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

that. Hands reached for him, gnarled and hairy and grasping.

He lost himself in a whirl of coarse bodies and cluttering voices,

hearing only his own voice screaming from somewhere inside

not to be taken again, not to be held.

He was suddenly at the edge of the bluff. He summoned the

magic of the wishsong, striking out with images at the Spider

Gnomes who beset him, desperately trying to force a path

through their midst. The Shadowen had disappeared, lost some-

where in the smoke and shadows.

Then he felt his feet go out from under him, the edge of the

bluff giving way beneath the weight of his attackers. He grap-

pled for them, for a handhold anywhere, and found nothing. He

toppled clear of the bluff, falling into the abyss, tumbling into

the swiri of mist. The Shadowen, the Spider Gnomes, the fires,

caves, and burrows all disappeared behind him. Down he

fell, head-over-heels, tumbling through scrub brush and grasses,

across slides and between boulders. Miraculously, he missed

the rocks mat might have killed or crippled him, falling clear

finally in a long, agonizing drop that ended in jarring blackness.

He was unconscious for a time; he didn’t know how long.

When he came awake again, he found himself in a crushed bed

of damp marsh grasses. The grasses, he realized, must have

broken his fall and probably saved his life. He lay there, the

breath knocked from his body, listening to the sound of his heart

pumping in his breast. When his strength returned and his vision

cleared, he climbed gingedy to his feet and checked himself.

His entire body was a mass of cuts and bruises, but there ap-

peared to be nothing broken. He stood without moving then and

listened. From somewhere far above, he could hear the voice of

the Spider Gnomes.

They would be coming for him, he knew. He had to get out

of there.

He looked about. Mist and shadows chased each other through

a twilight world of gathering darkness, night descending quickly

now. Small, almost invisible things skipped and jumped through

the tall grasses. Ooze sucked and bubbled all about, hidden

quagmires surrounding islands of solid earth. Stunted trees and

brush defined me landscape, frozen in grotesque poses. Sounds

were distant and directionless. Everything seemed and looked

the same, a maze without end.

Par took a deep breath to steady himself. He could guess

where he was. He had been on Toffer Ridge. His fall had taken

him down off the ridge and right into Olden Moor. In his efforts

to escape his fate, he had only managed to find it sooner. He

had put himself exactly where the Shadowen had threatened to

send him-into the domain of the Werebeasts.

He set his jaw and started moving. He was only at me edge

of the moor, he told himself-not fully into it yet, not lost. He

still had the ridge behind him to serve as a guide. If he could

follow it far enough south, he could escape. But he had to be

quick.

He could almost feel the Werebeasts watching him.

The stories of the Werebeasts came back to him now, jarred

free by the realization of where he was and sharpened by his

fear. They were an old magic, monsters who preyed off strayed

and lost creatures who wandered into the moor or were sent

there, stealing away their strength and spirit and feeding on their

lives. The Spider Gnomes were their principal food; the Spider

Gnomes believed the Werebeasts were spirits that required ap-

peasement, and they sacrificed themselves accordingly. Par went

cold at the thought. That was what the Shadowen had intended

for him.

Fatigue slowed him and made him unsteady. He stumbled

several times, and once he stepped hip-deep into a quagmire

before quickly pulling free. His vision was blurred, and sweat

ran down his back. The moor’s heat was stultifying, even at

night. He glanced skyward and realized that the last of the light

was fading. Soon it would be completely black.

Then he would not be able to see at all.

A massive pool of sludge barred his passage, the wall of the

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