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

Was what he was being told true? Shades, was everything the

lie that Rimmer Dall claimed it to be? He could not believe it,

yet he could not bring himself to disbelieve i?«ither. His con-

fusion wrapped him like a blanket and left him feeling small

and vulnerable.

“I have to think,” he said wearily.

“Then come with me and do so,” Rimmer Dall responded

at once. “Come with me and we shall talk more of this. You

have many questions that require answers, and I can give them

to you. There is much you need to know about how the magic

can be used. Come, Valeman. Put aside your fears and misgiv-

ings. No harm shall come to you-never to one whose magic is

so promising.”

He spoke reassuringly, compellingly, and for an instant Par

was almost persuaded. It would have been so easy to agree. He

was tired, and he wanted this odyssey to end. It would be com-

forting to have someone to talk to about the frustrations of pos-

sessing the magic. Rimmer Dall would surely know, having

experienced them himself. As much as he hated to admit it, he

no longer felt threatened by the man. There seemed to be no

reason to deny what he was asking.

But he did nevertheless. He did without really understanding

why. “No,” he said quietly.

“Think of what we can share if you come with me,” the

other persisted. “We have so much in common! Surely you have

longed to talk of your magic, the magic you have been forced

to conceal. There has never been anyone for you to do that with

before me. I can feel the need in you; I can sense it! Come with

me! Valeman, you have …”

“No.”

Par stepped away. Something ugly whispered suddenly in his

mind, some memory that did not yet have a face, but whose

voice he clearly recognized.

Rimmer Dall watched him, his craggy features gone suddenly

hard. “This is foolish, Valeman.”

“I am leaving,” Par said quietly, tense now, back on his

guard. What was it that bothered him so? “And I am taking the

Sword.”

The black-cloaked form became another shadow in the half-

light. “Stay, Valeman. There are dark secrets kept from you,

things that would be better learned from me. Stay and hear

them.”

Par edged toward the passageway that had brought him in.

“The door is directly behind you,” Rimmer Dall said sud-

denly, his voice sharp. “There are no passageways, no stairs.

That was all illusion, my magic invoked to closet you long

enough so that we might talk. But if you leave now, something

precious will be destroyed. Truth waits for you, Valeman-and

there is horror in its face. You cannot withstand it. Stay, and

listen to me! You need me!”

Par shook his head. “You sounded for a moment, Rimmer

Dall, like those others, those Shadowen who look nothing like

you outwardly, yet speak with your need. Like them, you would

possess me.”

Rimmer Dall stood silently before him, not moving, simply

watching as he backed away. The light the First Seeker had

produced faded, and the chamber slid rapidly into darkness.

Par Ohmsford grasped the Sword of Shannara in both hands

and bolted for freedom.

Rimmer Dall had been right about the passageways and stairs.

There were none. It was all illusion, a magic Par should have

recognized at once. He burst from the blackness of the vault

directly into the gray half-light of the Pit. The damp and mist

closed about him instantly. He blinked and whirled about,

searching.

Coil.

Where was Coil?

He stripped the cloak from his back and wrapped it hurriedly

about the Sword of Shannara. Allanon had said he would need

it-if Allanon was still to be believed. At the moment, he didn’t

know. But the Sword should be cared for; it must have purpose.

Unless it had lost its magic. Could it have lost its magic?

“Par.”

The Valeman jumped, startled by the voice. It was right be-

hind him, so close that it might have been a whisper in his ear

if not for the harshness of its sound. He turned.

And there was Coil.

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