Langdon continued translating his folios with increasing difficulty. His Italian skills were rocky at best, and the tiny penmanship and archaic language was making it slow going. Vittoria reached the end of her stack before Langdon and looked disheartened as she flipped the pages back over. She hunkered down for another more intense inspection.
When Langdon finished his final page, he cursed under his breath and looked over at Vittoria. She was scowling, squinting at something on one of her folios. "What is it?" he asked.
Vittoria did not look up. "Did you have any footnotes on your pages?"
"Not that I noticed. Why?"
"This page has a footnote. It’s obscured in a crease."
Langdon tried to see what she was looking at, but all he could make out was the page number in the upper right-hand corner of the sheet. Folio 5. It took a moment for the coincidence to register, and even when it did the connection seemed vague.
Vittoria shook her head. "Text. One line. Very small printing. Almost illegible."
His hopes faded. "It’s supposed to be math.
"Yeah, I know." She hesitated. "I think you’ll want to hear this, though." Langdon sensed excitement in her voice.
"Go ahead."
Squinting at the folio, Vittoria read the line. "The path of light is laid, the sacred test."
The words were nothing like what Langdon had imagined. "I’m sorry?"
Vittoria repeated the line. "The path of light is laid, the sacred test."
"Path of light?" Langdon felt his posture straightening.
"That’s what it says. Path of light."
As the words sank in, Langdon felt his delirium pierced by an instant of clarity.
Vittoria hesitated. "Actually…" She glanced over at him with a strange look. "It’s not technically a translation. The line is written in
For an instant, Langdon thought the acoustics in the chamber had affected his hearing. "
Vittoria pushed the document over to him, and Langdon read the minuscule printing at the bottom of the page. "
Vittoria shrugged. She too was looking tipsy. "Maybe English is what they meant by the
"But this was in the 1600s," Langdon argued. "Nobody spoke English in Italy, not even— " He stopped short, realizing what he was about to say. "Not even… the
"So you’re saying maybe Galileo considered English
"Yes. Or maybe by putting the clue in English, Galileo was subtly restricting the readership away from the Vatican."
"But it’s not even a clue," Vittoria argued. "
"We need to get out of here," Vittoria said, sounding hoarse.
Langdon wasn’t listening.
Vittoria looked lost. "Iambic who?"
For an instant Langdon was back at Phillips Exeter Academy sitting in a Saturday morning English class.
A moment later, another realization sent a numbing sensation down his legs. Iambic pentameter, on account of its simplicity, was often called "pure verse" or "pure meter."
"Uh oh," Vittoria said.
Langdon wheeled to see her rotating the folio upside down. He felt a knot in his gut.
"No, it’s not an ambigram… but it’s…" She kept turning the document, 90 degrees at every turn.
"It’s what?"
Vittoria looked up. "It’s not the
"There’s another?"
"There’s a different line on every margin. Top, bottom, left, and right. I think it’s a poem."
"Four lines?" Langdon bristled with excitement.
Vittoria did not relinquish the page. She kept turning the page in quarter turns. "I didn’t see the lines before because they’re on the edges." She cocked her head over the last line. "Huh. You know what? Galileo didn’t even write this."
"What!"
"The poem is signed John Milton."
"John
