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by Laura Strickland




  Table of Contents

  Excerpt

  Praise for Laura Strickland

  Last Orders

  Copyright

  Dedication

  Other Books by Laura Strickland

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  Chapter Twenty-One

  Chapter Twenty-Two

  Chapter Twenty-Three

  Chapter Twenty-Four

  Chapter Twenty-Five

  Chapter Twenty-Six

  Chapter Twenty-Seven

  Chapter Twenty-Eight

  Chapter Twenty-Nine

  Chapter Thirty

  Chapter Thirty-One

  Chapter Thirty-Two

  Chapter Thirty-Three

  Chapter Thirty-Four

  Chapter Thirty-Five

  Chapter Thirty-Six

  Chapter Thirty-Seven

  Chapter Thirty-Eight

  Chapter Thirty-Nine

  Chapter Forty

  Chapter Forty-One

  A word about the author…

  Thank you for purchasing this publication of The Wild Rose Press, Inc.

  Also available from The Wild Rose Press, Inc. and other major retailers

  Ginny glared harder at the tall, strapping hunk of man—police officer—who stood before her. She supposed being a police officer didn’t exclude him from being a man, but at the moment she felt a little fuzzy about it. In any case, he was much too good-looking, well over six feet, with a good set of shoulders, reddish hair, and features that had been entirely too well carved. And those eyes—just look at those eyes: bright blue and snapping with rage.

  She detested handsome men.

  He had to be the most detestable she’d ever seen. And his voice! That Irish accent of his caressed his words the way his tongue might well caress a woman.

  “I do not wish to be arrested. What blame fool would want to get arrested?”

  “Then hand over your weapon. You can reclaim it tomorrow at the station.”

  How professional he was. How well he kept his anger under control. But Ginny could feel it, and she wondered what it would take to make him lose that control.

  “I’ve had this steam cannon since I was fourteen years old.”

  “Well, you and it are going to have to spend the rest of the night apart. Dennis?” The officer jerked his head at the second cop—at least Ginny thought there were two and she wasn’t just seeing double. The two of them closed in on her again, one from either side.

  She raised the weapon, dimly aware it was a stupid thing to do.

  Praise for Laura Strickland

  Laura Strickland’s novella FORGED BY LOVE won first place in the short historical category of the International Digital Awards.

  ~*~

  “The world building is phenomenal.”

  ~Daysie W. at My Book Addiction and More

  ~*~

  “Laura Strickland creates a world that not only draws you in, but she incorporates it…seamlessly.…the kind of book that keeps you awake well into the wee hours, and sighing with satisfaction when you’ve finished the very last page.”

  ~Nicole McCaffrey, author

  ~*~

  “As I read I became so involved with the story, I found it difficult to put down the book. …Definitely …an author to watch.”

  ~Dandelion at Long & Short Reviews

  Last Orders

  by

  Laura Strickland

  A Buffalo Steampunk Adventure

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales, is entirely coincidental.

  Last Orders

  COPYRIGHT © 2018 by Laura Strickland

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission of the author or The Wild Rose Press, Inc. except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews.

  Contact Information: info@thewildrosepress.com

  Cover Art by Diana Carlile

  The Wild Rose Press, Inc.

  PO Box 708

  Adams Basin, NY 14410-0708

  Visit us at www.thewildrosepress.com

  Publishing History

  First Fantasy Rose Edition, 2018

  Print ISBN 978-1-5092-2011-3

  Digital ISBN 978-1-5092-2012-0

  A Buffalo Steampunk Adventure

  Published in the United States of America

  Dedication

  For my fabulous fans of this series,

  in Buffalo and elsewhere,

  with thanks for their enthusiasm and encouragement

  Other Books by Laura Strickland

  available from The Wild Rose Press, Inc.

  Dead Handsome: A Buffalo Steampunk Adventure

  Off Kilter: A Buffalo Steampunk Adventure

  Sheer Madness: A Buffalo Steampunk Adventure

  Steel Kisses: A Buffalo Steampunk Adventure

  ~*~

  Devil Black

  His Wicked Highland Ways

  Honor Bound: A Highland Adventure

  The White Gull (part of the Lobster Cove Series)

  Forged by Love (sequel to The White Gull)

  Words and Dreams (sequel to Forged by Love)

  The Hiring Fair (part of the Help Wanted Series)

  Awake on Garland Street

  Stars in the Morning (part of the Landmarks Series)

  Loyal and True

  ~*~

  The Guardians of Sherwood Trilogy:

  Daughter of Sherwood

  Champion of Sherwood

  Lord of Sherwood

  ~*~

  Christmas Short Stories:

  Mrs. Claus and the Viking Ship

  The Tenth Suitor

  Christmastime on Donner’s Mountain

  ~*~

  Valentine Short Story:

  Ask Me (part of the Candy Hearts Series)

  Chapter One

  Buffalo, the Niagara Frontier, September 1884

  “It’s happened again.” Sergeant Brendan Fagan’s superior, Police Captain Addelforce, delivered the news in a grim voice matched by his mournful expression. Addelforce of the Force, the men called him, though never to his face, him being well liked. A good steady captain, Brendan thought him, though not likely to blaze any trails.

  Brendan liked blazing trails—one of his worst faults, so his ma said. She was one for playing it safe, though the old man had taken a chance or two in his day—like bringing the whole family here from Ireland when Brendan was only fourteen. Funny, that a woman who denounced risk-taking so heartily had agreed to follow the man clear to America.

  Brendan had lived in Buffalo more than ten years and been a member of the police force for five. A rising star he was generally considered. He often managed to be in the middle of big things in the city and expected to make captain one day before too long. But he supposed no one would deem him a risk-taker from looking at him. Strong and steady he appeared—as hard to rock as a stone chair.

  He donned his most stoic and impenetrable look as he stared into his captain’s t
roubled face.

  “That’s ill news indeed, sir. Where did the murder take place this time?”

  “One of those big houses up on Bidwell Parkway. The deceased”—Addelforce consulted a paper on his desk—“is a Mister Ronald Bell, an elderly man and quite wealthy. He lived alone and apparently kept a number of steam units employed as servants. His daughter, also a lady of some means, is making a lot of noise and demanding justice.”

  Brendan shifted on his feet but gave no other sign of discomfort. A police officer learned to keep his emotions close to his vest, but this wasn’t news he wanted to hear.

  The third unprovoked murder in as many weeks, and none of them solved, though in each case suspicion ran rife. The first murder had taken place on a street corner under cover of night. The victim, a prominent man of the city who had spoken out vociferously against the Automaton Rights Movement, had been walking home from one of the gentlemen’s clubs. A passerby had seen him surrounded by a number of steam units and said they appeared to be talking politely.

  At daybreak the man was found there, lying in a pool of his own blood.

  The second killing had occurred at one of the small canneries down near the waterfront. At first it seemed much more straightforward, if far more grisly. The manageress, by all accounts a cur of a woman who made life hell for her automaton employees and everyone else she encountered, had been beaten, dismembered, and put through the canning process.

  Everyone on the premises denied any knowledge of how it had happened. Brendan had gone to interview witnesses and take reports. The steam units, all basic models, had told him the manageress must have suffered an accident—and no one had noticed.

  Now an old man in a mansion.

  “Sir, what was this Mr. Ronald Bell’s manner of death?”

  Addelforce leaned closer. The two men were alone in his office, but as Brendan knew, the walls of the stationhouse had ears.

  “Beaten to death,” Addelforce whispered. “The first of our men on the scene reported there being blood everywhere. He’d been pounded so hard some of his bones were pulverized.”

  “And the steam servants, sir? What had they to say?”

  “Not much. None of them admits to seeing or hearing anything.”

  Brendan grunted.

  “Now listen to me, Fagan. The situation is ugly and can only get uglier. The climate in this city since the steam units started getting ideas above their station is ripe for an explosion of some magnitude. We need to solve at least one of these murders as soon as possible.”

  “Above their station, sir?” Brendan knew he should hold his tongue, but he hated injustice of any kind.

  “They’re machines, for God’s sake.”

  “Sir, with all due respect, you know they’re more than that. You’ve worked with Pat Kelly and other members of the Irish Squad.”

  “The Irish Squad,” Addelforce repeated with some disgust. “Whoever let those hybrid automatons start calling themselves by that grandiose name has a lot to answer for.”

  Brendan stiffened. “Actually, sir, that was me. And they are Irish—at least they were constructed from the corpses of Irishmen.”

  Two mad geniuses called Mason and Charles had constructed the units, mating frames of steel with the skin, eyes, and scalps taken from men—mostly Irish—murdered at the jail. Both had been attacked and severely beaten by their own inventions; Charles had since died, and Mason, so far as Brendan knew, was now safely locked away.

  No one had been sure what to do with the hybrid units. Brendan, involved heavily in the nightmare, had suggested they join the force.

  Addelforce looked surprised. “That’s right. I’d forgotten.”

  “Sir, I wouldn’t be standing here if they were just machines. They are in truth Irishmen.”

  “Or fancy themselves as such. I’ll give you that. But they’re made of steel, and they operate on coal like any other steam unit.”

  “Aye, sir.” Brendan once more shut his feelings down. His job didn’t require expressing his opinion. And if Addelforce wanted to be a pigheaded fool, well—that was his right.

  Addelforce eyed him. “Fagan, you’re a good cop. And you’re Irish, I understand that. You’re also human. Those hybrids have their place in the force; I won’t claim they’re not useful in the right circumstances. But given the latest rash of incidents and the demands the steamies are making, it would be unwise to attribute too much to them.”

  “Aye, sir.”

  “We need these murders solved—quickly, efficiently—and the miscreants brought to answer for their crimes, even if they’re steam units—no, especially if they’re steam units. That’s why I’ve called you in. You’re both quick and efficient.”

  Brendan quirked an eyebrow. “Thank you, sir.”

  “Take a fellow officer and get over to the scene on Bidwell. Go over the place from top to bottom and get me some answers.”

  “I will, sir.”

  “Results, Fagan—that’s what we need. Results!”

  “I’ll do my best, sir.”

  Brendan left the captain’s office and moved out into the busy main room of the precinct. That was the trouble with being good at your job—you got all the impossible cases. Aye, well, he’d never backed down from one and wouldn’t start now, though Addelforce might not appreciate his methods. He always followed orders, but he wasn’t above bending the rules.

  The station looked crowded this morning. Many of the officers on duty were taking statements or scribbling at paperwork. The figure in the far corner, however, looked up when Brendan emerged from Addelforce’s office and met his gaze with one of startlingly intense green.

  Brendan smiled. “Morning, Pat. I’m that glad to see you on duty.”

  “Good morning, Brendan.”

  The big automaton got to his feet when Brendan paused beside his desk. A tall man at well over six feet, Brendan often towered above others. Pat Kelly matched him in height and breadth.

  At first glance, you’d never know Kelly—an elite member of the aforementioned Irish Squad—wasn’t human. Only the faint clicking of his voice box gave him away. But in fact a coal fire burned in his thorax, and his only exhalations came in the form of steam.

  Brendan, who owed Kelly his life, not only respected him but called him friend.

  “We’ve an assignment, Pat. Will you come along with me?”

  “The murder on Bidwell Parkway?”

  No flies ever on Pat Kelly. “How’d you hear about that?”

  “It is all over the city.” Kelly studied Brendan somberly. “Are you quite certain you wish to take me, under the circumstances?”

  “Under the circumstances, I think you’re the perfect man to take. All the potential interviewees are steam units, as I understand.”

  “Captain Addelforce will not be pleased.”

  “Captain Addelforce was after telling me to take a man with me—he didn’t say which one.”

  Pat Kelly emitted the soft grinding sound that denoted his version of laughter. “As you say, friend.”

  They went out into the bustling streets and set to walking with a will. Pat Kelly, as Brendan well knew, could walk all day and probably all night as well, and Brendan never minded hoofing it.

  “How is Rose?” Brendan asked Kelly as they went. The big automaton had been married earlier this year to a human woman, no less. And that had been before the mass wedding at the park on Delaware the month before last, which had seen the marriage of numerous hybrid couples as well as another human and hybrid pair.

  “Rose is blooming, as always. And your latest sexual exploit?”

  Brendan rolled his eyes. Kelly enjoyed ribbing him about the women he saw, which weren’t actually so many in number. But as a bachelor he did tend to walk on the wild side from time to time—strictly when off duty, of course.

  “I happen to be between women right now,” he confessed. The last one had been a mistake—clingy. Nothing on God’s green earth worse than a clingy woman.

/>   “Your exploits are legendary among members of the force.”

  “Are they so? The force needs more in the way of occupation.”

  “Plenty going on in the city at present. Emotions among the human citizens run high.”

  “And even higher, it might be argued, among the automaton population. What’s the word on the street, Pat? Whom do they think is responsible for these murders?”

  “The humans think the automatons are responsible. The automatons have not expressed an opinion.”

  Brendan shot him a look. “And what do you think?”

  Pat contemplated it; Brendan could almost hear the whir of his artificial intelligence. “I think, friend, we are poised on the edge of a most dangerous situation.”

  Chapter Two

  The big house on Bidwell Parkway stood eerily quiet. Apart from the single steamie that answered the door—a high-quality silver unit—nothing seemed to stir.

  What a sin, Brendan thought, for one old man to have such a house to himself when people in this city went without a place to lay their heads. How could some have so much and some so little?

  Brendan identified himself and Kelly, and the steamie ushered them in. “I would like to interview the staff,” he told it, “and examine the scene of death. Are all members of staff still here?”

  “Yes, Officer.” The steamie had slight damage to its voice box and squeaked as it spoke. The sound grated on Brendan’s nerves.

  “How many of you are there?”

  “Six, sir. We were greater in number before last week. Master Bell sent two of us to the yard then.”

  “To the yard?” Brendan echoed.

  “The scrap man,” Kelly explained, “where units are broken down and parts reused.”

  “I see.” Brendan eyed Kelly askance. A motive? Kelly’s expression, as always, remained bland. “Well, please call your fellow units so we may ask them some questions.”

  “Sir, we have already been questioned.”

  “I understand that. I would like to interview all of you again.”

  “Yes, Officer. Please come into the parlor, sirs.”

  The room, large and high-ceilinged, stood flooded with light. No question but this was the crime scene—the air still reeked of blood.

  Indeed, walking farther into the room, Brendan saw that none of it had been cleaned up. The body may have been taken away to the morgue, but the blood—and other body fluids—lay pooled on the rug beside an armchair that showed great splashes of spatter.

 

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