“I am embarrassed, Sister, that you were awoken on my behalf.”
“Not at all. You are in Paris a short time. You should not miss Saint-Sulpice. Are your interests in the church more architectural or historical?”
“Actually, Sister, my interests are spiritual.”
She gave a pleasant laugh. “That goes without saying. I simply wondered where to begin your tour.”
Silas felt his eyes focus on the altar. “A tour is unnecessary. You have been more than kind. I can show myself around.”
“It is no trouble,” she said. “After all, I am awake.”
Silas stopped walking. They had reached the front pew now, and the altar was only fifteen yards away. He turned his massive body fully toward the small woman, and he could sense her recoil as she gazed up into his red eyes. “If it does not seem too rude, Sister, I am not accustomed to simply walking into a house of God and taking a tour. Would you mind if I took some time alone to pray before I look around?”
Sister Sandrine hesitated. “Oh, of course. I shall wait in the rear of the church for you.”
Silas put a soft but heavy hand on her shoulder and peered down. “Sister, I feel guilty already for having awoken you. To ask you to stay awake is too much. Please, you should return to bed. I can enjoy your sanctuary and then let myself out.”
She looked uneasy. “Are you sure you won't feel abandoned?”
“Not at all. Prayer is a solitary joy.”
“As you wish.”
Silas took his hand from her shoulder. “Sleep well, Sister. May the peace of the Lord be with you.”
“And also with you.” Sister Sandrine headed for the stairs. “Please be sure the door closes tightly on your way out.”
“I will be sure of it.” Silas watched her climb out of sight. Then he turned and knelt in the front pew, feeling the
Crouching in the shadows of the choir balcony high above the altar, Sister Sandrine peered silently through the balustrade at the cloaked monk kneeling alone. The sudden dread in her soul made it hard to stay still. For a fleeting instant, she wondered if this mysterious visitor could be the enemy they had warned her about, and if tonight she would have to carry out the orders she had been holding all these years. She decided to stay there in the darkness and watch his every move.
Chapter 20
Emerging from the shadows, Langdon and Sophie moved stealthily up the deserted Grand Gallery corridor toward the emergency exit stairwell.
As he moved, Langdon felt like he was trying to assemble a jigsaw puzzle in the dark. The newest aspect of this mystery was a deeply troubling one:
“Do you think,” he whispered, “that maybe
Sophie didn't even turn. “Impossible.”
Langdon wasn't so sure. “He seems pretty intent on making me look guilty. Maybe he thought writing my name on the floor would help his case?”
“The Fibonacci sequence? The P.S.? All the Da Vinci and goddess symbolism? That
Langdon knew she was right. The symbolism of the clues meshed too perfectly—the pentacle,
“And his phone call to me this afternoon,” Sophie added. “He said he had to tell me something. I'm certain his message at the Louvre was his final effort to tell me something important, something he thought you could help me understand.”
Langdon frowned.
“The doorway isn't much farther,” Sophie said.
“Do you think there's a possibility that the
“I've been thinking about the numbers all night. Sums, quotients, products. I don't see anything. Mathematically, they're arranged at random. Cryptographic gibberish.”
“And yet they're all part of the Fibonacci sequence. That can't be coincidence.”
“It's not. Using Fibonacci numbers was my grandfather's way of waving another flag at me—like writing the message in English, or arranging himself like my favorite piece of art, or drawing a pentacle on himself. All of it was to catch my attention.”
“The pentacle has meaning to you?”
“Yes. I didn't get a chance to tell you, but the pentacle was a special symbol between my grandfather and me when I was growing up. We used to play Tarot cards for fun, and my indicator card
Langdon felt a chill.
They arrived at the emergency stairwell, and Sophie carefully pulled open the door. No alarm sounded. Only the doors to the outside were wired. Sophie led Langdon down a tight set of switchback stairs toward the ground level, picking up speed as they went.
“Your grandfather,” Langdon said, hurrying behind her, “when he told you about the pentacle, did he mention goddess worship or any resentment of the Catholic Church?”
Sophie shook her head. “I was more interested in the mathematics of it—the Divine Proportion, PHI, Fibonacci sequences, that sort of thing.”
Langdon was surprised. “Your grandfather taught you about the number PHI?”
“Of course. The Divine Proportion.” Her expression turned sheepish. “In fact, he used to joke that I was