began to undo the cord which bound it. 
Brent looked startled, then caught himself. He had known Flint for 
some time--an adventurer, more or less unscrupulous, who had been the 
foreign representative of International Patents. 
Flint took off his coat and threw it on a chair with an air of assurance 
that seemed to increase Brent's anxiety, then began again to untie the 
bulky package. 
"Just a moment, Flint," cautioned Brent, stopping him. 
With an air of uneasy secrecy Brent hurried to the door that led from 
the dining-room to the conservatory and bolted it securely. Then he 
made sure that the door to the library was bolted. 
As he did so he did not see his secretary, Zita, watching in the hall, for 
the footsteps of Locke, approaching, had caught her quick ear and she 
had fled. 
"Locke!" called Brent, hearing his laboratory, manager. "Under no 
circumstances allow me to be disturbed to-night." 
"Very well, sir," responded Locke. 
Just then the light step of Eva was heard on the stairs. 
"What's the matter, father?" she asked, still upset by the events of the 
afternoon. "Is there anything wrong?" 
"No, my dear, nothing," hastily replied Brent. "In the morning I shall 
have something to say to you. Now run along like a good girl." 
Dutifully Eva turned. Brent watched her out of sight. Then with a keen 
look at Locke he pulled out a paper from his pocket and handed it to 
the young scientist, who read: 
BRENT,--This is my last warning. If you persist in your course you
will be struck down by the Madagascar madness. Q. 
Locke looked up from the scrawl in alarmed perplexity. 
"What does this mean?" he queried. 
Brent merely shook his head cryptically. 
"Study this message. I shall have something very important to tell you 
in the morning." 
As Brent turned back into the library he paused a moment and looked 
after Locke, hesitating, as if he would call him back. Then he decided 
not to do so, turned, and carefully locked the door from the 
dining-room into the hallway. 
Eva was waiting at the head of the stairs as Locke, perplexed by the 
strange actions of his employer, came up. 
"What is the trouble?" she repeated, anxiously. "Please tell me. Is there 
anything wrong?" 
"No--nothing," reassured Locke, in spite of his own doubt. "Everything 
is all right." 
"I hope so." Eva lingered. "Good night." 
Locke bowed admiringly. But there was the same restraint in his look 
that had been shown in the afternoon. 
"Good night," he murmured, slowly. 
Eva quite understood, and there was a smile of encouragement on her 
face as she turned away and flitted down the hall to her room. 
Outside, Zita had hurried from the house to the nearest public 
telephone-booth and was frantically calling Balcom at his apartment. 
"Mr. Balcom," she repeated, breathlessly, as the junior partner
answered, "Flint has returned. I have seen him." 
"The devil!" exclaimed Balcom, angrily, then checked himself before 
he said any more. "Keep me informed." 
Abruptly he hung up. 
It was scarcely a moment later that Paul Balcom entered the Balcom 
apartment, admitted by a turbaned black suggestive of the Orient. 
Paul was surly and had evidently been drinking, for he shoved the 
servant roughly out of the way as he strode toward his father. 
Apparently outside Paul had overheard and had gathered the drift of 
what Balcom had been saying. Or perhaps, from his own sources of 
information, he already knew. At any rate, as Balcom turned from the 
telephone, father and son faced each other angrily. 
"Brent's lying," exclaimed Paul. "That marriage to me must take place 
to-morrow." 
Talking angrily, sometimes in agreement, at others far apart, the two 
left the room. 
Back in the dining-room by this time Brent had rejoined Flint and now 
watched him eagerly as he took the last wrappings from the package 
which he had carried so carefully. 
As the last wrapping was stripped from it, on the table before them lay 
a small steel model, perhaps three feet high--a weird-looking thing in 
the miniature shape of a man, designed along lines that only a cubist 
could have conceived--jointed, mobile, truly a contrivance at which to 
marvel. 
Brent gazed incredulously at the strange thing. "An automaton!" he 
exclaimed. 
"More than that," replied Flint, calmly.
Flint unrolled a chart of the human nervous system and spread it out on 
the table. Pointing to the brain, he leaned over tensely, and whispered: 
"This model is merely a piece of mechanism. But the real automaton 
possesses a human brain which has been transplanted into it and made 
to guide it." 
For a moment Brent listened incredulously, then sat back in his chair 
and laughed skeptically. But even Flint recognized that there was a 
hollowness in the laughter. 
"Do you mean to    
    
		
	
	
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