The year is 1292 B.C. and Egypt has almost recovered from more than a generation of turmoil. Begun by the "Pharaoh who is not named," the nation was plunged into social and religious chaos by a leader who overthrew the historical gods of the Two Lands in his desire to follow a single supreme and all-powerful deity, which he named Aten. The powerful priesthood of Amun-Ra blamed and sought the destruction of the Hebrews for corrupting the forgotten pharaoh with their heretical religious ideas. However, they sought to accomplish their annihilation in a way that would not destroy the economy of Egypt since the Two Lands had become dependent on Hebrew labor. The blight would gradually be removed from the land within one generation by killing all newborn males. Now, during the fourth year of a fledgling dynasty, a new threat is taken from the waters of the Nile by the sister of Pharaoh: a Hebrew child who should rightfully be put to death as an offering to Sobek, the crocodile-headed god. However, the princess is childless, and abundant signs and portents signal that the gods have an opinion.