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

thoughts. There had been no further talk of AUanon since setting

out. There had been no mention of Walker or Wren. Par fingered

the ring with the hawk insigne from time to time and wondered

anew about the identity of the man who had given it to him.

It was late afternoon when they passed down through the river

valley of the Runne Mountains north of Varfleet and approached

the outskirts of the city. It sprawled below them across a series

of hills, dusty and sweltering against the glare of me westward

fading sun. Snacks and hovels ringed the city’s perimeter, squalid

shelters for men and women who lacked even the barest of

means. They called out to the travelers as they passed, pressing

up against them for money and food, and Par and Coil handed

down what little they had. Morgan glanced back reprovingly,

somewhat as a parent might at a naive child, but made no com-

ment.

A little farther on, Par found himself wishing belatedly that

he had thought to disguise his Elven features. It had been weeks

since he had done so, and he had simply gotten out of the habit.

He could take some consolation from me fact that his hair had

grown long and covered his ears. But he would have to be careful

nevertheless. He glanced over at the Dwarves. They had their

travel cloaks pulled close, the hoods wrapping their faces in

shadow. They were in more danger than he of discovery. Every-

one knew that Dwarves were not permitted to travel in the

Southland. Even in Varfleet, it was risky.

When they reached the city proper and the beginnings of

streets that bore names and shops with signs, the traffic in-

creased markedly. Soon, it was all but impossible to move ahead.

They dismounted and led their horses afoot until they found a

stable where they could board mem. Morgan made the trans-

action while the others stood back unobtrusively against the walls

of the buildings across the way and watched the people of the

city press against one another in a sluggish flow. Beggars came

up to them and asked for coins. Par watched a fire-eater display

his art to a wondering crowd of boys and men at a fruit mart.

The low mutter of voices filled the air with a ragged sound.

“Sometimes you get lucky,” Morgan informed them quietly

as he returned. “We’re standing in Reaver’s End. This whole

section of the city is Reaver’s End. Kiltan Forge is just a few

streets over.”

He beckoned them on, and they slipped past the steady throng

of bodies, working their way into a side street that was less

crowded, if more ill-smelling, and soon they were hurrying

along a shadowed alley that twisted and turned past a rutted

sewage way. Par wrinkled his nose in distaste. This was the city

as Coil saw it. He risked a quick glance back at his brother, but

his brother was busy watching where he was stepping.

They crossed several more streets before emerging onto one

that seemed to satisfy Morgan, who promptly turned right and

led them through the crowds to a broad, two-storey barn with a

sign that bore the name Kiltan Forge seared on a plaque of

wood. The sign and the building were old and splintering, but

the furnaces within burned red-hot, spitting and flaming as met-

als were fed in and removed by tenders. Machines ground, and

hammers pounded and shaped. The din rose above the noise of

the street and echoed off the walls of the surrounding buildings,

to disappear finally into the suffocating embrace of the lingering

afternoon heat.

Morgan edged his way along the fringes of the crowd, me

others trailing silently after, and finally managed to work his

way up to the Forge entrance. A handful of men worked me

furnaces under the direction of a large fellow with drooping

mustaches and a balding pate colored soot-black. The fellow

ignored them until they had come all the way inside, then turned

and asked, “Something I can help you with?”

Morgan said, “We’re looking for the Archer.”

The fellow with the mustaches ambled over. “Who did you

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