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Novel
08-28-2024, 01:28 AM (This post was last modified: 08-28-2024 01:30 AM by The GodMan.)
Post: #9
RE: Novel
(08-28-2024 01:25 AM)softhacker Wrote:  Missed u my bro godman

My Bro

(08-28-2024 01:28 AM)The GodMan Wrote:  
(08-28-2024 01:25 AM)softhacker Wrote:  Missed u my bro godman

My Bro
Been quite a while,
I've missed you.
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08-28-2024, 01:37 AM
Post: #10
RE: Novel
CHAPTER 2
One mile away, the hulking albino named Silas
limped through the front gate of the luxurious
brownstone residence on Rue La Bruyere. The
spiked cilice belt that he wore around his thigh
cut into his flesh, and yet his soul sang with
satisfaction of service to the Lord.
Pain is good.
His red eyes scanned the lobby as he entered
the residence. Empty. He climbed the stairs
quietly, not wanting to awaken any of his fellow
numeraries. His bedroom door was open; locks
were forbidden here. He entered, closing the
door behind him.
The room was spartan - hardwood floors, a pine
dresser, a canvas mat in the corner that served
as his bed. He was a visitor here this week, and
yet for many years he had been blessed with a
similar sanctuary in New York City.
The Lord has provided me shelter and purpose in
my life.
Tonight, at last, Silas felt he had begun to repay
his debt. Hurrying to the dresser, he found the
cell phone hidden in his bottom drawer and
placed a call.
"Yes?" a male voice answered. "Teacher, I have
returned." "Speak," the voice commanded,
sounding pleased to hear from him.
"All four are gone. The three senechaux...and the
Grand Master himself."
There was a momentary pause, as if for prayer.
"Then I assume you have the information?" "All
four concurred. Independently." "And you
believed them?"
"Their agreement was too great for coincidence."
An excited breath. "Excellent. I had feared the
brotherhood's reputation for secrecy might
prevail." "The prospect of death is strong
motivation." "So, my pupil, tell me what I must
know."
Silas knew the information he had gleaned from
his victims would come as a shock. "Teacher, all
four confirmed the existence of the clef de
voute...the legendary keystone."
He heard a quick intake of breath over the
phone and could feel the Teacher's excitement.
"The keystone.Exactly as we suspected."
According to lore, the brotherhood had created a
map of stone - a clef de voute...or keystone - an
engraved tablet that revealed the final resting
place of the brotherhood's greatest secret...
information so powerful that its protection was
the reason for the brotherhood's very existence.
"When we possess the keystone," the Teacher
said," we will be only one step away." "We are
closer than you think. The keystone is here in
Paris." "Paris? Incredible. It is almost too easy."
Silas relayed the earlier events of the evening...
how all four of his victims, moments before
death, had desperately tried to buy back their
godless lives by telling their secret. Each had told
Silas the exact same thing - that the keystone
was ingeniously hidden at a precise location
inside one of Paris's ancient churches - the Eglise
de Saint-Sulpice.
"Inside a house of the Lord," the Teacher
exclaimed. "How they mock us!" "As they have
for centuries." The Teacher fell silent, as if letting
the triumph of this moment settle over him.
Finally, he spoke. "You have done a great service
to God. We have waited centuries for this. You
must retrieve the stone for me. Immediately.
Tonight. You understand the stakes."
Silas knew the stakes were incalculable, and yet
what the Teacher was now commanding
seemed impossible. "But the church, it is a
fortress. Especially at night. How will I enter?"
With the confident tone of a man of enormous
influence, the Teacher explained what was to be
done.
When Silas hung up the phone, his skin tingled
with anticipation.
one hour, he told himself, grateful that theOne
Teacher had given him time to carry out the
necessary penance before entering a house of
God. I must purge my soul of today's sins.The
sins committed today had been holy in purpose.
Acts of war against the enemies of God had
been committed for centuries. Forgiveness was
assured.
Even so, Silas knew, absolution required sacrifice.
Pulling his shades, he stripped naked and knelt in
the center of his room. Looking down, he
examined the spiked cilice belt clamped around
his thigh. All true followers of The Way wore this
device - a leather strap, studded with sharp
metal barbs that cut into the flesh as a perpetual
reminder of Christ's suffering. The pain caused by
the device also helped counteract the desires of
the flesh.
Although Silas already had worn his cilice today
longer than the requisite two hours, he knew
today was no ordinary day. Grasping the buckle,
he cinched it one notch tighter, wincing as the
barbs dug deeper into his flesh. Exhaling slowly,
he savored the cleansing ritual of his pain.
Pain is good, Silas whispered, repeating the
sacred mantra of Father Josemaria Escriva - the
Teacher of all Teachers. Although Escriva had
died in 1975, his wisdom lived on, his words still
whispered by thousands of faithful servants
around the globe as they knelt on the floor and
performed the sacred practice known as"
corporal mortification."
Silas turned his attention now to a heavy
knotted rope coiled neatly on the floor beside
him. TheDiscipline. The knots were caked with
dried blood. Eager for the purifying effects of his
own agony, Silas said a quick prayer. Then,
gripping one end of the rope, he closed his eyes
and swung it hard over his shoulder, feeling the
knots slap against his back. He whipped it over
his shoulder again, slashing at his flesh. Again
and again, he lashed.
Castigo corpus meum.
Finally, he felt the blood begin to flow.
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08-28-2024, 01:38 AM
Post: #11
RE: Novel
U started this fvck again

I Am Currently The Best Hacker Around Read rules!
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08-28-2024, 01:41 AM (This post was last modified: 08-28-2024 01:41 AM by The GodMan.)
Post: #12
RE: Novel
:laugh:

It's kinda cool,
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08-28-2024, 01:41 AM (This post was last modified: 08-28-2024 02:15 AM by Camelo.)
Post: #13
RE: Novel
CHAPTER 3
The crisp April air whipped through the open
window of the Citroen ZX as it skimmed south
past the Opera House and crossed Place
Vendôme. In the passenger seat, Robert
Langdon felt the city tear past him as he tried to
clear his thoughts. His quick shower and shave
had left him looking reasonably presentable but
had done little to ease his anxiety. The
frightening image of the curator's body remained
locked in his mind.
Jacques Sauniere is dead.
Langdon could not help but feel a deep sense of
loss at the curator's death. Despite Sauniere's
reputation for being reclusive, his recognition for
dedication to the arts made him an easy man to
revere. His books on the secret codes hidden in
the paintings of Poussin and Teniers were some
of Langdon's favorite classroom texts. Tonight's
meeting had been one Langdon was very much
looking forward to, and he was disappointed
when the curator had not shown.
Again the image of the curator's body flashed in
his mind. Jacques Sauniere did that to himself?
Langdon turned and looked out the window,
forcing the picture from his mind.
Outside, the city was just now winding down -
street vendors wheeling carts of candied
amandes, waiters carrying bags of garbage to
the curb, a pair of late night lovers cuddling to
stay warm in a breeze scented with jasmine
blossom. The Citroen navigated the chaos with
authority, its dissonant two-tone siren parting the
traffic like a knife.
"Le capitaine was pleased to discover you were
still in Paris tonight," the agent said, speaking for
the first time since they'd left the hotel. "A
fortunate coincidence."
Langdon was feeling anything but fortunate, and
coincidence was a concept he did not entirely
trust. As someone who had spent his life
exploring the hidden interconnectivity of
disparate emblems and ideologies, Langdon
viewed the world as a web of profoundly
intertwined histories and events. The connections
may be invisible, he often preached to his
symbology classes at Harvard, but they are
always there, buried just beneath the surface.
"I assume," Langdon said," that the American
University of Paris told you where I was
staying?" The driver shook his head. "Interpol."
Interpol, Langdon thought. Of course.He had
forgotten that the seemingly innocuous request
of all European hotels to see a passport at check-
in was more
than a quaint formality - it was the
law. On any given night, all across Europe,
Interpol officials could pinpoint exactly who was
sleeping where. Finding Langdon at the Ritz had
probably taken all of five seconds.
As the Citroen accelerated southward across the
city, the illuminated profile of the Eiffel Tower
appeared, shooting skyward in the distance to
the right. Seeing it, Langdon thought of Vittoria,
recalling their playful promise a year ago that
every six months they would meet again at a
different romantic spot on the globe. The Eiffel
Tower, Langdon suspected, would have made
their list. Sadly, he last kissed Vittoria in a noisy
airport in Rome more than a year ago.
"Did you mount her?" the agent asked, looking
over.
Langdon glanced up, certain he had
misunderstood. "I beg your pardon?"
"She is lovely, no?" The agent motioned through
the windshield toward the Eiffel Tower. "Have
you mounted her?"
Langdon rolled his eyes. "No, I haven't climbed
the tower." "She is the symbol of France. I think
she is perfect." Langdon nodded absently.
Symbologists often remarked that France - a
country renowned for machismo, womanizing,
and diminutive insecure leaders like Napoleon
and Pepin the Short - could not have chosen a
more apt national emblem than a thousand-foot
phallus.
When they reached the intersection at Rue de
Rivoli, the traffic light was red, but the Citroen
didn't slow. The agent gunned the sedan across
the junction and sped onto a wooded section of
Rue Castiglione, which served as the northern
entrance to the famed Tuileries Gardens - Paris's
own version of Central Park. Most tourists
mistranslated Jardins des Tuileries as relating to
the thousands of tulips that bloomed here, but
Tuileries was actually a literal reference to
something far less romantic. This park had once
been an enormous, polluted excavation pit from
which Parisian contractors mined clay to
manufacture the city's famous red roofing tiles -
or tuiles.
As they entered the deserted park, the agent
reached under the dash and turned off the
blaring siren. Langdon exhaled, savoring the
sudden quiet. Outside the car, the pale wash of
halogen headlights skimmed over the crushed
gravel parkway, the rugged whir of the tires
intoning a hypnotic rhythm. Langdon had always
considered the Tuileries to be sacred ground.
These were the gardens in which Claude Monet
had experimented with form and color, and
literally inspired the birth of the Impressionist
movement. Tonight, however, this place held a
strange aura of foreboding.
Citroen swerved left now, angling west downThe
the park's central boulevard. Curling around a
circular pond, the driver cut across a desolate
avenue out into a wide quadrangle beyond. Langdon
could
now see the end of the Tuileries Gardens,
marked by a giant stone archway.
Arc du Carrousel.
Despite the orgiastic rituals once held at the Arc du
Carrousel, art aficionados revered this place for
another reason entirely. From the esplanade at the
end of the Tuileries, four of the finest art museums
in the world could be seen... one at each point of the
compass.
Out the right-hand window, south across the Seine
and Quai Voltaire, Langdon could see the
dramatically lit facade of the old train station - now
the esteemed Musee d'Orsay. Glancing left, he could
make out the top of the ultramodern Pompidou
Center, which housed the Museum of Modern Art.
Behind him to the west, Langdon knew the ancient
obelisk of Ramses rose above the trees, marking the
Musee du Jeu de Paume.
But it was straight ahead, to the east, through the
archway, that Langdon could now see the monolithic
Renaissance
palace that had become the most
famous art museum in the world.
Musee du Louvre.
Langdon felt a familiar tinge of wonder as his eyes
made a futile attempt to absorb the entire mass of
the edifice. Across a staggeringly expansive plaza,
the imposing facade of the Louvre rose like a citadel
against the Paris sky. Shaped like an enormous
horseshoe, the Louvre was the longest building in
Europe, stretching farther than three Eiffel Towers
laid end to end. Not even the million square feet of
open plaza between the museum wings could
challenge the majesty of the facade's breadth.
Langdon had once walked the Louvre's entire
perimeter, an astonishing three-mile journey.
Despite the estimated five days it would take a
visitor to properly appreciate the 65, 300 pieces of
art in this building, most tourists chose an
abbreviated experience Langdon referred to as
"Louvre Lite" - a full sprint through the museum to
see the three most famous objects: the Mona Lisa,
Venus de Milo, and Winged Victory.Art Buchwald
had once boasted he'd seen all three masterpieces
in five minutes and fifty-six seconds.
The driver pulled out a handheld walkie-talkie and
spoke in rapid-fire French. "Monsieur Langdonest
arrive.Deux minutes."
An indecipherable confirmation came crackling back.
The agent stowed the device, turning now to
Langdon. "You will meet the capitaine at the main
entrance."
The driver ignored the signs prohibiting auto traffic
on the plaza, revved the engine, and gunned the
Citroen up over the curb. The Louvre's main entrance
was
visible now, rising boldly in the distance,
encircled by seven triangular pools from which
spouted illuminated fountains.
La Pyramide.
The new entrance to the Paris Louvre had become
almost as famous as the museum itself. The
controversial, neomodern glass pyramid designed by
Chinese-born American architect I. M. Peistill evoked
scorn from traditionalists who felt it destroyed the
dignity of the Renaissance courtyard. Goethe had
described architecture as frozen music, and Pei's
critics described this pyramid as fingernails on a
chalkboard. Progressive admirers, though, hailed
Pei's seventy-one-foot-tall transparent pyramid as a
dazzling synergy of ancient structure and modern
method - a symbolic link between the old and new -
helping usher the Louvre into the next millennium.
"Do you like our pyramid?" the agent asked.
Langdon frowned. The French, it seemed, loved to
ask Americans this. It was a loaded question, of
course. Admitting you liked the pyramid made you a
tasteless American, and expressing dislike was an
insult to the French.
"Mitterrand was a bold man," Langdon replied,
splitting the difference. The late French president
who had commissioned the pyramid was said to
have suffered from a" Pharaoh complex."
Singlehandedly responsible for filling Paris with
Egyptian obelisks, art, and artifacts.
François Mitterrand had an affinity for
Egyptian culture that was so all-consuming that the
French still referred to him as the Sphinx.
"What is the captain's name?" Langdon asked,
changing topics.
"Bezu Fache," the driver said, approaching the
pyramid's main entrance. "We call him le Taureau."
Langdon glanced over at him, wondering if every
Frenchman had a mysterious animal epithet. "You
call your captain the Bull?"
The man arched his eyebrows. "Your French is better
than you admit, Monsieur Langdon."
My French stinks, Langdon thought, but my zodiac
iconography is pretty good.Taurus was always the
bull. Astrology was a symbolic constant all over the
world.
The agent pulled the car to a stop and pointed
between two fountains to a large door in the side of
the pyramid. "There is the entrance. Good luck,
monsieur." "You're not coming?" "My orders are to
leave you here. I have other business to attend to."
Langdon heaved a sigh and climbed out. It's your
circus. The agent revved his engine and sped off.
As Langdon stood alone and watched the departing
taillights, he realized he could easily reconsider, exit
the courtyard, grab a taxi, and head home to bed.
Something told him it was probably a lousy idea.
As he moved toward the mist of the fountains,
Langdon had the uneasy sense he was crossing an
imaginary threshold into another world. The
dreamlike quality of the evening was settling around
him again.
Twenty minutes ago he had been asleep
in his hotel room. Now he was standing in front of a
transparent pyramid built by the Sphinx, waiting for
a policeman they called the Bull.
I'm trapped in a Salvador Dali painting, he thought.
Langdon strode to the main entrance - an enormous
revolving door. The foyer beyond was dimly lit and
deserted.
Do I knock?
Langdon wondered if any of Harvard's revered
Egyptologists had ever knocked on the front door of
a pyramid and expected an answer. He raised his
hand to bang on the glass, but out of the darkness
below, a figure appeared, striding up the curving
staircase. The man was stocky and dark, almost
Neanderthal, dressed in a dark double-breasted suit
that strained to cover his wide shoulders. He
advanced with unmistakable authority on squat,
powerful legs. He was speaking on his cell phone
but finished the call as he arrived. He motioned for
Langdon to enter.
"I am Bezu Fache," he announced as Langdon
pushed through the revolving door. "Captain of the
Central Directorate Judicial Police." His tone was
fitting - a guttural rumble... like a gathering storm.
Langdon held out his hand to shake. "Robert
Langdon."
Fache's enormous palm wrapped around Langdon's
with crushing force.
"I saw the photo," Langdon said. "Your agent said
Jacques Sauniere himself did - "
"Mr. Langdon," Fache's ebony eyes locked on. "What
you see in the photo is only the beginning of what
Sauniere did."

CHAPTER 4
Captain Bezu Fache carried himself like an angry
ox, with his wide shoulders thrown back and his
chin tucked hard into his chest. His dark hair was
slicked back with oil, accentuating an arrow-like
widow's peak that divided his jutting brow and
preceded him like the prow of a battleship. As he
advanced,
his dark eyes seemed to scorch the
earth before him, radiating a fiery clarity that
forecast his reputation for unblinking severity in
all matters.
Advertisement
Langdon followed the captain down the famous
marble staircase into the sunken atrium beneath
the glass pyramid. As they descended, they
passed between two armed Judicial Police
guards with machine guns. The message was
clear: Nobody goes in or out tonight without the
blessing of Captain Fache.
Descending below ground level, Langdon fought
a rising trepidation. Fache's presence was
anything but welcoming, and the Louvre itself
had an almost sepulchral aura at this hour. The
staircase, like the aisle of a dark movie theater,
was illuminated by subtle tread-lighting
embedded in each step. Langdon could hear his
own footsteps reverberating off the glass
overhead. As he glanced up, he could see the
faint illuminated wisps of mist from the fountains
fading away outside the transparent roof.
"Do you approve?" Fache asked, nodding upward
with his broad chin.
Langdon sighed, too tired to play games. "Yes,
your pyramid is magnificent." Fache grunted. "A
scar on the face of Paris." Strike one.Langdon
sensed his host was a hard man to please. He
wondered if Fache had any idea that this
pyramid, at President Mitterrand's explicit
demand, had been constructed of exactly 666
panes of glass - a bizarre request that had
always been a hot topic among conspiracy buffs
who claimed 666 was the number of Satan.
Langdon decided not to bring it up.
As they dropped farther into the subterranean
foyer, the yawning space slowly emerged from
the shadows. Built fifty-seven feet beneath
ground level, the Louvre's newly constructed 70,
000-square-foot lobby spread out like an endless
grotto. Constructed in warm ocher marble to be
compatible with the honey-colored stone of the
Louvre facade above, the subterranean hall was
usually vibrant with sunlight and tourists. Tonight,
however, the lobby was barren and dark, giving
the entire space a cold and crypt-like
atmosphere.
"And the museum's regular security staff?"
Langdon asked.
"En quarantaine,"Fache replied, sounding as if
Langdon were questioning the integrity of
Fache's team. "Obviously, someone gained entry
tonight who should not have. All Louvre night
wardens are in the Sully Wing being questioned.
My own agents have taken over museum
security for the evening."
Langdon nodded, moving quickly to keep pace
with Fache.
-- Advertisement --
"How well did you know Jacques Sauniere?" the
captain asked. "Actually, not at all. We'd never
met." Fache looked surprised. "Your first meeting
was to be tonight?"
"Yes. We'd planned to meet at the American
University reception following my lecture, but he
never showed up."
Fache scribbled some notes in a little book. As
they walked, Langdon caught a glimpse of the
Louvre's lesser-known pyramid - La Pyramide
Inversee - a huge inverted skylight that hung
from the ceiling like a stalactite in an adjoining
section of the entresol. Fache guided Langdon up
a short set of stairs to the mouth of an arched
tunnel, over which a sign read: DENON. The
Denon Wing was the most famous of the
Louvre's three main sections.
"Who requested tonight's meeting?" Fache asked
suddenly. "You or he?"
The question seemed odd. "Mr. Sauniere did,"
Langdon replied as they entered the tunnel. "His
secretary contacted me a few weeks ago via e-
mail. She said the curator had heard I would be
lecturing in Paris this month and wanted to
discuss something with me while I was here."
"Discuss what?"
"I don't know. Art, I imagine. We share similar
interests."
Fache looked skeptical. "You have no idea what
your meeting was about?"
Langdon did not. He'd been curious at the time
but had not felt comfortable demanding specifics.
The venerated Jacques Sauniere had a renowned
penchant for privacy and granted very few
meetings; Langdon was grateful simply for the
opportunity to meet him.
"Mr. Langdon, can you at least guess what our
murder victim might have wanted to discuss
with you on the night he was killed? It might be
helpful."
The pointedness of the question made Langdon
uncomfortable. "I really can't imagine. I didn't
ask. I felt honored to have been contacted at all.
I'm an admirer of Mr. Sauniere's work. I use his
texts often in my classes."
Fache made note of that fact in his book.
The two men were now halfway up the Denon
Wing's entry tunnel, and Langdon could see the
twin ascending escalators at the far end, both
motionless.
"So you shared interests with him?" Fache asked.
"Yes. In fact, I've spent much of the last year
writing the draft for a book that deals with Mr.
Sauniere's primary area of expertise. I was
looking forward to picking his brain."
Fache glanced up. "Pardon?"
The idiom apparently didn't translate. "I was
looking forward to learning his thoughts on the
topic."
"I see. And what is the topic?"
Langdon hesitated, uncertain exactly how to put
it. "Essentially, the manuscript is about the
iconography of goddess worship - the concept of
female sanctity and the art and symbols
associated with it."
Fache ran a meaty hand across his hair. "And
Sauniere was knowledgeable about this?"
"Nobody more so." "I see."
Langdon sensed Fache did not see at all. Jacques
Sauniere was considered the premiere goddess
iconographer on earth. Not only did Sauniere
have a personal passion for relics relating to
fertility, goddess cults, Wicca, and the sacred
feminine, but during his twenty-year tenure as
curator, Sauniere had helped the Louvre amass
the largest collection of goddess art on earth -
labrys axes from the priestesses' oldest Greek
shrine in Delphi, gold caducei wands, hundreds of
Tjetankhs resembling small standing angels,
sistrum rattles used in ancient Egypt to dispel evil
spirits,
and an astonishing array of statues
depicting Horus being nursed by the goddess Isis.

Chapter 4 CONT'D


Jacques Sauniere knew of your"Perhaps
manuscript?" Fache offered. "And he called the
meeting to offer his help on your book."
Langdon shook his head. "Actually, nobody yet
knows about my manuscript. It's still in draft
form, and I haven't shown it to anyone except
my editor."
Fache fell silent.
Langdon did not add the reason he hadn't yet
shown the manuscript to anyone else. The three-
hundred-page draft - tentatively titled Symbols of
the
Lost Sacred Feminine - proposed some very
unconventional interpretations of established
religious iconography which would certainly be
controversial.
Now, as Langdon approached the stationary
escalators, he paused, realizing Fache was no
longer beside him. Turning, Langdon saw Fache
standing several yards back at a service elevator.
"We'll take the elevator," Fache said as the lift
doors opened. "As I'm sure you're aware, the
gallery is quite a distance on foot."
Although Langdon knew the elevator would
expedite the long, two-story climb to the Denon
Wing, he remained motionless.
"Is something wrong?" Fache was holding the
door, looking impatient.
Langdon exhaled, turning a longing glance back
up the open-air escalator. Nothing's wrong at all,
he lied to himself, trudging back toward the
elevator. As a boy, Langdon had fallen down an
abandoned well shaft and almost died treading
water in the narrow space for hours before being
rescued.
Since then, he'd suffered a haunting
phobia of enclosed spaces - elevators, subways,
squash courts. The elevator is a perfectly safe
machine, Langdon continually told himself, never
believing it. It's a tiny metal box hanging in an
enclosed shaft! Holding his breath, he stepped
into the lift, feeling the familiar tingle of
adrenaline as the doors slid shut. Two floors.Ten
seconds.
"You and Mr. Sauniere," Fache said as the lift
began to move," you never spoke at all? Never
corresponded? Never sent each other anything in
the mail?"
Another odd question. Langdon shook his head.
"No. Never." Fache cocked his head, as if making
a mental note of that fact. Saying nothing, he
stared dead ahead at the chrome doors.
As they ascended, Langdon tried to focus on
anything other than the four walls around him. In
the reflection
of the shiny elevator door, he saw
the captain's tie clip - a silver crucifix with
thirteen embedded pieces of black onyx. Langdon
found
it vaguely surprising. The symbol was
known as a crux gemmata - a cross bearing
thirteen gems - a Christian ideogram for Christ
and His twelve apostles. Somehow Langdon had
not expected the captain of the French police to
broadcast his religion so openly. Then again, this
was France; Christianity was not a religion here
so much as a birthright.
"It's a crux gemmata" Fache said suddenly.
Startled, Langdon glanced up to find Fache's eyes
on him in the reflection. The elevator jolted to a
stop, and the doors opened. Langdon stepped
quickly out into the hallway, eager for the wide-
open space afforded by the famous high ceilings
of the Louvre galleries. The world into which he
stepped, however, was nothing like he expected.
Surprised, Langdon stopped short.
Fache glanced over. "I gather, Mr. Langdon, you
have never seen the Louvre after hours?"
I guess not, Langdon thought, trying to get his
bearings.
Usually impeccably illuminated, the Louvre
galleries were startlingly dark tonight. Instead of
the customary flat-white light flowing down from
above,
a muted red glow seemed to emanate
upward from the baseboards - intermittent
patches of red light spilling out onto the tile
floors.
As Langdon gazed down the murky corridor, he
realized he should have anticipated this scene.
Virtually all major galleries employed red service
lighting at night - strategically placed, low-level,
noninvasive lights that enabled staff members to
navigate hallways and yet kept the paintings
inrelative darkness to slow the fading effects of
overexposure to light. Tonight, the museum
possessed an almost oppressive quality. Long
shadows encroached everywhere, and the
usually soaring vaulted ceilings appeared as a
low, black void.
"This way," Fache said, turning sharply right and
setting out through a series of interconnected
galleries.
Langdon followed, his vision slowly adjusting to
the dark. All around, large-format oils began to
materialize like photos developing before him in
an enormous darkroom... their eyes following as
he moved through the rooms. He could taste the
familiar tang of museum air - an arid, deionized
essence that carried a faint hint of carbon - the
product of industrial, coal-filter dehumidifiers that
ran around the clock to counteract the corrosive
carbon dioxide exhaled by visitors.
Mounted high on the walls, the visible security
cameras sent a clear message to visitors: We see
you.Do not touch anything.
"Any of them real?" Langdon asked, motioning to
the cameras. Fache shook his head. "Of course
not." Langdon was not surprised. Video
surveillance in museums this size was cost-
prohibitive and ineffective. With acres of galleries
to watch over, the Louvre would require several
hundred technicians simply to monitor the feeds.
Most large museums now used" containment
security." Forget keeping thieves out.Keep them
in.Containment was activated after hours, and if
an intruder removed a piece of artwork,
compartmentalized exits would seal around that
gallery, and the thief would find himself behind
bars even before the police arrived.
The sound of voices echoed down the marble
corridor up ahead. The noise seemed to be
coming from a large recessed alcove that lay
ahead on the right. A bright light spilled out into
the hallway. "Office of the curator," the captain
said. As he and Fache drew nearer the alcove,
Langdon peered down a short hallway, into
Sauniere's luxurious study - warm wood, Old
Master paintings, and an enormous antique desk
on which stood a two-foot-tall model of a knight
in full armor. A handful of police agents bustled
about the room, talking on phones and taking
notes. One of them was seated at Sauniere's
desk, typing into a laptop. Apparently, the
curator's private office had become DCPJ's
makeshift command post for the evening.

Chapter 4 CONT'D


Fache called out, and the men
"Messieurs,"
turned. "Ne nous derangez pas sous aucun
pretexte. Entendu?"
Everyone inside the office nodded their
understanding.
Langdon had hung enough NE PAS DERANGER
signs on hotel room doors to catch the gist of the
captain's orders. Fache and Langdon were not to
be disturbed under any circumstances.
Leaving the small congregation of agents behind,
Fache led Langdon farther down the darkened
hallway. Thirty yards ahead loomed the gateway
to the Louvre's most popular section - la Grande
Galerie - a seemingly endless corridor that
housed the Louvre's most valuable Italian
masterpieces. Langdon had already discerned
that this was where Sauniere's body lay; the
Grand Gallery's famous parquet floor had been
unmistakable in the Polaroid.
As they approached, Langdon saw the entrance
was blocked by an enormous steel grate that
looked like something used by medieval castles
to keep out marauding armies.
"Containment security,"Fache said, as they
neared the grate.
Even in the darkness, the barricade looked like it
could have restrained a tank. Arriving outside,
Langdon peered through the bars into the dimly
lit caverns of the Grand Gallery.
"After you, Mr. Langdon," Fache said. Langdon
turned. After me, where?Fache motioned toward
the floor at the base of the grate.
Langdon looked down. In the darkness, he hadn't
noticed. The barricade was raised about two feet,
providing an awkward clearance underneath.
"This area is still off limits to Louvre security,"
Fache said. "My team from Police Technique
etScientifique has just finished their
investigation." He motioned to the opening.
"Please slide under."
Langdon stared at the narrow crawl space at his
feet and then up at the massive iron grate. He's
kidding, right? The barricade looked like a
guillotine waiting to crush intruders.
Fache grumbled something in French and
checked his watch. Then he dropped to his knees
and slithered his bulky frame underneath the
grate. On the other side, he stood up and looked
back through the bars at Langdon.
Langdon sighed. Placing his palms flat on the
polished parquet, he lay on his stomach and
pulled himself forward. As he slid underneath,
the nape of his Harris tweed snagged on the
bottom of the grate, and he cracked the back of
his head on the iron.
Very suave, Robert, he thought, fumbling and
then finally pulling himself through. As he stood
up, Langdon was beginning to suspect it was
going to be a very long night.

CHAPTER 5
Murray Hill Place - the new Opus Dei World
Headquarters and conference center - is located
at 243 Lexington Avenue in New York City. With
a price tag of just over $47 million, the 133, 000-
square-foot tower is clad in red brick and Indiana
limestone.
Designed by May & Pinska, the
building contains over one hundred bedrooms, six
dining rooms, libraries, living rooms, meeting
rooms, and offices. The second, eighth, and
sixteenth floors contain chapels, ornamented with
mill-
work and marble. The seventeenth floor is
entirely residential. Men enter the building
through the main doors on Lexington Avenue.
Women enter through a side street and are
'acoustically and visually separated' from the
men at all times within the building.
Earlier this evening, within the sanctuary of his
penthouse apartment, Bishop Manuel Aringarosa
had packed a small travel bag and dressed in a
traditional black cassock. Normally, he would
have wrapped a purple cincture around his waist,
but
tonight he would be traveling among the
public, and he preferred not to draw attention to
his high office. Only those with a keen eye
would notice his 14-karat gold bishop's ring with
purple amethyst, large diamonds, and hand-
tooled mitre-crozier applique. Throwing the travel
bag over his shoulder, he said a silent prayer and
left his apartment, descending to the lobby
where his driver was waiting to take him to the
airport.
Now, sitting aboard a commercial airliner bound
for Rome, Aringarosa gazed out the window at
the dark Atlantic. The sun had already set, but
Aringarosa knew his own star was on the rise.
Tonight the battle will be won, he thought,
amazed that only months ago he had felt
powerless against the hands that threatened to
destroy his empire.
As president-general of Opus Dei, Bishop
Aringarosa had spent the last decade of his life
spreading the message of "God's Work" - literally,
Opus
Dei.The congregation, founded in 1928 by
the Spanish priest Josemaria Escriva, promoted a
return to conservative Catholic values and
encouraged its members to make sweeping
sacrifices in their own lives in order to do the
Work of God.
Opus Dei's traditionalist philosophy initially had
taken root in Spain before Franco's regime, but
with the 1934 publication of Josemaria Escriva's
spiritual book The Way - 999 points of meditation
for doing God's Work in
one's own life - Escriva's
message exploded across the world. Now, with
over four million copies of The Way in circulation
in forty-two languages, Opus Dei was a global
force. Its residence halls, teaching centers, and
even universities could be found in almost every
major metropolis on earth. Opus Dei was the
fastest-growing and most financially secure
Catholic organization in the world. Unfortunately,
Aringarosa had learned, in an age of religious
cynicism, cults, and televangelists, Opus Dei's
escalating wealth and power was a magnet for
suspicion.
"Many call Opus Dei a brainwashing cult,"
reporters often challenged. "Others call you an
ultraconservative Christian secret society. Which
are you?"
"Opus Dei is neither," the bishop would patiently
reply. "We are a Catholic Church. We are a
congregation of Catholics who have chosen as
our priority to follow Catholic doctrine as
rigorously as we can in our own daily lives."
"Does God's Work necessarily include vows of
chastity, tithing, and atonement for sins through
self-flagellation and the cilice?"
"You are describing only a small portion of the
Opus Dei population," Aringarosa said. "There are
many levels of involvement. Thousands of Opus
Dei members are married, have families, and do
God's Work in their own communities. Others
choose lives of asceticism within our cloistered
residence halls. These choices are personal, but
everyone in Opus Dei shares the goal of
bettering the world by doing the Work of God.
Surely this is an admirable quest."
Reason seldom worked, though. The media
always gravitated toward scandal, and Opus Dei,
like most large organizations, had within its
membership a few misguided souls who cast a
shadow over the entire group.
Two months ago, an Opus Dei group at a mid-
western university had been caught drugging
new recruits with mescaline in an effort to
induce a euphoric state that neophytes would
perceive as a religious experience. Another
university student had used his barbed cilice belt
more often than the recommended two hours a
day and had given himself a near lethal infection.
In
Boston not long ago, a disillusioned young
investment banker had signed over his entire life
savings to Opus Dei before attempting suicide.
Misguided sheep, Aringarosa thought, his heart
going out to them.
Of course the ultimate embarrassment had been
the widely publicized trial of FBI spy Robert
Hanssen, who, in addition to being a prominent
member of Opus Dei, had turned out to be a
sexual deviant, his trial uncovering evidence that
he had rigged hidden video cameras in his own
bedroom so his friends could watch him having
sex with his wife. "Hardly the pastime of a
devout Catholic," the judge had noted.
Sadly, all of these events had helped spawn the
new watch group known as the Opus Dei
Awareness Network (ODAN). The group's popular
website
- www odan.org - relayed frightening
stories from former Opus Dei members who
warned of the dangers of joining. The media was
now referring
to Opus Dei as" God's Mafia" and"
the Cult of Christ."
We fear what we do not understand, Aringarosa
thought, wondering if these critics had any idea
how many lives Opus Dei had enriched. The
group enjoyed the full endorsement and blessing
of the Vatican. Opus Dei is a personal prelature
of the Pope himself.
Recently, however, Opus Dei had found itself
threatened by a force infinitely more powerful
than the media... an unexpected foe from which
Aringarosa could not possibly hide. Five months
ago, the kaleidoscope of power had been
shaken, and Aringarosa was still reeling from the
blow.
"They know not the war they have begun,"
Aringarosa whispered to himself, staring out the
plane's window at the darkness of the ocean
below. For an instant, his eyes refocused,
lingering on the reflection of his awkward face -
dark and oblong, dominated by a flat, crooked
nose that had been shattered by a fist in Spain
when he was a young missionary. The physical
flaw barely registered now. Aringarosa's was a
world of the soul, not of the flesh.
As the jet passed over the coast of Portugal, the
cell phone in Aringarosa's cassock began
vibrating in silent ring mode. Despite airline
regulations prohibiting the use of cell phones
during flights, Aringarosa knew this was a call he
could not miss. Only one man possessed this
number, the man who had mailed Aringarosa the
phone.
Excited, the bishop answered quietly. "Yes?"
"Silas has located the keystone," the caller said.
"It is in Paris. Within the Church of Saint-Sulpice."
Bishop Aringarosa smiled. "Then we are close."
"We can obtain it immediately. But we need your
influence." "Of course. Tell me what to do."
When
Aringarosa switched off the phone, his heart was
pounding. He gazed once again into the void of
night, feeling dwarfed by the events he had put
into motion.
Five hundred miles away, the albino named Silas
stood over a small basin of water and dabbed
the blood from his back, watching the patterns of
red spinning in
the water. Purge me with hyssop
andI shall be clean, he prayed, quoting Psalms.
Wash me, and I shall be whiter than snow.
Silas was feeling an aroused anticipation that he
had not felt since his previous life. It both
surprised and electrified him. For the last decade,
he had been following The Way, cleansing
himself of sins... rebuilding his life... erasing the
violence in his past. Tonight, however, it had all
come rushing back. The hatred he had fought so
hard to bury had been summoned. He had been
startled how quickly his past had resurfaced. And
with it, of course, had come his skills. Rusty but
serviceable.
Jesus' message is one of peace...of
nonviolence...of love.This was the message Silas
had been taught from the beginning, and the
message he held in his heart. And yet this was
the message the enemies of Christ now
threatened to destroy. Those who threaten God
with force will be met with force.Immovable and
steadfast.
For two millennia, Christian soldiers had
defended their faith against those who tried to
displace it. Tonight, Silas had been called to
battle.
Drying his wounds, he donned his ankle-length,
hooded robe. It was plain, made of dark wool,
accentuating the whiteness of his skin and hair.
Tightening the rope-tie around his waist, he
raised the hood over his head and allowed his
red eyes to admire his reflection in the mirror.
The wheels are in motion.
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08-28-2024, 11:32 PM (This post was last modified: 08-28-2024 11:34 PM by Camelo.)
Post: #14
RE: Novel
CHAPTER 6
Having squeezed beneath the security gate,
Robert Langdon now stood just inside the
entrance to the Grand Gallery. He was staring
into the mouth of a long, deep canyon. On either
side of the gallery, stark walls rose thirty feet,
evaporating into the darkness above. The reddish
glow of the service lighting sifted upward,
casting an unnatural smolder across a staggering
collection of Da Vincis, Titians, and Caravaggios
that hung suspended from ceiling cables. Still
lifes, religious scenes, and landscapes
accompanied portraits of nobility and politicians.
Although the Grand Gallery housed the Louvre's
most famous Italian art, many visitors felt the
wing's most stunning offering was actually its
famous parquet floor. Laid out in a dazzling
geometric design of diagonal oak slats, the floor
produced an ephemeral optical illusion - a multi-
dimensional network that gave visitors the sense
they were floating through the gallery on a
surface that changed with every step.
As Langdon's gaze began to trace the inlay, his
eyes stopped short on an unexpected object
lying on the floor just a few yards to his left,
surrounded by police tape. He spun toward
Fache. "Is that... a Caravaggio on the floor?"
Fache nodded without even looking.
The painting, Langdon guessed, was worth
upward of two million dollars, and yet it was
lying on the floor like a discarded poster. "What
the devil is it doing on the floor!"
Fache glowered, clearly unmoved. "This is a crime
scene,
Mr. Langdon. We have touched nothing.
That canvas was pulled from the wall by the
curator. It was how he activated the security
system."
Langdon looked back at the gate, trying to
picture what had happened.
"The curator was attacked in his office, fled into
the Grand Gallery, and activated the security
gate by pulling that painting from the wall. The
gate fell immediately, sealing off all access. This
is the only door in or out of this gallery." Langdon
felt confused. "So the curator actually captured
his attacker inside the Grand Gallery?" Fache
shook his head. "The security gate separated
Sauniere from his attacker. The killer waslocked
out there in the hallway and shot Sauniere
through this gate." Fache pointed toward
anorange tag hanging from one of the bars on
the gate under which they had just passed. "The
PT Steam found flashback residue from a gun. He
fired
through the bars. Sauniere died in here
alone."
Langdon pictured the photograph of Sauniere's
body. They said he did that to himself.Langdon
looked out at the enormous corridor before them.
"So where is his body?"
Fache straightened his cruciform tie clip and
began to walk. "As you probably know, the
Grand Gallery is quite long."
The exact length, if Langdon recalled correctly,
was around fifteen hundred feet, the length of
three Washington Monuments laid end to end.
Equally breathtaking was the corridor's width,
which easily could have accommodated a pair of
side-by-side passenger trains. The center of the
hallway was dotted by the occasional statue or
colossal porcelain urn, which served as a tasteful
divider and kept the flow of traffic moving down
one wall and up the other.
Fache was silent now, striding briskly up the right
side
of the corridor with his gaze dead ahead.
Langdon felt almost disrespectful to be racing
past so many masterpieces without pausing for
so much as a glance.
Not that I could see anything in this lighting, he
thought.
The muted crimson lighting unfortunately
conjured memories of Langdon's last experience
in noninvasive lighting in the Vatican Secret
Archives. This was tonight's second unsettling
parallel with his near-death in Rome. He flashed
on Vittoria again. She had been absent from his
dreams for months. Langdon could not believe
Rome had been only a year ago; it felt like
decades. Another life.His last correspondence
from Vittoria had been in December - a postcard
saying she was headed to the Java Sea to
continue her research in entanglement physics...
something about using satellites to track manta
ray migrations. Langdon had never harbored
delusions that a woman like Vittoria Vetra could
have been happy living with him on a college
campus, but their encounter in Rome had
unlocked in him a longing he never imagined he
could feel. His lifelong affinity for bachelorhood
and the simple freedoms it allowed had been
shaken somehow... replaced by an unexpected
emptiness that seemed to have grown over the
past year.
They continued walking briskly, yet Langdon still
saw no corpse. "Jacques Sauniere went this far?"
"Mr. Sauniere suffered a bullet wound to his
stomach. He died very slowly. Perhaps over
fifteen or twenty minutes. He was obviously a
man of great personal strength."
Langdon turned, appalled. "Security took fifteen
minutes to get here?"
"Of course not. Louvre security responded
immediately to the alarm and found the Grand
Gallery sealed. Through the gate, they could hear
someone moving around at the far end of the
corridor, but they could not see who it was. They
shouted, but they got no answer. Assuming it
could only be a criminal, they followed protocol
and called in the Judicial Police. We took up
positions within fifteen minutes. When we
arrived, we raised the barricade enough to slip
underneath, and I sent a dozen armed agents
inside. They swept the length of the gallery to
corner the intruder." "And?" "They found no one
inside. Except..." He pointed farther down the hall.
"Him."

Langdon lifted his gaze and followed Fache'
outstretched finger. At first he thought Fache was
pointing to a large marble statue in the middle
of
the hallway. As they continued, though, Langdon
began to see past the statue. Thirty yards down
the hall, a single spotlight on a portable pole
stand shone down on the floor, creating a stark
island of white light in the dark crimson gallery.
In the center of the light, like an insect under a
microscope, the corpse of the curator lay naked
on the parquet floor.
"You saw the photograph," Fache said," so this
should be of no surprise."
Langdon felt a deep chill as they approached the
body. Before him was one of the strangest
image she had ever seen.
The pallid corpse of Jacques Sauniere lay on the
parquet floor exactly as it appeared in the
photograph. As Langdon stood over the body and
squinted
in the harsh light, he reminded himself
to his amazement that Sauniere had spent his
last minutes of life arranging his own body in this
strange fashion.
Sauniere looked remarkably fit for a man of his
years... and all of his musculature was in plain
view. He had stripped off every shred of clothing,
placed
it neatly on the floor, and laid down on
his back in the center of the wide corridor,
perfectly aligned with the long axis of the room.
His arms and legs were sprawled outward in a
wide spread eagle, like those of a child making a
snow angel... or, perhaps more appropriately, like
a man being drawn and quartered by some
invisible force.
Just below Sauniere's breastbone, a bloody
smear marked the spot where the bullet had
pierced his flesh. The wound had bled surprisingly
little,
leaving only a small pool of blackened
blood.
Sauniere's left index finger was also bloody,
apparently having been dipped into the wound
to create the most unsettling aspect of his own
macabre deathbed; using his own blood as ink,
and employing his own naked abdomen as a
canvas, Sauniere had drawn a simple symbol on
his flesh - five straight lines that intersected to
form a five-pointed star.
The pentacle.
The bloody star, centered on Sauniere's navel,
gave his corpse a distinctly ghoulish aura. The
photo Langdon had seen was chilling enough, but
now,
witnessing the scene in person, Langdon
felt a deepening uneasiness.
He did this to himself.
"Mr. Langdon?" Fache's dark eyes settled on him
again.
"It's a pentacle," Langdon offered, his voice
feeling hollow in the huge space. "One of the
oldest symbols on earth. Used over four
thousand years before Christ."
"And what does it mean?"
Langdon always hesitated when he got this
question. Telling someone what a symbol"
meant" was like telling them how a song should
make them feel - it was different for all people.
A white Ku Klux Klan headpiece conjured images
of hatred and racism in the United States, and
yet the same costume carried a meaning of
religious faith in Spain.
"Symbols carry different meanings in different
settings," Langdon said. "Primarily, the pentacle is
a pagan religious symbol."
Fache nodded. "Devil worship." "No," Langdon
corrected, immediately realizing his choice of
vocabulary should have been clearer. Nowadays,
the term pagan had become almost synonymous
with devil worship - a gross misconception. The
word's roots actually reached back to the Latin
paganus, meaning country-dwellers. "Pagans"
were literally unindoctrinated country-folk who
clung to the old, rural religions of Nature worship.
In fact, so strong was the Church's fear of those
who lived in the rural villes that the once
innocuous word for" villager" - villain - came to
mean a wicked soul.
"The pentacle," Langdon clarified," is a pre-
Christian symbol that relates to Nature worship.
The ancients envisioned their world in two halves
-
masculine and feminine. Their gods and
goddesses worked to keep a balance of power.
Yin and yang. When male and female were
balanced, there was harmony in the world.
When they were unbalanced, there was chaos."
Langdon motioned to Sauniere's stomach. "This
pentacle is representative of the female half of
all things - a concept religious historians call the
'sacred feminine' or the 'divine goddess. '
Sauniere, of all people, would know this."
"Sauniere drew a goddess symbol on his
stomach?"
Langdon had to admit, it seemed odd. "In its
most specific interpretation, the pentacle
symbolizes Venus - the goddess of female sexual
love and beauty."
Fache eyed the naked man, and grunted.
"Early religion was based on the divine order of
Nature. The goddess Venus and the planet Venus
were one and the same. The goddess had a
place in the nighttime sky and was known by
many names - Venus, the Eastern Star, Ishtar,
Astarte - all of them powerful female concepts
with ties to Nature and Mother Earth."
Fache looked more troubled now, as if he
somehow preferred the idea of devil worship.
Langdon decided not to share the pentacle's
most astonishing property - the graphic origin of
its ties to Venus. As a young astronomy student,
Langdon had been stunned to learn the planet
Venus traced a perfect pentacle across the
ecliptic sky every four years. So astonished were
the ancients to observe this phenomenon, that
Venus and her pentacle became symbols of
perfection, beauty, and the cyclic qualities of
sexual love. As a tribute to the magic of Venus,
the Greeks used her four-year cycle to organize
their Olympiads. Nowadays, few people realized
that the four-year schedule of modern Olympic
Games still followed the cycles of Venus. Even
fewer people knew that the five-pointed star
had almost become the official Olympic seal but
was modified at the last moment - its five points
exchanged for five intersecting rings to better
reflect the games' spirit of inclusion and
harmony.
"Mr. Langdon," Fache said abruptly. "Obviously,
the pentacle must also relate to the devil. Your
American horror movies make that point clearly."
Langdon frowned. Thank you, Hollywood.The
five-pointed star was now a virtual cliche in
Satanic serial killer movies, usually scrawled on
the wall of some Satanist's apartment along with
other
alleged demonic symbology. Langdon was
always frustrated when he saw the symbol in
this context; the pentacle's true origins were
actually quite godly.

assure you," Langdon said," despite what you"I
see in the movies, the pentacle's demonic
interpretation is historically inaccurate. The
original feminine meaning is correct, but the
symbolism of the pentacle has been distorted
over the millennia. In this case, through
bloodshed." "I'm not sure I follow." Langdon
glanced at Fache's crucifix, uncertain how to
phrase his next point. "The Church, sir. Symbols
are very resilient, but the pentacle was altered
by the early Roman Catholic Church. As part of
the Vatican's campaign to eradicate pagan
religions and convert the masses to Christianity,
the Church launched a smear campaign against
the pagan gods and goddesses, recasting their
divine symbols as evil."
"Go on."
"This is very common in times of turmoil,"
Langdon continued. "A newly emerging power
will take over the existing symbols and degrade
them over time in an attempt to erase their
meaning. In the battle between the pagan
symbols and Christian symbols, the pagans lost;
Poseidon's trident became the devil's pitchfork,
the wise crone's pointed hat became the symbol
of a witch, and Venus's pentacle became a sign
of the devil." Langdon paused. "Unfortunately, the
United
States military has also perverted the
pentacle; it's now our foremost symbol of war.
We paint it on all our fighter jets and hang it on
the shoulders of all our generals." So much for
the goddess of love and beauty.
"Interesting." Fache nodded toward the spread-
eagle corpse. "And the positioning of the body?
What do you make of that?" Langdon shrugged.
"The position simply reinforces the reference to
the pentacle and sacred feminine."
Fache's expression clouded. "I beg your pardon?"
"Replication. Repeating a symbol is the simplest
way to strengthen its meaning. Jacques Sauniere
positioned himself in the shape of a five-pointed
star." If one pentacle is good, two is better.
Fache's eyes followed the five points of
Sauniere's arms, legs, and head as he again ran
a hand across his slick hair. "Interesting analysis."
He paused. "And the nudity?" He grumbled as he
spoke the word, sounding repulsed by the sight
of an aging male body. "Why did he remove his
clothing?"
Damned good question, Langdon thought. He'd
been wondering the same thing ever since he
first saw the Polaroid. His best guess was that a
naked human form was yet another
endorsement of Venus - the goddess of human
sexuality. Although modern culture had erased
much of Venus's association with the male/
female physical union, a sharp etymological eye
could still spot a vestige of Venus's original
meaning in the word" venereal." Langdon
decided not to go there.
"Mr. Fache, I obviously can't tell you why Mr.
Sauniere drew that symbol on himself or placed
himself in this way, but I can tell you that a man
like Jacques Sauniere would consider the
pentacle a sign of the female deity. The
correlation between this symbol and the sacred
feminine is widely known by art historians and
symbologists."
"Fine. And the use of his own blood as ink?"
"Obviously he had nothing else to write with."
Fache was silent a moment. "Actually, I believe
he used blood such that the police would follow
certain forensic procedures."
"I'm sorry?"
"Look at his left hand."
Langdon's eyes traced the length of the curator's
pale arm to his left hand but saw nothing.
Uncertain, he circled the corpse and crouched
down, now noting with surprise that the curator
was clutching a large, felt-tipped marker.
"Sauniere was holding it when we found him,"
Fache said, leaving Langdon and moving several
yards to a portable table covered with
investigation tools, cables, and assorted electronic
gear. "As
I told you," he said, rummaging around
the table," we have touched nothing. Are you
familiar with this kind of pen?"
Langdon knelt down farther to see the pen's
label. STYLO DE LUMIERE NOIRE. He glanced up
in surprise.
The black-light pen or watermark stylus was a
specialized felt-tipped marker originally designed
by museums, restorers, and forgery police to
place invisible marks on items. The stylus wrote
in a noncorrosive, alcohol-based fluorescent ink
that was visible only under black light.
Nowadays, museum maintenance staffs carried
these markers on their daily rounds to place
invisible" tick marks" on the frames of paintings
that needed restoration.
As Langdon stood up, Fache walked over to the
spotlight and turned it off. The gallery plunged
into sudden darkness.
Momentarily blinded, Langdon felt a rising
uncertainty. Fache's silhouette appeared,
illuminated in bright purple. He approached
carrying a portable light source, which shrouded
him in a violet haze.
"As you may know," Fache said, his eyes
luminescing in the violet glow," police use black-
light illumination to search crime scenes for blood
and other forensic evidence. So you can imagine
our surprise..." Abruptly, he pointed the light
down at the corpse.
Langdon looked down and jumped back in
shock.
His heart pounded as he took in the bizarre sight
now glowing before him on the parquet floor.
Scrawled in luminescent handwriting, the
curator's final words glowed purple beside his
corpse. As Langdon stared at the shimmering
text, he felt the fog that had surrounded this
entire night growing thicker.
Langdon read the message again and looked up
at Fache. "What the hell does this mean!" Fache's
eyes shone white. "That, monsieur, is precisely
the question you are here to answer."
Not far away, inside Sauniere's office, Lieutenant
Collet had returned to the Louvre and was
huddled over an audio console set up on the
curator's enormous desk. With the exception of
the eerie, robot-like doll of a medieval knight
that seemed to be staring at him from the corner
of Sauniere's desk, Collet was comfortable. He
adjusted his AKG headphones and checked the
input levels on the hard-disk recording system.
All systems were go. The microphones were
functioning flawlessly, and the audio feed was
crystal clear.
Le moment de verite, he mused.
Smiling, he closed his eyes and settled in to
enjoy the rest of the conversation now being
taped inside the Grand Gallery.

CHAPTER 7
The modest dwelling within the Church of Saint-
Sulpice was located on the second floor of the
church itself, to the left of the choir balcony. A
two-room suite with a stone floor and minimal
furnishings, it had been home to Sister Sandrine
Bieil for over a decade. The nearby convent
washer formal residence, if anyone asked, but
she preferred the quiet of the church and had
made herself quite comfortable upstairs with a
bed, phone, and hot plate.
Advertisement
As the church's conservatrice d'affaires, Sister
Sandrine was responsible for overseeing all
nonreligious aspects of church operations -
general maintenance, hiring support staff and
guides, securing the building after hours, and
ordering supplies like communion wine and
wafers.
Tonight, asleep in her small bed, she awoke to
the shrill of her telephone. Tiredly, she lifted the
receiver.
"Soeur Sandrine. Eglise Saint-Sulpice."
"Hello, Sister," the man said in French.
Sister Sandrine sat up. What time is it? Although
she recognized her boss's voice, in fifteen years
she had never been awoken by him. The abbe
was a deeply pious man who went home to bed
immediately after mass.
"I apologize if I have awoken you, Sister," the
abbe said, his own voice sounding groggy and on
edge.
"I have a favor to ask of you. I just
received a call from an influential American
bishop.
Perhaps you know him? Manuel Aringarosa?"
"The head of Opus Dei?" Of course I know of
him.Who in the Church doesn't? Aringarosa's
conservative prelature had grown powerful in
recent years. Their ascension to grace was jump-
started in 1982 when Pope John Paul II
unexpectedly elevated them to a" personal
prelature of the Pope," officially sanctioning all of
their practices. Suspiciously, Opus Dei's elevation
occurred the same year the wealthy sect
allegedly had transferred almost one billion
dollars into the Vatican's Institute for Religious
Works - commonly known as the Vatican Bank -
bailing it out of an embarrassing bankruptcy. In a
second maneuver that raised eyebrows, the
Pope placed the founder of Opus Dei on the" fast
track" for sainthood, accelerating an often
century-long waiting period for canonization to a
mere twenty years. Sister Sandrine could not
help but feel that Opus Dei's good standing in
Rome was suspect, but one did not argue with
the Holy See.
"Bishop Aringarosa called to ask me a favor," the
abbe told her, his voice nervous. "One of his
numeraries is in Paris tonight..."
-- Advertisement --
As Sister Sandrine listened to the odd request,
she felt a deepening confusion. "I'm sorry, you
say this visiting Opus Dei numerary cannot wait
until morning?"
"I'm afraid not. His plane leaves very early. He
has always dreamed of seeing Saint-Sulpice."
"But the church is far more interesting by day.
The sun's rays through the oculus, the graduated
shadows on the gnomon, this is what makes
Saint-Sulpice unique."
"Sister, I agree, and yet I would consider it a
personal favor if you could let him in tonight. He
can be there at... say one o'clock? That's in
twenty minutes."
Sister Sandrine frowned. "Of course. It would be
my pleasure." The abbe thanked her and hung
up. Puzzled, Sister Sandrine remained a moment
in the warmth of her bed, trying to shake off the
cobwebs of sleep. Her sixty-year-old body did not
awake
as fast as it used to, although tonight's
phone call had certainly roused her senses. Opus
Dei had always made her uneasy. Beyond the
prelature's adherence to the arcane ritual of
corporal mortification, their views on women
were medieval at best. She had been shocked to
learn that female numeraries were forced to
clean the men's residence halls for no pay while
the men were at mass; women slept on
hardwood floors, while the men had straw mats;
and women were forced to endure additional
requirements of corporal mortification... all as
added penance for original sin. It seemed Eve's
bite from the apple of knowledge was a debt
women were doomed to pay for eternity. Sadly,
while most of the Catholic Church was gradually
moving in the right direction with respect to
women's rights, Opus Dei threatened to reverse
the progress. Even so, Sister Sandrine had her
orders.
Swinging her legs off the bed, she stood slowly,
chilled by the cold stone on the soles of her bare
feet. As the chill rose through her flesh, she felt
an unexpected apprehension.
Women's intuition?
A follower of God, Sister Sandrine had learned to
find peace in the calming voices of her own soul.
Tonight, however, those voices were as silent as
the empty church around her.
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09-06-2024, 01:37 AM
Post: #15
RE: Novel
(08-28-2024 11:32 PM)Camelo Wrote:  CHAPTER 6
Having squeezed beneath the security gate,
Robert Langdon now stood just inside the
entrance to the Grand Gallery. He was staring
into the mouth of a long, deep canyon. On either
side of the gallery, stark walls rose thirty feet,
evaporating into the darkness above. The reddish
glow of the service lighting sifted upward,
casting an unnatural smolder across a staggering
collection of Da Vincis, Titians, and Caravaggios
that hung suspended from ceiling cables. Still
lifes, religious scenes, and landscapes
accompanied portraits of nobility and politicians.
Although the Grand Gallery housed the Louvre's
most famous Italian art, many visitors felt the
wing's most stunning offering was actually its
famous parquet floor. Laid out in a dazzling
geometric design of diagonal oak slats, the floor
produced an ephemeral optical illusion - a multi-
dimensional network that gave visitors the sense
they were floating through the gallery on a
surface that changed with every step.
As Langdon's gaze began to trace the inlay, his
eyes stopped short on an unexpected object
lying on the floor just a few yards to his left,
surrounded by police tape. He spun toward
Fache. "Is that... a Caravaggio on the floor?"
Fache nodded without even looking.
The painting, Langdon guessed, was worth
upward of two million dollars, and yet it was
lying on the floor like a discarded poster. "What
the devil is it doing on the floor!"
Fache glowered, clearly unmoved. "This is a crime
scene,
Mr. Langdon. We have touched nothing.
That canvas was pulled from the wall by the
curator. It was how he activated the security
system."
Langdon looked back at the gate, trying to
picture what had happened.
"The curator was attacked in his office, fled into
the Grand Gallery, and activated the security
gate by pulling that painting from the wall. The
gate fell immediately, sealing off all access. This
is the only door in or out of this gallery." Langdon
felt confused. "So the curator actually captured
his attacker inside the Grand Gallery?" Fache
shook his head. "The security gate separated
Sauniere from his attacker. The killer waslocked
out there in the hallway and shot Sauniere
through this gate." Fache pointed toward
anorange tag hanging from one of the bars on
the gate under which they had just passed. "The
PT Steam found flashback residue from a gun. He
fired
through the bars. Sauniere died in here
alone."
Langdon pictured the photograph of Sauniere's
body. They said he did that to himself.Langdon
looked out at the enormous corridor before them.
"So where is his body?"
Fache straightened his cruciform tie clip and
began to walk. "As you probably know, the
Grand Gallery is quite long."
The exact length, if Langdon recalled correctly,
was around fifteen hundred feet, the length of
three Washington Monuments laid end to end.
Equally breathtaking was the corridor's width,
which easily could have accommodated a pair of
side-by-side passenger trains. The center of the
hallway was dotted by the occasional statue or
colossal porcelain urn, which served as a tasteful
divider and kept the flow of traffic moving down
one wall and up the other.
Fache was silent now, striding briskly up the right
side
of the corridor with his gaze dead ahead.
Langdon felt almost disrespectful to be racing
past so many masterpieces without pausing for
so much as a glance.
Not that I could see anything in this lighting, he
thought.
The muted crimson lighting unfortunately
conjured memories of Langdon's last experience
in noninvasive lighting in the Vatican Secret
Archives. This was tonight's second unsettling
parallel with his near-death in Rome. He flashed
on Vittoria again. She had been absent from his
dreams for months. Langdon could not believe
Rome had been only a year ago; it felt like
decades. Another life.His last correspondence
from Vittoria had been in December - a postcard
saying she was headed to the Java Sea to
continue her research in entanglement physics...
something about using satellites to track manta
ray migrations. Langdon had never harbored
delusions that a woman like Vittoria Vetra could
have been happy living with him on a college
campus, but their encounter in Rome had
unlocked in him a longing he never imagined he
could feel. His lifelong affinity for bachelorhood
and the simple freedoms it allowed had been
shaken somehow... replaced by an unexpected
emptiness that seemed to have grown over the
past year.
They continued walking briskly, yet Langdon still
saw no corpse. "Jacques Sauniere went this far?"
"Mr. Sauniere suffered a bullet wound to his
stomach. He died very slowly. Perhaps over
fifteen or twenty minutes. He was obviously a
man of great personal strength."
Langdon turned, appalled. "Security took fifteen
minutes to get here?"
"Of course not. Louvre security responded
immediately to the alarm and found the Grand
Gallery sealed. Through the gate, they could hear
someone moving around at the far end of the
corridor, but they could not see who it was. They
shouted, but they got no answer. Assuming it
could only be a criminal, they followed protocol
and called in the Judicial Police. We took up
positions within fifteen minutes. When we
arrived, we raised the barricade enough to slip
underneath, and I sent a dozen armed agents
inside. They swept the length of the gallery to
corner the intruder." "And?" "They found no one
inside. Except..." He pointed farther down the hall.
"Him."

Langdon lifted his gaze and followed Fache'
outstretched finger. At first he thought Fache was
pointing to a large marble statue in the middle
of
the hallway. As they continued, though, Langdon
began to see past the statue. Thirty yards down
the hall, a single spotlight on a portable pole
stand shone down on the floor, creating a stark
island of white light in the dark crimson gallery.
In the center of the light, like an insect under a
microscope, the corpse of the curator lay naked
on the parquet floor.
"You saw the photograph," Fache said," so this
should be of no surprise."
Langdon felt a deep chill as they approached the
body. Before him was one of the strangest
image she had ever seen.
The pallid corpse of Jacques Sauniere lay on the
parquet floor exactly as it appeared in the
photograph. As Langdon stood over the body and
squinted
in the harsh light, he reminded himself
to his amazement that Sauniere had spent his
last minutes of life arranging his own body in this
strange fashion.
Sauniere looked remarkably fit for a man of his
years... and all of his musculature was in plain
view. He had stripped off every shred of clothing,
placed
it neatly on the floor, and laid down on
his back in the center of the wide corridor,
perfectly aligned with the long axis of the room.
His arms and legs were sprawled outward in a
wide spread eagle, like those of a child making a
snow angel... or, perhaps more appropriately, like
a man being drawn and quartered by some
invisible force.
Just below Sauniere's breastbone, a bloody
smear marked the spot where the bullet had
pierced his flesh. The wound had bled surprisingly
little,
leaving only a small pool of blackened
blood.
Sauniere's left index finger was also bloody,
apparently having been dipped into the wound
to create the most unsettling aspect of his own
macabre deathbed; using his own blood as ink,
and employing his own naked abdomen as a
canvas, Sauniere had drawn a simple symbol on
his flesh - five straight lines that intersected to
form a five-pointed star.
The pentacle.
The bloody star, centered on Sauniere's navel,
gave his corpse a distinctly ghoulish aura. The
photo Langdon had seen was chilling enough, but
now,
witnessing the scene in person, Langdon
felt a deepening uneasiness.
He did this to himself.
"Mr. Langdon?" Fache's dark eyes settled on him
again.
"It's a pentacle," Langdon offered, his voice
feeling hollow in the huge space. "One of the
oldest symbols on earth. Used over four
thousand years before Christ."
"And what does it mean?"
Langdon always hesitated when he got this
question. Telling someone what a symbol"
meant" was like telling them how a song should
make them feel - it was different for all people.
A white Ku Klux Klan headpiece conjured images
of hatred and racism in the United States, and
yet the same costume carried a meaning of
religious faith in Spain.
"Symbols carry different meanings in different
settings," Langdon said. "Primarily, the pentacle is
a pagan religious symbol."
Fache nodded. "Devil worship." "No," Langdon
corrected, immediately realizing his choice of
vocabulary should have been clearer. Nowadays,
the term pagan had become almost synonymous
with devil worship - a gross misconception. The
word's roots actually reached back to the Latin
paganus, meaning country-dwellers. "Pagans"
were literally unindoctrinated country-folk who
clung to the old, rural religions of Nature worship.
In fact, so strong was the Church's fear of those
who lived in the rural villes that the once
innocuous word for" villager" - villain - came to
mean a wicked soul.
"The pentacle," Langdon clarified," is a pre-
Christian symbol that relates to Nature worship.
The ancients envisioned their world in two halves
-
masculine and feminine. Their gods and
goddesses worked to keep a balance of power.
Yin and yang. When male and female were
balanced, there was harmony in the world.
When they were unbalanced, there was chaos."
Langdon motioned to Sauniere's stomach. "This
pentacle is representative of the female half of
all things - a concept religious historians call the
'sacred feminine' or the 'divine goddess. '
Sauniere, of all people, would know this."
"Sauniere drew a goddess symbol on his
stomach?"
Langdon had to admit, it seemed odd. "In its
most specific interpretation, the pentacle
symbolizes Venus - the goddess of female sexual
love and beauty."
Fache eyed the naked man, and grunted.
"Early religion was based on the divine order of
Nature. The goddess Venus and the planet Venus
were one and the same. The goddess had a
place in the nighttime sky and was known by
many names - Venus, the Eastern Star, Ishtar,
Astarte - all of them powerful female concepts
with ties to Nature and Mother Earth."
Fache looked more troubled now, as if he
somehow preferred the idea of devil worship.
Langdon decided not to share the pentacle's
most astonishing property - the graphic origin of
its ties to Venus. As a young astronomy student,
Langdon had been stunned to learn the planet
Venus traced a perfect pentacle across the
ecliptic sky every four years. So astonished were
the ancients to observe this phenomenon, that
Venus and her pentacle became symbols of
perfection, beauty, and the cyclic qualities of
sexual love. As a tribute to the magic of Venus,
the Greeks used her four-year cycle to organize
their Olympiads. Nowadays, few people realized
that the four-year schedule of modern Olympic
Games still followed the cycles of Venus. Even
fewer people knew that the five-pointed star
had almost become the official Olympic seal but
was modified at the last moment - its five points
exchanged for five intersecting rings to better
reflect the games' spirit of inclusion and
harmony.
"Mr. Langdon," Fache said abruptly. "Obviously,
the pentacle must also relate to the devil. Your
American horror movies make that point clearly."
Langdon frowned. Thank you, Hollywood.The
five-pointed star was now a virtual cliche in
Satanic serial killer movies, usually scrawled on
the wall of some Satanist's apartment along with
other
alleged demonic symbology. Langdon was
always frustrated when he saw the symbol in
this context; the pentacle's true origins were
actually quite godly.

assure you," Langdon said," despite what you"I
see in the movies, the pentacle's demonic
interpretation is historically inaccurate. The
original feminine meaning is correct, but the
symbolism of the pentacle has been distorted
over the millennia. In this case, through
bloodshed." "I'm not sure I follow." Langdon
glanced at Fache's crucifix, uncertain how to
phrase his next point. "The Church, sir. Symbols
are very resilient, but the pentacle was altered
by the early Roman Catholic Church. As part of
the Vatican's campaign to eradicate pagan
religions and convert the masses to Christianity,
the Church launched a smear campaign against
the pagan gods and goddesses, recasting their
divine symbols as evil."
"Go on."
"This is very common in times of turmoil,"
Langdon continued. "A newly emerging power
will take over the existing symbols and degrade
them over time in an attempt to erase their
meaning. In the battle between the pagan
symbols and Christian symbols, the pagans lost;
Poseidon's trident became the devil's pitchfork,
the wise crone's pointed hat became the symbol
of a witch, and Venus's pentacle became a sign
of the devil." Langdon paused. "Unfortunately, the
United
States military has also perverted the
pentacle; it's now our foremost symbol of war.
We paint it on all our fighter jets and hang it on
the shoulders of all our generals." So much for
the goddess of love and beauty.
"Interesting." Fache nodded toward the spread-
eagle corpse. "And the positioning of the body?
What do you make of that?" Langdon shrugged.
"The position simply reinforces the reference to
the pentacle and sacred feminine."
Fache's expression clouded. "I beg your pardon?"
"Replication. Repeating a symbol is the simplest
way to strengthen its meaning. Jacques Sauniere
positioned himself in the shape of a five-pointed
star." If one pentacle is good, two is better.
Fache's eyes followed the five points of
Sauniere's arms, legs, and head as he again ran
a hand across his slick hair. "Interesting analysis."
He paused. "And the nudity?" He grumbled as he
spoke the word, sounding repulsed by the sight
of an aging male body. "Why did he remove his
clothing?"
Damned good question, Langdon thought. He'd
been wondering the same thing ever since he
first saw the Polaroid. His best guess was that a
naked human form was yet another
endorsement of Venus - the goddess of human
sexuality. Although modern culture had erased
much of Venus's association with the male/
female physical union, a sharp etymological eye
could still spot a vestige of Venus's original
meaning in the word" venereal." Langdon
decided not to go there.
"Mr. Fache, I obviously can't tell you why Mr.
Sauniere drew that symbol on himself or placed
himself in this way, but I can tell you that a man
like Jacques Sauniere would consider the
pentacle a sign of the female deity. The
correlation between this symbol and the sacred
feminine is widely known by art historians and
symbologists."
"Fine. And the use of his own blood as ink?"
"Obviously he had nothing else to write with."
Fache was silent a moment. "Actually, I believe
he used blood such that the police would follow
certain forensic procedures."
"I'm sorry?"
"Look at his left hand."
Langdon's eyes traced the length of the curator's
pale arm to his left hand but saw nothing.
Uncertain, he circled the corpse and crouched
down, now noting with surprise that the curator
was clutching a large, felt-tipped marker.
"Sauniere was holding it when we found him,"
Fache said, leaving Langdon and moving several
yards to a portable table covered with
investigation tools, cables, and assorted electronic
gear. "As
I told you," he said, rummaging around
the table," we have touched nothing. Are you
familiar with this kind of pen?"
Langdon knelt down farther to see the pen's
label. STYLO DE LUMIERE NOIRE. He glanced up
in surprise.
The black-light pen or watermark stylus was a
specialized felt-tipped marker originally designed
by museums, restorers, and forgery police to
place invisible marks on items. The stylus wrote
in a noncorrosive, alcohol-based fluorescent ink
that was visible only under black light.
Nowadays, museum maintenance staffs carried
these markers on their daily rounds to place
invisible" tick marks" on the frames of paintings
that needed restoration.
As Langdon stood up, Fache walked over to the
spotlight and turned it off. The gallery plunged
into sudden darkness.
Momentarily blinded, Langdon felt a rising
uncertainty. Fache's silhouette appeared,
illuminated in bright purple. He approached
carrying a portable light source, which shrouded
him in a violet haze.
"As you may know," Fache said, his eyes
luminescing in the violet glow," police use black-
light illumination to search crime scenes for blood
and other forensic evidence. So you can imagine
our surprise..." Abruptly, he pointed the light
down at the corpse.
Langdon looked down and jumped back in
shock.
His heart pounded as he took in the bizarre sight
now glowing before him on the parquet floor.
Scrawled in luminescent handwriting, the
curator's final words glowed purple beside his
corpse. As Langdon stared at the shimmering
text, he felt the fog that had surrounded this
entire night growing thicker.
Langdon read the message again and looked up
at Fache. "What the hell does this mean!" Fache's
eyes shone white. "That, monsieur, is precisely
the question you are here to answer."
Not far away, inside Sauniere's office, Lieutenant
Collet had returned to the Louvre and was
huddled over an audio console set up on the
curator's enormous desk. With the exception of
the eerie, robot-like doll of a medieval knight
that seemed to be staring at him from the corner
of Sauniere's desk, Collet was comfortable. He
adjusted his AKG headphones and checked the
input levels on the hard-disk recording system.
All systems were go. The microphones were
functioning flawlessly, and the audio feed was
crystal clear.
Le moment de verite, he mused.
Smiling, he closed his eyes and settled in to
enjoy the rest of the conversation now being
taped inside the Grand Gallery.

CHAPTER 7
The modest dwelling within the Church of Saint-
Sulpice was located on the second floor of the
church itself, to the left of the choir balcony. A
two-room suite with a stone floor and minimal
furnishings, it had been home to Sister Sandrine
Bieil for over a decade. The nearby convent
washer formal residence, if anyone asked, but
she preferred the quiet of the church and had
made herself quite comfortable upstairs with a
bed, phone, and hot plate.
Advertisement
As the church's conservatrice d'affaires, Sister
Sandrine was responsible for overseeing all
nonreligious aspects of church operations -
general maintenance, hiring support staff and
guides, securing the building after hours, and
ordering supplies like communion wine and
wafers.
Tonight, asleep in her small bed, she awoke to
the shrill of her telephone. Tiredly, she lifted the
receiver.
"Soeur Sandrine. Eglise Saint-Sulpice."
"Hello, Sister," the man said in French.
Sister Sandrine sat up. What time is it? Although
she recognized her boss's voice, in fifteen years
she had never been awoken by him. The abbe
was a deeply pious man who went home to bed
immediately after mass.
"I apologize if I have awoken you, Sister," the
abbe said, his own voice sounding groggy and on
edge.
"I have a favor to ask of you. I just
received a call from an influential American
bishop.
Perhaps you know him? Manuel Aringarosa?"
"The head of Opus Dei?" Of course I know of
him.Who in the Church doesn't? Aringarosa's
conservative prelature had grown powerful in
recent years. Their ascension to grace was jump-
started in 1982 when Pope John Paul II
unexpectedly elevated them to a" personal
prelature of the Pope," officially sanctioning all of
their practices. Suspiciously, Opus Dei's elevation
occurred the same year the wealthy sect
allegedly had transferred almost one billion
dollars into the Vatican's Institute for Religious
Works - commonly known as the Vatican Bank -
bailing it out of an embarrassing bankruptcy. In a
second maneuver that raised eyebrows, the
Pope placed the founder of Opus Dei on the" fast
track" for sainthood, accelerating an often
century-long waiting period for canonization to a
mere twenty years. Sister Sandrine could not
help but feel that Opus Dei's good standing in
Rome was suspect, but one did not argue with
the Holy See.
"Bishop Aringarosa called to ask me a favor," the
abbe told her, his voice nervous. "One of his
numeraries is in Paris tonight..."
-- Advertisement --
As Sister Sandrine listened to the odd request,
she felt a deepening confusion. "I'm sorry, you
say this visiting Opus Dei numerary cannot wait
until morning?"
"I'm afraid not. His plane leaves very early. He
has always dreamed of seeing Saint-Sulpice."
"But the church is far more interesting by day.
The sun's rays through the oculus, the graduated
shadows on the gnomon, this is what makes
Saint-Sulpice unique."
"Sister, I agree, and yet I would consider it a
personal favor if you could let him in tonight. He
can be there at... say one o'clock? That's in
twenty minutes."
Sister Sandrine frowned. "Of course. It would be
my pleasure." The abbe thanked her and hung
up. Puzzled, Sister Sandrine remained a moment
in the warmth of her bed, trying to shake off the
cobwebs of sleep. Her sixty-year-old body did not
awake
as fast as it used to, although tonight's
phone call had certainly roused her senses. Opus
Dei had always made her uneasy. Beyond the
prelature's adherence to the arcane ritual of
corporal mortification, their views on women
were medieval at best. She had been shocked to
learn that female numeraries were forced to
clean the men's residence halls for no pay while
the men were at mass; women slept on
hardwood floors, while the men had straw mats;
and women were forced to endure additional
requirements of corporal mortification... all as
added penance for original sin. It seemed Eve's
bite from the apple of knowledge was a debt
women were doomed to pay for eternity. Sadly,
while most of the Catholic Church was gradually
moving in the right direction with respect to
women's rights, Opus Dei threatened to reverse
the progress. Even so, Sister Sandrine had her
orders.
Swinging her legs off the bed, she stood slowly,
chilled by the cold stone on the soles of her bare
feet. As the chill rose through her flesh, she felt
an unexpected apprehension.
Women's intuition?
A follower of God, Sister Sandrine had learned to
find peace in the calming voices of her own soul.
Tonight, however, those voices were as silent as
the empty church around her.

Good Job broCool
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09-06-2024, 01:51 AM
Post: #16
RE: Novel
Wanna read more?
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