For the first time, all four Robert Langdon thrillers are now available as one ebook bundle.
If you haven’t read a Dan Brown yet, now’s the time.
The countdown to oblivion has started - who will stop the clock?
A famous scientist is found dead, a mysterious symbol burned into his skin.
Many miles away in Rome, the world’s cardinals gather to elect a new pope. Little do they know that beneath their feet, a vast bomb has started to tick.
Professor Robert Langdon must work out the link between these two seemingly unconnected events if he is stop the Vatican being blown sky high.
The race to uncover the oldest secret has begun …
An eminent man is brutally murdered in the world’s most famous museum. Around his body are a ring of codes, hastily drawn in blood.
He died to protect a long-kept secret which Professor Robert Langdon must now uncover. It will be a race against time to decipher this final message. Can he get there before the killers do?
To save a life, you must first crack the code …
A mysterious invitation brings Professor Robert Langdon to Washington DC. But all is not as it seems in this powerful city. An ancient organization plans to reassert itself. And he is the only man standing in its way.
If he is to prevent a terrible plan being executed, Langdon must decipher a series of increasingly bloody clues. But first he has to make sure he stays alive …
The world is in danger – who will save it?
Robert Langdon wakes up in a Florence hospital with no clue how he got there.
But another attack on his life makes it very clear – someone wants him dead. And fast.
To survive, Langdon must work out who it is. And then he must answer the next question – why?
Dan Brown is the bestselling author of Digital Fortress, Deception Point, Angels and Demons, The Da Vinci Code, The Lost Symbol and most recently, Inferno. Three of his Robert Langdon novels have been adapted for the screen by Ron Howard, starring Tom Hanks. They have all been international blockbusters.
His new Robert Langdon novel, Origin will be out in Autumn 2017.
Dan Brown is a graduate of Amherst College and Phillips Exeter Academy, where he has taught English and Creative Writing. He lives in New England.
National Security Agency, Fort Meade, Maryland: when the world’s most powerful code-breaking machine encounters a mysterious code it cannot break, head cryptographer Susan Fletcher is summoned. What she uncovers sends shock waves through the corridors of power. The NSA is being held hostage … not by guns or bombs, but by a code so ingeniously complex that if released it would cripple US intelligence.
From the underground hallways of power to the skyscrapers of Tokyo to the towering cathedrals of Spain, a desperate race unfolds. Caught in an accelerating tempest of secrecy and lies, betrayed on all sides, Susan Fletcher finds herself fighting not only for her country but for her life, and in the end, for the life of the man she loves.
‘Engaged me instantly … Keeps up a cracking pace as the mystery deepens and disaster follows disaster’ THE TIMES
National Reconnaissance Office, Washington: Intelligence analyst, Rachel Sexton, is called before the President of the United States to verify a discovery which NASA claims will change the future of the planet itself.
Milne Ice Shelf, Arctic Circle: teams work feverishly to unearth an astonishingly rare object buried deep in the ice. But, accompanied by charismatic academic Michael Tolland, Rachel soon uncovers the unthinkable: evidence of scientific trickery. They soon find out this is not a discovery that anyone wants to hear …
‘A case study in suspense’ WASHINGTON POST
TRANSWORLD PUBLISHERS
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Transworld is part of the Penguin Random House group of companies whose addresses can be found at global.penguinrandomhouse.com
First published in Great Britain in 2016 by Transworld Digital
an imprint of Transworld Publishers
Angels and Demons Copyright © Dan Brown 2000
The Da Vinci Code Copyright © Dan Brown 2003
The Lost Symbol Copyright © Dan Brown 2009
Inferno Copyright © Dan Brown 2013
Dan Brown has asserted his right under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988 to be identified as the author of this work.
This book is a work of fiction and, except in the case of historical fact, any resemblance to actual persons living or dead, is purely coincidental.
Every effort has been made to obtain the necessary permissions with reference to copyright material, both illustrative and quoted. We apologize for any omissions in this respect and will be pleased to make the appropriate acknowledgements in any future edition.
A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.
Version 1.0 Epub ISBN 9781473543201
This ebook is copyright material and must not be copied, reproduced, transferred, distributed, leased, licensed or publicly performed or used in any way except as specifically permitted in writing by the publishers, as allowed under the terms and conditions under which it was purchased or as strictly permitted by applicable copyright law. Any unauthorized distribution or use of this text may be a direct infringement of the author’s and publisher’s rights and those responsible may be liable in law accordingly.
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For Blythe …
A debt of gratitude to Emily Bestler, Jason Kaufman, Ben Kaplan, and everyone at Pocket Books for their belief in this project.
To my friend and agent, Jake Elwell, for his enthusiasm and unflagging effort.
To the legendary George Wieser, for convincing me to write novels.
To my dear friend Irv Sittler, for facilitating my audience with the Pope, secreting me into parts of Vatican City few ever see, and making my time in Rome unforgettable.
To one of the most ingenious and gifted artists alive, John Langdon, who rose brilliantly to my impossible challenge and created the ambigrams for this novel.
To Stan Planton, head librarian, Ohio University – Chillicothe, for being my number one source of information on countless topics.
To Sylvia Cavazzini, for her gracious tour through the secret Passetto.
And to the best parents a kid could hope for, Dick and Connie Brown … for everything.
Thanks also to CERN, Henry Beckett, Brett Trotter, the Pontifical Academy of Science, Brookhaven Institute, FermiLab Library, Olga Wieser, Don Ulsch of the National Security Institute, Caroline H. Thompson at University of Wales, Kathryn Gerhard and Omar Al Kindi, John Pike and the Federation of American Scientists, Heimlich Viserholder, Corinna and Davis Hammond, Aizaz Ali, the Galileo Project of Rice University, Julie Lynn and Charlie Ryan at Mockingbird Pictures, Gary Goldstein, Dave (Vilas) Arnold and Andra Crawford, the Global Fraternal Network, the Phillips Exeter Academy Library, Jim Barrington, John Maier, the exceptionally keen eye of Margie Wachtel, alt.masonic. members, Alan Wooley, the Library of Congress Vatican Codices Exhibit, Lisa Callamaro and the Callamaro Agency, Jon A. Stowell, Musei Vaticani, Aldo Baggia, Noah Alireza, Harriet Walker, Charles Terry, Micron Electrics, Mindy Renselaer, Nancy and Dick Curtin, Thomas D. Nadeau, NuvoMedia and Rocket E-books, Frank and Sylvia Kennedy, Simon Edwards, Rome Board of Tourism, Maestro Gregory Brown, Val Brown, Werner Brandes, Paul Krupin at Direct Contact, Paul Stark, Tom King at Computalk Network, Sandy and Jerry Nolan, Web guru Linda George, the National Academy of Art in Rome, physicist and fellow scribe Steve Howe, Robert Weston, the Water Street Bookstore in Exeter, New Hampshire, and the Vatican Observatory.
The world’s largest scientific research facility – Switzerland’s Conseil Européen pour la Recherche Nucléaire (CERN) – recently succeeded in producing the first particles of antimatter. Antimatter is identical to physical matter except that it is composed of particles whose electric charges are opposite to those found in normal matter.
Antimatter is the most powerful energy source known to man. It releases energy with 100 per cent efficiency (nuclear fission is 1.5 per cent efficient). Antimatter creates no pollution or radiation, and a droplet could power New York City for a full day.
There is, however, one catch …
Antimatter is highly unstable. It ignites when it comes in contact with absolutely anything … even air. A single gram of antimatter contains the energy of a 20-kiloton nuclear bomb – the size of the bomb dropped on Hiroshima.
Until recently antimatter has been created only in very small amounts (a few atoms at a time). But CERN has now broken ground on its new Antiproton Decelerator – an advanced antimatter production facility that promises to create antimatter in much larger quantities.
One question looms: Will this highly volatile substance save the world, or will it be used to create the most deadly weapon ever made?
References to all works of art, tombs, tunnels, and architecture in Rome are entirely factual (as are their exact locations). They can still be seen today.
The brotherhood of the Illuminati is also factual.
Physicist Leonardo Vetra smelled burning flesh, and he knew it was his own. He stared up in terror at the dark figure looming over him. ‘What do you want!’
‘La chiave,’ the raspy voice replied. ‘The password.’
‘But … I don’t—’
The intruder pressed down again, grinding the white hot object deeper into Vetra’s chest. There was the hiss of broiling flesh.
Vetra cried out in agony. ‘There is no password!’ He felt himself drifting toward unconsciousness.
The figure glared. ‘Ne avevo paura. I was afraid of that.’
Vetra fought to keep his senses, but the darkness was closing in. His only solace was in knowing his attacker would never obtain what he had come for. A moment later, however, the figure produced a blade and brought it to Vetra’s face. The blade hovered. Carefully. Surgically.
‘For the love of God!’ Vetra screamed. But it was too late.
HIGH ATOP THE steps of the Great Pyramid of Giza, a young woman laughed and called down to him. ‘Robert, hurry up! I knew I should have married a younger man!’ Her smile was magic.
He struggled to keep up, but his legs felt like stone. ‘Wait,’ he begged. ‘Please …’
As he climbed, his vision began to blur. There was a thundering in his ears. I must reach her! But when he looked up again, the woman had disappeared. In her place stood an old man with rotting teeth. The man stared down, curling his lips into a lonely grimace. Then he let out a scream of anguish that resounded across the desert.
Robert Langdon awoke with a start from his nightmare. The phone beside his bed was ringing. Dazed, he picked up the receiver.
‘Hello?’
‘I’m looking for Robert Langdon,’ a man’s voice said.
Langdon sat up in his empty bed and tried to clear his mind. ‘This … is Robert Langdon.’ He squinted at his digital clock. It was 5.18 a.m.
‘I must see you immediately.’
‘Who is this?’
‘My name is Maximilian Kohler. I’m a discrete particle physicist.’
‘A what?’ Langdon could barely focus. ‘Are you sure you’ve got the right Langdon?’
‘You’re a professor of religious iconology at Harvard University. You’ve written three books on symbology and—’
‘Do you know what time it is?’
‘I apologize. I have something you need to see. I can’t discuss it on the phone.’
A knowing groan escaped Langdon’s lips. This had happened before. One of the perils of writing books about religious symbology was the calls from religious zealots who wanted him to confirm their latest sign from God. Last month, a stripper from Oklahoma had promised Langdon the best sex of his life if he would fly down and verify the authenticity of a cruciform that had magically appeared on her bed sheets. The Shroud of Tulsa, Langdon had called it.
‘How did you get my number?’ Langdon tried to be polite, despite the hour.
‘On the Worldwide Web. The site for your book.’
Langdon frowned. He was damn sure his book’s site did not include his home phone number. The man was obviously lying.
‘I need to see you,’ the caller insisted. ‘I’ll pay you well.’
Now Langdon was getting mad. ‘I’m sorry, but I really—’
‘If you leave immediately, you can be here by—’
‘I’m not going anywhere! It’s five o’clock in the morning!’ Langdon hung up and collapsed back in bed. He closed his eyes and tried to fall back asleep. It was no use. The dream was emblazoned in his mind. Reluctantly, he put on his robe and went downstairs.
Robert Langdon wandered barefoot through his deserted Massachusetts Victorian home and nursed his ritual insomnia remedy – a mug of steaming Nestlé’s Quik. The April moon filtered through the bay windows and played on the oriental carpets. Langdon’s colleagues often joked that his place looked more like an anthropology museum than a home. His shelves were packed with religious artifacts from around the world – an ekuaba from Ghana, a gold cross from Spain, a cycladic idol from the Aegean, and even a rare woven boccus from Borneo, a young warrior’s symbol of perpetual youth.
As Langdon sat on his brass Maharishi’s chest and savored the warmth of the chocolate, the bay window caught his reflection. The image was distorted and pale … like a ghost. An aging ghost, he thought, cruelly reminded that his youthful spirit was living in a mortal shell.
Although not overly handsome in a classical sense, the forty-five-year-old Langdon had what his female colleagues referred to as an ‘erudite’ appeal – wisps of gray in his thick brown hair, probing blue eyes, an arrestingly deep voice, and the strong, carefree smile of a collegiate athlete. A varsity diver in prep school and college, Langdon still had the body of a swimmer, a toned, six-foot physique that he vigilantly maintained with fifty laps a day in the university pool.
Langdon’s friends had always viewed him as a bit of an enigma – a man caught between centuries. On weekends he could be seen lounging on the quad in blue jeans, discussing computer graphics or religious history with students; other times he could be spotted in his Harris tweed and paisley vest, photographed in the pages of upscale art magazines at museum openings where he had been asked to lecture.
Although a tough teacher and strict disciplinarian, Langdon was the first to embrace what he hailed as the ‘lost art of good clean fun.’ He relished recreation with an infectious fanaticism that had earned him a fraternal acceptance among his students. His campus nickname – ‘The Dolphin’ – was a reference both to his affable nature and his legendary ability to dive into a pool and outmaneuver the entire opposing squad in a water polo match.
As Langdon sat alone, absently gazing into the darkness, the silence of his home was shattered again, this time by the ring of his fax machine. Too exhausted to be annoyed, Langdon forced a tired chuckle.
God’s people, he thought. Two thousand years of waiting for their Messiah, and they’re still persistent as hell.
Wearily, he returned his empty mug to the kitchen and walked slowly to his oak-paneled study. The incoming fax lay in the tray. Sighing, he scooped up the paper and looked at it.
Instantly, a wave of nausea hit him.
The image on the page was that of a human corpse. The body had been stripped naked, and its head had been twisted, facing completely backward. On the victim’s chest was a terrible burn. The man had been branded … imprinted with a single word. It was a word Langdon knew well. Very well. He stared at the ornate lettering in disbelief.
‘Illuminati,’ he stammered, his heart pounding. It can’t be …
In slow motion, afraid of what he was about to witness, Langdon rotated the fax 180 degrees. He looked at the word upside down.
Instantly, the breath went out of him. It was like he had been hit by a truck. Barely able to believe his eyes, he rotated the fax again, reading the brand right-side up and then upside down.
‘Illuminati,’ he whispered.
Stunned, Langdon collapsed in a chair. He sat a moment in utter bewilderment. Gradually, his eyes were drawn to the blinking red light on his fax machine. Whoever had sent this fax was still on the line … waiting to talk. Langdon gazed at the blinking light a long time.
Then, trembling, he picked up the receiver.
‘DO I HAVE your attention now?’ the man’s voice said when Langdon finally answered the line.
‘Yes, sir, you damn well do. You want to explain yourself?’
‘I tried to tell you before.’ The voice was rigid, mechanical. ‘I’m a physicist. I run a research facility. We’ve had a murder. You saw the body.’
‘How did you find me?’ Langdon could barely focus. His mind was racing from the image on the fax.
‘I already told you. The Worldwide Web. The site for your book, The Art of the Illuminati.’
Langdon tried to gather his thoughts. His book was virtually unknown in mainstream literary circles, but it had developed quite a following on-line. Nonetheless, the caller’s claim still made no sense. ‘That page has no contact information,’ Langdon challenged. ‘I’m certain of it.’
‘I have people here at the lab very adept at extracting user information from the Web.’
Langdon was skeptical. ‘Sounds like your lab knows a lot about the Web.’
‘We should,’ the man fired back. ‘We invented it.’
Something in the man’s voice told Langdon he was not joking.
‘I must see you,’ the caller insisted. ‘This is not a matter we can discuss on the phone. My lab is only an hour’s flight from Boston.’
Langdon stood in the dim light of his study and analyzed the fax in his hand. The image was overpowering, possibly representing the epigraphical find of the century, a decade of his research confirmed in a single symbol.
‘It’s urgent,’ the voice pressured.
Langdon’s eyes were locked on the brand. Illuminati, he read over and over. His work had always been based on the symbolic equivalent of fossils – ancient documents and historical hearsay – but this image before him was today. Present tense. He felt like a paleontologist coming face to face with a living dinosaur.
‘I’ve taken the liberty of sending a plane for you,’ the voice said. ‘It will be in Boston in twenty minutes.’
Langdon felt his mouth go dry. An hour’s flight …
‘Please forgive my presumption,’ the voice said. ‘I need you here.’
Langdon looked again at the fax – an ancient myth confirmed in black and white. The implications were frightening. He gazed absently through the bay window. The first hint of dawn was sifting through the birch trees in his backyard, but the view looked somehow different this morning. As an odd combination of fear and exhilaration settled over him, Langdon knew he had no choice.
‘You win,’ he said. ‘Tell me where to meet the plane.’
THOUSANDS OF MILES away, two men were meeting. The chamber was dark. Medieval. Stone.
‘Benvenuto,’ the man in charge said. He was seated in the shadows, out of sight. ‘Were you successful?’
‘Si,’ the dark figure replied. ‘Perfettamente.’ His words were as hard as the rock walls.
‘And there will be no doubt who is responsible?’
‘None.’
‘Superb. Do you have what I asked for?’
The killer’s eyes glistened, black like oil. He produced a heavy electronic device and set it on the table.
The man in the shadows seemed pleased. ‘You have done well.’
‘Serving the brotherhood is an honor,’ the killer replied.
‘Phase two begins shortly. Get some rest. Tonight we change the world.’
ROBERT LANGDON’S SAAB 900S tore out of the Callahan Tunnel and emerged on the east side of Boston Harbor near the entrance to Logan Airport. Checking his directions Langdon found Aviation Road and turned left past the old Eastern Airlines Building. Three hundred yards down the access road a hangar loomed in the darkness. A large number ‘4’ was painted on it. He pulled into the parking lot and got out of his car.
A round-faced man in a blue flight suit emerged from behind the building. ‘Robert Langdon?’ he called. The man’s voice was friendly. He had an accent Langdon couldn’t place.
‘That’s me,’ Langdon said, locking his car.
‘Perfect timing,’ the man said. ‘I’ve just landed. Follow me, please.’
As they circled the building, Langdon felt tense. He was not accustomed to cryptic phone calls and secret rendezvous with strangers. Not knowing what to expect he had donned his usual classroom attire – a pair of chinos, a turtleneck, and a Harris tweed suit jacket. As they walked, he thought about the fax in his jacket pocket, still unable to believe the image it depicted.
The pilot seemed to sense Langdon’s anxiety. ‘Flying’s not a problem for you, is it, sir?’
‘Not at all,’ Langdon replied. Branded corpses are a problem for me. Flying I can handle.
The man led Langdon the length of the hangar. They rounded the corner onto the runway.
Langdon stopped dead in his tracks and gaped at the aircraft parked on the tarmac. ‘We’re riding in that?’
The man grinned. ‘Like it?’
Langdon stared a long moment. ‘Like it? What the hell is it?’
The craft before them was enormous. It was vaguely reminiscent of the space shuttle except that the top had been shaved off, leaving it perfectly flat. Parked there on the runway, it resembled a colossal wedge. Langdon’s first impression was that he must be dreaming. The vehicle looked as airworthy as a Buick. The wings were practically non-existent – just two stubby fins on the rear of the fuselage. A pair of dorsal guiders rose out of the aft section. The rest of the plane was hull – about two hundred feet from front to back – no windows, nothing but hull.
‘Two hundred fifty thousand kilos fully fueled,’ the pilot offered, like a father bragging about his newborn. ‘Runs on slush hydrogen. The shell’s a titanium matrix with silicon carbide fibers. She packs a 20:1 thrust/weight ratio; most jets run at 7:1. The director must be in one helluva hurry to see you. He doesn’t usually send the big boy.’
‘This thing flies?’ Langdon said.
The pilot smiled. ‘Oh yeah.’ He led Langdon across the tarmac toward the plane. ‘Looks kind of startling, I know, but you better get used to it. In five years, all you’ll see are these babies – HSCT’s – High Speed Civil Transports. Our lab’s one of the first to own one.’
Must be one hell of a lab, Langdon thought.
‘This one’s a prototype of the Boeing X-33,’ the pilot continued, ‘but there are dozens of others – the National Aero Space Plane, the Russians have Scramjet, the Brits have HOTOL. The future’s here, it’s just taking some time to get to the public sector. You can kiss conventional jets good-bye.’
Langdon looked up warily at the craft. ‘I think I’d prefer a conventional jet.’
The pilot motioned up the gangplank. ‘This way, please, Mr Langdon. Watch your step.’
Minutes later, Langdon was seated inside the empty cabin. The pilot buckled him into the front row and disappeared toward the front of the aircraft.
The cabin itself looked surprisingly like a wide-body commercial airliner. The only exception was that it had no windows, which made Langdon uneasy. He had been haunted his whole life by a mild case of claustrophobia – the vestige of a childhood incident he had never quite overcome.
Langdon’s aversion to closed spaces was by no means debilitating, but it had always frustrated him. It manifested itself in subtle ways. He avoided enclosed sports like racquetball or squash, and he had gladly paid a small fortune for his airy, high-ceilinged Victorian home even though economical faculty housing was readily available. Langdon had often suspected his attraction to the art world as a young boy sprang from his love of museums’ wide open spaces.
The engines roared to life beneath him, sending a deep shudder through the hull. Langdon swallowed hard and waited. He felt the plane start taxiing. Piped-in country music began playing quietly overhead.
A phone on the wall beside him beeped twice. Langdon lifted the receiver.
‘Hello?’
‘Comfortable, Mr Langdon?’
‘Not at all.’
‘Just relax. We’ll be there in an hour.’
‘And where exactly is there?’ Langdon asked, realizing he had no idea where he was headed.
‘Geneva,’ the pilot replied, revving the engines. ‘The lab’s in Geneva.’
‘Geneva,’ Langdon repeated, feeling a little better. ‘Upstate New York. I’ve actually got family near Seneca Lake. I wasn’t aware Geneva had a physics lab.’
The pilot laughed. ‘Not Geneva, New York, Mr Langdon. Geneva, Switzerland.’
The word took a long moment to register. ‘Switzerland?’ Langdon felt his pulse surge. ‘I thought you said the lab was only an hour away!’
‘It is, Mr Langdon.’ The pilot chuckled. ‘This plane goes Mach fifteen.’
ON A BUSY European street, the killer serpentined through a crowd. He was a powerful man. Dark and potent. Deceptively agile. His muscles still felt hard from the thrill of his meeting.
It went well, he told himself. Although his employer had never revealed his face, the killer felt honored to be in his presence. Had it really been only fifteen days since his employer had first made contact? The killer still remembered every word of that call …
‘My name is Janus,’ the caller had said. ‘We are kinsmen of a sort. We share an enemy. I hear your skills are for hire.’
‘It depends whom you represent,’ the killer replied.
The caller told him.
‘Is this your idea of a joke?’
‘You have heard our name, I see,’ the caller replied.
‘Of course. The brotherhood is legendary.’
‘And yet you find yourself doubting I am genuine.’
‘Everyone knows the brothers have faded to dust.’
‘A devious ploy. The most dangerous enemy is that which no one fears.’
The killer was skeptical. ‘The brotherhood endures?’
‘Deeper underground than ever before. Our roots infiltrate everything you see … even the sacred fortress of our most sworn enemy.’
‘Impossible. They are invulnerable.’
‘Our reach is far.’
‘No one’s reach is that far.’
‘Very soon, you will believe. An irrefutable demonstration of the brotherhood’s power has already transpired. A single act of treachery and proof.’
‘What have you done?’
The caller told him.
The killer’s eyes went wide. ‘An impossible task.’
The next day, newspapers around the globe carried the same headline. The killer became a believer.
Now, fifteen days later, the killer’s faith had solidified beyond the shadow of a doubt. The brotherhood endures, he thought. Tonight they will surface to reveal their power.
As he made his way through the streets, his black eyes gleamed with foreboding. One of the most covert and feared fraternities ever to walk the earth had called on him for service. They have chosen wisely, he thought. His reputation for secrecy was exceeded only by that of his deadliness.
So far, he had served them nobly. He had made his kill and delivered the item to Janus as requested. Now, it was up to Janus to use his power to ensure the item’s placement.
The placement …
The killer wondered how Janus could possibly handle such a staggering task. The man obviously had connections on the inside. The brotherhood’s dominion seemed limitless.
Janus, the killer thought. A code name, obviously. Was it a reference, he wondered, to the Roman two-faced god … or to the moon of Saturn? Not that it made any difference. Janus wielded unfathomable power. He had proven that beyond a doubt.
As the killer walked, he imagined his ancestors smiling down on him. Today he was fighting their battle, he was fighting the same enemy they had fought for ages, as far back as the eleventh century … when the enemy’s crusading armies had first pillaged his land, raping and killing his people, declaring them unclean, defiling their temples and gods.
His ancestors had formed a small but deadly army to defend themselves. The army became famous across the land as protectors – skilled executioners who wandered the countryside slaughtering any of the enemy they could find. They were renowned not only for their brutal killings, but also for celebrating their slayings by plunging themselves into drug-induced stupors. Their drug of choice was a potent intoxicant they called hashish.
As their notoriety spread, these lethal men became known by a single word – Hassassin – literally ‘the followers of hashish.’ The name Hassassin became synonymous with death in almost every language on earth. The word was still used today, even in modern English … but like the craft of killing, the word had evolved.
It was now pronounced assassin.
SIXTY-FOUR MINUTES HAD passed when an incredulous and slightly airsick Robert Langdon stepped down the gangplank onto the sun-drenched runway. A crisp breeze rustled the lapels of his tweed jacket. The open space felt wonderful. He squinted out at the lush green valley rising to snowcapped peaks all around them.
I’m dreaming, he told himself. Any minute now I’ll be waking up.
‘Welcome to Switzerland,’ the pilot said, yelling over the roar of the X-33’s misted-fuel HEDM engines winding down behind them.
Langdon checked his watch. It read 7.07 a.m.
‘You just crossed six time zones,’ the pilot offered. ‘It’s a little past 1 p.m. here.’
Langdon reset his watch.
‘How do you feel?’
He rubbed his stomach. ‘Like I’ve been eating Styrofoam.’
The pilot nodded. ‘Altitude sickness. We were at sixty thousand feet. You’re thirty per cent lighter up there. Lucky we only did a puddle jump. If we’d gone to Tokyo I’d have taken her all the way up – a hundred miles. Now that’ll get your insides rolling.’
Langdon gave a wan nod and counted himself lucky. All things considered, the flight had been remarkably ordinary. Aside from a bone-crunching acceleration during take off, the plane’s motion had been fairly typical – occasional minor turbulence, a few pressure changes as they’d climbed, but nothing at all to suggest they had been hurtling through space at the mind-numbing speed of 11,000 miles per hour.
A handful of technicians scurried onto the runway to tend to the X-33. The pilot escorted Langdon to a black Peugeot sedan in a parking area beside the control tower. Moments later they were speeding down a paved road that stretched out across the valley floor. A faint cluster of buildings rose in the distance. Outside, the grassy plains tore by in a blur.
Langdon watched in disbelief as the pilot pushed the speedometer up around 170 kilometers an hour – over 100 miles per hour. What is it with this guy and speed? he wondered.
‘Five kilometers to the lab,’ the pilot said. ‘I’ll have you there in two minutes.’
Langdon searched in vain for a seat belt. Why not make it three and get us there alive?
The car raced on.
‘Do you like Reba?’ the pilot asked, jamming a cassette into the tape deck.
A woman started singing. ‘It’s just the fear of being alone …’
No fear here, Langdon thought absently. His female colleagues often ribbed him that his collection of museum-quality artifacts was nothing more than a transparent attempt to fill an empty home, a home they insisted would benefit greatly from the presence of a woman. Langdon always laughed it off, reminding them he already had three loves in his life – symbology, water polo, and bachelorhood – the latter being a freedom that enabled him to travel the world, sleep as late as he wanted, and enjoy quiet nights at home with a brandy and a good book.
‘We’re like a small city,’ the pilot said, pulling Langdon from his daydream. ‘Not just labs. We’ve got supermarkets, a hospital, even a cinema.’
Langdon nodded blankly and looked out at the sprawling expanse of buildings rising before them.
‘In fact,’ the pilot added, ‘we possess the largest machine on earth.’
‘Really?’ Langdon scanned the countryside.
‘You won’t see it out there, sir.’ The pilot smiled. ‘It’s buried six stories below the earth.’
Langdon didn’t have time to ask. Without warning the pilot jammed on the brakes. The car skidded to a stop outside a reinforced sentry booth.
Langdon read the sign before them. SECURITE. ARRETEZ. He suddenly felt a wave of panic, realizing where he was. ‘My God! I didn’t bring my passport!’
‘Passports are unnecessary,’ the driver assured. ‘We have a standing arrangement with the Swiss government.’
Langdon watched dumbfounded as his driver gave the guard an ID. The sentry ran it through an electronic authentication device. The machine flashed green.
‘Passenger name?’
‘Robert Langdon,’ the driver replied.
‘Guest of?’
‘The director.’
The sentry arched his eyebrows. He turned and checked a computer printout, verifying it against the data on his computer screen. Then he returned to the window. ‘Enjoy your stay, Mr Langdon.’
The car shot off again, accelerating another 200 yards around a sweeping rotary that led to the facility’s main entrance. Looming before them was a rectangular, ultramodern structure of glass and steel. Langdon was amazed by the building’s striking transparent design. He had always had a fond love of architecture.
‘The Glass Cathedral,’ the escort offered.
‘A church?’
‘Hell, no. A church is the one thing we don’t have. Physics is the religion around here. Use the Lord’s name in vain all you like,’ he laughed, ‘just don’t slander any quarks or mesons.’
Langdon sat bewildered as the driver swung the car around and brought it to a stop in front of the glass building. Quarks and mesons? No border control? Mach 15 jets? Who the hell ARE these guys? The engraved granite slab in front of the building bore the answer:
(CERN)
Conseil Européen pour la
Recherche Nucléaire
‘Nuclear Research?’ Langdon asked, fairly certain his translation was correct.
The driver did not answer. He was leaning forward, busily adjusting the car’s cassette player. ‘This is your stop. The director will meet you at this entrance.’
Langdon noted a man in a wheelchair exiting the building. He looked to be in his early sixties. Gaunt and totally bald with a sternly set jaw, he wore a white lab coat and dress shoes propped firmly on the wheelchair’s footrest. Even at a distance his eyes looked lifeless – like two gray stones.
‘Is that him?’ Langdon asked.
The driver looked up. ‘Well, I’ll be …’ He turned and gave Langdon an ominous smile. ‘Speak of the devil.’
Uncertain what to expect, Langdon stepped from the vehicle.
The man in the wheelchair accelerated toward Langdon and offered a clammy hand. ‘Mr Langdon? We spoke on the phone. My name is Maximilian Kohler.’
MAXIMILIAN KOHLER, DIRECTOR General of CERN, was known behind his back as König – King. It was a title more of fear than reverence for the figure who ruled over his dominion from a wheelchair throne. Although few knew him personally, the horrific story of how he had been crippled was lore at CERN, and there were few there who blamed him for his bitterness … nor for his sworn dedication to pure science.
Langdon had only been in Kohler’s presence a few moments and already sensed the director was a man who kept his distance. Langdon found himself practically jogging to keep up with Kohler’s electric wheelchair as it sped silently toward the main entrance. The wheelchair was like none Langdon had ever seen – equipped with a bank of electronics including a multiline phone, a paging system, computer screen, even a small, detachable video camera. King Kohler’s mobile command center.
Langdon followed through a mechanical door into CERN’s voluminous main lobby.
The Glass Cathedral, Langdon mused, gazing upward toward heaven.
Overhead, the bluish glass roof shimmered in the afternoon sun, casting rays of geometric patterns in the air and giving the room a sense of grandeur. Angular shadows fell like veins across the white tiled walls and down to the marble floors. The air smelled clean, sterile. A handful of scientists moved briskly about, their footsteps echoing in the resonant space.
‘This way, please, Mr Langdon.’ His voice sounded almost computerized. His accent was rigid and precise, like his stern features. Kohler coughed and wiped his mouth on a white handkerchief as he fixed his dead gray eyes on Langdon. ‘Please hurry.’ His wheelchair seemed to leap across the tiled floor.
Langdon followed past what seemed to be countless hallways branching off the main atrium. Every hallway was alive with activity. The scientists who saw Kohler seemed to stare in surprise, eyeing Langdon as if wondering who he must be to command such company.
‘I’m embarrassed to admit,’ Langdon ventured, trying to make conversation, ‘that I’ve never heard of CERN.’
‘Not surprising,’ Kohler replied, his clipped response sounding harshly efficient. ‘Most Americans do not see Europe as the world leader in scientific research. They see us as nothing but a quaint shopping district – an odd perception if you consider the nationalities of men like Einstein, Galileo, and Newton.’
Langdon was unsure how to respond. He pulled the fax from his pocket. ‘This man in the photograph, can you—’
Kohler cut him off with a wave of his hand. ‘Please. Not here. I am taking you to him now.’ He held out his hand. ‘Perhaps I should take that.’
Langdon handed over the fax and fell silently into step.
Kohler took a sharp left and entered a wide hallway adorned with awards and commendations. A particularly large plaque dominated the entry. Langdon slowed to read the engraved bronze as they passed.
ARS ELECTRONICA AWARD
For Cultural Innovation in the Digital Age Awarded to Tim Berners Lee and CERN for the invention of the WORLDWIDE WEB
Well I’ll be damned, Langdon thought, reading the text. This guy wasn’t kidding. Langdon had always thought of the Web as an American invention. Then again, his knowledge was limited to the site for his own book and the occasional on-line exploration of the Louvre or El Prado on his old Macintosh.
‘The Web,’ Kohler said, coughing again and wiping his mouth, ‘began here as a network of in-house computer sites. It enabled scientists from different departments to share daily findings with one another. Of course, the entire world is under the impression the Web is U.S. technology.’
Langdon followed down the hall. ‘Why not set the record straight?’
Kohler shrugged, apparently disinterested. ‘A petty misconception over a petty technology. CERN is far greater than a global connection of computers. Our scientists produce miracles almost daily.’
Langdon gave Kohler a questioning look. ‘Miracles?’ The word ‘miracle’ was certainly not part of the vocabulary around Harvard’s Fairchild Science Building. Miracles were left for the School of Divinity.
‘You sound skeptical,’ Kohler said. ‘I thought you were a religious symbologist. Do you not believe in miracles?’
‘I’m undecided on miracles,’ Langdon said. Particularly those that take place in science labs.
‘Perhaps miracle is the wrong word. I was simply trying to speak your language.’
‘My language?’ Langdon was suddenly uncomfortable. ‘Not to disappoint you, sir, but I study religious symbology – I’m an academic, not a priest.’
Kohler slowed suddenly and turned, his gaze softening a bit. ‘Of course. How simple of me. One does not need to have cancer to analyze its symptoms.’
Langdon had never heard it put quite that way.
As they moved down the hallway, Kohler gave an accepting nod. ‘I suspect you and I will understand each other perfectly, Mr Langdon.’
Somehow Langdon doubted it.
As the pair hurried on, Langdon began to sense a deep rumbling up ahead. The noise got more and more pronounced with every step, reverberating through the walls. It seemed to be coming from the end of the hallway in front of them.
‘What’s that?’ Langdon finally asked, having to yell. He felt like they were approaching an active volcano.
‘Free fall tube,’ Kohler replied, his hollow voice cutting the air effortlessly. He offered no other explanation.
Langdon didn’t ask. He was exhausted, and Maximilian Kohler seemed disinterested in winning any hospitality awards. Langdon reminded himself why he was here. Illuminati. He assumed somewhere in this colossal facility was a body … a body branded with a symbol he had just flown thousands of miles to see.
As they approached the end of the hall, the rumble became almost deafening, vibrating up through Langdon’s soles. They rounded the bend, and a viewing gallery appeared on the right. Four thick-paned portals were embedded in a curved wall, like windows in a submarine. Langdon stopped and looked through one of the holes.
Professor Robert Langdon had seen some strange things in his life, but this was the strangest. He blinked a few times, wondering if he was hallucinating. He was staring into an enormous circular chamber. Inside the chamber, floating as though weightless, were people. Three of them. One waved and did a somersault in midair.
My God, he thought. I’m in the land of Oz.
The floor of the room was a mesh grid, like a giant sheet of chicken wire. Visible beneath the grid was the metallic blur of a huge propeller.
‘Free fall tube,’ Kohler said, stopping to wait for him. ‘Indoor skydiving. For stress relief. It’s a vertical wind tunnel.’
Langdon looked on in amazement. One of the free fallers, an obese woman, maneuvered toward the window. She was being buffeted by the air currents but grinned and flashed Langdon the thumbs-up sign. Langdon smiled weakly and returned the gesture, wondering if she knew it was the ancient phallic symbol for masculine virility.
The heavyset woman, Langdon noticed, was the only one wearing what appeared to be a miniature parachute. The swathe of fabric billowed over her like a toy. ‘What’s her little chute for?’ Langdon asked Kohler. ‘It can’t be more than a yard in diameter.’
‘Friction,’ Kohler said. ‘Decreases her aerodynamics so the fan can lift her.’ He started down the corridor again. ‘One square yard of drag will slow a falling body almost twenty per cent.’
Langdon nodded blankly.
He never suspected that later that night, in a country hundreds of miles away, the information would save his life.
WHEN KOHLER AND Langdon emerged from the rear of CERN’s main complex into the stark Swiss sunlight, Langdon felt as if he’d been transported home. The scene before him looked like an Ivy League campus.
A grassy slope cascaded downward onto expansive lowlands where clusters of sugar maples dotted quadrangles bordered by brick dormitories and footpaths. Scholarly looking individuals with stacks of books hustled in and out of buildings. As if to accentuate the collegiate atmosphere, two longhaired hippies hurled a Frisbee back and forth while enjoying Mahler’s Fourth Symphony blaring from a dorm window.
‘These are our residential dorms,’ Kohler explained as he accelerated his wheelchair down the path toward the buildings. ‘We have over three thousand physicists here. CERN single-handedly employs more than half of the world’s particle physicists – the brightest minds on earth – Germans, Japanese, Italians, Dutch, you name it. Our physicists represent over five hundred universities and sixty nationalities.’
Langdon was amazed. ‘How do they all communicate?’
‘English, of course. The universal language of science.’
Langdon had always heard math