AUTHOR’S NOTE
THERE WAS A time in the Eighteenth Dynasty when
Nefertiti’s family reigned supreme over Egypt. She and her husband,
Akhenaten, removed Egypt’s gods and raised the mysterious sun deity
Aten in their place. Even after Nefertiti died and her policies
were deemed heretical, it was still her daughter Ankhesenamun and
her stepson, Tutankhamun, who reigned. When Tutankhamun died of an
infection at around nineteen years of age, Nefertiti’s father, Ay,
took the throne. With his death only a few years later, the last
link to the royal family was Nefertiti’s younger sister,
Mutnodjmet.
Knowing that Mutnodjmet would never take the crown for herself, the general Horemheb took her as his wife by force, in order to legitimize his own claim to Egypt’s throne. It was the end of an era when Mutnodjmet died in childbirth, and the Nineteenth Dynasty began when Horemheb passed the throne to his general, Ramesses I. But Ramesses was an old man at the start of his rule, and when he died, the crown passed to his son, Pharaoh Seti.
Now, the year is 1283 BC. Nefertiti’s family has passed on, and all that remains of her line is Mutnodjmet’s daughter, Nefertari, an orphan in the court of Seti I.