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

She didn’t like being followed, and she was going to put an end

to it. They would change the direction of their travel, disguise

their trail, backtrack once or twice, ride all night if need be, and

lose their shadow once and for all.

She took her hand away from the bag and her eyes were fierce.

Sometimes you had to make your own luck.

Walker Boh entered the Hall of Kings on cat’s feet, passing

noiselessly between the massive stone sentinels, stepping

through the cavern mouth into the blackness beyond. He paused

there, letting his eyes adjust. There was light, a faint greenish

phosphorescence given off by the rock. He would not need to

light a torch to find the way.

A picture of the caverns flashed momentarily in his mind, a

reconstruction of what he expected to find. Cogline had drawn

it for him on paper once, long ago. The old man had never been

into the caverns himself, but others of the Druids had, Allanon

among them, and Cogline had studied the maps that they had

devised and revealed their secrets to his pupil. Walker felt con-

fident that he could find the way.

He started ahead.

The passageway was broad and level, its walls and floors free

from sharp projections and crevices. The near-dark was wrapped

in silence, deep and hushed, and there was only the faint echo

of his boots as he walked. The air was bone-chilling, a cold that

had settled into the mountain rock over the centuries and could

not be dislodged. It seeped into Walker despite his clothing and

made him shiver. A prickling of unpleasant feelings crept

through him-loneliness, insignificance, futility. The caverns

dwarfed him; they reduced him to nothing, a tiny creature whose

very presence in such an ancient, forbidden place was an affront.

He fought back against the feelings, recognizing what they would

do to him, and after a brief struggle they faded back into the

cold and the silence.

He reached the cave of the Sphinxes shortly after. He paused

again, this time to steady his mind, to take himself deep down

inside where the stone spirits couldn’t reach him. When he was

there, wrapped in whispers of caution and warning, blanketed

in words of power, he went forward. He kept his eyes fixed on

the dusty floor, watching the stone pass away, looking only at

the next few feet he must cover.

In his mind, he saw the Sphinxes looming over him, massive

stone monoliths fashioned by the same hands that had made the

sentinels. The Sphinxes were said to have human faces carved

on the bodies of beasts-creatures of another age that no living

man had ever seen. They were old, so incredibly ancient that

their lives could be measured by hundreds of generations of

mortal men. So many monarchs had passed beneath their gaze,

carried from life to endless rest within their mountain tombs.

So many, never to return.

Look at us, they whispered! See haw wondrous we are!

He could sense their eyes on him, hear the whisper of their

voices in his mind, feel them tearing and ripping at the layers of

protection he had fashioned for himself, begging him to look

up. He moved more quickly now, fighting to banish the whis-

pers, resisting the urge to obey them. The stone monsters seemed

to howl at him, harsh and insistent.

Walker Boh! Look at us! You must!

He struggled forward, his mind swarming with their voices,

his resolve crumbling. Sweat beaded on his face despite the

cold, and his muscles knotted until they hurt. He gritted his

teeth against his weakness, chiding himself, thinking suddenly

of Allanon in a bitter, desperate reminder that the Druid had

come this way before him with seven men under his protection

and had not given in.

In the end, neither did he. Just as he thought he would, that

he must, he reached the far end of the cavern and stepped into

tfae passageway beyond. The whispers faded and were gone. The

Sphinxes were left behind. He looked up again, carefully re-

sisted the urge to glance back, then moved ahead once more.

The passageway narrowed and began to wind downward.

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