You can say "They ordered her to return the book." When you do that, you are not changing the mood of any verb. Rather, you are replacing one noun clause ("that she return the book") with a different noun clause ("to return the book").
Infinitives act as nouns, adjectives, or adverbs. They serve very well to create noun clauses. The one thing infinitives are unable to do is to act as verbs. An infinitive never has a subject, whereas verbs do.
"That" has the ability to transform any sentence into a noun clause:
"I like that she sings well."
Now, "she return the book" is not a good sentence because the subjunctive mood needs some verb that fits it, but "that she return the book" is a good noun clause using subjunctive mood. Other nouns work just as well:
"They ordered her cooperation."
Present participles can also be used this way:
"They suggested her going to school"
in which "her" is an indirect object and "going to school" is a noun phrase acting as the direct object.