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

night of the new moon had begun to wear a little thin. He was

immersed mostly in his admiration for the majesty of the sunset

when he caught sight of the odd trio as they rode their horses

out of the westward glare from a screen of poplar trees and

started toward him. He came to his feet slowly, refusing to trust

his eyes at first. Then, having determined that he was not mis-

taken, he leaped from his perch and charged back down the trail

to alert the others of his little company who were camped im-

mediately below.

Wren got there almost before he did. Her sharp Elven eyes

caught sight of him at about the same time he saw her. Acting

on impulse and leaving her companions to follow as best they

could, she spurred her horse ahead recklessly, came charging

into camp, vaulted from the saddle before her mount was fully

checked, rushed up to Par with a wild yell, and hugged him with

such enthusiasm that he was almost knocked from his feet. When

she was done with him, she gave the same reception to an aston-

ished, but delighted Coll. Walker got a more reserved kiss on

the cheek and Morgan, whom she barely remembered from her

childhood, a handshake and a nod.

While the three Ohmsford siblings-for they seemed such,

despite the fact that Wren wasn’t a true sister-traded hugs and

words of greeting, those with them stood around uncomfortably

and sized up one another with wary glances. Most of the sizing

up was reserved for Garth, who was twice as big as any of the

rest of them. He was dressed in the brightly colored clothing

common to the Rovers, and the garishness of his garb made him

seem larger still. He met the stares of the others without discom-

fort, his gaze steady and implacable. Wren remembered him

after a moment and began the required series of introductions.

Par followed with Steff and Teel. Cogline hung back from the

others; since everyone seemed to know who he was, in any case,

no formal introduction was attempted. There were nods and

handshakes all around, courtesies observed as expected, but the

wariness in the faces of most did not subside. When they all

moved over to the fire that formed the center of the little camp-

site to partake of the dinner that the Dwarves had been in the

process of preparing when Wren and her companions had ap-

peared, the newly formed company of nine quickly fragmented

into groups. Steff and Teel turned their attention to the comple-

tion of the meal, mute as they hovered over the pots and cooking

fire. Walker withdrew to a patch of shade under a scrawny pine,

and Cogline disappeared into the rocks without a word to any-

one. He was so quiet about it that he was gone almost before

they realized it. But Cogline was not really considered a part of

the company, so no one much bothered about it. Par, Coil,

Wren, and Morgan clustered together by the horses, unsaddling

them and robbing them down, and talked about old times, old

friends, the places they had been, the things they had seen, and

the vicissitudes of life.

“You are much grown, Wren,” Coil marveled. “Not at all

the broomstick little girl I remember when you left us.”

“A rider of horses, wild as the wind! No boundaries for you!”

Par laughed, throwing up his hands in a gesture meant to en-

compass the whole of the land.

Wren grinned back. “I live a better life than the lot of you,

resting on your backsides, singing old tales and rousting tired

dogs. The Wesdand’s a good country for free-spirited things,

you know.” Then her grin faded. “The old man, Cogline, told

me of what’s happened in the Vale. Jaralan and Mirianna were

my parents for a time, too, and I care for them still. Prisoners,

he said. Have you heard anything of them?”

Par shook his head. “We have been running ever since Var-

fleet.”

“I am sorry. Par.” There was genuine discomfort in her eyes.

“The Federation does its best to make all of our lives miserable.

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