โWhat doย you mean sheโs not answering?โ Fache looked incredulous. โYouโre calling her cell phone, right? I know sheโs carrying it.โ
Collet had been trying to reach Sophie now for several minutes. โMaybe her batteries are dead. Or her ringerโs off.โ
Fache had looked distressed ever since talking to the director of Cryptology on the phone. After hanging up, he had marched over to Collet and demanded he get Agent Neveu on the line. Now Collet had failed, and Fache was pacing like a caged lion.
โWhy did Crypto call?โ Collet now ventured.
Fache turned. โTo tell us they found no references to Draconian devils and lame saints.โ
โThatโs all?โ
โNo, also to tell us that they had just identified the numerics as Fibonacci numbers, but they suspected the series was meaningless.โ
Collet was confused. โBut they already sent Agent Neveu to tell us that.โ
Fache shook his head. โThey didnโt send Neveu.โ โWhat?โ
โAccording to the director, at my orders he paged his entire team to look at the images Iโd wired him. When Agent Neveu arrived, she took one look at the photos of Sauniรจre and the code and left the o ce without a word. The director said he didnโt question her behavior because she was understandably upset by the photos.โ
โUpset? Sheโs never seen a picture of a dead body?โ
Fache was silent a moment. โI was not aware of this, and it seems neither was the director until a coworker informed him, but apparently Sophie Neveu is tacques Sauniรจreโs granddaughter.โ
Collet was speechless.
โThe director said she never once mentioned Sauniรจre to him, and he assumed it was because she probably didnโt want preferential treatment for having a famous grandfather.โ
No wonder she was upset by the pictures.ย Collet could barely conceive of the unfortunate coincidence that called in a young woman to decipher a code written by a dead family member. Still, her actions made no sense. โBut she obviously recognized the numbers as Fibonacci numbers because she came here andย toldย us. I donโt understand why she would leave the o ce without telling anyone she had figured it out.โ
Collet could think of only one scenario to explain the troubling developments: Sauniรจre had written a numeric code on the floor in hopes Fache would involve cryptographers in the investigation, and therefore involve his own granddaughter. As for the rest of the message, was Sauniรจre communicating in some way with his granddaughter? If so, what did the message tell her? And how did Langdon fit in?
Before Collet could ponder it any further, the silence of the deserted museum was shattered by an alarm. The bell sounded like it was coming from inside the Grand Gallery.
“Alarme!โย one of the agents yelled, eyeing his feed from the Louvre security center.ย “Grande Galerie! Toilettes Messieurs!โ
Fache wheeled to Collet. โWhereโs Langdon?โ
โStill in the menโs room!โ Collet pointed to the blinking red dot on his laptop schematic. โHe must have broken the window!โ Collet knew Langdon wouldnโt get far. Although Paris fire codes required windows above fifteen meters in public buildings be breakable in case of fire, exiting a Louvre second-story window without the help of a hook and ladder would be suicide. Furthermore, there were no trees or grass on the western end of the Denon Wing to cushion a fall. Directly beneath that rest room window, the two-lane Place du Carrousel ran within a few feet of the outer wall. โMy God,โ Collet exclaimed, eyeing the screen. โLangdonโs moving to the window ledge!โ
But Fache was already in motion. Yanking his Manurhin MR-93 revolver from his shoulder holster, the captain dashed out of the o ce.
Collet watched the screen in bewilderment as the blinking dot arrived at the window ledge and then did something utterly
unexpected. The dot movedย outsideย the perimeter of the building.
Whatโs going on?ย he wondered.ย Is Langdon out on a ledge orโย “Jesu!โย Collet jumped to his feet as the dot shot farther outside
the wall. The signal seemed to shudder for a moment, and then the blinking dot came to an abrupt stop about ten yards outside the perimeter of the building.
Fumbling with the controls, Collet called up a Paris street map and recalibrated the GPS. Zooming in, he could now see the exact location of the signal.
It was no longer moving.
It lay at a dead stop in the middle of Place du Carrousel. Langdon had jumped.