Heritage of Shannara 1 – The Scions of Shannara by Brooks, Terry

Heritage of Shannara 1 – The Scions of Shannara

Heritage of Shannara 1 – The Scions of Shannara

The old man sat alone in the shadow of the Dragon’s

Teeth and watched the coming darkness chase the day-

light west. The day had been cool, unusually so for

midsummer, and the night promised to be chill. Scattered clouds

masked the sky, casting their silhouettes upon the earth, drifting

in the manner of aimless beasts between moon and stars. A hush

filled the emptiness left by the fading light like a voice waiting

to speak.

It was a hush that whispered of magic, the old man thought.

A fire burned before him, small still, just the beginning of

what was needed. After all, he would be gone for several hours.

He studied the fire with a mixture of expectation and uneasiness

before reaching down to add the larger chunks ofdeadwood that

brought the flames up quickly. He poked at it with a stick, then

stepped away, driven back by the heat. He stood at the edge of

the light, caught between the fire and the growing dark, a crea-

ture who might have belonged to neither or both.

His eyes glittered as he looked off into the distance. The peaks

of the Dragon’s Teeth jutted skyward like bones the earth could

not contain. There was a hush to the mountains, a secrecy that

clung like mist on a frosty morning and hid all the dreams of

the ages.

The fire sparked sharply and the old man brushed at a stray

bit of glowing ash that threatened to settle on him. He was just

a bundle of sticks, loosely tied together, that might crumble into

dust if a strong wind were to blow. Gray robes and a forest cloak

hung on him as they would have on a scarecrow. His skin was

leathery and brown and had shrunken close against his bones.

White hair and beard wreathed his head, thin and fine, like

wisps of gauze against the firelight. He was so wrinkled and

hunched down that he looked to be a hundred years old.

He was, in fact, almost a thousand.

Strange, he thought suddenly, remembering his years. Para-

nor, the Councils of the Races, even the Druids-gone. Strange

that he should have outlasted them all.

He shook his head. It was so long ago, so far back in time

that it was a part of his life he only barely recognized. He had

thought that part finished, gone forever. He had thought himself

free. But he had never been mat, he guessed. It wasn’t possible

to be free of something that, at the very least, was responsible

for the fact that he was still alive.

How else, after all, save for the Druid Sleep, could he still

be standing there?

He shivered against the descending night, darkness all about

him now as the last of the sunlight slipped below the horizon.

It was time. The dreams had told him it must be now, and he

believed the dreams because he understood them. That, too,

was a part of his old life that would not let him go-dreams,

visions of worlds beyond worlds, of warnings and truths, of

things that could and sometimes must be.

He stepped away from the fire and started up the narrow

pathway into the rocks. Shadows closed about him, their touch

chill. He walked for a long time, winding through narrow de-

files, scrambling past massive boulders, angling along craggy

drops and jagged splits in the rock. When he emerged again into

the light, he stood within a shallow, rock-strewn valley domi-

nated by a lake whose glassy surface reflected back at him with

a harsh, greenish cast.

The lake was the resting place for the shades of Druids come

and gone. It was to the Hadeshom that he had been summoned.

“Might as well get on with it,” he growled softly.

He walked slowly, cautiously downward into the valley, his

steps uneasy, his heart pounding in his ears. He had been away

a long time. The waters before him did not stir; the shades lay

sleeping. It was best that way, he thought. It was best that they

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