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Chapter no 21

The Da Vinci Code
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The Mona Lisa.

For an instant, standing in the exit stairwell, Sophie forgot all about trying to leave the Louvre.

Her shock over the anagram was matched only by her embarrassment at not having deciphered the message herself. Sophieโ€™s expertise in complex cryptanalysis had caused her to overlook simplistic word games, and yet she knew she should have seen it. After all, she was no stranger to anagramsโ€”especially in English.

When she was young, often her grandfather would use anagram games to hone her English spelling. Once he had written the English word โ€œplanetsโ€ and told Sophie that an astonishing sixty-twoย otherย English words of varying lengths could be formed using those same letters. Sophie had spent three days with an English dictionary until she found them all.

โ€œI canโ€™t imagine,โ€ Langdon said, staring at the printout, โ€œhow your grandfather created such an intricate anagram in the minutes before he died.โ€

Sophie knew the explanation, and the realization made her feel even worse.ย I should have seen this!ย She now recalled that her grandfatherโ€”a wordplay aficionado and art loverโ€”had entertained himself as a young man by creating anagrams of famous works of art. In fact, one of his anagrams had gotten him in trouble once when Sophie was a little girl. While being interviewed by an American art magazine, Sauniรจre had expressed his distaste for the modernist Cubist movement by noting that Picassoโ€™s masterpieceย Les Demoiselles dโ€™Avignonย was a perfect anagram ofย vile meaningless doodles. Picasso fans were not amused.

โ€œMy grandfather probably created thisย Mona Lisaย anagram long ago,โ€ Sophie said, glancing up at Langdon.ย And tonight he was forced to use it as a makeshift code.ย Her grandfatherโ€™s voice had called out from beyond with chilling precision.

Leonardo da Vinci! The Mona Lisa!

Why his final words to her referenced the famous painting, Sophie had no idea, but she could think of only one possibility. A disturbing one.

Those were not his final wordsโ€ฆ.

Was she supposed to visit theย Mona Lisa? Had her grandfather left her a message there? The idea seemed perfectly plausible. After all, the famous painting hung in the Salle des Etatsโ€”a private viewing chamber accessible only from the Grand Gallery. In fact, Sophie now realized, the doors that opened into the chamber were situated only twenty meters from where her grandfather had been found dead.

He easily could have visited the Mona Lisa before he died.

Sophie gazed back up the emergency stairwell and felt torn. She knew she should usher Langdon from the museum immediately, and yet instinct urged her to the contrary. As Sophie recalled her first childhood visit to the Denon Wing, she realized that if her grandfather had a secret to tell her, few places on earth made a more apt rendezvous than Da Vinciโ€™sย Mona Lisa.

โ€œSheโ€™s just a little bit farther,โ€ her grandfather had whispered, clutching Sophieโ€™s tiny hand as he led her through the deserted museum after hours.

Sophie was six years old. She felt small and insignificant as she gazed up at the enormous ceilings and down at the dizzying floor. The empty museum frightened her, although she was not about to let her grandfather know that. She set her jaw firmly and let go of his hand.

โ€œUp ahead is the Salle des Etats,โ€ her grandfather said as they approached the Louvreโ€™s most famous room. Despite her grandfatherโ€™s obvious excitement, Sophie wanted to go home. She had seen pictures of theย Mona Lisaย in books and didnโ€™t like it at all. She couldnโ€™t understand why everyone made such a fuss.

“Cโ€™est ennuyeux,โ€ย Sophie grumbled.

โ€œBoring,โ€ he corrected. โ€œFrench at school. English at home.โ€

“Le Louvre, cโ€™est pas chez moi!โ€ย she challenged.

He gave her a tired laugh. โ€œRight you are. Then letโ€™s speak English just for fun.โ€

Sophie pouted and kept walking. As they entered the Salle des Etats, her eyes scanned the narrow room and settled on the obvious spot of honorโ€”the center of the right-hand wall, where a lone portrait hung behind a protective Plexiglas wall. Her grandfather paused in the doorway and motioned toward the painting.

โ€œGo ahead, Sophie. Not many people get a chance to visit her alone.โ€

Swallowing her apprehension, Sophie moved slowly across the room. After everything sheโ€™d heard about theย Mona Lisa,ย she felt as if she were approaching royalty. Arriving in front of the protective Plexiglas, Sophie held her breath and looked up, taking it in all at once.

Sophie was not sure what she had expected to feel, but it most certainly was not this. No jolt of amazement. No instant of wonder. The famous face looked as it did in books. She stood in silence for what felt like forever, waiting for something to happen.

โ€œSo what do you think?โ€ her grandfather whispered, arriving behind her. โ€œBeautiful, yes?โ€

โ€œSheโ€™s too little.โ€

Sauniรจre smiled. โ€œYouโ€™re little and youโ€™re beautiful.โ€

I am not beautiful,ย she thought. Sophie hated her red hair and freckles, and she was bigger than all the boys in her class. She looked back at theย Mona Lisaย and shook her head. โ€œSheโ€™s even worse than in the books. Her face is โ€ฆย brumeux.โ€

โ€œFoggy,โ€ her grandfather tutored.

โ€œFoggy,โ€ Sophie repeated, knowing the conversation would not continue until she repeated her new vocabulary word.

โ€œThatโ€™s called theย sfumatoย style of painting,โ€ he told her, โ€œand itโ€™s very hard to do. Leonardo da Vinci was better at it than anyone.โ€

Sophie still didnโ€™t like the painting. โ€œShe looks like she knows something โ€ฆ like when kids at school have a secret.โ€

Her grandfather laughed. โ€œThatโ€™s part of why she is so famous.

People like to guess why she is smiling.โ€

โ€œDoย youย know why sheโ€™s smiling?โ€

โ€œMaybe.โ€ Her grandfather winked. โ€œSomeday Iโ€™ll tell you all about it.โ€

Sophie stamped her foot. โ€œI told you I donโ€™t like secrets!โ€ โ€œPrincess,โ€ he smiled. โ€œLife is filled with secrets. You canโ€™t learn

them all at once.โ€

โ€œIโ€™m going back up,โ€ Sophie declared, her voice hollow in the stairwell.

โ€œTo theย Mona Lisa?โ€ Langdon recoiled.ย “Now?โ€

Sophie considered the risk. โ€œIโ€™m not a murder suspect. Iโ€™ll take my chances. I need to understand what my grandfather was trying to tell me.โ€

โ€œWhat about the embassy?โ€

Sophie felt guilty turning Langdon into a fugitive only to abandon him, but she saw no other option. She pointed down the stairs to a metal door. โ€œGo through that door, and follow the illuminated exit signs. My grandfather used to bring me down here. The signs will lead you to a security turnstile. Itโ€™s monodirectional and opens out.โ€ She handed Langdon her car keys. โ€œMine is the red SmartCar in the employee lot. Directly outside this bulkhead. Do you know how to get to the embassy?โ€

Langdon nodded, eyeing the keys in his hand.

โ€œListen,โ€ Sophie said, her voice softening. โ€œI think my grandfather may have left me a message at theย Mona Lisaโ€”some kind of clue as to who killed him. Or why Iโ€™m in danger.โ€ย Or what happened to my family. โ€œI have to go see.โ€

โ€œBut if he wanted to tell you why you were in danger, why wouldnโ€™t he simply write it on the floor where he died? Why this complicated word game?โ€

โ€œWhatever my grandfather was trying to tell me, I donโ€™t think he wanted anyone else to hear it. Not even the police.โ€ Clearly, her grandfather had done everything in his power to send a confidential transmission directly toย her. He had written it in code, included her secret initials, and told her to find Robert Langdonโ€”a wise

command, considering the American symbologist had deciphered his code. โ€œAs strange as it may sound,โ€ Sophie said, โ€œI think he wants me to get to theย Mona Lisaย before anyone else does.โ€

โ€œIโ€™ll come.โ€

โ€œNo! We donโ€™t know how long the Grand Gallery will stay empty.

Youย have to go.โ€

Langdon seemed hesitant, as if his own academic curiosity were threatening to override sound judgment and drag him back into Facheโ€™s hands.

โ€œGo. Now.โ€ Sophie gave him a grateful smile. โ€œIโ€™ll see you at the embassy, Mr. Langdon.โ€

Langdon looked displeased. โ€œIโ€™ll meet you there onย oneย condition,โ€ he replied, his voice stern.

She paused, startled. โ€œWhatโ€™s that?โ€ โ€œThat you stop calling meย Mr.ย Langdon.โ€

Sophie detected the faint hint of a lopsided grin growing across Langdonโ€™s face, and she felt herself smile back. โ€œGood luck, Robert.โ€

When Langdon reached the landing at the bottom of the stairs, the unmistakable smell of linseed oil and plaster dust assaulted his nostrils. Ahead, an illuminatedย SORTIE/EXITย displayed an arrow pointing down a long corridor.

Langdon stepped into the hallway.

To the right gaped a murky restoration studio out of which peered an army of statues in various states of repair. To the left, Langdon saw a suite of studios that resembled Harvard art classroomsโ€”rows of easels, paintings, palettes, framing toolsโ€”an art assembly line.

As he moved down the hallway, Langdon wondered if at any moment he might awake with a start in his bed in Cambridge. The entire evening had felt like a bizarre dream.ย Iโ€™m about to dash out of the Louvre โ€ฆ a fugitive.

Sauniรจreโ€™s clever anagrammatic message was still on his mind, and Langdon wondered what Sophie would find at theย Mona Lisaย โ€ฆ if anything. She had seemed certain her grandfather meant for her to visit the famous painting one more time. As plausible an

interpretation as this seemed, Langdon felt haunted now by a troubling paradox.

P.S. Find Robert Langdon.

Sauniรจre had written Langdonโ€™s name on the floor, commanding Sophie to find him. But why? Merely so Langdon could help her break an anagram?

It seemed quite unlikely.

After all, Sauniรจre had no reason to think Langdon was especially skilled at anagrams.ย Weโ€™ve never even met. More important, Sophie had stated flat out thatย sheย should have broken the anagram on her own. It had been Sophie who spotted the Fibonacci sequence, and, no doubt, Sophie who, if given a little more time, would have deciphered the message with no help from Langdon.

Sophie was supposed to break that anagram on her own. Langdon was suddenly feeling more certain about this, and yet the conclusion left an obvious gaping lapse in the logic of Sauniรจreโ€™s actions.

Why me?ย Langdon wondered, heading down the hall.ย Why was Sauniรจreโ€™s dying wish that his estranged granddaughter find me? What is it that Sauniรจre thinks I know?

With an unexpected jolt, Langdon stopped short. Eyes wide, he dug in his pocket and yanked out the computer printout. He stared at the last line of Sauniรจreโ€™s message.

P.S. Find Robert Langdon.ย He fixated on two letters.ย P.S.

In that instant, Langdon felt Sauniรจreโ€™s puzzling mix of symbolism fall into stark focus. Like a peal of thunder, a careerโ€™s worth of symbology and history came crashing down around him. Everything tacques Sauniรจre had done tonight suddenly made perfect sense.

Langdonโ€™s thoughts raced as he tried to assemble the implications of what this all meant. Wheeling, he stared back in the direction from which he had come.

Is there time?

He knew it didnโ€™t matter.

Without hesitation, Langdon broke into a sprint back toward the stairs.

Enjoy a fast, distraction-free reading experience. 'Request a Book' and other cool features are coming soon,

Enjoy a fast, distraction-free reading experience. 'Request a Book' and other cool features are coming soon.

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