Elfstones come to life, flaring with white light, with ancient power, filling the night with their brilliance, lancing out and striking the Shadowen, burning it as it struggled to break free . . .
She tried to rise and fell back. Garth caught her in his arms, having risen somehow to his knees, and eased her to the ground. He held her for a moment, cradled her as he might a child, and she let him, her face buried against his body. Then she pushed gently away, taking slow, deep breaths to steady herself. She rose and moved over to their cloaks, retrieved them and brought them back to where Garth waited. They wrapped themselves against the nightâs chill and sat staring at each other wordlessly.
Finally Wren lifted her hands and began to sign.
Did you know about the Elfstones?
she asked.
Garthâs gaze was steady.
No.
Not that they were real, not what they could do, nothing?
No.
She studied his face for a moment without moving. Then she reached into her tunic and drew out the leather bag that hung about her neck. She had slipped the Elfstones back inside when she had gone to help Garth. She wondered if they had transformed again, if they had returned to being the painted rocks they once were. She even wondered if she had somehow been mistaken in what she had seen. She turned the bag upside down and shook it over her hand.
Three bright blue stones tumbled free, painted rocks no longer, but glittering Elfstonesâthe Elfstones that had been given to Shea Ohmsford by Allanon over five hundred years ago and had belonged to the Ohmsford family ever since. She stared at them, entranced by their beauty, awed that she should be holding them. She shivered at the memory of their power.
âGarth,â she whispered. She placed the Elfstones in her lap. Her fingers moved. âYou must know something. You must. I was given into your care, Garth. The Elfstones were with me even then. Tell me. Where did they really come from?â
You already know. Your parents gave them to you.
My parents. She felt a welling up of pain and frustration. âTell me about them. Everything. There are secrets, Garth. There have always been secrets. I have to know now. Tell me.â
Garthâs dark face was frozen as he hesitated, then signed to her that her mother had been a Rover and that her father had been an Ohmsford. They brought her to the Rovers when she was a baby. He was told that the last thing they did before leaving was to place the leather bag with its painted rocks about her neck.
âYou did not see my mother. Or my father?â
Garth shook his head. He was away when they came and when he returned they were gone. They never came back. Wren was taken to Shady Vale to be raised by Jaralan and Mirianna Ohms-ford. When she was five, the Rovers took her back again. That was the agreement the Ohmsfords had made. It was what her parents had insisted upon.
âBut why?â Wren interrupted, bewildered.
Garth didnât know. He had never even been told who had made the bargain on behalf of the Rovers. She was given into his care by one of the family elders, a man who had died shortly after. No one had ever explained why he was to train her as he didâonly what was to be done. She was to be quicker, stronger, smarter, and better able to survive than any of them. Garth was to make her that way.
Wren sat back in frustration. She already knew everything that Garth was telling her. He had told it all to her before. Her jaw tightened angrily. There must be something more, something that would give her some insight into where she had come from and why she was carrying the Elfstones.
âGarth,â she tried again, insistent now. âWhat is it that you havenât told me? Something about my mother? I dreamed of her, you know. I saw her face. Tell me what you are hiding!â
The big man was expressionless, but there was hurt in his eyes. Wren almost reached out to reassure him, but her need to know