor had watched over her for months, hiding himself from the Egyptian gods and gleaning what information he could from Eve’s daughter, Miriam. It had been an easy thing to cultivate a friendship with the young girl as her mother became heavy with child and Miriam had been sent to the well in Eve’s place. He had stopped her from being whipped at least half a dozen times, disgusted that anyone would raise a hand against a girl of seven simply for struggling to raise water from a well.
“A little brother!” Miriam whispered into the dark where he had cloaked himself outside the window.
“A great blessing,” he murmured back. Neither the midwife nor Eve noticed. Their heads were bent together over the baby, and Eve wept as the child nursed. The sound of her suffering had been like needles in his heart until it was broken by the babe’s wail, healthy and strong.
“It will be impossible to hide him, Yocheved. If you wish him to live, he must be sent away. Smuggled from the city,” the midwife said.
“We’ll be stopped if we try. The Pharaoh’s soldiers will find him.”
Thor didn’t dare try to manipulate Eve—such a thing would violate every law of conduct between the gods —but it took only the merest thought to influence the midwife.
“Let Miriam take him to the river,” the midwife said. “The soldiers will not stop a little girl, and if you lay him in a basket, it will float long enough to take him out of the city. If it is God’s will that the baby live, he will be saved.”
God’s will or not, this child would live. Thor had already seen too many die in this world. Too many lives wasted for nothing but the pleasure of their king. He would not allow the child of a goddess to suffer the same fate. Eve hesitated, seeming to stare straight at him through the window of the hut. He held his breath and emptied his mind of all thought but the baby’s safety. If she felt him, let her feel his reassurance, nothing more.
She dropped her eyes to the baby at her breast, and then kissed the small round head. “My boy,” she said. “Know my love.”
Eve hummed softly while she wrapped the boy in his blanket, laying him in a basket of reeds. The tune stirred memories of milk and warmth in Thor’s mind, and he shook his head to clear it. He had no time for distraction. If it was to be done, it must be done quickly. He urged them on silently until Miriam slipped out the door, the basket an awkward burden in her arms.
“I’ll carry him,” Thor said, stepping out from the shadows. Miriam was strong for a girl her age but the basket was a third as big as she was. He took her hand, cradling the basket in his other arm. “Quickly now. The fastest way to the river.”
She tugged him to the right down an alley, and he let her lead. If he used his power to travel through lightning to the water, it would give his presence away, and he could not risk being found by Ra or any of the others. They slipped through the dark streets and Thor did what he could to ensure that they were empty. When they did cross the path of one of Pharaoh’s guard by the water, he caused the man to think he had heard his wife’s voice, and they passed behind his back down the bank and out of sight.
“Did God send you to save my brother?” Miriam asked.
He looked down at her small face, lit by the moon, and squeezed her hand once before letting go. “Yes,” he lied. “But you mustn’t speak of it to anyone. Not even your mother.”
“Mother says that it’s the angels who do God’s work, now,” Miriam said, her forehead creased. “Are you an angel?”
He shook his head. “Just a friend. Will you keep this secret, Miriam? So your brother will live?” She frowned, but nodded, and he smiled. “Good girl. I’ll take him to safety by the water. Go back to your mother, now. She’ll have need of you.”
Miriam pressed her lips together, turned, and ran.
Thor followed her flight with a light touch in the back of her mind to be sure she did not meet any trouble, and then waded into the water with the basket. He knew exactly where he would take the baby, where he would be safe even from the pharaoh. After all, why would the king question his own daughter if she presented him with a child gifted to her by the gods?
Chapter Four: Present
“Abby?”
Garrit’s mother stood in the doorway when Eve looked up. She hadn’t meant to lose so much time, sifting through her memories.
“Juliette.” She rose from her seat to greet her with a kiss. “I’m so sorry. I didn’t realize you were here already.”
Juliette smiled. She was stunningly beautiful, with bright blue eyes and dark hair. Charming, too, which she would have to be to marry into the family. The DeLeon men had always had an overabundance of charisma, but they generally preferred women who weren’t bowled over by them when they took wives. Eve had never been sure if that had been a result of nature or nurture.
“Garrit told us you had a difficult day. I hope you don’t mind the interruption, but Ethan was most insistent that you would wish to see him right away.”
“Ethan?” Eve frowned trying to remember anyone by that name. The door swung open the rest of the way, and she saw the man standing behind Juliette. Her pulse jumped as he locked eyes with her, an arrogance pulling at the corners of his lips. “Oh!”
“
Juliette nodded, returning the smile and stepping out of the way. “I’ll leave you to your business. We’ll see you at dinner, Ethan?”
“I would be thrilled to join you.” He watched her leave before slipping into the room and shutting the door behind him. His attention turned to Eve, then, and he studied her with stone gray eyes she knew too well.
“Eve.”
She straightened under his inspection and raised her chin. “Adam.”
She would not give him the satisfaction of fear or discomfort. Not in her own home, among her own family. Even though looking at him brought back the memories of Michael’s threat. She closed her hands into fists to keep them from shaking.
He wasn’t supposed to remember. Michael had promised her that much, and she had witnessed it for herself in past lives. Never before now had Adam ever recognized her, ever known to come looking for her, ever remembered who he was. Not since Creation. The punishment for his sins.
“What are you doing here?”
“Your family was kind enough to share with me the details of this part of your past.” He was glancing over the books in the library. “Or at least some of them.”
She stepped behind a table, keeping it between them. “Because you forced them to.”
He inclined his head. Not quite a nod, but an admission. “It was no small effort. In particular, your future father-in-law. His mind is quite strong.
The idea that he had wriggled his way into their minds, manipulating and controlling her own family made her taste bile. “You have no business here, Adam. And frankly, I’m not sure how you remembered to find me at all.”
“Time heals all wounds, Sister.”
“I’m your sister now, am I? I thought you had intended to have me as your wife.”
“Clearly you’re otherwise engaged at the moment.” He smiled that smug and powerful smile again. “Not that