Talismans of Shannara by Terry Brooks

after him through the door. Padishar stood toe to toe with a

knot of Federation soldiers. More appeared in the stairwell be-

yond. The leader of the free-bom threw back the foremost by

sheer strength alone and spun about in fury.

“Drat you, boy—run! Now! Remember our agreement!”

Then the soldiers were on him again, and he was fighting

for his life. Two went down, then another, but there were more

to take their place. Too many. Par thought. Too many to stand

against. He felt his chest tighten. He must help his friend. But

that would mean using the wishsong’s magic, the fire he could

not control. It would mean seeing those men ripped to pieces.

It would mean chancing that Padishar would be ripped to

pieces as well.

And he had given the big man his promise.

“Padishar,” he heard Damson breathe in his ear and felt her

start toward the big man.

Instantly he had hold of her and was dragging her back the

way they had come, away from the fighting. He had made his

choice. “Par!” she screamed in anger, but he shook his head

50 The Talismans of Shannara

no. They reached the closed door. Were there Shadowen be-

hind it? Par could not hear them; he could not hear anything

above the sounds of the battle behind him.

“We can’t leave him!” Damson was screaming.

He pulled her close. “We have to.” Before him, the wooden

door loomed, hiding what lay behind, forbidding and silent. He

braced himself, summoning the wishsong’s magic because this

time there was no choice. The magic stirred, anxious.

Please, he thought, let me keep control of it just this once!

He flung open the door, ready to send the magic careening

down the corridor beyond, white-hot and deadly. Silence

greeted him. Moonlight flooded down through cracks in the

shattered stone. Debris littered the floor. The passage was

empty.

He cast a final look back at the embattled Padishar Creel, a

solitary barrier against the flood of Federation soldiers seeking

to break past. There was no hope for Padishar, he knew. It had

been a trap from the beginning. And the trap was about to

close.

Yet there was still time to save Damson.

As they had agreed they would, whatever the cost.

With Damson still clinging to his arm, he charged ahead into

the empty corridor, leaving Padishar Creel behind.

VI

They were through the stairwell door and back out on the

landing in seconds. A haze of sound and fury rose from

the corridor behind them, where Padishar held the Fed-

eration soldiers at bay.

Par wheeled back and kicked the tower door shut.

Which way?

From below, he could hear the thudding of boots and the

shouts of men as they ascended the stairs. They could not go

down.

“Let go of me!” Damson cried furiously, and yanked free of

him. Her green eyes were bright with tears and anger. “You

left him!”

Par was barely listening. They had to go up, back the way

they had come, back to where the Mole waited. Unless

Padishar had been right and the Mole had indeed betrayed

them. It was possible. The Mole might have been taken days

ago when the Federation had first found them in his lair. But,

no, if he had been taken then, he would not have helped them

escape when they had fled the gristmill; he would have let the

Federation have them and been done with the matter. But what

if he had been caught when he had gone in search of Damson

this last time—taken and subverted, made over into a Sha-

dowen?

Damson was tearing at him. “We have to go back. Par! He

needs us! He’s my father!” Her teeth bared. “He came back for

you!”

Par wheeled on her, grasped her arms, and dragged her so

close that he could feel the heat of her breath on his face. “I’ll

51

52 The Talismans of Shannara

only say this once. I gave him my promise. Whatever else hap-

pened, you were to be gotten safely away. He’s given himself

up for you. Damson, and it is not going to be for nothing!

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