thought."
"Not necessarily. We must remember that the cardinals spent much of today in the Vatican museums and St. Peter’s Basilica, enjoying those areas without the crowds. It is probable that the missing cardinals were taken in one of these areas."
"But how were they removed from our walls?"
"We are still assessing that."
"I see." The camerlegno exhaled and stood up. He walked over to Olivetti. "Commander, I would like to hear your contingency plan for evacuation."
"We are still formalizing that, signore. In the meantime, I am faithful Captain Rocher will find the canister."
Rocher clicked his boots as if in appreciation of the vote of confidence. "My men have already scanned two-thirds of the white zones. Confidence is high."
The camerlegno did not appear to share that confidence.
At that moment the guard with a scar beneath one eye came through the door carrying a clipboard and a map. He strode toward Langdon. "Mr. Langdon? I have the information you requested on the
Langdon swallowed his scone. "Good. Let’s have a look."
The others kept talking while Vittoria joined Robert and the guard as they spread out the map on the Pope’s desk.
The soldier pointed to St. Peter’s Square. "This is where we are. The central line of
Langdon slumped. "
"Maybe more."
"Do any of the churches fall
"Some look closer than others," the guard said, "but translating the exact bearing of the
Langdon looked out at St. Peter’s Square a moment. Then he scowled, stroking his chin. "How about
Silence.
"How about obelisks?" he demanded. "Are any of the churches located near obelisks? "
The guard began checking the map.
Vittoria saw a glimmer of hope in Langdon’s eyes and realized what he was thinking.
"It’s a long shot," Langdon said, "but I know that many of Rome’s obelisks were erected or moved during Bernini’s reign. He was no doubt involved in their placement."
"Or," Vittoria added, "Bernini could have placed his markers
Langdon nodded. "True."
"Bad news," the guard said. "No obelisks on the line." He traced his finger across the map. "None even remotely close. Nothing."
Langdon sighed.
Vittoria’s shoulders slumped. She’d thought it was a promising idea. Apparently, this was not going to be as easy as they’d hoped. She tried to stay positive. "Robert, think. You must know of a Bernini statue relating to
"Believe me, I’ve been thinking. Bernini was incredibly prolific. Hundreds of works. I was hoping
"
Langdon shrugged. "There’s his famous sketches of
Vittoria frowned. "And you’re sure the
"You saw the relief, Vittoria. The design was totally symmetrical. The only indication of bearing was the breath."
Vittoria knew he was right.
"Not to mention," he added, "because the
Vittoria nodded.
Olivetti came over. "What have you got?"
"Too many churches," the soldier said. "Two dozen or so. I suppose we could put four men on each church—"
"Forget it," Olivetti said. "We missed this guy twice when we knew exactly where he was going to be. A mass stakeout means leaving Vatican City unprotected and canceling the search."
"We need a reference book," Vittoria said. "An index of Bernini’s work. If we can scan titles, maybe something will jump out."
"I don’t know," Langdon said. "If it’s a work Bernini created specifically for the Illuminati, it may be very obscure. It probably won’t be listed in a book."
Vittoria refused to believe it. "The other two sculptures were fairly well-known. You’d heard of them both."
Langdon shrugged. "Yeah."
"If we scan titles for references to the word ‘fire,’ maybe we’ll find a statue that’s listed as being in the right direction."
Langdon seemed convinced it was worth a shot. He turned to Olivetti. "I need a list of all Bernini’s work. You guys probably don’t have a coffee-table Bernini book around here, do you?"
"Coffee-table book?" Olivetti seemed unfamiliar with the term.
"Never mind. Any list. How about the Vatican Museum? They must have Bernini references."
The guard with the scar frowned. "Power in the museum is out, and the records room is enormous. Without the staff there to help—"
"The Bernini work in question," Olivetti interrupted. "Would it have been created while Bernini was employed here at the Vatican?"
"Almost definitely," Langdon said. "He was here almost his entire career. And certainly during the time period of the Galileo conflict."
Olivetti nodded. "Then there’s another reference."
Vittoria felt a flicker of optimism. "Where?"
The commander did not reply. He took his guard aside and spoke in hushed tones. The guard seemed uncertain but nodded obediently. When Olivetti was finished talking, the guard turned to Langdon.
"This way please, Mr. Langdon. It’s nine-fifteen. We’ll have to hurry."
Langdon and the guard headed for the door.
Vittoria started after them. "I’ll help."
Olivetti caught her by the arm. "No, Ms. Vetra. I need a word with you." His grasp was authoritative.