reason for east-facing tombs. "Why would Christians want their tombs to face the rising
Langdon smiled, pacing before the blackboard, chewing an apple. "Mr. Hitzrot!" he shouted.
A young man dozing in back sat up with a start. "What! Me?"
Langdon pointed to a Renaissance art poster on the wall. "Who is that man kneeling before God? "
"Um… some saint?"
"Brilliant. And how do you
"He’s got a halo?"
"Excellent, and does that golden halo remind you of anything?"
Hitzrot broke into a smile. "Yeah! Those Egyptian things we studied last term. Those… um…
"Thank you, Hitzrot. Go back to sleep." Langdon turned back to the class. "Halos, like much of Christian symbology, were borrowed from the ancient Egyptian religion of
"Excuse me?" the girl in front said. "I go to church all the time, and I don’t see much sun worshiping going on!"
"Really? What do you celebrate on December twenty-fifth?"
"Christmas. The birth of Jesus Christ."
"And yet according to the Bible, Christ was born in March, so what are we doing celebrating in late December?"
Silence.
Langdon smiled. "December twenty-fifth, my friends, is the ancient pagan holiday of
Langdon took another bite of apple.
"Conquering religions," he continued, "often adopt existing holidays to make conversion less shocking. It’s called
Now the girl in front looked furious. "You’re implying Christianity is just some kind of… repackaged
"Not at all. Christianity did not borrow
The girl glared. "So, is
"Very little in
"Um… hold on," Hitzrot ventured, sounding awake now. "I know something Christian that’s original. How about our
Langdon smiled. "When the early Christian converts abandoned their former deities—pagan gods, Roman gods, Greek, sun, Mithraic, whatever—they asked the church what their new Christian God looked like. Wisely, the church chose the most feared, powerful… and familiar face in all of recorded history."
Hitzrot looked skeptical. "An old man with a white, flowing beard?"
Langdon pointed to a hierarchy of ancient gods on the wall. At the top sat an old man with a white, flowing beard. "Does Zeus look familiar?"
The class ended right on cue.
"Good evening," a man’s voice said.
Langdon jumped. He was back in the Pantheon. He turned to face an elderly man in a blue cape with a red cross on the chest. The man gave him a gray-toothed smile.
"You’re English, right?" The man’s accent was thick Tuscan.
Langdon blinked, confused. "Actually, no. I’m American."
The man looked embarrassed. "Oh heavens, forgive me. You were so nicely dressed, I just figured… my apologies."
"Can I help you?" Langdon asked, his heart beating wildly.
"Actually I thought perhaps I could help
"You look like a man of distinction," the guide fawned, "no doubt more interested in culture than most. Perhaps I can give you some history on this fascinating building."
Langdon smiled politely. "Kind of you, but I’m actually an art historian myself, and—"
"Superb!" The man’s eyes lit up like he’d hit the jackpot. "Then you will no doubt find this delightful!"
"I think I’d prefer to—"
"The Pantheon," the man declared, launching into his memorized spiel, "was built by Marcus Agrippa in 27 B.C."
"Yes," Langdon interjected, "and rebuilt by Hadrian in 119 A.D."
"It was the world’s largest free-standing dome until 1960 when it was eclipsed by the Superdome in New Orleans!"
Langdon groaned. The man was unstoppable.
"And a fifth-century theologian once called the Pantheon the
Langdon blocked him out. His eyes climbed skyward to the oculus, and the memory of Vittoria’s suggested plot flashed a bone-numbing image in his mind… a branded cardinal falling through the hole and hitting the marble floor.
As Langdon moved off to continue his inspection, the babbling docent followed like a love-starved puppy.
Across the room, Vittoria was immersed in her own search. Standing all alone for the first time since she had heard the news of her father, she felt the stark reality of the last eight hours closing in around her. Her father had been murdered—cruelly and abruptly. Almost equally painful was that her father’s creation had been corrupted— now a tool of terrorists. Vittoria was plagued with guilt to think that it was
Oddly, the only thing that felt right in her life at the moment was the presence of a total stranger. Robert Langdon. She found an inexplicable refuge in his eyes… like the harmony of the oceans she had left behind early that morning. She was glad he was there. Not only had he been a source of strength and hope for her, Langdon had used his quick mind to render this one chance to catch her father’s killer.