Talismans of Shannara by Terry Brooks

could the Shadowen know their meeting would trigger the

magic of the Sword of Shannara and reveal the truth about

who Coil was, that Par would be able to see him as anything

but a Shadowen? Coil might have been sent as a lure to draw

Par after—that certainly seemed like Rimmer Dall—but again,

how could the Shadowen know that Par would discover his

brother’s identity?

Unless he wasn’t supposed to find out …

Par stopped abruptly. He was passing beneath a huge old

oak. It was shady there and cool. He could feel a breeze waft

in off the Mermidon. He could hear the sound of the river’s

sluggish flow. He could smell the water and the woods.

… until it was too late.

He felt his throat tighten. What if he had this whole business

backward? What if Coil wasn’t supposed to kill him? What if

he was supposed to kill Coil?

Why?

Because …

He struggled with the answer. It was almost there, just on

The Talismans of Shannara 163

the edge of his reasoning. A whisper of words, straining to be

recognized, to be understood.

He could not quite reach them.

He started off again, frustrated. He was on the right track,

even if he didn’t have all the particulars straight yet. It was

Coil out there, leading him on, fleeing without knowing why,

coming back at night to make certain Par was following. It

was the Sword of Shannara Par carried, and its magic that had

told him the truth. It was the Shadowen who had orchestrated

this whole business, who were playing with them as if they

were children set at a game, made to perform for the enjoy-

ment of others.

It has to do with the magic of the wishsong. Par thought

suddenly. It has to do with that.

It would come to him, he knew. He just needed to keep

thinking about it. He just needed to keep reasoning it through.

He had not found Coil by sunset of the second day, and he

made camp in a rock-sheltered niche that protected his back

while allowing him to see whatever approached from the front.

He did not build a fire. A fire would obscure his night vision

when it grew dark. He ate a little more of his provisions,

wrapped himself in his blanket, and settled back against the

rocks to wait.

The night deepened and the stars came out. Par watched the

shadows define and take shape in the pale light. He listened to

the sluggish flow of the river against the rocks and the cries of

the night birds circling its waters. He breathed the cooling,

damp air, and allowed himself to wonder for the first time in

two days about Damson Rhee. It was strange being without her

after the time they hid together in Tyrsis, the two of them

fighting to stay free. He worried for her, but reassured himself

by deciding that she was probably better off than he was. By

now she would have reached the free-born and be engaged in

an effort to rescue Padishar. By now she was safe.

Or as safe as either of them could be until this business was

finished.

Thoughts of Damson, Padishar, Morgan Leah, Wren, and

Walker Boh crowded into his mind, fragments of his memories

of those who had been lost along the way. It sometimes

seemed to him that he was destined to lose everyone So much

164 The Talismans of Shannara

effort expended and so little gained—the weight of it bore

down on him.

He drew his knees up to his chest protectively, tightening

himself into a ball. The Sword of Shannara pressed against his

back; he had forgotten to unstrap it. The Sword, his charge

from Allanon, his chance for life, his sole hope for someday

getting free of the Shadowen—a. lot had been given up for it.

He wondered anew what purpose the talisman was supposed to

serve. Surely something wondrous, for magic like this was cre-

ated for nothing less. But how was he supposed to discover

that purpose—especially here, lost somewhere in the Runne,

chasing after poor Coil? He should be searching for Walker

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