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

must look for him to be asking such a question.

He took a deep breath. “I’m not asking where it is, only

if. . .”

“I understand what you’re asking and why,” the other said,

cutting short his protestation. The hard face furrowed about the

eyes and mouth. Padishar said nothing for a moment, studying

the Highlander intently. “As a matter of fact, there is another

way,” he said finally. “You must have figured that out on your

own, though. You understand enough of tactics to know that

there must always be more than one way in or out of a refuge.”

Morgan nodded wordlessly.

“Well, then, Highlander, I can only add that Damson would

not put the Valemen at risk by trying to bring them here while

the Jut was under siege. She would keep them safe in Tyrsis or

elsewhere, whatever the situation might require.”

He paused, eyes hard with hidden thoughts. Then he said,

“No one but Damson, Chandos, and I know the other way-

now that Hirehone is dead. Better that we keep it so until the

identity of our traitor is discovered, don’t you think? I wouldn’t

want the Federation walking in through the back door while we

were busy holding shut the front.”

Morgan hadn’t considered the possibility of such a thing hap-

pening until now. It was a chilling thought. “Is the back way

secure?” he asked hesitantly.

Padishar pursed his lips. “Very. Now take yourself off to

dinner, Highlander. And remember to keep your eyes open.”

He turned back to his drawings. Morgan hesitated a moment,

thinking to say something more, then turned abruptly and left.

That night, as daylight faded into evening and stars began to

appear, Morgan sat alone at the far end of the bluff where a

grove of aspen trees sheltered a small grassy clearing, looked

out across the valley of the Parma Key to where the moon, half-

full again, lifted slowly out of the horizon into the darkening

skies, and marshalled his powers of reason. The camp was quiet

now except for the muffled sounds of work being done back in

the caves on Padishar’s secret weapon. The catapults and bows

were stilled, the men of both the Federation army and the Move-

ment sleeping or lost in their own private contemplations. Pad-

ishar was meeting with the Trolls and Chandos, a meeting to

which Morgan had not been invited. Steff was resting, his fever

seemingly no worse, but his strength sapped and his general

health no better. There was nothing to be done, nothing to oc-

cupy the time but to sleep or think, and Morgan Leah had chosen

the latter.

For as long as he could remember, he had been clever. It was

a gift, admittedly, one that could be traced to his ancestors, to

men such as Menion and Rone Leah-real Princes in those days,

heroes-but an ability, too, that Morgan had worked long and

hard to perfect. The Federation had supplied him with both a

purpose and a direction for his skill. He had spent almost the

whole of his youth concentrating on finding ways to outwit the

Federation officials who occupied and governed his homeland,

to irritate them at every opportunity so that they might never

feel secure, to make them experience a futility and a frustration

that would one day drive them from Leah forever. He was very

good at it; perhaps he was the best there was. He knew all the

tricks, had conceived most of them himself. He could outthink

and outsmart almost anyone, if he were given time and oppor-

tunity to do so.

He smiled ruefully. At least, that was what he had always told

himself. Now it was time to prove that it was so. It was time to

figure out how the Federation had known so often what they

were about, how it was that they had been betrayed-the out-

laws, the Valemen, the little company from Culhaven, everyone

connected with this misadventure-and most important of all,

who was responsible.

It was something he could reason out.

He let his lean frame drape itself against the grassy base of a

twisted, old trunk, drew his knees partway up to his chest, and

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