FACT:
The
Priory of Sion—a European secret society founded in 1099—is
a real organization. In 1975, Paris's Bibliothèque Nationale
discovered parchments known as Les Dossiers Secrets, identifying
numerous members of the Priory of Sion, including Sir Isaac Newton,
Botticelli, Victor Hugo, and Leonardo da Vinci.
The
Vatican prelature known as Opus Dei is a deeply devout Catholic group
that has been the topic of recent controversy due to reports of brain-washing,
coercion, and a practice known as "corporal mortification." Opus Dei
has just completed construction of a $47 million National Headquarters
at 243 Lexington Avenue in New York City.
All
descriptions of artwork, architecture, documents, and secret rituals
in this novel are accurate.
PROLOGUE
LOUVRE MUSEUM, PARIS
10:46 P.M.
Renowned
curator Jacques Saunière staggered through the vaulted archway of
the museum's Grand Gallery. He lunged for the nearest painting he
could see, a Carravagio. Grabbing the gilded frame, the seventy-three-year-old
man heaved the masterpiece toward himself until it tore from the wall
and Saunière collapsed backward in a heap beneath the canvas.
As he
anticipated, a thundering iron gate fell nearby, barricading the entrance
to the suite. The parquet floor shook. Far off, an alarm began to
ring.
The
curator lay a moment, gasping for breath, taking stock. I am still
alive. He crawled out from under the canvas and scanned the cavernous
space for someplace to hide.
A
voice spoke, chillingly close. "Do not move."
On
his hands and knees, the curator froze, turning his head slowly.
Only
fifteen feet away, outside the sealed gate, the mountainous silhouette
of his attacker stared through the iron bars. He was broad and tall,
with ghost-pale skin and thinning white hair. His irises were pink
with dark red pupils. The albino drew a pistol from his coat and aimed
the long silencer through the bars, directly at the curator. "You
should not have run." His accent was not easy to place. "Now tell
me where it is."
"I
told you already," the curator stammered, kneeling defenseless on
the floor of the gallery. "I have no idea what you are talking
about!"
"You
are lying." The man stared at him, perfectly immobile except for the
glint in his ghostly eyes. "You and your brethren possess something
that is not yours."
The
curator felt a surge of adrenalin. How could he possibly know this?
"Tonight
the rightful guardians will be restored. Tell me where it is hidden,
and you will live." The man leveled his gun at the curator's
head. "Is it a secret you will die for?"
Saunière
could not breathe.
The
man tilted his head and closed one eye, peering down the barrel of
his gun.
Saunière
held up his hands in defense. "Wait," he said slowly. "I will tell
you what you need to know." The curator spoke his next words carefully.
The lie he told was one he had rehearsed many times…each time praying
he would never have to use it.
When
the curator had finished speaking, his assailant smiled smugly. "Yes.
This is exactly what the others told me."
Saunière
recoiled. The others?
"I
found them, too," the huge man taunted. "All three of them. They confirmed
what you have just said."
It
cannot be! The curator's true identity, along with the identities
of his three sénéchaux, was almost as sacred as the ancient
secret they protected.
Saunière now realized his sénéchaux, following strict procedure,
had told the same lie before their own deaths. It was part of the
protocol.
The
attacker aimed his gun again. "When you are gone, I will be the only
one who knows the truth."
The
truth. In an instant, the curator grasped the true horror of the
situation. If I die, the truth will be lost forever. Instinctively,
he tried to scramble for cover.
The
silencer spat, and the curator felt a searing heat as the bullet lodged
in his stomach. He fell forward…struggling against the pain. Slowly,
Saunière rolled over and stared back through the bars at his attacker.
The
man was now taking dead aim at Saunière's head.
Saunière
closed his eyes, his thoughts a swirling tempest of fear and regret.
The
click of an empty chamber echoed through the corridor.
The
curator's eyes flew open.
The
man glanced down at his weapon, looking almost amused. He reached
for a second clip, but then seemed to reconsider, smirking calmly
at Saunière's gut. "My work here is done."
The
curator looked down and saw the bullet hole in his white linen shirt.
It was framed by a small circle of blood a few inches below his breastbone.
My stomach. Almost cruelly, the bullet had missed his heart. As
a veteran of La Guerre d'Algérie, the curator had witnessed
this horribly drawn out death before. For fifteen minutes, he would
survive as his stomach acids seeped into his chest cavity, slowly
poisoning him from within.
"Pain
is good, monsieur," the man said.
Then
he was gone.
Alone
now, Jacques Saunière turned his gaze again to the iron gate. He was
trapped, and the doors could not be reopened for at least twenty minutes.
By the time anyone got to him, he would be dead. Even so, the fear
that now gripped him was a fear far greater than that of his own death.
I
must pass on the secret.
Staggering
to his feet, he pictured his three murdered brethren. He thought of
the generations who had come before them…of the mission with which
they had all been entrusted.
An
unbroken chain of knowledge.
Suddenly, now, despite all the precautions…despite all the fail safes…Jacques
Saunière was the only remaining link, the sole guardian of one of
the most powerful secrets ever kept.
Shivering,
he pulled himself to his feet.
I
must find some way….
He
was trapped inside the Grand Gallery, and there existed only one person
on earth to whom he could pass the torch. Saunière gazed up at the
walls of his opulent prison. A collection of the world's most famous
paintings seemed to smile down on him like old friends.
Wincing
in pain, he summoned all of his faculties and strength. The desperate
task before him, he knew, would require every remaining second of
his life.
CHAPTER 1
Robert
Langdon awoke slowly.
A
telephone was ringing in the darkness-a tinny, unfamiliar ring. He
fumbled for the bedside lamp and turned it on. Squinting at his surroundings
he saw a plush Renaissance bedroom with Louis XVI furniture, hand-frescoed
walls, and a colossal mahogany four-poster bed.
Where
the hell am I?
The
jacquard bathrobe hanging on his bedpost bore the monogram: HOTEL
RITZ PARIS.
Slowly,
the fog began to lift.
Langdon
picked up the receiver. "Hello?"
"Monsieur
Langdon?" a man's voice said. "I hope I have not awoken you?"
Dazed,
Langdon looked at the bedside clock. It was 12:32 A.M. He had been
asleep only an hour, but he felt like the dead.
"This
is the concierge, monsieur. I apologize for this intrusion, but you
have a visitor. He insists it is urgent."
Langdon
still felt fuzzy. A visitor? His eyes focused now on a crumpled
flyer on his bedside table.
THE AMERICAN UNIVERSITY OF PARIS
proudly presents
an evening with Robert Langdon
Professor of Religious Symbology, Harvard University
Langdon
groaned. Tonight's lecture-a slide show about pagan symbolism hidden
in the stones of Chartres Cathedral-had probably ruffled some conservative
feathers in the audience. Most likely, some religious scholar had trailed
him home to pick a fight.
"I'm
sorry," Langdon said, "but I'm very tired and-"
"Mais
monsieur," the concierge pressed, lowering his voice to an urgent
whisper. "Your guest is an important man."
Langdon
had little doubt. His books on religious paintings and cult symbology
had made him a reluctant celebrity in the art world, and last year Langdon's
visibility had increased a hundred-fold after his involvement in a widely
publicized incident at the Vatican. Since then, the stream of self-important
historians and art buffs arriving at his door had seemed never-ending.
"If
you would be so kind," Langdon said, doing his best to remain polite,
"could you take the man's name and number, and tell him I'll try to
call him before I leave Paris on Tuesday? Thank you." He hung up before
the concierge could protest.
Sitting
up now, Langdon frowned at his bedside Guest Relations Handbook, whose
cover boasted: SLEEP LIKE A BABY IN THE CITY OF LIGHTS. SLUMBER AT THE
PARIS RITZ. He turned and gazed tiredly into the full-length mirror
across the room. The man staring back at him was a stranger-tousled
and weary.
You
need a vacation, Robert.
The
past year had taken a heavy toll on him, but he didn't appreciate seeing
proof in the mirror. His usually sharp blue eyes looked hazy and drawn
tonight. A dark stubble was shrouding his strong jaw and dimpled chin.
Around his temples, the gray highlights were advancing, making their
way deeper into his thicket of coarse black hair. Although his female
colleagues insisted the gray only accentuated his bookish appeal, Langdon
knew better.
If
Boston Magazine could see me now.
Last
month, much to Langdon's embarrassment, Boston Magazine had listed
him as one of that city's top ten most intriguing people-a dubious honor
that made him the brunt of endless ribbing by his Harvard colleagues.
Tonight, three thousand miles from home, the accolade had resurfaced
to haunt him at the lecture he had given.
"Ladies
and gentlemen…" the hostess had announced to a full house at The American
University of Paris's Pavillon Dauphine, "Our guest tonight
needs no introduction. He is the author of numerous books: The
Symbology of Secret Sects, The Art of the Illuminati, The Lost Language
of Ideograms, and when I say he wrote the book on Religious
Iconology, I mean that quite literally. Many of you use his textbooks
in class."
The students
in the crowd nodded enthusiastically.
"I had planned
to introduce him tonight by sharing his impressive curriculum vitae. However…"
She glanced playfully at Langdon, who was seated onstage. "An audience
member has just handed me a far more, shall we say…intriguing introduction."
She held up a copy of Boston Magazine.
Langdon
cringed. Where the hell did she get that?
The hostess
began reading choice excerpts from the inane article, and Langdon felt
himself sinking lower and lower in his chair. Thirty seconds later, the
crowd was grinning, and the woman showed no signs of letting up. "And
Mr. Langdon's refusal to speak publicly about his unusual role in last
year's Vatican conclave certainly wins him points on our intrigue-o-meter."
The hostess goaded the crowd. "Would you like to hear more?"
The crowd
applauded.
Somebody
stop her, Langdon pleaded as she dove into the article again.
"Although
Professor Langdon might not be considered hunk-handsome like some of our
younger awardees, this forty-six-year-old academic has more than his share
of scholarly allure. His captivating presence is punctuated by an unusually
low, baritone speaking voice, which his female students describe as 'chocolate
for the ears.'''
The hall
erupted in laughter.
Langdon
forced an awkward smile. He knew what came next-some ridiculous line about
"Harrison Ford in Harris tweed"-and because this evening he had figured
it was finally safe again to wear his Harris tweed and Burberry turtleneck,
he decided to take action.
"Thank you,
Monique," Langdon said, standing prematurely and edging her away from
the podium. "Boston Magazine clearly has a gift for fiction." He
turned to the audience with an embarrassed sigh. "And if I find which
one of you provided that article, I'll have the consulate deport you."
The crowd
laughed.
"Well,
folks, as you all know, I'm here tonight to talk about the power of
symbols…"
The ringing
of Langdon's hotel phone once again broke the silence.
Groaning
in disbelief, he picked up. "Yes?"
As expected,
it was the concierge. "Mr. Langdon, again my apologies. I am calling
to inform you that your guest is now en route to your room. I thought
I should alert you."
Langdon
was wide awake now. "You sent someone to my room?"
"I apologize,
monsieur, but a man like this…I cannot presume the authority to stop
him."
"Who exactly
is he?"
But the
concierge was gone.
Almost
immediately, a heavy fist pounded on Langdon's door.
Uncertain,
Langdon slid off the bed, feeling his toes sink deep into the savonniere
carpet. He donned the hotel bathrobe and moved toward the door. "Who
is it?"
"Mr. Langdon?
I need to speak with you." The man's English was accented-a sharp, authoritative
bark. "My name is Lieutenant Jérome Collet. Direction Centrale Police
Judiciaire."
Langdon
paused. The Judicial Police? The DCPJ were the rough equivalent
of the U.S. FBI.
Leaving
the security chain in place, Langdon opened the door a few inches. The
face staring back at him was thin and washed out. The man was exceptionally
lean, dressed in an official-looking blue uniform.
"May I
come in?" the agent asked.
Langdon
hesitated, feeling uncertain as the stranger's sallow eyes studied him.
"What is this is all about?"
"My capitaine
requires your expertise in a private matter."
"Now?"
Langdon managed. "It's after midnight."
"Am I
correct that you were scheduled to meet with the curator of the Louvre
this evening? "
Langdon
felt a sudden surge of uneasiness. He and the revered curator Jacques
Saunière had been slated to meet for drinks after Langdon's lecture
tonight, but Saunière had never shown up. "Yes. How did you know that?"
"We found
your name in his daily planner."
"I trust
nothing is wrong?"
The agent
gave a dire sigh and slid a Polaroid snapshot through the narrow opening
in the door.
When Langdon
saw the photo, his entire body went rigid.
"This
photo was taken less than an hour ago. Inside the Louvre."
As Langdon
stared at the bizarre image, his initial revulsion and shock gave way
to a sudden upwelling of anger. "Who would do this!"
"We had
hoped that you might help us answer that very question, considering
your knowledge in symbology and your plans to meet with him."
Langdon
stared at the picture, his horror now laced with fear. The image was
gruesome and profoundly strange, bringing with it an unsettling sense
of déjà vu. A little over a year ago, Langdon had received a photograph
of a corpse and a similar request for help. Twenty-four hours later,
he had almost lost his life inside Vatican City. This photo was entirely
different, and yet something about the scenario felt disquietingly familiar.
The agent
checked his watch. "My capitaine is waiting, sir." Langdon barely heard
him. His eyes were still riveted on the picture. "This symbol here,
and the way his body is so oddly…"
"Positioned?"
the agent offered.
Langdon
nodded, feeling a chill as he looked up. "I can't imagine who would
do this to someone."
The agent
looked grim. "You don't understand, Mr. Langdon. What you see in this
photograph…" He paused. "Monsieur Saunière did that to himself."
CHAPTER 2
One mile
away, the hulking albino named Silas limped through the front gate of
the luxurious brownstone residence on Rue la Bruyère. The spiked cilice
belt that he wore around his thigh cut into his flesh, and yet his soul
sang with satisfaction of service to the Lord.
Pain
is good.
His
red eyes scanned the lobby as he entered the residence. Empty. He climbed
the stairs quietly, not wanting to awaken any of his fellow numeraries.
His bedroom door was open; locks were forbidden here. He entered, closing
the door behind him.
The room
was spartan-hardwood floors, a pine dresser, a canvas mat in the corner
that served as his bed. He was a visitor here this week, and yet for
many years he had been blessed with a similar sanctuary in New York
City.
The
Lord has provided me shelter and purpose in my life.
Tonight,
at last, Silas felt he had begun to repay his debt. Hurrying to the
dresser, he found the cell phone hidden in his bottom drawer and placed
a call to a private extension.
"Yes?"
a male voice answered.
"Teacher,
I have returned."
"Speak,"
the voice commanded, sounding pleased to hear from him.
"All four
are gone. The three sénéchaux…and the grandmaster himself."
There
was a momentary pause, as if for prayer. "Then I assume you have the
information?"
"All four
concurred. Independently."
"And you
believed them?"
"Their
agreement was too great for coincidence."
An excited
breath. "Superb. I had feared the brotherhood's reputation for secrecy
might prevail."
"The prospect
of death is strong motivation."
"So, my
pupil, tell me what I must know."
Silas
knew the information he had gleaned from his victims would come as a
shock. "Teacher, all four confirmed the existence of the clef de voûte…the
legendary keystone."
He heard
a quick intake of breath over the phone and could feel the Teacher's
excitement. "The keystone. Exactly as we suspected."
According
to lore, the brotherhood had created a map of stone-a clef de voûte…or
keystone—an engraved tablet that revealed the final resting
place of the brotherhood's greatest secret…information so powerful that
its protection was the reason for the brotherhood's very existence.
"When
we possess the keystone," the Teacher said, "we will be only one step
away."
"We are
closer than you think. The keystone is here in Paris."
"Paris?
Incredible. It is almost too easy."
Silas
relayed the earlier events of the evening…how all four of his victims,
moments before death, had desperately tried to buy back their Godless
lives by telling their secret. Each had told Silas the exact same thing-that
the keystone was ingeniously hidden at a precise location inside one
of Paris's ancient churches—Eglise de Saint-Sulpice. "
Inside
a House of the Lord," the Teacher exclaimed. "How they mock us!"
"As they
have for centuries."
The Teacher
fell silent, as if letting the triumph of this moment settle over him.
Finally, he spoke. "You have done a great service to God. We have waited
centuries for this. You must retrieve the stone for me. Immediately.
Tonight. You understand the stakes."
Silas
knew the stakes were incalculable, and yet what the Teacher was now
commanding seemed impossible. "But the church, it is a fortress. Especially
at night. How will I enter?"
With the confident tone of man of enormous influence, the Teacher explained
what was to be done.
When
Silas hung up the phone, his skin tingled with anticipation.
One hour,
he told himself, grateful that the Teacher had given him time to carry
out the necessary penance before entering a house of God. I must
purge my soul of today's sins. The sins committed today had been
Holy in purpose. Acts of war against the enemies of God had been committed
for centuries. Forgiveness was assured.
Even so,
Silas knew, absolution required sacrifice.
Pulling
his shades, he stripped naked and knelt in the center of his room. Looking
down, he examined the spiked cilice belt clamped around his thigh.
All true followers of The Way wore this device-a leather strap, studded
with sharp metal barbs that cut into the flesh as a perpetual reminder
of Christ's suffering. The pain caused by the device also helped counteract
the desires of the flesh.
Although
Silas already had worn his cilice today longer than the requisite
two hours, he knew today was no ordinary day. Grasping the buckle, he
cinched it one notch tighter, wincing as the barbs dug deeper into his
flesh. Exhaling slowly, he savored the cleansing ritual of his pain.
Pain
is good, Silas whispered, repeating the sacred mantra of Father
Josemaria Escriva-the Teacher of all Teachers. Although Escriva had
died in 1975, his wisdom lived on, his words still whispered by thousands
of faithful servants around the globe as they knelt on the floor and
performed the sacred practice known as "corporal mortification."
Silas
turned his attention now to a heavy knotted rope coiled neatly on the
floor beside him. The Discipline. The knots were caked with dried
blood. Eager for the purifying effects of his own agony, Silas said
a quick prayer. Then, gripping one end of the rope, he closed his eyes
and swung it hard over his shoulder, feeling the knots slap against
his back. He whipped it over his shoulder again, slashing at his flesh.
Again and again, he lashed.
Castigo
corpus meum.
Finally,
he felt the blood begin to flow.
CHAPTER 3
The
crisp April air whipped through the open window of the Citroën ZX
as it skimmed south past the Opera House and crossed Place Vendôme.
In the passenger seat, Robert Langdon felt the city tear past him
as he tried to clear his thoughts. His quick shower and shave had
left him looking reasonably presentable but had done little to ease
his anxiety. The frightening image of the curator's body remained
locked in his mind.
Jacques
Saunière is dead.
Langdon
could not help but feel a deep sense of loss at the curator's death.
Despite Saunière's reputation for being reclusive, his recognition
for dedication to the arts made him an easy man to revere. His books
on the secret codes hidden in the paintings of Poussin and Teniers
were some of Langdon's favorite classroom texts. Tonight's meeting
had been one Langdon was very much looking forward to, and he was
disappointed when the curator had not shown.
Again
the image of the curator's body flashed in his mind. Jacques Saunière
did that to himself? Langdon turned and looked out the window,
forcing the picture from his mind.
Outside,
the city was just now winding down-street vendors wheeling carts of
candied amandes, waiters carrying bags of garbage to the curb,
a pair of late night lovers cuddling to stay warm in a breeze scented
with juniper blossom. The Citroën navigated the chaos with authority,
its dissonant two-tone siren parting the traffic like a knife.
"Le
capitaine was pleased to discover you were still in Paris tonight,"
the agent said, speaking for the first time since they'd left the
hotel. "A fortunate coincidence."
Langdon
was feeling anything but fortunate, and coincidence was a concept
he did not entirely trust. As someone who had spent his life exploring
the hidden interconnectivity of disparate emblems and ideologies,
Langdon viewed the world as a web of profoundly intertwined histories
and events. The connections may be invisible, he often preached
to his symbology classes at Harvard, but they are always there,
buried just beneath the surface.
"I
assume," Langdon said, "that American University in Paris told you
where I was staying?"
The
driver shook his head. "Interpol."
Interpol,
Langdon thought. Of course. He had forgotten that the seemingly
innocuous request of all European hotels to see a passport at check-in
was more than a quaint formality-it was the law. On any given night,
all across Europe, Interpol officials could pinpoint exactly who was
sleeping where. Finding Langdon at the Ritz had probably taken all
of five seconds.
As the
Citroën accelerated southward across the city, the illuminated profile
of the Eiffel Tower appeared, shooting skyward in the distance to
the right. Seeing it, Langdon thought of Vittoria, recalling their
playful promise a year ago that every six months they would meet again
at a different romantic spot on the globe. The Eiffel Tower, Langdon
suspected, would have made their list. Sadly, he last kissed Vittoria
in a noisy airport in Rome more than a year ago.
"Did
you mount her?" the agent asked, looking over.
Langdon
glanced up, certain he had misunderstood. "I beg your pardon?"
"She
is lovely, no?" The agent motioned through the windshield toward the
Eiffel Tower.
"Have
you mounted her?"
Langdon
rolled his eyes. "No, I haven't climbed the tower."
"She is the symbol of France. I think she is perfect." Langdon nodded
absently. Symbologists often remarked that France-a country renowned
for machismo, womanizing, and diminutive insecure leaders like Napoleon
and Pepin the Short-could not have chosen a more apt national emblem
than a thousand-foot phallus.
When
they reached the intersection at Rue de Rivoli, the traffic light
was red, but the Citroën didn't slow. The agent gunned the sedan across
the junction and sped onto a wooded section of Rue Castiglione, which
served as the northern entrance to the famed Tuileries Gardens-Paris's
own version of Central Park. Most tourists mistranslated Jardins
des Tuileries as relating to the thousands of tulips that bloomed
here, but Tuileries was actually a literal reference to something
far less romantic. This park had once been an enormous, polluted excavation
pit from which Parisian contractors mined clay to manufacture the
city's famous red roofing tiles-or tuiles.
As they
entered the deserted park, the agent reached under the dash and turned
off the blaring siren. Langdon exhaled, savoring the sudden quiet.
Outside the car, the pale wash of halogen headlights skimmed over
the crushed gravel parkway, the rugged whirr of the tires intoning
a hypnotic rhythm. Langdon had always considered the Tuileries to
be sacred ground. These were the gardens in which Claude Monet had
experimented with form and color, and literally inspired the birth
of the Impressionist movement. Tonight, however, this place held a
strange aura of foreboding.
The
Citroën swerved left now, angling west down the park's central boulevard.
Curling around a circular pond, the driver cut across a desolate avenue
out into a wide quadrangle beyond. Langdon could now see the end of
the Tuileries Gardens, marked by a giant stone archway.
Arc
du Carrousel.
Despite
the orgiastic rituals once held at the Arc du Carrousel, art
aficionados revered this place for another reason entirely. From the
esplanade at the end of the Tuileries, four of the finest art museums
in the world could be seen…one at each point of the compass.
Out
the right-hand window, south across the Seine and Quai Voltaire, Langdon
could see the dramatically lit façade of the old train station—now
the esteemed Musée d'Orsay. Glancing left, he could make out
the top of the ultra-modern Pompidou Center, which housed the Museum
of Modern Art. Behind him to the west, Langdon knew the ancient obelisk
of Ramses rose above the trees, marking the Musée Jeu de Paume.
But
it was straight ahead, to the east, through the archway, that Langdon
could now see the monolithic Renaissance palace that had become the
most famous art museum in the world.
Musée du Louvre.
Langdon
felt a familiar tinge of wonder as his eyes made a futile attempt
to absorb the entire mass of the edifice. Across a staggeringly expansive
plaza, the imposing facade of the Louvre rose like a citadel against
the Paris sky. Shaped like an enormous horseshoe, the Louvre was the
longest building in Europe, stretching farther than three Eiffel Towers
laid end to end. Not even the million square feet of open plaza between
the museum wings could challenge the majesty of the façade's breadth.
Langdon had once walked the Louvre's entire perimeter, an astonishing
three-mile journey.
Despite
the estimated five days it would take a visitor to properly appreciate
the 65,300 pieces of art in this building, most tourists chose an
abbreviated experience Langdon referred to as "Louvre Lite"-a full
sprint through the museum to see the three most famous objects: The
Mona Lisa, Venus de Milo, and Winged Victory. Art Buchwald had
once boasted he'd seen all three masterpieces in five minutes and
fifty-six seconds.
The
driver pulled out a handheld walkie-talkie and spoke in rapid-fire
French. "Monsieur Langdon est arrivé. Deux minutes."
An indecipherable
confirmation came crackling back.
The
agent stowed the device, turning now to Langdon. "You will meet the
capitaine at the main entrance."
The
driver ignored the signs prohibiting auto traffic on the plaza, revved
the engine, and gunned the Citroën up over the curb. The Louvre's
main entrance was visible now, rising boldly in the distance, encircled
by seven triangular infinity pools from which spouted illuminated
fountains.
La
Pyramide.
The
new entrance to the Paris Louvre had become almost as famous as the
museum itself. The controversial, neo-modern glass pyramid designed
by Chinese-born American architect I. M. Pei still evoked scorn from
traditionalists who felt it destroyed the dignity of the Renaissance
courtyard. Goethe had described architecture as frozen music, and
Pei's critics described this pyramid as fingernails on a chalkboard.
Progressive admirers, though, hailed Pei's seventy-one-foot tall,
transparent pyramid as a dazzling synergy of ancient structure and
modern method-a symbolic link between the old and new—helping
usher the Louvre into the next millennium.
"Do
you like our pyramid?" the agent asked.
Langdon
frowned. The French, it seemed, loved to ask Americans this. It was
a loaded question, of course. Admitting you liked the pyramid made
you a tasteless American, and expressing dislike was an insult to
the French.
"Mitterrand
was a bold man," Langdon replied, splitting the difference. The late
French president who had commissioned the pyramid was said to have
suffered from a "Pharaoh-complex." Single-handedly responsible for
filling Paris with Egyptian obelisks, art, and artifacts, Francois
Mitterrand had an affinity for Egyptian culture that was so all-consuming
that the French still referred to him as The Sphinx.
"What
is the captain's name?" Langdon asked, changing topics.
"Bezu
Fache," the driver said, approaching the pyramid's main entrance.
"We call him Le Taureau."
Langdon
glanced over at him, wondering if every Frenchman had a mysterious
animal epithet. "You call your captain The Bull?"
The
man arched his eyebrows. "Your French is better than you admit, Monsieur
Langdon."
My
French stinks, Langdon thought, but my zodiac iconography is
pretty good. Taurus was always the bull. Astrology was a symbolic
constant all over the world.
The agent pulled the car to a stop and pointed between two fountains
to a large door in the side of the pyramid. "There is the entrance.
Good luck, monsieur."
"You're
not coming?"
"My
orders are to leave you here. I have other business to attend to."
Langdon
heaved a sigh and climbed out. It's your circus.
The
agent revved his engine and sped off.
As Langdon
stood alone and watched the departing tail lights, he realized he
could easily reconsider, exit the courtyard, grab a taxi, and head
home to bed. Something told him it was probably a lousy idea.
As he
moved toward the mist of the fountains, Langdon had the uneasy sense
he was crossing an imaginary threshold into another world. The dreamlike
quality of the evening was settling around him again. Twenty minutes
ago he had been asleep in his hotel room. Now he was standing in front
of a transparent pyramid built by The Sphinx, waiting for a policeman
they called The Bull.
I'm
trapped in a Salvador Dali painting, he thought.
Langdon
strode to the main entrance-an enormous revolving door. The foyer
beyond was dimly lit and deserted.
Do
I knock?
Langdon
wondered if any of Harvard's revered Egyptologists had ever knocked
on the front door of a pyramid and expected an answer. He raised his
hand to bang on the glass, but out of the darkness below, a figure
appeared, striding up the curving staircase. The man was stocky and
dark, almost Neanderthal, dressed in a dark double-breasted suit that
strained to cover his wide shoulders. He advanced with unmistakable
authority on squat, powerful legs. He was speaking on his cell phone
but finished the call as he arrived. He motioned for Langdon to enter.
"I am
Bezu Fache," he announced as Langdon pushed through the revolving
door. "Captain of the Central Directorate Judicial Police." His tone
was fitting-a guttural rumble…like a gathering storm.
Langdon
held out his hand to shake. "Robert Langdon."
Fache's
enormous palm wrapped around Langdon's with crushing force.
"I saw
the photo," Langdon said. "Your agent said Jacques Saunière himself
did—"
"Mr.
Langdon," Fache's ebony eyes locked on. "What you see in the photo
is only the beginning of what Saunière did."
CHAPTER 4
Captain
Bezu Fache carried himself like an angry ox, with his wide shoulders
thrown back and his chin tucked hard into his chest. His dark hair
was slicked back with oil, accentuating an arrow-like widow's peak
that divided his jutting brow and preceded him like the prow of a
battleship. As he advanced, his dark eyes seemed to scorch the earth
before him, radiating a fiery clarity that forecast his reputation
for unblinking severity in all matters.
Langdon
followed the captain down the famous marble staircase into the sunken
atrium beneath the glass pyramid. As they descended, they passed between
two armed Judicial Police guards with semiautomatic machine guns.
The message was clear: Nobody goes in or out tonight without the blessing
of Captain Fache.
Descending
below ground level, Langdon fought a rising trepidation. Fache's presence
was anything but welcoming, and the Louvre itself had an almost sepulchral
aura at his hour. The staircase, like the aisle of a dark movie theater,
was illuminated by subtle tread-lighting embedded in each step. Langdon
could hear his own footsteps reverberating off the glass overhead.
As he glanced up, he could see the faint illuminated wisps of mist
from the fountains fading away outside the transparent roof.
"Do
you approve?" Fache asked, nodding upward with his broad chin.
Langdon
sighed, too tired to play games. "Yes, your pyramid is magnificent."
Fache
grunted. "A scar on the face of Paris."
Strike
one. Langdon sensed his host was a hard man to please. He wondered
if Fache had any idea that this pyramid, at President Mitterrand's
explicit demand, had been constructed of exactly 666 panes of glass-a
bizarre request that had always been a hot topic among conspiracy
buffs who claimed 666 was the number of Satan.
Langdon
decided not to bring it up.
As they
dropped further into the subterranean foyer, the yawning space slowly
emerged from the shadows. Built fifty-seven feet beneath ground level,
the Louvre's newly constructed 70,000-square-foot lobby spread out
like an endless grotto.
Constructed in warm ochre marble to be compatible with the honey-colored
stone of the Louvre façade above, the subterranean hall was usually
vibrant with sunlight and tourists. Tonight, however, the lobby was
barren and dark, giving the entire space a cold and crypt-like atmosphere.
"And
the museum's regular security staff?" Langdon asked.
"En
quarantine," Fache replied, sounding as if Langdon were questioning
the integrity of Fache's replacements. "Obviously, someone gained
entry tonight who should not have. All Louvre night wardens are in
the Sully Wing being questioned. My own agents have taken over museum
security for the evening."
Langdon
nodded, moving quickly to keep pace with Fache.
"How
well did you know Jacques Saunière?" the captain asked.
"Actually,
not at all. We'd never met."
Fache
looked surprised. "Your first meeting was to be tonight?"
"Yes.
We'd planned to meet at the American University reception following
my lecture, but he never showed up."
Fache
scribbled some notes in a little book. As they walked, Langdon caught
a glimpse of the Louvre's lesser-known pyramid—La Pyramide
Inversée&mdasha huge inverted skylight that hung from the ceiling
like a stalactite in an adjoining section of the entresol. Fache guided
Langdon up a short set of stairs to the mouth of an arched tunnel,
over which a sign read: DENON. The Denon Wing was the most famous
of the Louvre's three main sections.
"Who
requested tonight's meeting?" Fache asked suddenly. "You or he?"
The
question seemed odd. "Mr. Saunière did," Langdon replied as they entered
the tunnel. "His secretary contacted me a few weeks ago via email.
She said the curator had heard I would be lecturing in Paris this
month and wanted to discuss something with me while I was here."
"Discuss
what?"
"I don't
know. Art, I imagine. We share similar interests."
Fache
looked skeptical. "You have no idea what your meeting was about?"
Langdon
did not. He'd been curious at the time but had not felt comfortable
demanding specifics. The venerated Jacques Saunière had a renowned
penchant for privacy and granted very few meetings; Langdon was grateful
simply for the opportunity to meet him.
"Mr.
Langdon, can you at least guess what our murder victim might
have wanted to discuss with you on the night he was killed? It might
be helpful."
The
pointedness of the question made Langdon uncomfortable. "I really
can't imagine. I didn't ask. I felt honored to have been contacted
at all. I'm a fan of Mr. Saunière's work. I use his texts often in
my classes."
Fache
made note of that fact in his book.
The
two men were now halfway up the Denon Wing's entry tunnel, and Langdon
could see the twin ascending escalators at the far end, both motionless.
"So
you shared interests with him?" Fache asked.
"Yes.
In fact, I've spent much of the last year writing the draft for a
book that deals with Mr. Saunière's primary area of expertise. I was
looking forward to picking his brain."
Fache
glanced up. "Pardon?"
The
idiom apparently didn't translate. "I was looking forward to learning
his thoughts on the topic."
"I see.
And what is the topic?"
Langdon
hesitated, uncertain exactly how to put it. "Essentially, the manuscript
is about the iconography of Goddess worship-the concept of female
sanctity and the art and symbols associated with it."
Fache
ran a meaty hand across his hair. "And Saunière was knowledgeable
about this?"
"Nobody
more so."
"I see."
Langdon
sensed Fache did not see at all. Jacques Saunière was considered the
premiere goddess iconographer on earth. Not only did Saunière have
a personal passion for relics relating to fertility, goddess cults,
Wicca, and the sacred feminine, but during his twenty year tenure
as curator, Saunière had helped the Louvre amass the largest collection
of Goddess art on earth-labrys axes from the priestesses' oldest Greek
shrine in Delphi, gold caducei wands, hundreds of Tjet ankhs resembling
small standing angels, Sistrum rattles used in ancient Egypt to dispel
evil spirits, and an astonishing array of statues depicting Horus
being nursed by the goddess Isis.
"Perhaps
Jacques Saunière knew of your manuscript?" Fache offered. "And he
called the meeting to offer his help on your book."
Langdon
shook his head. "Actually, nobody yet knows about my manuscript.
It's still in draft form, and I haven't shown it to anyone except
my editor."
Fache fell silent.
Langdon
did not add the reason he hadn't yet shown the manuscript to
anyone else. The three hundred page draft—tentatively titled
Symbols of the Lost Sacred Feminine—proposed some very
unconventional interpretations of established religious iconography
and would certainly be controversial.
Now,
as Langdon approached the stationary escalators, he paused, realizing
Fache was no longer beside him. Turning, Langdon saw Fache standing
several yards back at a service elevator.
"We'll
take the elevator," Fache said, as the lift doors opened. "As I'm
sure you're aware, the gallery is quite a walk."
Although
Langdon knew the elevator would expedite the long, two-story climb
to the Denon Wing, he remained motionless.
"Is
something wrong?" Fache was holding the door, looking impatient.
Langdon
exhaled, turning a longing glance back up the open-air escalator.
Nothing's wrong at all, he lied to himself, trudging back toward
the elevator. As a boy, Langdon had fallen down an abandoned well-shaft
and almost died treading water in the narrow space for hours before
being rescued. Since then, he'd suffered a haunting phobia of enclosed
spaces—elevators, subways, squash courts. The elevator is
a perfectly safe machine, Langdon continually told himself, never
believing it. It's a tiny metal box hanging in an enclosed shaft!
Holding his breath, he stepped into the lift, feeling the familiar
tingle of adrenaline as the doors slid shut.
Two
floors. Ten seconds.
"You
and Mr. Saunière," Fache said as the lift began to move, "you never
spoke at all? Never corresponded? Never sent each other anything in
the mail?"
Another
odd question. Langdon shook his head. "No. Never."
Fache
cocked his head, as if making a mental note of that fact. Saying nothing,
he stared dead ahead at the chrome doors.
As they
ascended, Langdon tried to focus on anything other than the four walls
around him. In the reflection of the shiny elevator door, Langdon's
eyes fell to the captain's tie-clip-a silver crucifix with thirteen
embedded pieces of black onyx. Langdon found it vaguely surprising.
The symbol was known as a crux gemmata—a cross bearing
thirteen gems-a Christian ideogram for Christ and His twelve apostles.
Somehow Langdon had not expected the captain of the French Police
to broadcast his religion so openly. Then again, this was France;
Christianity was not a religion here so much as a birthright.
"It's
a crux gemmata," Fache said suddenly.
Startled,
Langdon glanced up to find Fache's eyes on him in the reflection.
The
elevator jolted to a stop, and the doors opened.
Langdon
stepped quickly out into the hallway, eager for the wide-open space
afforded by the famous high ceilings of the Louvre galleries. The
world into which he stepped, however, was nothing like he expected.
Surprised,
Langdon stopped short.
Fache
glanced over. "I gather, Mr. Langdon, you have never seen the Louvre
after hours?"
I
guess not, Langdon thought, trying to get his bearings.
Usually
impeccably illuminated, the Louvre galleries were startlingly dark
tonight. Instead of the customary flat-white light flowing down from
above, a muted red glow seemed to emanate upward from the baseboards-intermittent
patches of infrared spilling out onto the tile floors.
As Langdon
gazed down the murky corridor, he realized he should have anticipated
this scene. Virtually all major galleries employed infrared service-lighting
at night—strategically placed, low-level, non-invasive lights
that enabled staff members to navigate hallways and yet kept the paintings
in relative darkness to slow the fading effects of overexposure to
light. Tonight, the museum possessed an almost oppressive quality.
Long shadows encroached everywhere, and the usually soaring vaulted
ceilings appeared as a low, black void.
"This
way," Fache said, turning sharply right and setting out through a
series of interconnected galleries.
Langdon
followed, his vision slowly adjusting to the dark. All around, large-format
oils began to materialize like photos developing before him in an
enormous darkroom…their eyes following as he moved through the rooms.
He could taste the familiar tang of museum air—an arid, deionized
essence that carried a faint hint of carbon-the product of industrial,
coal-filter dehumidifiers that ran around the clock to counteract
the corrosive carbon-dioxide exhaled by visitors.
Mounted
high on the walls, the visible security cameras sent a clear message
to visitors: We see you. Do not touch anything.
"Any
of them real?" Langdon asked, motioning to the cameras.
Fache
shook his head. "Of course not."
Langdon
was not surprised. Video surveillance in museums this size was cost
prohibitive and ineffective. With acres of galleries to watch over,
the Louvre would require several hundred technicians simply to monitor
the feeds. Most large museums now used "containment security."
Forget keeping thieves out. Keep them in. Containment was activated
after hours, and if an intruder removed a piece of artwork, compartmentalized
exits would seal around that gallery, and the thief would find himself
behind bars even before the police arrived.
The
sound of voices echoed down the marble corridor up ahead. The noise
seemed to be coming from a large recessed alcove that lay ahead on
the right. A bright light spilled out into the hallway.
"Office
of the curator," the captain said.
As he
and Fache drew nearer the alcove, Langdon peered down a short hallway,
into Saunière's luxurious study-warm wood, Old Master paintings, and
an enormous antique desk on which stood a two-foot-tall model of an
medieval knight in full armor. A handful of police agents bustled
about the room, talking on phones and taking notes. One of them was
seated at Saunière's desk, typing into a laptop. Apparently, the curator's
private office had become DCPJ's makeshift command post for the evening.
"Messieurs,"
Fache called out, and the men turned. "Ne nous dérangez pas sous
aucun prétexte. Entendu?"
Everyone
inside the office nodded their understanding.
Langdon
had hung enough NE PAS DERANGER signs on hotel room doors to catch
the gist of the captain's orders. Fache and Langdon were not to be
disturbed under any circumstances.
Leaving
the small congregation of agents behind, Fache led Langdon farther
down the darkened hallway. Thirty yards ahead loomed the gateway to
the Louvre's most famous section-Le Grande Galerie-a seemingly
endless corridor that housed the Louvre's most valuable Italian masterpieces.
Langdon had already discerned that this was where Saunière's
body lay; the Grand Gallery's famous parquet floor had been unmistakable
in the Polaroid.
As they
approached, Langdon saw the entrance was blocked by an enormous steel
grate that looked like something used by medieval castles to keep
out marauding armies.
"Containment
security," Fache said, as they neared the grate.
Even
in the darkness, the barricade looked like it could have restrained
a tank.
Arriving
outside, Langdon peered through the bars into the dimly lit caverns
of the Grand Gallery.
"After
you, Mr. Langdon," Fache said.
Langdon
turned. After me, where?
Fache
motioned toward the floor at the base of the grate.
Langdon
looked down. In the darkness, he hadn't noticed. The barricade was
raised about two feet, providing an awkward clearance underneath.
"This
area is still off limits to Louvre security," Fache said. "My PTS
team has just finished their investigation." He motioned to the opening.
"Please slide under."
Langdon
stared at the narrow crawl-space at his feet and then up at the massive
iron grate. He's kidding right? The barricade looked like a
guillotine waiting to crush intruders.
Fache
grumbled something in French and checked his watch. Then he dropped
to his knees and slithered his bulky frame underneath the grate. On
the other side, he stood up and looked back through the bars at Langdon.
Langdon
sighed. Placing his palms flat on the polished parquet, he lay on
his stomach and pulled himself forward. As he slid underneath, the
nape of his Harris tweed snagged on the bottom of the grate, and he
cracked the back of his head on the iron.
Very
suave, Robert, he thought, fumbling and then finally pulling himself
through. As he stood up, Langdon was beginning to suspect it was going
to be a very long night.
CHAPTER 5
Murray
Hill Place—the new Opus Dei National Headquarters and conference
center—is located at 243 Lexington Avenue in New York City.
With a price tag of just over $47 million, the133,000 square-foot
tower is clad in red brick and Indiana limestone. Designed by May
& Pinska, the building contains over one hundred bedrooms, six dining
rooms, libraries, living rooms, meeting rooms, and offices. The second,
eighth, and sixteenth floors contain chapels, ornamented with millwork
and marble. The seventeenth floor is entirely residential. Men enter
the building through the main doors on Lexington Avenue. Women enter
through a side street and are "acoustically and visually separated"
from the men at all times within the building.
Earlier
this evening, within the sanctuary of his top-floor apartment, Bishop
Manuel Aringarosa had packed a small travel bag and dressed in a traditional
black cassock. Normally, he would have wrapped a purple cincture around
his waist, but tonight he would be traveling among the public, and
he preferred not to draw attention to his high office. Only those
with a keen eye would notice his 14-karat gold bishop's ring with
purple amethyst, large diamonds, and hand-tooled mitre-crozier appliqué.
Throwing the travel bag over his shoulder, he said a silent prayer
and left his apartment, descending to the lobby where his driver was
waiting to take him to the airport.
Now,
sitting aboard a commercial airliner bound for Rome, Aringarosa gazed
out the window at the dark Atlantic. The sun had already set, but
Aringarosa knew his own star was on the rise. Tonight the battle
will be won, he thought, amazed that only months ago he had felt
powerless against the hands that threatened to destroy his empire.
As president-general
of Opus Dei, Bishop Aringarosa had spent the last decade of his life
spreading the message of "God's Work"—literally, Opus Dei. The
congregation, founded in 1928 by the Spanish priest Josemaría Escrivá,
promoted a return to conservative Catholic values and encouraged its
members to make sweeping sacrifices in their own lives in order to
do the Work of God.
Opus
Dei's traditionalist philosophy initially had taken root in Spain
before Franco's regime, but with the 1934 publication of Josemaría
Escrivá's spiritual book The Way—999 points of meditation for
doing God's Work in one's own life—Escrivá's message exploded
across the world. Now, with over four million copies of The Way in
circulation in forty-two languages, Opus Dei was a global force. Its
residence halls, teaching centers, and even universities could be
found in almost every major metropolis on earth. Opus Dei was the
fastest-growing and most financially secure Catholic organization
in the world. Unfortunately, Aringarosa had learned, in an age of
religious cynicism, cults, and televangelists, Opus Dei's escalating
wealth and power was a magnet for suspicion.
"Many
call Opus Dei a brainwashing cult," reporters often challenged. "Others
call you an ultraconservative Christian secret society. Which are
you?"
"Opus
Dei is neither," the bishop would patiently reply. "We are a Catholic
Church. We are a congregation of Catholics who have chosen as our
priority to follow Catholic doctrine as rigorously as we can in our
own daily lives."
"Does
God's Work necessarily include vows of chastity, tithing, and atonement
for sins through self-flagellation and the cilice?"
"You
are describing only a small portion of the Opus Dei population," Aringarosa
said. "There are many levels of involvement. Thousands of Opus Dei
members are married, have families, and do God's Work in their own
communities. Others choose lives of asceticism within our cloistered
residence halls. These choices are personal, but everyone in Opus
Dei shares the goal of bettering the world by doing the Work of God.
Surely this is an admirable quest."
Reason
seldom worked, though. The media always gravitated toward scandal,
and Opus Dei, like most large organizations, had within its membership
a few misguided souls who cast a shadow over the entire group.
Two
months ago, an Opus Dei group at a midwestern university had been
caught drugging new recruits with mescaline in an effort to induce
a euphoric state that neophytes would perceive as a religious experience.
Another university student had used his barbed cilice belt more often
than the recommended two hours a day and had given himself a near
lethal infection. In Boston not long ago, a disillusioned young investment
banker had signed over his entire life savings to Opus Dei before
attempting suicide.
Misguided
sheep, Aringarosa thought, his heart going out to them.
Of course
the ultimate embarrassment had been the widely pub-licized trial of
FBI spy Robert Hanssen, who, in addition to being a prominent member
of Opus Dei, had turned out to be a sexual deviant, his trial uncovering
evidence that he had rigged hidden video cameras in his own bedroom
so his friends could watch him having sex with his wife. "Hardly the
pastime of a devout Catholic," the judge had noted.
Sadly,
all of these events had helped spawn the new watch group known as
the Opus Dei Awareness Network (ODAN). The group's popular website—www.odan.org—relayed
frightening stories from former Opus Dei members who warned of the
dangers of joining. The media was now referring to Opus Dei as "God's
Mafia" and "the Cult of Christ."
We
fear what we do not understand, Aringarosa thought, wondering
if these critics had any idea how many lives Opus Dei had enriched.
The group enjoyed the full endorsement and blessing of the Vatican.
Opus Dei is a personal prelature of the Pope himself.
Recently,
however, Opus Dei had found itself threatened by a force infinitely
more powerful than the media . . . an unexpected foe from which Aringarosa
could not possibly hide. Five months ago, the kaleidoscope of power
had been shaken, and Aringarosa was still reeling from the blow.
"They
know not the war they have begun," Aringarosa whispered to himself,
staring out the plane's window at the darkness of the ocean below.
For an instant, his eyes refocused, lingering on the reflection of
his awkward face—dark and oblong, dominated by a flat, crooked
nose that had been shattered by a fist in Spain when he was a young
missionary. The physical flaw barely registered now. Aringarosa's
was a world of the soul, not of the flesh.
As the
jet passed over the coast of Portugal, the cell phone in Aringarosa's
cassock began vibrating in silent ring mode. Despite airline regulations
prohibiting the use of cell phones during flights, Aringarosa knew
this was a call he could not miss. Only one man possessed this number,
the man who had mailed Aringarosa the phone.
Excited,
the bishop answered quietly. "Yes?"
"Silas
has located the keystone," the caller said. "It is in Paris. Within
the Church of Saint-Sulpice."
Bishop
Aringarosa smiled. "Then we are close."
"We
can obtain it immediately. But we need your influence."
"Of
course. Tell me what to do."
When
Aringarosa switched off the phone, his heart was pounding. He gazed
once again into the void of night, feeling dwarfed by the events he
had put into motion.
Five
hundred miles away, the albino named Silas stood over a small basin
of water and dabbed the blood from his back, watching the patterns
of red spinning in the water. Purge me with hyssop and I shall be
clean, he prayed, quoting Psalms. Wash me, and I shall be whiter
than snow.
Silas
was feeling an aroused anticipation that he had not felt since his
previous life. It both surprised and electrified him. For the last
decade, he had been following The Way, cleansing himself of sins .
. . rebuilding his life . . . erasing the violence in his past. Tonight,
however, it had all come rushing back. The hatred he had fought so
hard to bury had been summoned. He had been startled how quickly his
past had resurfaced. And with it, of course, had come his skills.
Rusty but serviceable.
Jesus'
message is one of peace . . . of nonviolence . . . of love. This
was the message Silas had been taught from the beginning, and the
message he held in his heart. And yet this was the message the enemies
of Christ now threatened to destroy. Those who threaten God with
force will be met with force. Immovable and steadfast.
For
two millennia, Christian soldiers had defended their faith against
those who tried to displace it. Tonight, Silas had been called to
battle.
Drying
his wounds, he donned his ankle-length, hooded robe. It was plain,
made of dark wool, accentuating the whiteness of his skin and hair.
Tightening the rope-tie around his waist, he raised the hood over
his head and allowed his red eyes to admire his reflection in the
mirror. The wheels are in motion.
CHAPTER 6
Having
squeezed beneath the security gate, Robert Langdon now stood just
inside the entrance to the Grand Gallery. He was staring into the
mouth of a long, deep canyon. On either side of the gallery, stark
walls rose thirty feet, evaporating into the darkness above. The reddish
glow of the service lighting sifted upward, casting an unnatural smolder
across a staggering collection of Da Vincis, Titians, and Caravaggios
that hung suspended from ceiling cables. Still-lifes, religious scenes,
and landscapes joined portraits of nobility and politicians.
Although
the Grand Gallery housed the Louvre's most famous Italian art, many
visitors felt the wing's most stunning offering was actually its famous
parquet floor. Laid out in a dazzling geometric design of diagonal
oak slats, the floor produced an almost ephemeral optical illusion-a
three-dimensional network that gave visitors the sense they were floating
through the gallery on a surface that changed with every step.
As Langdon's
gaze began to trace the inlay, his eyes stopped short on an unexpected
object lying on the floor just a few yards to his left, surrounded
by police tape. He spun toward Fache. "Is that…a Carravagio
on the floor?"
Fache
nodded without even looking.
The
painting, Langdon guessed, was worth upward of two million dollars,
and yet it was lying on the floor like a discarded poster. "What the
devil is it doing on the floor!"
Fache
glowered, clearly unmoved. "This is a crime scene, Mr. Langdon. We
have touched nothing. That canvas was pulled from the wall by the
curator. It was how he activated the security system."
Langdon
looked back at the gate, trying to picture what had happened.
"The curator was attacked in his office, fled into the Grand Gallery
and activated the security gate by pulling that painting from the
wall. The gate fell immediately, sealing off all access. This is the
only door in or out of this gallery."
Langdon
felt confused. "So the curator actually captured his attacker inside
the Grand Gallery?"
Fache
shook his head. "The security gate separated Saunière from
his attacker. The killer was locked out there in the hallway and shot
Saunière through this gate." Fache pointed toward an orange tag hanging
from one of the bars on the gate under which they had just passed.
"The PTS team found flashback residue from a gun. He fired through
the bars. Saunière died in here alone."
Langdon
pictured the photograph of Saunière's body and remembered what he'd
been told. They said he did that to himself. Langdon looked
out at the enormous corridor before them. "So where is his body?"
Fache
straightened his cruciform tie-clip and began to walk. "As you probably
know, the Grand Gallery is quite long."
The
exact length, if Langdon recalled correctly, was around fifteen hundred
feet, the length of three Washington Monuments laid end to end. Equally
breathtaking was the corridor's width, which easily could have accommodated
side by side passenger trains. The center of the hallway was dotted
by the occasional statue or colossal porcelain urn, which served as
a tasteful divider and kept the flow of traffic moving down one wall
and up the other.
Fache was silent now, striding briskly up the right side of the corridor
with his gaze dead ahead. Langdon felt almost disrespectful to be
racing past so many masterpieces without pausing for so much as a
glance.
Not
that I could see anything in this lighting, he thought.
The
muted crimson lighting unfortunately conjured memories of Langdon's
last experience in infrared lighting in The Vatican Secret Archives.
This was tonight's second unsettling parallel with his near-death
in Rome. He flashed on Vittoria again. She had been absent from his
dreams for months. Langdon could not believe Rome had been only a
year ago; it felt like decades. Another life. His last correspondence
from Vittoria had been in December-a postcard saying she was headed
to Java Sea to continue her research in entanglement physics…something
about using satellites to track Manta Ray migrations. Langdon had
never harbored delusions that a woman like Vittoria Vetra could have
been happy living with him on a college campus, but their encounter
in Rome had unlocked in him a longing he never imagined he could feel.
His lifelong affinity for bachelorhood and the simple freedoms it
allowed had been shaken somehow…replaced by an unexpected emptiness
that seemed to have grown over the past year.
They
continued walking briskly, yet Langdon still saw no corpse. "Jacques
Saunière went this far?"
"Mr.
Saunière suffered a bullet wound to his stomach. He died very slowly.
Perhaps over fifteen or twenty minutes. He was obviously a man of
great personal strength."
Langdon
turned, appalled. "Security took fifteen minutes to get here?"
"Of
course not. Louvre security responded immediately to the alarm and
found the Grand Gallery sealed. Through the gate, they could hear
someone moving around at the far end of the corridor, but they could
not see who it was. They shouted, but they got no answer. Assuming
it could only be a criminal, they followed protocol and called in
the Judicial Police. We took up positions within fifteen minutes.
When we arrived, we raised the barricade enough to slip underneath,
and I sent a dozen armed agents inside. They swept the length of the
gallery to corner the intruder."
"And?"
"They
found no one inside. Except…" He pointed farther down the hall. "Him."
Langdon
lifted his gaze and followed Fache's outstretched finger. At first
he thought Fache was pointing to a large marble statue in the middle
of the hallway. As they continued, though, Langdon began to see past
the statue. Thirty yards down the hall, a single spotlight on a portable
pole-stand shone down on the floor, creating a stark island of white
light in the dark crimson gallery. In the center of the light, like
an insect under a microscope, the corpse of the curator lay naked
on the parquet floor.
"You
saw the photograph," Fache said, "so this should be of no surprise."
Langdon
felt a deep chill as they approached the body. Before him was one
of the strangest images he had ever seen.
