did-you-know? rent-now

Amazon no longer offers textbook rentals. We do!

did-you-know? rent-now

Amazon no longer offers textbook rentals. We do!

We're the #1 textbook rental company. Let us show you why.

9780060555115

The Jaguar Knights

by
  • ISBN13:

    9780060555115

  • ISBN10:

    0060555114

  • Format: Hardcover
  • Copyright: 2004-09-08
  • Publisher: HarperCollins Publications
  • Purchase Benefits
  • Free Shipping Icon Free Shipping On Orders Over $35!
    Your order must be $35 or more to qualify for free economy shipping. Bulk sales, PO's, Marketplace items, eBooks and apparel do not qualify for this offer.
  • eCampus.com Logo Get Rewarded for Ordering Your Textbooks! Enroll Now
List Price: $24.95

Summary

Acclaimed fantasy author Dave Duncan returns to Chivial and the dashing King's Blades -- the greatest swordsmen in the world -- with a new epic adventure of sword fights, magic, romance, and a Blade unlike any other. Sir Wolf is not your typical King's Blade. Sure, he's smart, athletic, a good dresser, and a phenomenal swordsman. But he hasn't been named the King's Killer for nothing, and after years of dark secrets and painful loyalties to a king he cannot respect, all he wants is to be left alone. But when unknown assailants storm a royal fortress and carry off a former royal mistress, Wolf is dispatched posthaste to investigate. Who were these strangers, what were their motives, and who -- or what -- was their sinister cat-faced leader? Burdened by the need to comfort his impetuous younger brother, Sir Lynx -- the only Blade ever to lose his ward and live -- and shadowed by a secretive Inquisitor with her own agenda, Wolf struggles to solve a mystery that threatens the kingdom of Chivial itself. His quest will lead him into lands of danger and discovery unlike any the Blades have ever seen, and to an answer beyond his wildest nightmares.

Author Biography

Dave Duncan is an award-winning author whose fantasy trilogy The Seventh Sword is considered a sword-and-sorcery classic

Table of Contents

The master first lets slip his best houndsp. 1
Skilled huntsmen knowing all forms of spoor ...p. 76
The chase is reserved to the lord ... lesser orders [hunt with] snares and netsp. 121
On the eve of the hunt, the lord summons his huntsmen, his trainers, his grooms ...p. 154
Hearing the horns' call and the baying of hounds, the stag taketh flightp. 191
Send not valued dogs against the wild boar in his wallow ...p. 230
Birds of prey must be handled with respectp. 286
The mort is sounded by one long call and several shortp. 328
Epiloguep. 380
Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved.

Supplemental Materials

What is included with this book?

The New copy of this book will include any supplemental materials advertised. Please check the title of the book to determine if it should include any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.

The Used, Rental and eBook copies of this book are not guaranteed to include any supplemental materials. Typically, only the book itself is included. This is true even if the title states it includes any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.

Excerpts

The Jaguar Knights
A Chronicle of the King's Blades

Chapter One

The master first lets slip
his best hounds

Something was up. The Royal Guard liked to think it knew all thenews and heard it before anyone else did, but that day it had been shutout. The morning watch had been on duty for two hours already, butCommander Vicious had not arrived to hold the daily inspection andthe graveyard shift had not yet been stood down. They were supposedlyattending the King, who was meeting with senior advisors in the councilchamber. Absurd! Even during the worst panics of the ThencasterConspiracy, three years ago, Athelgar had never summoned his cabinetin the middle of the night.

Deputy Commander Lyon must have some idea what was going on,but he refused to admit it. Infuriatingly, he just sat behind his desk in theguardroom, reading a book of poetry -- Lyon not only read poetry, hewrote it too, yet he was a fine swordsman, subtle and unpredictable.Thehalf-dozen Blades sustaining the permanent dice game under the windowwere doing so halfheartedly, grumbling more than gambling. Sir Wolf was polishing his boots in a corner -- Wolf never read poetry, wasnever invited into the games, and cared not a fig what folly the King waspursuing this time.

The park beyond the frost-spangled panes was all pen-and-ink, starkwhite-and-black, sun-bright snow and cadaver trees under a sky of anemicblue, for this was Secondmoon of 395, the coldest winter in memory.Nocare, with its high ceilings and huge windows, was a summerpalace, impossible to heat in cold weather. The King had moved thecourt there on some inexplicable whim and could not return it to pokyold Greymere as long as the roads were blocked by snowdrifts. Courtiersslunk around unhappily, huddled in furs and muttering under theirsmoky breath.

Innumerable feet shuffled past the guardroom door: gentry, heralds,pages, porters, stewards,White Sisters, Household Yeomen. No one paidany heed until a rapid tattoo of heel taps raised every head. Blades knewthe sound of Guard boots, and these were in a hurry.

Wolf went on polishing his left one.

In marched Sir Damon, still wearing his sash as officer in charge ofthe night watch. The kibitzers by the window exchanged shockedglances.The matter was much more than routine if Sir Vicious had senta senior Blade as messenger, instead of a junior or just a page.

Damon glanced around the room, then bent to whisper somethingto Lyon. Lyon turned to Wolf.

"Leader wants you."

Wolf put foot in boot and stamped. "Where?"

Damon said, "Council Chamber. He's still with the Pirate's Son."

At the dice table, eyebrows rose even higher. The Pirate's Son wasKing Athelgar. It was common knowledge that Vicious preferred tokeep Sir Wolf out of the King's sight, so if Wolf was wanted now, it wasbecause the King had called for him by name.

Wolf was the King's Killer.

Ignoring the rabble's surprise, Wolf strode across to the mirror andlooked himself over with care. Like all Blades he was of middle height,slim and athletic, but he was invariably the best-turned-out man in theGuard -- boots and sword belt gleaming like glass, not a wrinkle in hishose nor speck of dust marring his jerkin. He adjusted the feather in hisbonnet an imperceptible amount and turned away. He did not examinehis face. No one looked at that horror unless they must.

Exchanging nods with a lip-chewing Lyon, he strode out into thecorridor, and Damon fell into step beside him. Together they marchedalong marble corridors, past statuary and tapestries. Courtiers staredwith interest at two senior members of the Royal Guard moving at anurgent clip. Word that the King had sent for the infamous Sir Wolfwould spread like fire in dry grass.

So what was up? The last time Wolf had been summoned to theroyal presence, Athelgar had named him -- over Leader's objections -- tolead the Elboro mission, which had required him to kill two brotherBlades. It had not been the first such filthy job the Pirate's Son had givenhim, either, and Wolf 's written report afterwards had let AthelgarRadgaring know exactly what he thought of his liege lord. Moreover,since Leader had not ordered him to rewrite it, it had warned HisMajesty that others shared those opinions.The Guard had been shorthandedback then, else Wolf might have been thrown in a dungeon forsome of the comments in that report. In the two years since,Vicious hadkept him well away from the King.

What had changed? Well, the Guard was up to strength now, so onepossibility was that Athelgar was going to award him the Order of theRoyal Boot. That was highly unlikely. Knowing how Wolf felt abouthim, Athelgar was more likely to keep the King's Killer bound to absoluteloyalty forever -- safer that way.

Another possibility was that the Pirate's Son wanted someone murdered.Blades were bound by oath and conjuration to defend their wardfrom his enemies, not to commit crimes on royal whims, but defensecould cover a multitude of nasty situations.

Wolf saw anger in Damon's tightly clenched jaw. Damon was a decentman, not one of those who carried grudges against the King'sKiller.

"Any hints, brother?"

"Dunno anything. Huntley and Flint rode in about four hours ago."

"Ah! And Leader wakened the Pirate's Son?"

"They've been in council ever since. No one's allowed in or out exceptinquisitors. A plague of inquisitors!"

That news merely deepened the mystery. Sir Flint and Sir Huntleywere typical examples of Blades who failed to find a real life after beingknighted and discharged from the Guard. Both men were in their fifties,idling away years at Ironhall, instructing boys in fencing and horsemanship,yet still hankering after the sins of the city ...

The Jaguar Knights
A Chronicle of the King's Blades
. Copyright © by Dave Duncan. Reprinted by permission of HarperCollins Publishers, Inc. All rights reserved. Available now wherever books are sold.

Excerpted from The Jaguar Knights by Dave Duncan
All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.

Rewards Program