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

felt oddly alone.

His last thought before he fell asleep was that, in a way he

didn’t yet comprehend, he was.

He slept fitfully, but without dreaming, waking often amid

stirrings of dissatisfaction and wariness that darted through the

corridors of his mind like harried rats. Each time he came awake

it was still night, until the last time when it was almost dawn,

the sky beyond the curtained window brightening faintly, the

room in which he lay still and gauzy. A white-robed Stor passed

briefly through the room, appearing from out of the shadows

like a ghost to pause at his bedside and touch his wrist and

forehead with hands that were surprisingly warm before turning

and disappearing back the way he had come. Par slept soundly

after that, drifting far down within himself and floating undis-

turbed in a sea of black warmth.

When he woke again, it was raining. His eyes blinked open

and he stared fixedly into the grayness of his room. He could

hear the sound of the raindrops beating on the windows and

roof, a steady drip and splash in the stillness. There was daylight

yet; he could see it through the part in the curtains. Thunder

rolled in the distance, echoing in long, uneven peals.

Gingerly, he hoisted himself up on one elbow. He saw a fire

burning in a small stove that he hadn’t even noticed the previous

night, tucked back in the shadows. It gave a solid warmth to the

room that wrapped and cradled him and made him feel secure.

There was tea by his bedside and tiny cakes. He pushed himself

up the rest of me way, propping himself against the headboard

of his bed with his pillows and pulling the cakes and tea to him.

He was famished, and he devoured the cakes in seconds. Then

he drank a small portion of the tea, which had gone cold in the

sitting, but was wonderful in any case.

He was midway through his third cup when the door opened

soundlessly and Walker Boh appeared. His uncle paused mo-

mentarily on seeing him awake, then closed the door softly and

came over to stand at his bedside. He was dressed in forest

green-tunic and pants belted tight, soft leather boots unlaced

and muddied, long travel cloak spotted with rain. There was

rain on his bearded face as well, and his dark hair was damp

against his skin.

He pushed the travel cloak back across his shoulders. “Feel-

ing better?” he asked quietly.

Par nodded. “Much.” He set his cup aside. “I understand I

have you to thank for that. You saved me from the Werebeasts.

You brought me back to Hearthstone. It was your idea to bring

me to Storlock. Coil and Morgan tell me that you even used

magic to see to it that I stayed alive long enough to complete

the journey.”

“Magic.” Walker repeated the word softly, his voice dis-

tracted. “Words and touching in combination, a sort of variation

on the workings of the wishsong. My legacy from Brin Ohms-

ford. I haven’t the curse of the fullness of her powers-only the

annoyance of its shadings. Still, now and again, it does become

the gift you insist it must be. I can interact with another living

thing, feel its life force, sometimes find a way to strengthen it.”

He paused. “I don’t know if I would call it magic, though.”

“And what you did to the Werebeasts in Olden Moor when

you stood up for me-was that not magic?”

His uncle’s eyes shifted away from him. “I was taught that,”

he said finally.

Par waited a moment, but when nothing more was forthcom-

ing he said, “I’m grateful for all of it in any case. Thank you.”

The other man shook his head slowly. “I don’t deserve your

thanks. It was my fault that it happened in the first place.”

Par readjusted himself carefully against his pillows. “I seem

to remember you saying that before.”

Walker moved to the far end of the bed and sat down on its

edge. “If I had watched over you the way I should have, the

Spider Gnomes would never have even gotten into the valley.

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