The daughter of Jared² is named in the Jaredite record for devising the plan that restored secret combinations among her people. Seeing her father grieve after his own father, Omer, had overthrown him and taken back the kingdom, she proposed a scheme to win it back (Ether 8:8). She was, the record says, “exceedingly fair,” and she pointed her father to the account their ancestors had brought across the sea, of those of old who by their secret plans had obtained kingdoms and great glory (Ether 8:9).
She told Jared to send for Akish, son of Kimnor, saying she would dance before him and that, when Akish desired her to wife, Jared should demand the head of Omer the king as the price. She danced before Akish, who desired to marry her; Jared then set the head of his father as the condition (Ether 8:10-11). Akish gathered his kinsfolk and bound them by the oaths handed down from of old, forming the secret combination. Omer was warned in a dream and escaped with his household, so the assassination failed (Ether 9:1-3).
Moroni, editing this record, explicitly frames the combination she devised as the devil’s own pattern re-entering Jaredite history. He declares it “most abominable and wicked above all, in the sight of God” and identifies it as “built up by the devil, who is the father of all lies; even that same liar who beguiled our first parents” (Ether 8:18-19, 25). Her scheme thus carries in the record not merely a narrative but a theological weight: Moroni connects the line from Eden to her plan in order to warn future readers against the same pattern (Ether 8:26).
Jared was then anointed king “by the hand of wickedness” and gave his daughter to Akish as wife. Akish afterward sought the life of his father-in-law, and Jared was murdered on his throne (Ether 9:4). The record gives no further account of the daughter of Jared².