Talismans of Shannara by Terry Brooks

Druid magic on the ancient weapon, and the legacy of that gift

or curse—take your choice—was a binersweet taste that once

experienced cried out for more.

The Talismans of Shannara 279

As did the wishsong for Par. As did all the magic that ever

was or had ever been—siren songs of power that transcended

everything in their compelling, inexorable need to be sung.

He smiled darkly. Be careful what you wish for. Wasn’t that

the old admonition to those who begged for what they did not

have?

The smile faded. Maybe he would find out when it came

time to summon the Sword’s magic again—as summon it he

surely must, sooner or later. Maybe Quickening’s healing

touch, the magic that had restored his talisman, would prove in

the end to be as killing as that of the Shadowen.

The thought left him feeling cold and empty and impossibly

alone. He sat motionless in the shadows, staring out across the

countryside, waiting for the darkness to claim it.

XXIV

Three days earlier another storm had passed, one mark

ediy more violent, a torrential downpour riddled by ex-

plosions of thunder and flashes of lightning and driven

by a rough-faced howling wind, the sort of deluge that came

and went regularly in the Borderlands with the buildup of late

summer pressure and heat. It swept into Callahom at dusk, in-

undated the land through the night, and disappeared south with

the coming of dawn.

In the wake of its passing a solitary figure rose from the

sodden earth at the edge of the Rainbow Lake, muddied be-

yond recognition and stooped as if weighed down with chains.

Dark eyes blinked and tried to focus. The day was late in

waking, worried perhaps that the storm might return, dark-

edged clouds lingering fitfully in the leaden skies, sunrise iron-

gray and cautious as it eased back the night’s stubborn

shadows. The figure stared out at the flat expanse of the lake,

at the light east, at the skies, at a world that was clearly unfa-

miliar. One hand held a sword that glimmered faintly where

the grass and mire caked on it were scraped down to the metal.

The figure hesitated uncertainly, then stumbled to the edge

of the lake and submerged hands and face and finally body as

well, washing and rinsing down to a tangle of rags and bare

skin.

Mud and debris swirled away in the dark waters, and Coil

Ohmsford rose to look about.

At first he could not remember anything beyond who he

was—though he was quite determined of that, as if perhaps his

identity had been in doubt once. He recognized the Rainbow

280

The Talismans of Shannara 281

Lake, the ground upon which he stood, and the country that

surrounded him. He was standing on the lake’s southern shore

west of Culhaven and north of the Battlemound. But he did not

Icnow how he had gotten there.

He looked down at the blade in his hand (Had he managed

to wash himself without releasing it?) and realized that he was

holding the Sword of Shannara.

And then the memories came back in a rush that caused him

to gasp and double over as if a blow had been delivered to his

stomach. The images hammered at him. He had been captured

by the Shadowen and imprisoned at Southwatch. He had man-

aged an escape, but in truth Rimmer Dall had managed it for

him. He had been tricked into believing that the Mirrorshroud

would conceal him when in truth it had subverted him in ways

he did not care to recall, turning him into one of them, making

him over in their image. He had lost control of himself, be-

coming something very close to animal, scouring the country-

side in search of his brother. Par, seeking him without clear

reason or purpose beyond a vague intention to cause him harm.

Cloaked in the Mirrorshroud’s dark folds, he had tracked,

found, and attacked his brother …

He was breathing rapidly through his mouth. His chest tight-

ened and his stomach churned.

His brother.

… and tried to kill him—and would have, if something

hadn’t stopped him, hadn’t driven him away.

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