CHAPTER 40
Struggling with the gear
shift, Langdon managed to maneuver the hijacked taxi to the far side of the Bois
de Boulogne while stalling only twice. Unfortunately, the inherent humor in the
situation was overshadowed by the taxi dispatcher repeatedly hailing their cab
over the radio.
"Voiture cinq-six-trois. Où êtes-vous? Répondez!"
When Langdon reached the exit of the park, he swallowed his machismo and jammed
on the brakes. "You'd better drive."
Sophie looked relieved as she jumped behind the wheel. Within seconds she had
the car humming smoothly westward along Allée de Longchamp, leaving the Garden
of Earthly Delights behind.
"Which way is Rue Haxo?" Langdon asked, watching Sophie edge the speedometer
over a hundred kilometers an hour.
Sophie's eyes remained focused on the road. "The cab driver said it's adjacent
to the Roland Garros tennis stadium. I know that area."
Langdon pulled the heavy key from his pocket again, feeling the weight in his
palm. He sensed it was an object of enormous consequence. Quite possibly the key
to his own freedom.
Earlier, while telling Sophie about the Knights Templar, Langdon had realized
that this key, in addition to having the Priory seal embossed on it, possessed a
more subtle tie to the Priory of Sion. The equal-armed cruciform was symbolic of
balance and harmony but also of the Knights Templar. Everyone had seen the
paintings of Knights Templar wearing white tunics emblazoned with red
equal-armed crosses. Granted, the arms of the Templar cross were slightly flared
at the ends, but they were still of equal length.
A square cross. Just like the one on this key.
Langdon felt his imagination starting to run wild as he fantasized about what
they might find. The Holy Grail. He almost laughed out loud at the absurdity of
it. The Grail was believed to be somewhere in England, buried in a hidden
chamber beneath one of the many Templar churches, where it had been hidden since
at least 1500.
The era of Grand Master Da Vinci.
The Priory, in order to keep their powerful documents safe, had been forced to
move them many times in the early centuries. Historians now suspected as many as
six different Grail relocations since its arrival in Europe from Jerusalem. The
last Grail "sighting" had been in 1447 when numerous eyewitnesses described a
fire that had broken out and almost engulfed the documents before they were
carried to safety in four huge chests that each required six men to carry. After
that, nobody claimed to see the Grail ever again. All that remained were
occasional whisperings that it was hidden in Great Britain, the land of King
Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table.
Wherever it was, two important facts remained:
Leonardo knew where the Grail resided during his lifetime.
That hiding place had probably not changed to this day.
For this reason, Grail enthusiasts still pored over Da Vinci's art and diaries
in hopes of unearthing a hidden clue as to the Grail's current location. Some
claimed the mountainous backdrop in Madonna of the Rocks matched the topography
of a series of cave-ridden hills in Scotland. Others insisted that the
suspicious placement of disciples in The Last Supper was some kind of code.
Still others claimed that X rays of the Mona Lisa revealed she originally had
been painted wearing a lapis lazuli pendant of Isis—a detail Da Vinci
purportedly later decided to paint over. Langdon had never seen any evidence of
the pendant, nor could he imagine how it could possibly reveal the Holy Grail,
and yet Grail aficionados still discussed it ad nauseum on Internet bulletin
boards and worldwide-web chat rooms.
Everyone loves a conspiracy.
And the conspiracies kept coming. Most recently, of course, had been the
earthshaking discovery that Da Vinci's famed Adoration of the Magi was hiding a
dark secret beneath its layers of paint. Italian art diagnostician Maurizio
Seracini had unveiled the unsettling truth, which the New York Times Magazine
carried prominently in a story titled "The Leonardo Cover-Up."
Seracini had revealed beyond any doubt that while the Adoration's gray-green
sketched underdrawing was indeed Da Vinci's work, the painting itself was not.
The truth was that some anonymous painter had filled in Da Vinci's sketch like a
paint-by-numbers years after Da Vinci's death. Far more troubling, however, was
what lay beneath the impostor's paint. Photographs taken with infrared
reflectography and X ray suggested that this rogue painter, while filling in Da
Vinci's sketched study, had made suspicious departures from the underdrawing...
as if to subvert Da Vinci's true intention. Whatever the true nature of the
underdrawing, it had yet to be made public. Even so, embarrassed officials at
Florence's Uffizi Gallery immediately banished the painting to a warehouse
across the street. Visitors at the gallery's Leonardo Room now found a
misleading and unapologetic plaque where the Adoration once hung.
THIS WORK IS UNDERGOING
DIAGNOSTIC TESTS IN PREPARATION
FOR RESTORATION.
In the bizarre underworld of modern
Grail seekers, Leonardo da Vinci remained the quest's great enigma. His artwork
seemed bursting to tell a secret, and yet whatever it was remained hidden,
perhaps beneath a layer of paint, perhaps enciphered in plain view, or perhaps
nowhere at all. Maybe Da Vinci's plethora of tantalizing clues was nothing but
an empty promise left behind to frustrate the curious and bring a smirk to the
face of his knowing Mona Lisa.
"Is it possible," Sophie asked, drawing Langdon back, "that the key you're
holding unlocks the hiding place of the Holy Grail?"
Langdon's laugh sounded forced, even to him. "I really can't imagine. Besides,
the Grail is believed to be hidden in the United Kingdom somewhere, not France."
He gave her the quick history.
"But the Grail seems the only rational conclusion," she insisted. "We have an
extremely secure key, stamped with the Priory of Sion seal, delivered to us by a
member of the Priory of Sion—a brotherhood which, you just told me, are
guardians of the Holy Grail."
Langdon knew her contention was logical, and yet intuitively he could not
possibly accept it. Rumors existed that the Priory had vowed someday to bring
the Grail back to France to a final resting place, but certainly no historical
evidence existed to suggest that this indeed had happened. Even if the Priory
had managed to bring the Grail back to France, the address 24 Rue Haxo near a
tennis stadium hardly sounded like a noble final resting place. "Sophie, I
really don't see how this key could have anything to do with the Grail."
"Because the Grail is supposed to be in England?"
"Not only that. The location of the Holy Grail is one of the best kept secrets
in history. Priory members wait decades proving themselves trustworthy before
being elevated to the highest echelons of the fraternity and learning where the
Grail is. That secret is protected by an intricate system of compartmentalized
knowledge, and although the Priory brotherhood is very large, only four members
at any given time know where the Grail is hidden—the Grand Master and his three
sénéchaux. The probability of your grandfather being one of those four top
people is very slim."
My grandfather was one of them, Sophie thought, pressing down on the
accelerator. She had an image stamped in her memory that confirmed her
grandfather's status within the brotherhood beyond any doubt.
"And even if your grandfather were in the upper echelon, he would never be
allowed to reveal anything to anyone outside the brotherhood. It is
inconceivable that he would bring you into the inner circle."
I've already been there, Sophie thought, picturing the ritual in the basement.
She wondered if this were the moment to tell Langdon what she had witnessed that
night in the Normandy château. For ten years now, simple shame had kept her from
telling a soul. Just thinking about it, she shuddered. Sirens howled somewhere
in the distance, and she felt a thickening shroud of fatigue settling over her.
"There!" Langdon said, feeling excited to see the huge complex of the Roland
Garros tennis stadium looming ahead.
Sophie snaked her way toward the stadium. After several passes, they located the
intersection of Rue Haxo and turned onto it, driving in the direction of the
lower numbers. The road became more industrial, lined with businesses.
We need number twenty-four, Langdon told himself, realizing he was secretly
scanning the horizon for the spires of a church. Don't be ridiculous. A
forgotten Templar church in this neighborhood?
"There it is," Sophie exclaimed, pointing.
Langdon's eyes followed to the structure ahead.
What in the world?
The building was modern. A squat citadel with a giant, neon equal-armed cross
emblazoned atop its facade. Beneath the cross were the words:
DEPOSITORY BANK OF ZURICH
Langdon was thankful not to have shared his Templar church hopes with Sophie. A
career hazard of symbologists was a tendency to extract hidden meaning from
situations that had none. In this case, Langdon had entirely forgotten that the
peaceful, equal-armed cross had been adopted as the perfect symbol for the flag
of neutral Switzerland.
At least the mystery was solved.
Sophie and Langdon were holding the key to a Swiss bank deposit box.
CHAPTER 41
Outside Castel Gandolfo, an updraft of mountain air gushed over the top of the
cliff and across the high bluff, sending a chill through Bishop Aringarosa as he
stepped from the Fiat. I should have worn more than this cassock, he thought,
fighting the reflex to shiver. The last thing he needed to appear tonight was
weak or fearful.
The castle was dark save the windows at the very top of the building, which
glowed ominously. The library, Aringarosa thought. They are awake and waiting.
He ducked his head against the wind and continued on without so much as a glance
toward the observatory domes.
The priest who greeted him at the door looked sleepy. He was the same priest who
had greeted Aringarosa five months ago, albeit tonight he did so with much less
hospitality. "We were worried about you, Bishop," the priest said, checking his
watch and looking more perturbed than worried.
"My apologies. Airlines are so unreliable these days."
The priest mumbled something inaudible and then said, "They are waiting
upstairs. I will escort you up."
The library was a vast square room with dark wood from floor to ceiling. On all
sides, towering bookcases burgeoned with volumes. The floor was amber marble
with black basalt trim, a handsome reminder that this building had once been a
palace.
"Welcome, Bishop," a man's voice said from across the room.
Aringarosa tried to see who had spoken, but the lights were ridiculously
low—much lower than they had been on his first visit, when everything was
ablaze. The night of stark awakening. Tonight, these men sat in the shadows, as
if they were somehow ashamed of what was about to transpire.
Aringarosa entered slowly, regally even. He could see the shapes of three men at
a long table on the far side of the room. The silhouette of the man in the
middle was immediately recognizable—the obese Secretariat Vaticana, overlord of
all legal matters within Vatican City. The other two were high-ranking Italian
cardinals.
Aringarosa crossed the library toward them. "My humble apologies for the hour.
We're on different time zones. You must be tired."
"Not at all," the secretariat said, his hands folded on his enormous belly. "We
are grateful you have come so far. The least we can do is be awake to meet you.
Can we offer you some coffee or refreshments?"
"I'd prefer we don't pretend this is a social visit. I have another plane to
catch. Shall we get to business?"
"Of course," the secretariat said. "You have acted more quickly than we
imagined."
"Have I?"
"You still have a month."
"You made your concerns known five months ago," Aringarosa said. "Why should I
wait?"
"Indeed. We are very pleased with your expediency."
Aringarosa's eyes traveled the length of the long table to a large black
briefcase. "Is that what I requested?"
"It is." The secretariat sounded uneasy. "Although, I must admit, we are
concerned with the request. It seems quite..."
"Dangerous," one of the cardinals finished. "Are you certain we cannot wire it
to you somewhere? The sum is exorbitant."
Freedom is expensive. "I have no concerns for my own safety. God is with me."
The men actually looked doubtful.
"The funds are exactly as I requested?"
The secretariat nodded. "Large-denomination bearer bonds drawn on the Vatican
Bank. Negotiable as cash anywhere in the world."
Aringarosa walked to the end of the table and opened the briefcase. Inside were
two thick stacks of bonds, each embossed with the Vatican seal and the title
PORTATORE, making the bonds redeemable to whoever was holding them.
The secretariat looked tense. "I must say, Bishop, all of us would feel less
apprehensive if these funds were in cash."
I could not lift that much cash, Aringarosa thought, closing the case. "Bonds
are negotiable as cash. You said so yourself."
The cardinals exchanged uneasy looks, and finally one said, "Yes, but these
bonds are traceable directly to the Vatican Bank."
Aringarosa smiled inwardly. That was precisely the reason the Teacher suggested
Aringarosa get the money in Vatican Bank bonds. It served as insurance. We are
all in this together now. "This is a perfectly legal transaction," Aringarosa
defended. "Opus Dei is a personal prelature of Vatican City, and His Holiness
can disperse monies however he sees fit. No law has been broken here."
"True, and yet..." The secretariat leaned forward and his chair creaked under
the burden. "We have no knowledge of what you intend to do with these funds, and
if it is in any way illegal..."
"Considering what you are asking of me," Aringarosa countered, "what I do with
this money is not your concern."
There was a long silence.
They know I'm right, Aringarosa thought. "Now, I imagine you have something for
me to sign?"
They all jumped, eagerly pushing the paper toward him, as if they wished he
would simply leave.
Aringarosa eyed the sheet before him. It bore the papal seal. "This is identical
to the copy you sent me?"
"Exactly."
Aringarosa was surprised how little emotion he felt as he signed the document.
The three men present, however, seemed to sigh in relief.
"Thank you, Bishop," the secretariat said. "Your service to the Church will
never be forgotten."
Aringarosa picked up the briefcase, sensing promise and authority in its weight.
The four men looked at one another for a moment as if there were something more
to say, but apparently there was not. Aringarosa turned and headed for the door.
"Bishop?" one of the cardinals called out as Aringarosa reached the threshold.
Aringarosa paused, turning. "Yes?"
"Where will you go from here?"
Aringarosa sensed the query was more spiritual than geographical, and yet he had
no intention of discussing morality at this hour. "Paris," he said, and walked
out the door.
CHAPTER 42
The Depository Bank of Zurich was a twenty-four-hour Geldschrank bank offering
the full modern array of anonymous services in the tradition of the Swiss
numbered account. Maintaining offices in Zurich, Kuala Lumpur, New York, and
Paris, the bank had expanded its services in recent years to offer anonymous
computer source code escrow services and faceless digitized backup.
The bread and butter of its operation was by far its oldest and simplest
offering—the anonyme Lager—blind drop services, otherwise known as anonymous
safe-deposit boxes. Clients wishing to store anything from stock certificates to
valuable paintings could deposit their belongings anonymously, through a series
of high-tech veils of privacy, withdrawing items at any time, also in total
anonymity.
As Sophie pulled the taxi to a stop in front of their destination, Langdon gazed
out at the building's uncompromising architecture and sensed the Depository Bank
of Zurich was a firm with little sense of humor. The building was a windowless
rectangle that seemed to be forged entirely of dull steel. Resembling an
enormous metal brick, the edifice sat back from the road with a
fifteen-foot-tall, neon, equilateral cross glowing over its facade.
Switzerland's reputation for secrecy in banking had become one of the country's
most lucrative exports. Facilities like this had become controversial in the art
community because they provided a perfect place for art thieves to hide stolen
goods, for years if necessary, until the heat was off. Because deposits were
protected from police inspection by privacy laws and were attached to numbered
accounts rather than people's names, thieves could rest easily knowing their
stolen goods were safe and could never be traced to them.
Sophie stopped the taxi at an imposing gate that blocked the bank's driveway—a
cement-lined ramp that descended beneath the building. A video camera overhead
was aimed directly at them, and Langdon had the feeling that this camera, unlike
those at the Louvre, was authentic.
Sophie rolled down the window and surveyed the electronic podium on the driver's
side. An LCD screen provided directions in seven languages. Topping the list was
English.
INSERT KEY.
Sophie took the gold laser-pocked
key from her pocket and turned her attention back to the podium. Below the
screen was a triangular hole.
"Something tells me it will fit," Langdon said.
Sophie aligned the key's triangular shaft with the hole and inserted it, sliding
it in until the entire shaft had disappeared. This key apparently required no
turning. Instantly, the gate began to swing open. Sophie took her foot off the
brake and coasted down to a second gate and podium. Behind her, the first gate
closed, trapping them like a ship in a lock.
Langdon disliked the constricted sensation. Let's hope this second gate works
too.
This second podium bore familiar directions.
INSERT KEY.
When Sophie inserted the key, the second gate immediately opened. Moments later
they were winding down the ramp into the belly of the structure.
The private garage was small and dim, with spaces for about a dozen cars. At the
far end, Langdon spied the building's main entrance. A red carpet stretched
across the cement floor, welcoming visitors to a huge door that appeared to be
forged of solid metal.
Talk about mixed messages, Langdon thought. Welcome and keep out.
Sophie pulled the taxi into a parking space near the entrance and killed the
engine. "You'd better leave the gun here."
With pleasure, Langdon thought, sliding the pistol under the seat.
Sophie and Langdon got out and walked up the red carpet toward the slab of
steel. The door had no handle, but on the wall beside it was another triangular
keyhole. No directions were posted this time.
"Keeps out the slow learners," Langdon said.
Sophie laughed, looking nervous. "Here we go." She stuck the key in the hole,
and the door swung inward with a low hum. Exchanging glances, Sophie and Langdon
entered. The door shut with a thud behind them.
The foyer of the Depository Bank of Zurich employed as imposing a decor as any
Langdon had ever seen. Where most banks were content with the usual polished
marble and granite, this one had opted for wall-to-wall metal and rivets.
Who's their decorator? Langdon wondered. Allied Steel?
Sophie looked equally intimidated as her eyes scanned the lobby.
The gray metal was everywhere—the floor, walls, counters, doors, even the lobby
chairs appeared to be fashioned of molded iron. Nonetheless, the effect was
impressive. The message was clear: You are walking into a vault.
A large man behind the counter glanced up as they entered. He turned off the
small television he was watching and greeted them with a pleasant smile. Despite
his enormous muscles and visible sidearm, his diction chimed with the polished
courtesy of a Swiss bellhop.
"Bonsoir," he said. "How may I help you?"
The dual-language greeting was the newest hospitality trick of the European
host. It presumed nothing and opened the door for the guest to reply in
whichever language was more comfortable.
Sophie replied with neither. She simply laid the gold key on the counter in
front of the man.
The man glanced down and immediately stood straighter. "Of course. Your elevator
is at the end of the hall. I will alert someone that you are on your way."
Sophie nodded and took her key back. "Which floor?"
The man gave her an odd look. "Your key instructs the elevator which floor."
She smiled. "Ah, yes."
The guard watched as the two newcomers made their way to the elevators, inserted
their key, boarded the lift, and disappeared. As soon as the door had closed, he
grabbed the phone. He was not calling to alert anyone of their arrival; there
was no need for that. A vault greeter already had been alerted automatically
when the client's key was inserted outside in the entry gate.
Instead, the guard was calling the bank's night manager. As the line rang, the
guard switched the television back on and stared at it. The news story he had
been watching was just ending. It didn't matter. He got another look at the two
faces on the television.
The manager answered. "Oui?"
"We have a situation down here."
"What's happening?" the manager demanded.
"The French police are tracking two fugitives tonight."
"So?"
"Both of them just walked into our bank."
The manager cursed quietly. "Okay. I'll contact Monsieur Vernet immediately."
The guard then hung up and placed a second call. This one to Interpol.
Langdon was surprised to feel the elevator dropping rather than climbing. He had
no idea how many floors they had descended beneath the Depository Bank of Zurich
before the door finally opened. He didn't care. He was happy to be out of the
elevator.
Displaying impressive alacrity, a host was already standing there to greet them.
He was elderly and pleasant, wearing a neatly pressed flannel suit that made him
look oddly out of place—an old-world banker in a high-tech world.
"Bonsoir," the man said. "Good evening. Would you be so kind as to follow me,
s'il vous plait?" Without waiting for a response, he spun on his heel and strode
briskly down a narrow metal corridor.
Langdon walked with Sophie down a series of corridors, past several large rooms
filled with blinking mainframe computers.
"Voici," their host said, arriving at a steel door and opening it for them.
"Here you are."
Langdon and Sophie stepped into another world. The small room before them looked
like a lavish sitting room at a fine hotel. Gone were the metal and rivets,
replaced with oriental carpets, dark oak furniture, and cushioned chairs. On the
broad desk in the middle of the room, two crystal glasses sat beside an opened
bottle of Perrier, its bubbles still fizzing. A pewter pot of coffee steamed
beside it.
Clockwork, Langdon thought. Leave it to the Swiss.
The man gave a perceptive smile. "I sense this is your first visit to us?"
Sophie hesitated and then nodded.
"Understood. Keys are often passed on as inheritance, and our first-time users
are invariably uncertain of the protocol." He motioned to the table of drinks.
"This room is yours as long as you care to use it."
"You say keys are sometimes inherited?" Sophie asked.
"Indeed. Your key is like a Swiss numbered account, which are often willed
through generations. On our gold accounts, the shortest safety-deposit box lease
is fifty years. Paid in advance. So we see plenty of family turnover."
Langdon stared. "Did you say fifty years?"
"At a minimum," their host replied. "Of course, you can purchase much longer
leases, but barring further arrangements, if there is no activity on an account
for fifty years, the contents of that safe-deposit box are automatically
destroyed. Shall I run through the process of accessing your box?"
Sophie nodded. "Please."
Their host swept an arm across the luxurious salon. "This is your private
viewing room. Once I leave the room, you may spend all the time you need in here
to review and modify the contents of your safe-deposit box, which arrives...
over here." He walked them to the far wall where a wide conveyor belt entered
the room in a graceful curve, vaguely resembling a baggage claim carousel. "You
insert your key in that slot there...." The man pointed to a large electronic
podium facing the conveyor belt. The podium had a familiar triangular hole.
"Once the computer confirms the markings on your key, you enter your account
number, and your safe-deposit box will be retrieved robotically from the vault
below for your inspection. When you are finished with your box, you place it
back on the conveyor belt, insert your key again, and the process is reversed.
Because everything is automated, your privacy is guaranteed, even from the staff
of this bank. If you need anything at all, simply press the call button on the
table in the center of the room."
Sophie was about to ask a question when a telephone rang. The man looked puzzled
and embarrassed. "Excuse me, please." He walked over to the phone, which was
sitting on the table beside the coffee and Perrier.
"Oui?" he answered.
His brow furrowed as he listened to the caller. "Oui... oui... d'accord." He
hung up, and gave them an uneasy smile. "I'm sorry, I must leave you now. Make
yourselves at home." He moved quickly toward the door.
"Excuse me," Sophie called. "Could you clarify something before you go? You
mentioned that we enter an account number?"
The man paused at the door, looking pale. "But of course. Like most Swiss banks,
our safe-deposit boxes are attached to a number, not a name. You have a key and
a personal account number known only to you. Your key is only half of your
identification. Your personal account number is the other half. Otherwise, if
you lost your key, anyone could use it."
Sophie hesitated. "And if my benefactor gave me no account number?"
The banker's heart pounded. Then you obviously have no business here! He gave
them a calm smile. "I will ask someone to help you. He will be in shortly."
Leaving, the banker closed the door behind him and twisted a heavy lock, sealing
them inside.
Across town, Collet was standing in the Gare du Nord train terminal when his
phone rang.
It was Fache. "Interpol got a tip," he said. "Forget the train. Langdon and
Neveu just walked into the Paris branch of the Depository Bank of Zurich. I want
your men over there right away."
"Any leads yet on what Saunière was trying to tell Agent Neveu and Robert
Langdon?"
Fache's tone was cold. "If you arrest them, Lieutenant Collet, then I can ask
them personally."
Collet took the hint. "Twenty-four Rue Haxo. Right away, Captain." He hung up
and radioed his men.
CHAPTER 43
André Vernet—president of the Paris branch of the Depository Bank of
Zurich—lived in a lavish flat above the bank. Despite his plush accommodations,
he had always dreamed of owning a riverside apartment on L'lle Saint-Louis,
where he could rub shoulders with the true cognoscenti, rather than here, where
he simply met the filthy rich.
When I retire, Vernet told himself, I will fill my cellar with rare Bordeaux,
adorn my salon with a Fragonard and perhaps a Boucher, and spend my days hunting
for antique furniture and rare books in the Quartier Latin.
Tonight, Vernet had been awake only six and a half minutes. Even so, as he
hurried through the bank's underground corridor, he looked as if his personal
tailor and hairdresser had polished him to a fine sheen. Impeccably dressed in a
silk suit, Vernet sprayed some breath spray in his mouth and tightened his tie
as he walked. No stranger to being awoken to attend to his international clients
arriving from different time zones, Vernet modeled his sleep habits after the
Maasai warriors—the African tribe famous for their ability to rise from the
deepest sleep to a state of total battle readiness in a matter of seconds.
Battle ready, Vernet thought, fearing the comparison might be
uncharacteristically apt tonight. The arrival of a gold key client always
required an extra flurry of attention, but the arrival of a gold key client who
was wanted by the Judicial Police would be an extremely delicate matter. The
bank had enough battles with law enforcement over the privacy rights of their
clients without proof that some of them were criminals.
Five minutes, Vernet told himself. I need these people out of my bank before the
police arrive.
If he moved quickly, this impending disaster could be deftly sidestepped. Vernet
could tell the police that the fugitives in question had indeed walked into his
bank as reported, but because they were not clients and had no account number,
they were turned away. He wished the damned watchman had not called Interpol.
Discretion was apparently not part of the vocabulary of a 15-euro-per-hour
watchman.
Stopping at the doorway, he took a deep breath and loosened his muscles. Then,
forcing a balmy smile, he unlocked the door and swirled into the room like a
warm breeze.
"Good evening," he said, his eyes finding his clients. "I am André Vernet. How
can I be of serv—" The rest of the sentence lodged somewhere beneath his Adam's
apple. The woman before him was as unexpected a visitor as Vernet had ever had.
"I'm sorry, do we know each other?" Sophie asked. She did not recognize the
banker, but he for a moment looked as if he'd seen a ghost.
"No...," the bank president fumbled. "I don't... believe so. Our services are
anonymous." He exhaled and forced a calm smile. "My assistant tells me you have
a gold key but no account number? Might I ask how you came by this key?"
"My grandfather gave it to me," Sophie replied, watching the man closely. His
uneasiness seemed more evident now.
"Really? Your grandfather gave you the key but failed to give you the account
number?"
"I don't think he had time," Sophie said. "He was murdered tonight."
Her words sent the man staggering backward. "Jacques Saunière is dead?" he
demanded, his eyes filling with horror. "But... how?!"
Now it was Sophie who reeled, numb with shock. "You knew my grandfather?"
Banker André Vernet looked equally astounded, steadying himself by leaning on an
end table. "Jacques and I were dear friends. When did this happen?"
"Earlier this evening. Inside the Louvre."
Vernet walked to a deep leather chair and sank into it. "I need to ask you both
a very important question." He glanced up at Langdon and then back to Sophie.
"Did either of you have anything to do with his death?"
"No!" Sophie declared. "Absolutely not."
Vernet's face was grim, and he paused, pondering. "Your pictures are being
circulated by Interpol. This is how I recognized you. You're wanted for a
murder."
Sophie slumped. Fache ran an Interpol broadcast already? It seemed the captain
was more motivated than Sophie had anticipated. She quickly told Vernet who
Langdon was and what had happened inside the Louvre tonight.
Vernet looked amazed. "And as your grandfather was dying, he left you a message
telling you to find Mr. Langdon?"
"Yes. And this key." Sophie laid the gold key on the coffee table in front of
Vernet, placing the Priory seal face down.
Vernet glanced at the key but made no move to touch it. "He left you only this
key? Nothing else? No slip of paper?"
Sophie knew she had been in a hurry inside the Louvre, but she was certain she
had seen nothing else behind Madonna of the Rocks. "No. Just the key."
Vernet gave a helpless sigh. "I'm afraid every key is electronically paired with
a ten-digit account number that functions as a password. Without that number,
your key is worthless."
Ten digits. Sophie reluctantly calculated the cryptographic odds. Over ten
billion possible choices. Even if she could bring in DCPJ's most powerful
parallel processing computers, she still would need weeks to break the code.
"Certainly, monsieur, considering the circumstances, you can help us."
"I'm sorry. I truly can do nothing. Clients select their own account numbers via
a secure terminal, meaning account numbers are known only to the client and
computer. This is one way we ensure anonymity. And the safety of our employees."
Sophie understood. Convenience stores did the same thing. EMPLOYEES DO NOT HAVE
KEYS TO THE SAFE. This bank obviously did not want to risk someone stealing a
key and then holding an employee hostage for the account number.
Sophie sat down beside Langdon, glanced down at the key and then up at Vernet.
"Do you have any idea what my grandfather is storing in your bank?"
"None whatsoever. That is the definition of a Geldschrank bank."
"Monsieur Vernet," she pressed, "our time tonight is short. I am going to be
very direct if I may." She reached out to the gold key and flipped it over,
watching the man's eyes as she revealed the Priory of Sion seal. "Does the
symbol on this key mean anything to you?"
Vernet glanced down at the fleur-de-lis seal and made no reaction. "No, but many
of our clients emboss corporate logos or initials onto their keys."
Sophie sighed, still watching him carefully. "This seal is the symbol of a
secret society known as the Priory of Sion."
Vernet again showed no reaction. "I know nothing of this. Your grandfather was a
friend, but we spoke mostly of business." The man adjusted his tie, looking
nervous now.
"Monsieur Vernet," Sophie pressed, her tone firm. "My grandfather called me
tonight and told me he and I were in grave danger. He said he had to give me
something. He gave me a key to your bank. Now he is dead. Anything you can tell
us would be helpful."
Vernet broke a sweat. "We need to get out of the building. I'm afraid the police
will arrive shortly. My watchman felt obliged to call Interpol."
Sophie had feared as much. She took one last shot. "My grandfather said he
needed to tell me the truth about my family. Does that mean anything to you?"
"Mademoiselle, your family died in a car accident when you were young. I'm
sorry. I know your grandfather loved you very much. He mentioned to me several
times how much it pained him that you two had fallen out of touch."
Sophie was uncertain how to respond.
Langdon asked, "Do the contents of this account have anything to do with the
Sangreal?"
Vernet gave him an odd look. "I have no idea what that is." Just then, Vernet's
cell phone rang, and he snatched it off his belt. "Oui?" He listened a moment,
his expression one of surprise and growing concern. "La police? Si rapidement?"
He cursed, gave some quick directions in French, and said he would be up to the
lobby in a minute.
Hanging up the phone, he turned back to Sophie. "The police have responded far
more quickly than usual. They are arriving as we speak."
Sophie had no intention of leaving empty-handed. "Tell them we came and went
already. If they want to search the bank, demand a search warrant. That will
take them time."
"Listen," Vernet said, "Jacques was a friend, and my bank does not need this
kind of press, so for those two reasons, I have no intention of allowing this
arrest to be made on my premises. Give me a minute and I will see what I can do
to help you leave the bank undetected. Beyond that, I cannot get involved." He
stood up and hurried for the door. "Stay here. I'll make arrangements and be
right back."
"But the safe-deposit box," Sophie declared. "We can't just leave."
"There's nothing I can do," Vernet said, hurrying out the door. "I'm sorry."
Sophie stared after him a moment, wondering if maybe the account number was
buried in one of the countless letters and packages her grandfather had sent her
over the years and which she had left unopened.
Langdon stood suddenly, and Sophie sensed an unexpected glimmer of contentment
in his eyes.
"Robert? You're smiling."
"Your grandfather was a genius."
"I'm sorry?"
"Ten digits?"
Sophie had no idea what he was talking about.
"The account number," he said, a familiar lopsided grin now craning his face.
"I'm pretty sure he left it for us after all."
"Where?"
Langdon produced the printout of the crime scene photo and spread it out on the
coffee table. Sophie needed only to read the first line to know Langdon was
correct.
13-3-2-21-1-1-8-5
O, Draconian devil!
Oh, lame saint!
P.S. Find Robert Langdon
CHAPTER 44
"Ten digits," Sophie
said, her cryptologic senses tingling as she studied the printout.
13-3-2-21-1-1-8-5
Grand-père wrote his account number on the Louvre floor!
When Sophie had first seen the scrambled Fibonacci sequence on the parquet, she
had assumed its sole purpose was to encourage DCPJ to call in their
cryptographers and get Sophie involved. Later, she realized the numbers were
also a clue as to how to decipher the other lines—a sequence out of order... a
numeric anagram. Now, utterly amazed, she saw the numbers had a more important
meaning still. They were almost certainly the final key to opening her
grandfather's mysterious safe-deposit box.
"He was the master of double-entendres," Sophie said, turning to Langdon. "He
loved anything with multiple layers of meaning. Codes within codes."
Langdon was already moving toward the electronic podium near the conveyor belt.
Sophie grabbed the computer printout and followed.
The podium had a keypad similar to that of a bank ATM terminal. The screen
displayed the bank's cruciform logo. Beside the keypad was a triangular hole.
Sophie wasted no time inserting the shaft of her key into the hole.
The screen refreshed instantly.
ACCOUNT NUMBER: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
The cursor blinked. Waiting.
Ten digits. Sophie read the numbers off the printout, and Langdon typed them in.
ACCOUNT NUMBER: 1332211185
When he had typed the last digit, the screen refreshed again. A message in several languages appeared. English was on top.
CAUTION:
Before you strike the enter key, please check the accuracy of your account
number.
For your own security, if the computer does not recognize your account number,
this system will automatically shut down.
"Fonction terminer," Sophie said,
frowning. "Looks like we only get one try." Standard ATM machines allowed users
three attempts to type a PIN before confiscating their bank card. This was
obviously no ordinary cash machine.
"The number looks right," Langdon confirmed, carefully checking what they had
typed and comparing it to the printout. He motioned to the ENTER key. "Fire
away."
Sophie extended her index finger toward the keypad, but hesitated, an odd
thought now hitting her.
"Go ahead," Langdon urged. "Vernet will be back soon."
"No." She pulled her hand away. "This isn't the right account number."
"Of course it is! Ten digits. What else would it be?"
"It's too random."
Too random? Langdon could not have disagreed more. Every bank advised its
customers to choose PINs at random so nobody could guess them. Certainly clients
here would be advised to choose their account numbers at random.
Sophie deleted everything she had just typed in and looked up at Langdon, her
gaze self-assured. "It's far too coincidental that this supposedly random
account number could be rearranged to form the Fibonacci sequence."
Langdon realized she had a point. Earlier, Sophie had rearranged this account
number into the Fibonacci sequence. What were the odds of being able to do that?
Sophie was at the keypad again, entering a different number, as if from memory.
"Moreover, with my grandfather's love of symbolism and codes, it seems to follow
that he would have chosen an account number that had meaning to him, something
he could easily remember." She finished typing the entry and gave a sly smile.
"Something that appeared random... but was not." Langdon looked at the screen.
ACCOUNT NUMBER: 1123581321
It took him an instant, but when
Langdon spotted it, he knew she was right.
The Fibonacci sequence.
1-1-2-3-5-8-13-21
When the Fibonacci sequence was melded into a single ten-digit number, it became
virtually unrecognizable. Easy to remember, and yet seemingly random. A
brilliant ten-digit code that Saunière would never forget. Furthermore, it
perfectly explained why the scrambled numbers on the Louvre floor could be
rearranged to form the famous progression.
Sophie reached down and pressed the ENTER key.
Nothing happened.
At least nothing they could detect.
At that moment, beneath them, in the bank's cavernous subterranean vault, a
robotic claw sprang to life. Sliding on a double-axis transport system attached
to the ceiling, the claw headed off in search of the proper coordinates. On the
cement floor below, hundreds of identical plastic crates lay aligned on an
enormous grid... like rows of small coffins in an underground crypt.
Whirring to a stop over the correct spot on the floor, the claw dropped down, an
electric eye confirming the bar code on the box. Then, with computer precision,
the claw grasped the heavy handle and hoisted the crate vertically. New gears
engaged, and the claw transported the box to the far side of the vault, coming
to a stop over a stationary conveyor belt.
Gently now, the retrieval arm set down the crate and retracted.
Once the arm was clear, the conveyor belt whirred to life....
Upstairs, Sophie and Langdon exhaled in relief to see the conveyor belt move.
Standing beside the belt, they felt like weary travelers at baggage claim
awaiting a mysterious piece of luggage whose contents were unknown.
The conveyor belt entered the room on their right through a narrow slit beneath
a retractable door. The metal door slid up, and a huge plastic box appeared,
emerging from the depths on the inclined conveyor belt. The box was black, heavy
molded plastic, and far larger than she imagined. It looked like an air-freight
pet transport crate without any airholes.
The box coasted to a stop directly in front of them.
Langdon and Sophie stood there, silent, staring at the mysterious container.
Like everything else about this bank, this crate was industrial—metal clasps, a
bar code sticker on top, and molded heavy-duty handle. Sophie thought it looked
like a giant toolbox.
Wasting no time, Sophie unhooked the two buckles facing her. Then she glanced
over at Langdon. Together, they raised the heavy lid and let it fall back.
Stepping forward, they peered down into the crate.
At first glance, Sophie thought the crate was empty. Then she saw something.
Sitting at the bottom of the crate. A lone item.
The polished wooden box was about the size of a shoebox and had ornate hinges.
The wood was a lustrous deep purple with a strong grain. Rosewood, Sophie
realized. Her grandfather's favorite. The lid bore a beautiful inlaid design of
a rose. She and Langdon exchanged puzzled looks. Sophie leaned in and grabbed
the box, lifting it out.
My God, it's heavy!
She carried it gingerly to a large receiving table and set it down. Langdon
stood beside her, both of them staring at the small treasure chest her
grandfather apparently had sent them to retrieve.
Langdon stared in wonderment at the lid's hand-carved inlay—a five-petal rose.
He had seen this type of rose many times. "The five-petal rose," he whispered,
"is a Priory symbol for the Holy Grail."
Sophie turned and looked at him. Langdon could see what she was thinking, and he
was thinking it too. The dimensions of the box, the apparent weight of its
contents, and a Priory symbol for the Grail all seemed to imply one unfathomable
conclusion. The Cup of Christ is in this wooden box. Langdon again told himself
it was impossible.
"It's a perfect size," Sophie whispered, "to hold... a chalice."
It can't be a chalice.
Sophie pulled the box toward her across the table, preparing to open it. As she
moved it, though, something unexpected happened. The box let out an odd gurgling
sound.
Langdon did a double take. There's liquid inside?
Sophie looked equally confused. "Did you just hear...?"
Langdon nodded, lost. "Liquid."
Reaching forward, Sophie slowly unhooked the clasp and raised the lid.
The object inside was unlike anything Langdon had ever seen. One thing was
immediately clear to both of them, however. This was definitely not the Cup of
Christ.
CHAPTER 45
"The police are blocking
the street," André Vernet said, walking into the waiting room. "Getting you out
will be difficult." As he closed the door behind him, Vernet saw the heavy-duty
plastic case on the conveyor belt and halted in his tracks. My God! They
accessed Saunière's account?
Sophie and Langdon were at the table, huddling over what looked to be a large
wooden jewelry box. Sophie immediately closed the lid and looked up. "We had the
account number after all," she said.
Vernet was speechless. This changed everything. He respectfully diverted his
eyes from the box and tried to figure out his next move. I have to get them out
of the bank! But with the police already having set up a roadblock, Vernet could
imagine only one way to do that. "Mademoiselle Neveu, if I can get you safely
out of the bank, will you be taking the item with you or returning it to the
vault before you leave?"
Sophie glanced at Langdon and then back to Vernet. "We need to take it."
Vernet nodded. "Very well. Then whatever the item is, I suggest you wrap it in
your jacket as we move through the hallways. I would prefer nobody else see it."
As Langdon shed his jacket, Vernet hurried over to the conveyor belt, closed the
now empty crate, and typed a series of simple commands. The conveyor belt began
moving again, carrying the plastic container back down to the vault. Pulling the
gold key from the podium, he handed it to Sophie.
"This way please. Hurry."
When they reached the rear loading dock, Vernet could see the flash of police
lights filtering through the underground garage. He frowned. They were probably
blocking the ramp. Am I really going to try to pull this off? He was sweating
now.
Vernet motioned to one of the bank's small armored trucks. Transport sûr was
another service offered by the Depository Bank of Zurich.
"Get in the cargo hold," he said, heaving open the massive rear door and
motioning to the glistening steel compartment. "I'll be right back."
As Sophie and Langdon climbed in, Vernet hurried across the loading dock to the
dock overseer's office, let himself in, collected the keys for the truck, and
found a driver's uniform jacket and cap. Shedding his own suit coat and tie, he
began to put on the driver's jacket. Reconsidering, he donned a shoulder holster
beneath the uniform. On his way out, he grabbed a driver's pistol from the rack,
put in a clip, and stuffed it in the holster, buttoning his uniform over it.
Returning to the truck, Vernet pulled the driver's cap down low and peered in at
Sophie and Langdon, who were standing inside the empty steel box.
"You'll want this on," Vernet said, reaching inside and flicking a wall switch
to illuminate the lone courtesy bulb on the hold's ceiling. "And you'd better
sit down. Not a sound on our way out the gate."
Sophie and Langdon sat down on the metal floor. Langdon cradled the treasure
wadded in his tweed jacket. Swinging the heavy doors closed, Vernet locked them
inside. Then he got in behind the wheel and revved the engine.
As the armored truck lumbered toward the top of the ramp, Vernet could feel the
sweat already collecting beneath his driver's cap. He could see there were far
more police lights in front than he had imagined. As the truck powered up the
ramp, the interior gate swung inward to let him pass. Vernet advanced and waited
while the gate behind him closed before pulling forward and tripping the next
sensor. The second gate opened, and the exit beckoned.
Except for the police car blocking the top of the ramp.
Vernet dabbed his brow and pulled forward.
A lanky officer stepped out and waved him to a stop a few meters from the
roadblock. Four patrol cars were parked out front.
Vernet stopped. Pulling his driver's cap down farther, he effected as rough a
facade as his cultured upbringing would allow. Not budging from behind the
wheel, he opened the door and gazed down at the agent, whose face was stern and
sallow.
"Qu'est-ce qui se passe?" Vernet asked, his tone rough.
"Je suis Jérome Collet," the agent said. "Lieutenant Police Judiciaire." He
motioned to the truck's cargo hold. "Qu'est-ce qu'ily a là dedans?"
"Hell if I know," Vernet replied in crude French. "I'm only a driver."
Collet looked unimpressed. "We're looking for two criminals."
Vernet laughed. "Then you came to the right spot. Some of these bastards I drive
for have so much money they must be criminals."
The agent held up a passport picture of Robert Langdon. "Was this man in your
bank tonight?"
Vernet shrugged. "No clue. I'm a dock rat. They don't let us anywhere near the
clients. You need to go in and ask the front desk."
"Your bank is demanding a search warrant before we can enter."
Vernet put on a disgusted look. "Administrators. Don't get me started."
"Open your truck, please." Collet motioned toward the cargo hold.
Vernet stared at the agent and forced an obnoxious laugh. "Open the truck? You
think I have keys? You think they trust us? You should see the crap wages I get
paid."
The agent's head tilted to one side, his skepticism evident. "You're telling me
you don't have keys to your own truck?"
Vernet shook his head. "Not the cargo area. Ignition only. These trucks get
sealed by overseers on the loading dock. Then the truck sits in dock while
someone drives the cargo keys to the drop-off. Once we get the call that the
cargo keys are with the recipient, then I get the okay to drive. Not a second
before. I never know what the hell I'm lugging."
"When was this truck sealed?"
"Must have been hours ago. I'm driving all the way up to St. Thurial tonight.
Cargo keys are already up there."
The agent made no response, his eyes probing as if trying to read Vernet's mind.
A drop of sweat was preparing to slide down Vernet's nose. "You mind?" he said,
wiping his nose with his sleeve and motioning to the police car blocking his
way. "I'm on a tight schedule."
"Do all the drivers wear Rolexes?" the agent asked, pointing to Vernet's wrist.
Vernet glanced down and saw the glistening band of his absurdly expensive watch
peeking out from beneath the sleeve of his jacket. Merde. "This piece of shit?
Bought it for twenty euro from a Taiwanese street vendor in St. Germain des Prés.
I'll sell it to you for forty."
The agent paused and finally stepped aside. "No thanks. Have a safe trip."
Vernet did not breathe again until the truck was a good fifty meters down the
street. And now he had another problem. His cargo. Where do I take them?
CHAPTER 46
Silas lay prone on the
canvas mat in his room, allowing the lash wounds on his back to clot in the air.
Tonight's second session with the Discipline had left him dizzy and weak. He had
yet to remove the cilice belt, and he could feel the blood trickling down his
inner thigh. Still, he could not justify removing the strap.
I have failed the Church.
Far worse, I have failed the bishop.
Tonight was supposed to be Bishop Aringarosa's salvation. Five months ago, the
bishop had returned from a meeting at the Vatican Observatory, where he had
learned something that left him deeply changed. Depressed for weeks, Aringarosa
had finally shared the news with Silas.
"But this is impossible!" Silas had cried out. "I cannot accept it!"
"It is true," Aringarosa said. "Unthinkable, but true. In only six months."
The bishop's words terrified Silas. He prayed for deliverance, and even in those
dark days, his trust in God and The Way never wavered. It was only a month later
that the clouds parted miraculously and the light of possibility shone through.
Divine intervention, Aringarosa had called it.
The bishop had seemed hopeful for the first time. "Silas," he whispered, "God
has bestowed upon us an opportunity to protect The Way. Our battle, like all
battles, will take sacrifice. Will you be a soldier of God?"
Silas fell to his knees before Bishop Aringarosa—the man who had given him a new
life—and he said, "I am a lamb of God. Shepherd me as your heart commands."
When Aringarosa described the opportunity that had presented itself, Silas knew
it could only be the hand of God at work. Miraculous fate! Aringarosa put Silas
in contact with the man who had proposed the plan—a man who called himself the
Teacher. Although the Teacher and Silas never met face-to-face, each time they
spoke by phone, Silas was awed, both by the profundity of the Teacher's faith
and by the scope of his power. The Teacher seemed to be a man who knew all, a
man with eyes and ears in all places. How the Teacher gathered his information,
Silas did not know, but Aringarosa had placed enormous trust in the Teacher, and
he had told Silas to do the same. "Do as the Teacher commands you," the bishop
told Silas. "And we will be victorious."
Victorious. Silas now gazed at the bare floor and feared victory had eluded
them. The Teacher had been tricked. The keystone was a devious dead end. And
with the deception, all hope had vanished.
Silas wished he could call Bishop Aringarosa and warn him, but the Teacher had
removed all their lines of direct communication tonight. For our safety.
Finally, overcoming enormous trepidation, Silas crawled to his feet and found
his robe, which lay on the floor. He dug his cell phone from the pocket. Hanging
his head in shame, he dialed.
"Teacher," he whispered, "all is lost." Silas truthfully told the man how he had
been tricked.
"You lose your faith too quickly," the Teacher replied. "I have just received
news. Most unexpected and welcome. The secret lives. Jacques Saunière
transferred information before he died. I will call you soon. Our work tonight
is not yet done."
CHAPTER 47
Riding inside the dimly
lit cargo hold of the armored truck was like being transported inside a cell for
solitary confinement. Langdon fought the all too familiar anxiety that haunted
him in confined spaces. Vernet said he would take us a safe distance out of the
city. Where? How far?
Langdon's legs had gotten stiff from sitting cross-legged on the metal floor,
and he shifted his position, wincing to feel the blood pouring back into his
lower body. In his arms, he still clutched the bizarre treasure they had
extricated from the bank.
"I think we're on the highway now," Sophie whispered.
Langdon sensed the same thing. The truck, after an unnerving pause atop the bank
ramp, had moved on, snaking left and right for a minute or two, and was now
accelerating to what felt like top speed. Beneath them, the bulletproof tires
hummed on smooth pavement. Forcing his attention to the rosewood box in his
arms, Langdon laid the precious bundle on the floor, unwrapped his jacket, and
extracted the box, pulling it toward him. Sophie shifted her position so they
were sitting side by side. Langdon suddenly felt like they were two kids huddled
over a Christmas present.
In contrast to the warm colors of the rosewood box, the inlaid rose had been
crafted of a pale wood, probably ash, which shone clearly in the dim light. The
Rose. Entire armies and religions had been built on this symbol, as had secret
societies. The Rosicrucians. The Knights of the Rosy Cross.
"Go ahead," Sophie said. "Open it."
Langdon took a deep breath. Reaching for the lid, he stole one more admiring
glance at the intricate woodwork and then, unhooking the clasp, he opened the
lid, revealing the object within.
Langdon had harbored several fantasies about what they might find inside this
box, but clearly he had been wrong on every account. Nestled snugly inside the
box's heavily padded interior of crimson silk lay an object Langdon could not
even begin to comprehend.
Crafted of polished white marble, it was a stone cylinder approximately the
dimensions of a tennis ball can. More complicated than a simple column of stone,
however, the cylinder appeared to have been assembled in many pieces. Six
doughnut-sized disks of marble had been stacked and affixed to one another
within a delicate brass framework. It looked like some kind of tubular,
multiwheeled kaleidoscope. Each end of the cylinder was affixed with an end cap,
also marble, making it impossible to see inside. Having heard liquid within,
Langdon assumed the cylinder was hollow.
As mystifying as the construction of the cylinder was, however, it was the
engravings around the tube's circumference that drew Langdon's primary focus.
Each of the six disks had been carefully carved with the same unlikely series of
letters—the entire alphabet. The lettered cylinder reminded Langdon of one of
his childhood toys—a rod threaded with lettered tumblers that could be rotated
to spell different words.
"Amazing, isn't it?" Sophie whispered.
Langdon glanced up. "I don't know. What the hell is it?"
Now there was a glint in Sophie's eye. "My grandfather used to craft these as a
hobby. They were invented by Leonardo da Vinci."
Even in the diffuse light, Sophie could see Langdon's surprise.
"Da Vinci?" he muttered, looking again at the canister.
"Yes. It's called a cryptex. According to my grandfather, the blueprints come
from one of Da Vinci's secret diaries."
"What is it for?"
Considering tonight's events, Sophie knew the answer might have some interesting
implications. "It's a vault," she said. "For storing secret information."
Langdon's eyes widened further.
Sophie explained that creating models of Da Vinci's inventions was one of her
grandfather's best-loved hobbies. A talented craftsman who spent hours in his
wood and metal shop, Jacques Saunière enjoyed imitating master craftsmen—Fabergé,
assorted cloisonne artisans, and the less artistic, but far more practical,
Leonardo da Vinci.
Even a cursory glance through Da Vinci's journals revealed why the luminary was
as notorious for his lack of follow-through as he was famous for his brilliance.
Da Vinci had drawn up blueprints for hundreds of inventions he had never built.
One of Jacques Saunière's favorite pastimes was bringing Da Vinci's more obscure
brainstorms to life—timepieces, water pumps, cryptexes, and even a fully
articulated model of a medieval French knight, which now stood proudly on the
desk in his office. Designed by Da Vinci in 1495 as an outgrowth of his earliest
anatomy and kinesiology studies, the internal mechanism of the robot knight
possessed accurate joints and tendons, and was designed to sit up, wave its
arms, and move its head via a flexible neck while opening and closing an
anatomically correct jaw. This armor-clad knight, Sophie had always believed,
was the most beautiful object her grandfather had ever built... that was, until
she had seen the cryptex in this rosewood box.
"He made me one of these when I was little," Sophie said. "But I've never seen
one so ornate and large."
Langdon's eyes had never left the box. "I've never heard of a cryptex."
Sophie was not surprised. Most of Leonardo's unbuilt inventions had never been
studied or even named. The term cryptex possibly had been her grandfather's
creation, an apt title for this device that used the science of cryptology to
protect information written on the contained scroll or codex.
Da Vinci had been a cryptology pioneer, Sophie knew, although he was seldom
given credit. Sophie's university instructors, while presenting computer
encryption methods for securing data, praised modern cryptologists like
Zimmerman and Schneier but failed to mention that it was Leonardo who had
invented one of the first rudimentary forms of public key encryption centuries
ago. Sophie's grandfather, of course, had been the one to tell her all about
that.
As their armored truck roared down the highway, Sophie explained to Langdon that
the cryptex had been Da Vinci's solution to the dilemma of sending secure
messages over long distances. In an era without telephones or e-mail, anyone
wanting to convey private information to someone far away had no option but to
write it down and then trust a messenger to carry the letter. Unfortunately, if
a messenger suspected the letter might contain valuable information, he could
make far more money selling the information to adversaries than he could
delivering the letter properly.
Many great minds in history had invented cryptologic solutions to the challenge
of data protection: Julius Caesar devised a code-writing scheme called the
Caesar Box; Mary, Queen of Scots created a transposition cipher and sent secret
communiqués from prison; and the brilliant Arab scientist Abu Yusuf Ismail al-Kindi
protected his secrets with an ingeniously conceived polyalphabetic substitution
cipher.
Da Vinci, however, eschewed mathematics and cryptology for a mechanical
solution. The cryptex. A portable container that could safeguard letters, maps,
diagrams, anything at all. Once information was sealed inside the cryptex, only
the individual with the proper password could access it.
"We require a password," Sophie said, pointing out the lettered dials. "A
cryptex works much like a bicycle's combination lock. If you align the dials in
the proper position, the lock slides open. This cryptex has five lettered dials.
When you rotate them to their proper sequence, the tumblers inside align, and
the entire cylinder slides apart."
"And inside?"
"Once the cylinder slides apart, you have access to a hollow central
compartment, which can hold a scroll of paper on which is the information you
want to keep private."
Langdon looked incredulous. "And you say your grandfather built these for you
when you were younger?"
"Some smaller ones, yes. A couple times for my birthday, he gave me a cryptex
and told me a riddle. The answer to the riddle was the password to the cryptex,
and once I figured it out, I could open it up and find my birthday card."
"A lot of work for a card."
"No, the cards always contained another riddle or clue. My grandfather loved
creating elaborate treasure hunts around our house, a string of clues that
eventually led to my real gift. Each treasure hunt was a test of character and
merit, to ensure I earned my rewards. And the tests were never simple."
Langdon eyed the device again, still looking skeptical. "But why not just pry it
apart? Or smash it? The metal looks delicate, and marble is a soft rock."
Sophie smiled. "Because Da Vinci is too smart for that. He designed the cryptex
so that if you try to force it open in any way, the information self-destructs.
Watch." Sophie reached into the box and carefully lifted out the cylinder. "Any
information to be inserted is first written on a papyrus scroll."
"Not vellum?"
Sophie shook her head. "Papyrus. I know sheep's vellum was more durable and more
common in those days, but it had to be papyrus. The thinner the better."
"Okay."
"Before the papyrus was inserted into the cryptex's compartment, it was rolled
around a delicate glass vial." She tipped the cryptex, and the liquid inside
gurgled. "A vial of liquid."
"Liquid what?"
Sophie smiled. "Vinegar."
Langdon hesitated a moment and then began nodding. "Brilliant."
Vinegar and papyrus, Sophie thought. If someone attempted to force open the
cryptex, the glass vial would break, and the vinegar would quickly dissolve the
papyrus. By the time anyone extracted the secret message, it would be a glob of
meaningless pulp.
"As you can see," Sophie told him, "the only way to access the information
inside is to know the proper five-letter password. And with five dials, each
with twenty-six letters, that's twenty-six to the fifth power." She quickly
estimated the permutations. "Approximately twelve million possibilities."
"If you say so," Langdon said, looking like he had approximately twelve million
questions running through his head. "What information do you think is inside?"
"Whatever it is, my grandfather obviously wanted very badly to keep it secret."
She paused, closing the box lid and eyeing the five-petal Rose inlaid on it.
Something was bothering her. "Did you say earlier that the Rose is a symbol for
the Grail?"
"Exactly. In Priory symbolism, the Rose and the Grail are synonymous."
Sophie furrowed her brow. "That's strange, because my grandfather always told me
the Rose meant secrecy. He used to hang a rose on his office door at home when
he was having a confidential phone call and didn't want me to disturb him. He
encouraged me to do the same." Sweetie, her grandfather said, rather than lock
each other out, we can each hang a rose—la fleur des secrets—on our door when we
need privacy. This way we learn to respect and trust each other. Hanging a rose
is an ancient Roman custom.
"Sub rosa," Langdon said. "The Romans hung a rose over meetings to indicate the
meeting was confidential. Attendees understood that whatever was said under the
rose—or sub rosa—had to remain a secret."
Langdon quickly explained that the Rose's overtone of secrecy was not the only
reason the Priory used it as a symbol for the Grail. Rosa rugosa, one of the
oldest species of rose, had five petals and pentagonal symmetry, just like the
guiding star of Venus, giving the Rose strong iconographic ties to womanhood. In
addition, the Rose had close ties to the concept of "true direction" and
navigating one's way. The Compass Rose helped travelers navigate, as did Rose
Lines, the longitudinal lines on maps. For this reason, the Rose was a symbol
that spoke of the Grail on many levels—secrecy, womanhood, and guidance—the
feminine chalice and guiding star that led to secret truth.
As Langdon finished his explanation, his expression seemed to tighten suddenly.
"Robert? Are you okay?"
His eyes were riveted to the rosewood box. "Sub... rosa," he choked, a fearful
bewilderment sweeping across his face. "It can't be."
"What?"
Langdon slowly raised his eyes. "Under the sign of the Rose," he whispered.
"This cryptex... I think I know what it is."
CHAPTER 48
Langdon could scarcely believe his own supposition, and yet, considering who had
given this stone cylinder to them, how he had given it to them, and now, the
inlaid Rose on the container, Langdon could formulate only one conclusion.
I am holding the Priory keystone.
The legend was specific.
The keystone is an encoded stone that lies beneath the sign of the Rose.
"Robert?" Sophie was watching him. "What's going on?"
Langdon needed a moment to gather his thoughts. "Did your grandfather ever speak
to you of something called la clef de voûte?"
"The key to the vault?" Sophie translated.
"No, that's the literal translation. Clef de voûte is a common architectural
term. Voûte refers not to a bank vault, but to a vault in an archway. Like a
vaulted ceiling."
"But vaulted ceilings don't have keys."
"Actually they do. Every stone archway requires a central, wedge-shaped stone at
the top which locks the pieces together and carries all the weight. This stone
is, in an architectural sense, the key to the vault. In English we call it a
keystone." Langdon watched her eyes for any spark of recognition.
Sophie shrugged, glancing down at the cryptex. "But this obviously is not a
keystone."
Langdon didn't know where to begin. Keystones as a masonry technique for
building stone archways had been one of the best-kept secrets of the early
Masonic brotherhood. The Royal Arch Degree. Architecture. Keystones. It was all
interconnected. The secret knowledge of how to use a wedged keystone to build a
vaulted archway was part of the wisdom that had made the Masons such wealthy
craftsmen, and it was a secret they guarded carefully. Keystones had always had
a tradition of secrecy. And yet, the stone cylinder in the rosewood box was
obviously something quite different. The Priory keystone—if this was indeed what
they were holding—was not at all what Langdon had imagined.
"The Priory keystone is not my specialty," Langdon admitted. "My interest in the
Holy Grail is primarily symbologic, so I tend to ignore the plethora of lore
regarding how to actually find it."
Sophie's eyebrows arched. "Find the Holy Grail?"
Langdon gave an uneasy nod, speaking his next words carefully. "Sophie,
according to Priory lore, the keystone is an encoded map... a map that reveals
the hiding place of the Holy Grail."
Sophie's face went blank. "And you think this is it?"
Langdon didn't know what to say. Even to him it sounded unbelievable, and yet
the keystone was the only logical conclusion he could muster. An encrypted
stone, hidden beneath the sign of the Rose.
The idea that the cryptex had been designed by Leonardo da Vinci—former Grand
Master of the Priory of Sion—shone as another tantalizing indicator that this
was indeed the Priory keystone. A former Grand Master's blueprint... brought to
life centuries later by another Priory member. The bond was too palpable to
dismiss.
For the last decade, historians had been searching for the keystone in French
churches. Grail seekers, familiar with the Priory's history of cryptic
double-talk, had concluded la clef de voûte was a literal keystone—an
architectural wedge—an engraved, encrypted stone, inserted into a vaulted
archway in a church. Beneath the sign of the Rose. In architecture, there was no
shortage of roses. Rose windows. Rosette reliefs. And, of course, an abundance
of cinquefoils—the five-petaled decorative flowers often found at the top of
archways, directly over the keystone. The hiding place seemed diabolically
simple. The map to the Holy Grail was incorporated high in an archway of some
forgotten church, mocking the blind churchgoers who wandered beneath it.
"This cryptex can't be the keystone," Sophie argued. "It's not old enough. I'm
certain my grandfather made this. It can't be part of any ancient Grail legend."
"Actually," Langdon replied, feeling a tingle of excitement ripple through him,
"the keystone is believed to have been created by the Priory sometime in the
past couple of decades."
Sophie's eyes flashed disbelief. "But if this cryptex reveals the hiding place
of the Holy Grail, why would my grandfather give it to me? I have no idea how to
open it or what to do with it. I don't even know what the Holy Grail is!"
Langdon realized to his surprise that she was right. He had not yet had a chance
to explain to Sophie the true nature of the Holy Grail. That story would have to
wait. At the moment, they were focused on the keystone.
If that is indeed what this is....
Against the hum of the bulletproof wheels beneath them, Langdon quickly
explained to Sophie everything he had heard about the keystone. Allegedly, for
centuries, the Priory's biggest secret—the location of the Holy Grail—was never
written down. For security's sake, it was verbally transferred to each new
rising sénéchal at a clandestine ceremony. However, at some point during the
last century, whisperings began to surface that the Priory policy had changed.
Perhaps it was on account of new electronic eavesdropping capabilities, but the
Priory vowed never again even to speak the location of the sacred hiding place.
"But then how could they pass on the secret?" Sophie asked.
"That's where the keystone comes in," Langdon explained. "When one of the top
four members died, the remaining three would choose from the lower echelons the
next candidate to ascend as sénéchal. Rather than telling the new sénéchal where
the Grail was hidden, they gave him a test through which he could prove he was
worthy."
Sophie looked unsettled by this, and Langdon suddenly recalled her mentioning
how her grandfather used to make treasure hunts for her—preuves de mérite.
Admittedly, the keystone was a similar concept. Then again, tests like this were
extremely common in secret societies. The best known was the Masons', wherein
members ascended to higher degrees by proving they could keep a secret and by
performing rituals and various tests of merit over many years. The tasks became
progressively harder until they culminated in a successful candidate's induction
as thirty-second-degree Mason.
"So the keystone is a preuve de mérite," Sophie said. "If a rising Priory
sénéchal can open it, he proves himself worthy of the information it holds."
Langdon nodded. "I forgot you'd had experience with this sort of thing."
"Not only with my grandfather. In cryptology, that's called a 'self-authorizing
language.' That is, if you're smart enough to read it, you're permitted to know
what is being said."
Langdon hesitated a moment. "Sophie, you realize that if this is indeed the
keystone, your grandfather's access to it implies he was exceptionally powerful
within the Priory of Sion. He would have to have been one of the highest four
members."
Sophie sighed. "He was powerful in a secret society. I'm certain of it. I can
only assume it was the Priory."
Langdon did a double take. "You knew he was in a secret society?"
"I saw some things I wasn't supposed to see ten years ago. We haven't spoken
since." She paused. "My grandfather was not only a ranking top member of the
group... I believe he was the top member."
Langdon could not believe what she had just said. "Grand Master? But... there's
no way you could know that!"
"I'd rather not talk about it." Sophie looked away, her expression as determined
as it was pained.
Langdon sat in stunned silence. Jacques Saunière? Grand Master? Despite the
astonishing repercussions if it were true, Langdon had the eerie sensation it
almost made perfect sense. After all, previous Priory Grand Masters had also
been distinguished public figures with artistic souls. Proof of that fact had
been uncovered years ago in Paris's Bibliothèque Nationale in papers that became
known as Les Dossiers Secrets.
Every Priory historian and Grail buff had read the Dossiers. Cataloged under
Number 4° lm1 249, the Dossiers Secrets had been authenticated by many
specialists and incontrovertibly confirmed what historians had suspected for a
long time: Priory Grand Masters included Leonardo da Vinci, Botticelli, Sir
Isaac Newton, Victor Hugo, and, more recently, Jean Cocteau, the famous Parisian
artist.
Why not Jacques Saunière?
Langdon's incredulity intensified with the realization that he had been slated
to meet Saunière tonight. The Priory Grand Master called a meeting with me. Why?
To make artistic small talk? It suddenly seemed unlikely. After all, if
Langdon's instincts were correct, the Grand Master of the Priory of Sion had
just transferred the brotherhood's legendary keystone to his granddaughter and
simultaneously commanded her to find Robert Langdon.
Inconceivable!
Langdon's imagination could conjure no set of circumstances that would explain
Saunière's behavior. Even if Saunière feared his own death, there were three
sénéchaux who also possessed the secret and therefore guaranteed the Priory's
security. Why would Saunière take such an enormous risk giving his granddaughter
the keystone, especially when the two of them didn't get along? And why involve
Langdon... a total stranger?
A piece of this puzzle is missing, Langdon thought.
The answers were apparently going to have to wait. The sound of the slowing
engine caused them both to look up. Gravel crunched beneath the tires. Why is he
pulling over already? Langdon wondered. Vernet had told them he would take them
well outside the city to safety. The truck decelerated to a crawl and made its
way over unexpectedly rough terrain. Sophie shot Langdon an uneasy look, hastily
closing the cryptex box and latching it. Langdon slipped his jacket back on.
When the truck came to a stop, the engine remained idling as the locks on the
rear doors began to turn. When the doors swung open, Langdon was surprised to
see they were parked in a wooded area, well off the road. Vernet stepped into
view, a strained look in his eye. In his hand, he held a pistol.
"I'm sorry about this," he said. "I really have no choice."
CHAPTER 49
André Vernet looked awkward with a pistol, but his eyes shone with a
determination that Langdon sensed would be unwise to test.
"I'm afraid I must insist," Vernet said, training the weapon on the two of them
in the back of the idling truck. "Set the box down."
Sophie clutched the box to her chest. "You said you and my grandfather were
friends."
"I have a duty to protect your grandfather's assets," Vernet replied. "And that
is exactly what I am doing. Now set the box on the floor."
"My grandfather entrusted this to me!" Sophie declared.
"Do it," Vernet commanded, raising the gun.
Sophie set the box at her feet.
Langdon watched the gun barrel swing now in his direction.
"Mr. Langdon," Vernet said, "you will bring the box over to me. And be aware
that I'm asking you because you I would not hesitate to shoot."
Langdon stared at the banker in disbelief. "Why are you doing this?"
"Why do you imagine?" Vernet snapped, his accented English terse now. "To
protect my client's assets."
"We are your clients now," Sophie said.
Vernet's visage turned ice-cold, an eerie transformation. "Mademoiselle Neveu, I
don't know how you got that key and account number tonight, but it seems obvious
that foul play was involved. Had I known the extent of your crimes, I would
never have helped you leave the bank."
"I told you," Sophie said, "we had nothing to do with my grandfather's death!"
Vernet looked at Langdon. "And yet the radio claims you are wanted not only for
the murder of Jacques Saunière but for those of three other men as well?"
"What!" Langdon was thunderstruck. Three more murders? The coincidental number
hit him harder than the fact that he was the prime suspect. It seemed too
unlikely to be a coincidence. The three sénéchaux? Langdon's eyes dropped to the
rosewood box. If the sénéchaux were murdered, Saunière had no options. He had to
transfer the keystone to someone.
"The police can sort that out when I turn you in," Vernet said. "I have gotten
my bank involved too far already."
Sophie glared at Vernet. "You obviously have no intention of turning us in. You
would have driven us back to the bank. And instead you bring us out here and
hold us at gunpoint?"
"Your grandfather hired me for one reason—to keep his possessions both safe and
private. Whatever this box contains, I have no intention of letting it become a
piece of cataloged evidence in a police investigation. Mr. Langdon, bring me the
box."
Sophie shook her head. "Don't do it."
A gunshot roared, and a bullet tore into the wall above him. The reverberation
shook the back of the truck as a spent shell clinked onto the cargo floor.
Shit! Langdon froze.
Vernet spoke more confidently now. "Mr. Langdon, pick up the box."
Langdon lifted the box.
"Now bring it over to me." Vernet was taking dead aim, standing on the ground
behind the rear bumper, his gun outstretched into the cargo hold now.
Box in hand, Langdon moved across the hold toward the open door.
I've got to do something! Langdon thought. I'm about to hand over the Priory
keystone! As Langdon moved toward the doorway, his position of higher ground
became more pronounced, and he began wondering if he could somehow use it to his
advantage. Vernet's gun, though raised, was at Langdon's knee level. A
well-placed kick perhaps? Unfortunately, as Langdon neared, Vernet seemed to
sense the dangerous dynamic developing, and he took several steps back,
repositioning himself six feet away. Well out of reach.
Vernet commanded, "Place the box beside the door."
Seeing no options, Langdon knelt down and set the rosewood box at the edge of
the cargo hold, directly in front of the open doors.
"Now stand up."
Langdon began to stand up but paused, spying the small, spent pistol shell on
the floor beside the truck's precision-crafted doorsill.
"Stand up, and step away from the box."
Langdon paused a moment longer, eyeing the metal threshold. Then he stood. As he
did, he discreetly brushed the shell over the edge onto the narrow ledge that
was the door's lower sill. Fully upright now, Langdon stepped backward.
"Return to the back wall and turn around."
Langdon obeyed.
Vernet could feel his own heart pounding. Aiming the gun with his right hand, he
reached now with his left for the wooden box. He discovered that it was far too
heavy. I need two hands. Turning his eyes back to his captives, he calculated
the risk. Both were a good fifteen feet away, at the far end of the cargo hold,
facing away from him. Vernet made up his mind. Quickly, he laid down the gun on
the bumper, lifted the box with two hands, and set it on the ground, immediately
grabbing the gun again and aiming it back into the hold. Neither of his
prisoners had moved.
Perfect. Now all that remained was to close and lock the door. Leaving the box
on the ground for the moment, he grabbed the metal door and began to heave it
closed. As the door swung past him, Vernet reached up to grab the single bolt
that needed to be slid into place. The door closed with a thud, and Vernet
quickly grabbed the bolt, pulling it to the left. The bolt slid a few inches and
crunched to an unexpected halt, not lining up with its sleeve. What's going on?
Vernet pulled again, but the bolt wouldn't lock. The mechanism was not properly
aligned. The door isn't fully closed! Feeling a surge of panic, Vernet shoved
hard against the outside of the door, but it refused to budge. Something is
blocking it! Vernet turned to throw full shoulder into the door, but this time
the door exploded outward, striking Vernet in the face and sending him reeling
backward onto the ground, his nose shattering in pain. The gun flew as Vernet
reached for his face and felt the warm blood running from his nose.
Robert Langdon hit the ground somewhere nearby, and Vernet tried to get up, but
he couldn't see. His vision blurred and he fell backward again. Sophie Neveu was
shouting. Moments later, Vernet felt a cloud of dirt and exhaust billowing over
him. He heard the crunching of tires on gravel and sat up just in time to see
the truck's wide wheelbase fail to navigate a turn. There was a crash as the
front bumper clipped a tree. The engine roared, and the tree bent. Finally, it
was the bumper that gave, tearing half off. The armored car lurched away, its
front bumper dragging. When the truck reached the paved access road, a shower of
sparks lit up the night, trailing the truck as it sped away.
Vernet turned his eyes back to the ground where the truck had been parked. Even
in the faint moonlight he could see there was nothing there.
The wooden box was gone.