John Russell Fearn

Triangle of Power


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herself. These dynamics provided him with an interstellar canvas, thus ensuring that the series would remain ahead of reality.

      Fearn’s strategy was a great success, and the Amazon novels retained their popularity, ending only with his tragically early death in 1960. By then he had written a further twenty Amazon novels, and made preliminary notes for his next (which would later be written by Fearn’s biographer, Philip Harbottle).

      Long after Fearn’s death, his entire Amazon series would eventually see print from the pioneering US small press Gryphon Books in limited paperback editions, and later by the Canadian Battered Silicon Dispatch Box small press in their hardcover Omnibus series.

      This new Borgo Press paperback series will be the first trade edition of all twenty-one of these later novels by Fearn, beginning with the seventh novel in the original series. First published in 1949 as Conquest of the Amazon, I have edited it slightly as World Beneath Ice (The Golden Amazon Saga, Book One) so that it can be read and enjoyed by new readers who may be totally unfamiliar with what had gone before. Subsequent novels have also been slightly edited for modern readers.

      The publishers hope that this new series may create many more “fans of the Amazon.” Meanwhile, any reader interested in seeking out the earlier six Golden Amazon novels will find that they are readily available on the internet, and in numerous earlier paperback and hardcover editions.

      * * * *

      To date, readers can enjoy the following new Borgo Press editions:

      Book One: World Beneath Ice

      In destroying the threat of an alien invasion, the Golden Amazon had inadvertently caused a decline in the sun’s heat, encasing Earth in an ice sheet that threatens to eliminate humanity. The Amazon encounters Abna, a descendant of Atlantis, stronger and even more scientifically advanced than she, and the ruler of an Atlantean colony still surviving in a protected environment on Jupiter. She refuses his offer of marriage, but agrees to form an alliance in order to restore the sun and save the Earth. One thing that Abna has not told the Amazon is that all the females of his race have been wiped out by a bacilli infection....

      Book Two: Lord of Atlantis

      A gigantic ridge of land rises from the Atlantic floor, causing massive tidal waves on either side of the ocean. Even stranger, both England and America are then assailed by an invasion of prehistoric monsters! A gigantic domed city rests on the newly risen plateau, whilst out in space an alien spacecraft orbits the Earth. Such are the mysteries and challenges facing the Golden Amazon, self-appointed governess of Earth, as she struggles to unravel the maze of mystery that was the deadly legacy of Atlantis!

      CHAPTER ONE

      HONEYMOON IN SPACE

      Westminster Abbey in the late twenty-first century—not the time-­honoured edifice of grey stone and exquisite carvings beloved of history, but a bigger and even more lavish recreation. Around it people in tens of thousands, packing the streets and paths and parks, all straining for a glimpse of the pair who were to be married this day, the most extraordinary man and woman who had ever stepped into Earth history and directed its destiny by scientific power—Violet Ray Brant, The Golden Amazon, and Abna of Jupiter, descendant of Atlantis.

      The breathtaking loveliness of’ the woman was something which held those nearest to her in thrall. She looked her eternal twenty-five, graceful in her oyster-satin gown. The bridal veil somewhat masked the shimmering gold of her hair, but it left the beauty of her features untouched. The mouth was full and red, the chin rounded but strong, the eyes a deep violet—unfathomable. Here was the woman who had a scientist’s gift of super­human strength and scientific intel­ligence, a woman whose brain had more than once saved the Earth from disaster and even rekindled a dying sun.

      Yet still there was one cleverer—and stronger: the nearly seven-foot giant at her side. The grey suit he was wearing seemed inappropriate. He needed the toga-like uniform of his race. He was as handsome as the woman was beautiful.

      The wedding was over. It was a signal for a stirring among the people. Among them, toward the rear of the mighty church, a slender man with heliotrope-coloured eyes sat musing. He was half smiling, a smile of scorn as if he considered this cere­mony the height of absurdity.

      Neither the Amazon nor Abna noticed him as they went on their way to a limousine that took them to the main London airport, where in a special enclosure lay the giant gleaming space machine Ultra, owned by the Amazon.

      Honeymoon among the stars. That was the plan. Out in the wastes of space, once they had cleared the space-traffic lines operated between Earth, the Moon, and Mars by the Dodd Space Line, they could find the peace and solitude that only the limitless void could give.

      The Ultra took off in a blaze of exhaust tubes; then the fiery trail ceased as the atomic power plant took over. The man with heliotrope eyes was in the crowd, watching the speck vanish in the sky. He smiled, again with scorn. Sefner Quorne, ex-adviser of Abna and master scientist, had plans of his own to put in oper­ation while the Amazon and Abna were away.

      Unaware of the intrigue in the mind of their sworn enemy—whom they had not seen since he had made an unsuccessful attempt to destroy all females in the Earth race many months before—Abna and the Amazon looked out on to the slowly shrinking globe from which they had come. They had changed now into attire more appropriate for their voyaging—the Amazon into a tight black suit with a golden belt at the waist; Abna into the toga-like costume of his race.

      Mightily muscled, head and shoulders taller than the girl be had wed, he stood with his hand on her shoulder looking out of the main port.

      “King and queen of Earth, Vi,” he murmured. “Just as I said we would be.”

      The Amazon did not answer. Her eyes glanced over the switchboard at the automatic controls, then back at the massive atomic power plant. Even at this moment her mind was on the scientific issues upon which life or death depended. Any flaw in the mechanism or driving power of the Ultra could bring destruction.

      “Nothing on our minds,” Abna added, smiling down on her in the quiet, patronizing way she still found irritat­ing. “No need to exert our knowledge or strength to crush some foe. Just you and I and the stars, and the future.”

      “Yes,” the Amazon murmured, and gazed outside.

      The endless stars were flung into infinity like diamonds on velvet. They were depthless, fantastically glittering, immeasurable. The sun blazed with his flaming girdle of prominences and eerie, space-flung corona; the moon sailed majestically, basking in her master’s light. Venus, Mars, Mercury—and more distant, the orbits of the giant outer planets and their scatterings of attendant moons. And beyond it all, like a great misty sluice pouring out of infinity, hung the Milky Way Galaxy, the swirling core from which Earth herself had been born in forgotten time.

      Abna said: “You said something about going to the end of the System for the honeymoon, Vi. Think we’ve got enough power to do it?”

      “Had I not thought that, I wouldn’t have suggested it.”

      Abna frowned slightly. “What kind of an answer is that for your husband? I only asked a simple question. You don’t have to bite my head off.”

      “Sorry, Abna.” The Amazon gave a faint smile. “I hadn’t quite realized—I’m inclined to get brusque when I’m thinking about something.”

      Withdrawing from the gentle grip Abna had on her shoulder, she settled at the control board and began the complicated task of plotting the course through space. Abna watched her for a while, then he looked puzzled.

      “Taking a chance, aren’t you?” he asked. “Pulling in so close to Jupiter, I mean? You know what kind of a gravitational pull he’s got; if we drop into it we’ll consume nearly all our power trying to get out.”

      “It won’t be the first time we’ve pulled away from Jupiter,” the Amazon smiled. “Besides, our honeymoon would hardly be complete if we didn’t pass close to the planet from which you came, would it?”

      “But