Quentin turned to Eva to take her in his arms when there was a terrific crash of glass in the conservatory, the splintering of wood, and the Automaton, arms swinging like flails, charged like a mad thing into the room.
Its terrorizing eyes were agleam, its one desire destruction. A large table stood in its way and it demolished it as though it were matchwood.
The interruption came so abruptly that Brent, who in his right mind had never seen the fiend and was now seeing it for the first time, was paralyzed with horror. He tried to rise from his chair, but in his weak condition fell back, helpless.
Quentin made a flying leap over the demolished table and placed himself directly in front of Brent and in the path of the monster. Doctor Q, Zita, and Eva started for Locke’s side, but he waved them back frantically.
Locke reached into his pocket and drew out his gas-pistol. The Automaton was almost upon him when he raised his arm and fired.
There was a blinding flash and a dull report. The Automaton stopped in his tracks and, raising one mighty hand to its chest, staggered backward. Again Quentin fired, and the Automaton slowly crumpled, sinking to one knee. There was no need to fire again, for suddenly the monster crashed to the floor and lay still.
Locke started forward, but Eva shrieked for him to stand back. She had not forgotten that once she had thought the monster dead and it had suddenly seized her and almost crushed out her life.
There was, however, nothing to fear this time. Quentin reassured her that the gas fumes had passed away, then knelt by the iron terror. He tried to remove the steel headpiece, but before he could accomplish it the doctor came forward and in a moment had unfastened the bolts.
As they were doing so a thick voice from inside could be distinguished, muttering words about the capture of Brent and Zita just before Balcom was killed, the escape of Zita, the rescue of Brent, the killing of Dora, who had evidently come to betray something in jealousy. It was all incoherent and Doctor Q and Quentin hastened to uncasque the man within.
They lifted off the helmet and there was the contorted and dying face of Paul Balcom, who had, in desperation, taken his father’s place in a vain hope to secure the fortune for himself.
The poison was too strong, and as the girls turned, sickened, away, the evil features froze, more evil than ever they had been in his evil life.
* * * * *
A few days later a brilliant wedding took place at Brent Rock, which itself was a present to the bride and groom.
After the guests had thinned out, Quentin and Eva strolled into the garden, no longer in fear of attack from the steel Automaton.
Eva glanced at her ring, musing.
“After all the things from which you have escaped, dear,” she murmured, a bit timidly, “I am afraid nothing in the world can hold you.”