Lord of Order Read online




  Also by Brett Riley

  The Subtle Dance of Impulse and Light

  Comanche

  IMBRIFEX BOOKS

  8275 S. Eastern Avenue, Suite 200

  Las Vegas, NV 89123

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  LORD OF ORDER: A Novel

  Copyright ©2021 by Brett Riley. All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission from the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations used in critical articles and reviews.

  This is a work of fiction. All of the characters, organizations, and events portrayed in this novel are either products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, businesses, companies, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

  IMBRIFEX® is registered trademark of Flattop Productions, Inc.

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Names: Riley, Brett, 1970- author.

  Title: Lord of order / Brett Riley.

  Description: First Edition. | Las Vegas, NV : Imbrifex Books, 2021. |

  Identifiers: LCCN 2020027324 (print) | LCCN 2020027325 (ebook) | ISBN 9781945501418 (hardcover) | ISBN 9781945501425 (epub) | ISBN 9781945501371 (e-book) | ISBN 9781945501326 (audiobook)

  Subjects: GSAFD: Fantasy fiction.

  Classification: LCC PS3618.I532724 L67 2021 (print) | LCC PS3618.I532724 (ebook) |

  DDC 813/.6--dc23

  LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2020027324

  LC ebook record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2020027325

  Jacket design: Jason Heuer

  Book design: Sue Campbell Book Design

  Author photo: Benjamin Hager

  Typeset in ITC Berkeley Oldstyle and Rockwell Extra Bold

  Printed in the United States of America

  Distributed by Publishers Group West

  First Edition: March 2021

  This book is dedicated, as always, to Kalene (thanks for the suggestion about McClure), and to Shauna, John, Nova, Luna, Brendan, and Maya. To my God, without whom I am nothing. And to everyone who has suffered because of someone else’s so-called morality, I see you. Never lose heart.

  The Cemetery

  The man stood on the crumbling road. Green grass grew through its many fissures. Old, faded symbols with long-forgotten meanings stretched into the distance down its center and near its edges. To the man’s right, the boy rubbed his eyes, blond hair tousled and pillow-matted. He stood nearly as tall as the man, his father, though he had not yet seen twelve summers. To the left, the girl shielded her face against the rising sun, her curly red hair billowing in the breeze. Soon they would follow the road down the hill to the graveyard where, among monuments great and small, dew sparkled on the grass, though not for long; the air already felt warm. A scorching late June, portending a July that would fell strong men in their fields. But not yet. First came the telling.

  The man embraced the children. The girl laid her head against him. Below them, the meticulous workers cropped the graveyard grass with handheld shears and their own sweat, dumping the detritus into cloth bags. When the sacks were filled to bursting, the landscapers tied them with heavy string and left them behind. Several dotted the ground like mottled warts.

  Other workers scrubbed the monuments with horsehair brushes and water from barrels in horse-drawn carts. The clean stones marched outward in neat, straight rows. In some sections, marble gave way to wooden crosses. Unless the history books were wrong—always a possibility, given how long they had been banned, how nameless heroes hidden in darkness and damp had extended them with cramped and often near-illegible handwriting on flimsy parchment—the cemetery had once been reserved for the honored dead of a great army serving a country called the United States of America. Now, even the word country sounded archaic. Countries existed only in books and tales told around hearths. Generations ago, the Cult had risen, blasting old Earth and its ways into scree on which nothing could find purchase.

  But all that was already known. The children had come to learn something both more and less than the wide world’s story.

  The girl fidgeted. Sweat gleamed on her freckled face. The boy stood as still as stone, but he was older. Only weeks ago, he had come to the man with questions about how things came to be. By custom, the man was bound to answer. So here they were.

  We’re looking for a grave in the very back, the man said. The workers won’t reach it until dusk. Perhaps even tomorrow. Gather your packs and follow me.

  He grabbed his poke from where it lay at their feet. Like his father before him, he had packed it with full canteens and jerky and a single blanket, the barest of provisions.

  The boy and girl shouldered their own packs, and the three of them set out. Soon enough, they could not avoid stepping on graves, but they did so with their heads bowed, silent. Sooner or later, everyone returned to the earth.

  They walked until the children’s breath tore in and out of their lungs, until they grunted with every step, until sweat soaked their hair. The man seemed oblivious to their struggles. The children did not cry out or complain.

  Finally, the man followed a row of sturdy white wooden crosses. The grass grew midcalf high. The cemetery’s rear border was lined with thick foliage, as if it were the edge of the known world. Near that tree line, one cross stood three times as tall as the others. This grave had been tended even as the others grew their green beards. Surrounded by the lush blooming whites and purples of dogwood and crepe myrtles, the cross was made of polished stone the bleached color of desert sand. It had been festooned with flowers now in various stages of decay—red roses shriveling against the base, orchids and lilies lying wilted and desiccated. The man stopped before this monument.

  He took off his pack and spread their blanket over the grave and sat cross-legged, back straight, the pack beside him. He motioned to the children. They unshouldered their burdens and sat, one near each of his knees in the shadows of the trees and the cross. The man closed his eyes for a moment and gathered his strength, knowing the tale would be long and the telling hard. But it was his duty, and he had never shirked duty in his life.

  He opened his eyes and said, We come to celebrate what is and mourn what was. Here, we acknowledge the growth of your bodies and your minds. Here, you learn where you come from and who you are. You must remember what I tell you today for the rest of your lives. I’ll not tell the tale again, and one day, you must come to this place and tell it to your own children. That is your charge. Take this greatest of all gifts—knowledge—and pass it on in your turn, and you will perpetuate all that is good in the world. You will stand vigil against the vile, the destructive, the cruel and merciless. There is nothing more at stake today, and nothing less. Do you understand?

  The children nodded, solemn, eyes wide. Crickets struck up their low, buzzing orchestra. The sun trekked across the sky. The Earth turned. And the man began his story.

  1

  Gabriel Troy crouched beside the blown-out windows as bullets whizzed by and pockmarked the wall. A double-barreled shotgun lay in the dirt and broken glass at his feet. His right hand clutched the .357, its barrel pointed up. He stuck his left index and middle fingers through the hole in his shirt and yanked, ripping most of the sleeve away. With the makeshift rag, he applied pressure where the bullet had gouged a shallow two-inch-long trench across his right shoulder. The wound bled and pulsed, but the arm seemed sound. Regardless, he could not stay put for long.

  When the heretics had spotted him and opened fire, Troy had ducked into the Dann
a Student Center, a building where, if the histories told true, scholars had gathered for meals. Its windows had been shattered long ago, its walls vandalized with paint and edged weapons of who knew what kind or origin. Some of the graffiti looked old enough to have been written before the Purge. The floors were covered in dirt, broken plaster, shards of glass, animal droppings, and piles of rotting leaves.

  Still, the façade seemed sturdy. A few Troubler guns ain’t gonna bring it down. If we live through this, I’ll assign a renovation crew here. About time somebody did.

  The shells of old vehicles had, over the long years, been hauled away to the western dumping ground, most of the burned and ruined buildings repaired or razed, but some, like this one, had never been touched. Always too much to do, never enough time.

  A rifle blast disintegrated part of the wall over Troy’s head. No time for ruminations. He grabbed his shotgun, stood, and ran, hurdling rubble and firing through the glassless windows. At the end of the hallway, he ducked again, leaning the shotgun against the wall and pulling the pack off his back. He dug through it and found some bullets and reloaded his Magnum, listening in vain for cries from outside. Reckon I missed em all. Well, I was runnin and shootin blind.

  Scattered small-arms fire suggested the Troublers had hunkered down in the Peace Quad, but at any moment, they might stop pressing their luck and rabbit. If they crossed Broadway in Willa McClure’s direction or headed back across Calhoun where old Ernie Tetweiller waited, things might get sticky. The girl and the elder were mainly supposed to be noisemakers, kicking up enough ruckus to herd the Troublers toward Jack Hobbes or Gordy Boudreaux. If that failed, the Troublers might duck into one of the unlocked buildings and turn this firefight into a siege. I gotta drive em toward St. Charles, and I gotta do it now.

  But even that presented risks. If the Troublers crossed St. Charles, they would disappear amid the crops and trees in Audubon Park. As directed, the field workers and foresters had slipped away as the time for the raid drew near so no citizens would be harmed, but even Santonio Ford would struggle to track the Troublers if they split up. At best, pursuing them would mean a firefight on open ground or in a wooded spot of the Troublers’ choosing. Best if the battle ended here.

  More shots—from Bobet or Marquette Hall? Those buildings had been renovated during Tetweiller’s tenure as lord. Troy had earmarked them for storage and apprentice housing, but no one had moved in yet, meaning their doors were bolted with heavy chains and padlocks, the keys to which hung on a wall in Troy’s office. Still, the Troublers could perhaps break through the fortified windows. He could not let that happen. To keep them in the open, he would have to show himself without getting killed and then lead them across the horseshoe-shaped drive facing St. Charles. If he could manage it, he and his crew could neutralize the entire nest.

  Another shot tore through the wall, showering him with dust. You had to laugh at the irony, or maybe cry—a gunfight in a place once called Peace Quad. He reached into his pack and pulled out six grenades, three smoke bombs and three concussives, and cradled them in his left arm as he closed his eyes. Lord, keep me and mine safe. Guide my hand. And forgive me for the wrongs I’ve done. Then he took a deep breath, selected a concussion grenade, and pulled the pin. He threw it out the window as hard as he could and crawfished back the way he had come, tossing grenades every few feet, alternating the concussions and the smokes. Halfway down the hall, the first grenade exploded. The roar echoed and amplified off the surrounding buildings. The student center shook. Chunks of earth and grass spattered the wall behind him. Dust and smoke blanketed the quad, and from somewhere in that miasma, human voices screamed.

  Troy retrieved his shotgun and the Magnum. Then he kicked open the splintered door and dashed outside, firing into the gloom. They’re hurt and blind, he shouted. Rip em to pieces.

  Let’s hope they ain’t figured out I’m talkin to myself.

  To his right, the sharp reports of a large-caliber pistol. That’s gotta be Boudreaux, some unseen Troubler cried. Fall back.

  Troy smiled. Willa McClure, the kid he had left on the other side of Broadway Avenue, had done her job, keeping the Troublers in the quad. He fired toward the voice. Someone grunted and fell. The flat crack of a rifle to his left. A Troubler hacked and coughed and started to sputter, like someone gargling heavy syrup.

  Get the hell away from the street, said a woman Troy could not see. Hobbes must be over yonder.

  They’ve got us on three sides, a man responded. Should we break into one of these goddam buildins or what? Where do we go?

  Thataway, said the woman. Troy’s comin, and I don’t plan on waitin here until he shoves his shotgun up my ass.

  Troy raised the shotgun and fired into the smoke, both barrels, but if he hit anyone, they kept quiet. He pressed forward as he reloaded, squinting against the smoke and gunpowder, stumbling over holes gouged in the grounds until he reached the back wall of Bobet Hall. Then he turned right and headed toward Broadway.

  I hope Willa don’t shoot me. Still, better to take my chances there than on Calhoun. Ernie’s got worse eyesight and a bigger gun.

  At the building’s corner, a middle-aged Troubler crouched, trembling, a shotgun clutched in his dirty hands. He wore sweat- and mud-stained breeches and a ragged roughspun shirt. His eyes were closed, his lips moving. Troy crept up and shot him in the back of the head with the .357. The man slumped over, hindquarters in the air, blood and brains caking the brick. Troy stepped over the body and trotted toward St. Charles, leaving the Troubler’s shotgun behind. He had no free hand to carry it.

  Eight Troublers huddled up ahead. They spotted him and ran. Half of them broke south beyond Marquette Hall, heading for the horseshoe driveway and into the killing box. Boudreaux had hidden in the old Holy Name of Jesus Church, while Hobbes and his .30-06 lay somewhere in Thomas Hall. As soon as the Troublers entered the horseshoe, both deputies opened up, Boudreaux’s shotgun blasting low peals of thunder, Hobbes’s big rifle cracking. They fired three or four times each. All four Troublers skittered on the pavement, dead or dying.

  Troy pursued the other four, one of them a woman. They had nearly reached St. Charles when someone in the brush across the street shot three times, and the male Troublers fell onto their faces. The woman ran ten more feet before she realized what had happened and stopped, her hands in the air.

  Santonio Ford stepped out of the tree line, his long dreadlocks flowing behind him, his rifle pointed at the woman’s head. Troy raised a hand. Ford nodded.

  As Troy approached, the Troubler spat at Ford. You’re a goddam ass licker, she said. Hope you enjoy them chains around your neck.

  Ford watched her, impassive.

  Troy kicked her in the back of her right knee. She grunted and fell, but she did not cry out. Her black hair hung in grungy strips, streaks of gray at her temples. Her green eyes blazed like twin emeralds in her ruddy face. Her lower lip was split open and bleeding, and when she smiled, her teeth shone bright red. She looked no more than five and a half feet, barely 120 pounds. And yet this woman had caused more trouble in the New Orleans principality than any other single person in the history of the Bright Crusade.

  She spat blood onto Troy’s boot and sneered. And look here. If it ain’t the ass hisself.

  Troy struck her in the head with his shotgun’s stock. She fell over, unconscious, her left eyebrow split open, blood pooling beneath her.

  Pleased to meet you, he said. Then he looked at Ford. Good shootin.

  Ford began reloading his rifle with ammunition from the poke he carried over his shoulder. Thanks. Doubt I could have got all eight. You herded them other four thataway like cattle.

  Cattle are smarter than this bunch.

  Boudreaux stepped out of the church just as Willa McClure appeared, the Rottweiler that followed her everywhere at her heel. Her short blond hair looked as if she had cut it herself with a dull knife
. Always clad in a hodgepodge wardrobe of whatever she could find, most often deerskin trousers and busted boots and roughspun or animal-skin shirts originally cut for some boy who apprenticed in a physical trade, usually as dirty as a swamp dweller and as ready to punch you in the privates as shake your hand, McClure now looked impassive, even bored.

  Across the horseshoe driveway, Hobbes ambled toward them, rifle resting on his shoulder. Somewhere behind Hobbes, Ernie Tetweiller was almost certainly climbing down from whatever rooftop he had chosen. Hopefully, the old man would not fall and break his hip, or worse.

  McClure walked up and stood over the woman. This her?

  I’m pretty sure, yeah, said Troy.

  She’s got a nice ass, if you like em flat. Which I don’t.

  Willa.

  Sorry, McClure said. She did not sound sincere.

  Your information was good.

  Course it was.

  McClure always came through. She might have been only twelve, give or take a year, but she knew how to get and use information better than most adults. Troy clapped the kid on the shoulder as Hobbes joined them. In the distance, Tetweiller limped their way, favoring his right leg, as always.

  Gordon Boudreaux, the youngest deputy, reached the group as Hobbes spat on the woman’s head. Rest of em are dead, he said. Gotta say she don’t look like much. Sure it’s her?

  Troy wiped sweat from his brow. It’s Stransky, all right. I ain’t never seen her before, but I heard her voice once, that time they tried to set fire to the Quarter. Still, don’t you boys go thinkin the Troublers are done. Born fighters don’t never stop.

  He tried to sound firm and assured, but his traitor heart sang like the heavenly choirs themselves. They had smashed a major pocket of the resistance, and they had captured the leader of New Orleans’s Troublers. All in all, the day was going well.

  2

  They walked their horses down St. Charles, through Lee Circle, and onto Camp Street, passing water bearers hauling barrels from the Mississippi and crews carrying fuel for the populace’s stoves and lamps. Sanitation teams emptied chamber pots and drove wagons of sealed waste-filled barrels across the bridge and down Jean Lafitte Boulevard. There they would dump their casks into the canal, where the waters might lead to Mud Lake, Barataria Bay, the Gulf of Mexico.