the last visible message had been clear.
SENDING MESSAGE: 100 % COMPLETE.
The UH-60 pilot threw his rotors into overdrive, trying to keep his skids from touching any part of the large glass skylight. He knew the six thousand pounds of lift force that surged downward from his rotors was already straining the glass to its breaking point. Unfortunately, the incline of the pyramid beneath the helicopter was efficiently shedding the thrust sideways, robbing him of lift.
He tipped the nose, trying to skim away, but the left strut hit the center of the glass. It was only for an instant, but that was all it took.
The Temple Room’s massive oculus exploded in a swirl of glass and wind. . sending a torrent of jagged shards plummeting into the room below.
Mal’akh stared up into the beautiful white light and saw a veil of shimmering jewels fluttering toward him. . accelerating. . as if racing to shroud him in their splendor.
Suddenly there was pain.
Everywhere.
Stabbing. Searing. Slashing. Razor-sharp knives piercing soft flesh. Chest, neck, thighs, face. His body tightened all at once, recoiling. His blood-filled mouth cried out as the pain ripped him from his trance. The white light above transformed itself, and suddenly, as if by magic, a dark helicopter was suspended above him, its thundering blades driving an icy wind down into the Temple Room, chilling Mal’akh to the core and dispersing the wisps of incense to the distant corners of the room.
Mal’akh turned his head and saw the Akedah knife lying broken by his side, smashed upon the granite altar, which was covered in a blanket of shattered glass.
With welling horror, Mal’akh raised his head and peered down along the length of his own body. This living artifact was to have been his great offering. But it lay in tatters. His body was drenched in blood. . huge shards of glass protruding from his flesh in all directions.
Weakly, Mal’akh lowered his head back to the granite altar and stared up through the open space in the roof. The helicopter was gone now, in its place a silent, wintry moon.
Wide-eyed, Mal’akh lay gasping for breath. . all alone on the great altar.
CHAPTER 122
The secret
Mal’akh knew it had all gone wrong. There was no brilliant light. No wondrous reception. Only darkness and excruciating pain. Even in his eyes. He could see nothing, and yet he sensed movement all around him. There were voices. . human voices. . one of them, strangely, belonging to Robert Langdon.
«She’s okay,» Langdon kept repeating. «Katherine is
Mal’akh could no longer see, could not tell if his eyes were even open, but he heard the helicopter banking away. An abrupt calm settled through the Temple Room. Mal’akh could feel the smooth rhythms of the earth becoming uneven. . as if the ocean’s natural tides were being disrupted by a gathering storm.
Unfamiliar voices were shouting now, talking urgently with Langdon about the laptop and video file.
Mal’akh sensed that a lone individual had quietly approached. He knew who it was. He could smell the sacred oils he had rubbed into his father’s shaved body.
«I don’t know if you can hear me,» Peter Solomon whispered in his ear. «But I want you to know something.» He touched a finger to the sacred spot atop Mal’akh’s skull. «What you wrote here. .» He paused. «This is
According to legend, the Lost Word was written in a language so ancient and arcane that mankind had all but forgotten how to read it. This mysterious language, Peter had revealed, was in fact the oldest language on earth.
In the idiom of symbology, there was
This is what Peter had told him moments ago. Mal’akh had been skeptical at first, but then he had looked again at the grid, realizing that the image of the pyramid was pointing
Eagerly, Mal’akh had inscribed the great symbol of the circumpunct on his scalp. As he did so, he felt an upwelling of power and satisfaction.
And yet, at the last instant, everything had gone horribly wrong.
Peter was still behind him now, speaking words that Mal’akh could barely fathom. «I lied to you,» he was saying. «You left me no choice. If I had revealed to you the true Lost Word, you would not have believed me, nor would you have understood.»
«The truth is,» said Peter, «the Lost Word is known to
The words echoed in Mal’akh’s mind.
«You remain incomplete,» Peter said, gently placing his palm on top of mal’akh’s head. «your work is not yet done. but wherever you are going, please know this. . you were loved.»
For some reason, the gentle touch of his father’s hand felt like it was burning through him like a potent catalyst that was initiating a chemical reaction inside Mal’akh’s body. Without warning, he felt a rush of blistering energy surging through his physical shell, as if every cell in his body were now dissolving.
In an instant, all of his worldly pain evaporated.