and erected a classical capital of pantheons and temples, all adorned with images of history’s great gods and
goddesses—Apollo, Minerva, Venus, Helios, Vulcan, Jupiter. In her center, as in many of the great classical
cities, the founders had erected an enduring tribute to the ancients—the Egyptian obelisk. This obelisk, larger
even than Cairo’s or Alexandria’s, rose 555 feet into the sky, more than thirty stories, proclaiming thanks and
honor to the demigod forefather for whom this capital city took its newer name.
Washington.
Now, centuries later, despite America’s separation of church and state, this state-sponsored Rotunda
glistened with ancient religious symbolism. There were over a dozen different gods in the Rotunda—more
than the original Pantheon in Rome. Of course, the Roman Pantheon had been converted to Christianity in
609 . . . but this pantheon was never converted; vestiges of its true history still remained in plain view.
“As you may know,” Langdon said, “this Rotunda was designed as a tribute to one of Rome’s most venerated
mystical shrines. The Temple of Vesta.”
“As in the vestal virgins?” Sato looked doubtful that Rome’s virginal guardians of the flame had anything to
do with the U.S. Capitol Building.
“The Temple of Vesta in Rome,” Langdon said, “was circular, with a gaping hole in the floor, through which
the sacred fire of enlightenment could be tended by a sisterhood of virgins whose job it was to ensure the
flame never went out.”
Sato shrugged. “This Rotunda is a circle, but I see no gaping hole in this floor.”
“No, not anymore, but for years the center of this room had a large opening precisely where Peter’s hand is
now.” Langdon motioned to the floor. “In fact, you can still see the marks in the floor from the railing that
kept people from falling in.”
“What?” Sato demanded, scrutinizing the floor. “I’ve never heard that.”
“Looks like he’s right.” Anderson pointed out the circle of iron nubs where the posts had once been. “I’ve
seen these before, but I never had any idea why they were there.”
You’re not alone, Langdon thought, imagining the thousands of people every day, including famous
lawmakers, who strode across the center of the Rotunda having no idea there was once a day when they
would have plunged down into the Capitol Crypt—the level beneath the Rotunda floor.
“The hole in the floor,” Langdon told them, “was eventually covered, but for a good while, those who visited
the Rotunda could see straight down to the fire that burned below.”
Sato turned. “Fire? In the U.S. Capitol?”
“More of a large torch, actually—an eternal flame that burned in the crypt directly beneath us. It was
supposed to be visible through the hole in the floor, making this room a modern Temple of Vesta. This
building even had its own vestal virgin—a federal employee called the Keeper of the Crypt—who
successfully kept the flame burning for fifty years, until politics, religion, and smoke damage snuffed out the
idea.”
Both Anderson and Sato looked surprised.
Nowadays, the only reminder that a flame once burned here was the four-pointed star compass embedded in
the crypt floor one story below them—a symbol of America’s eternal flame, which once shed illumination
toward the four corners of the New World.
“So, Professor,” Sato said, “your contention is that the man who left Peter’s hand here knew all this?”
“Clearly. And much, much more. There are symbols all over this room that reflect a belief in the Ancient
Mysteries.”
“Secret wisdom,” Sato said with more than a hint of sarcasm in her voice. “Knowledge that lets men acquire
godlike powers?”
“Yes, ma’am.”
“That hardly fits with the Christian underpinnings of this country.”
“So it would seem, but it’s true. This transformation of man into God is called apotheosis. Whether or not
you’re aware of it, this theme—transforming man into god—is the core element in this Rotunda’s
symbolism.”
“Apotheosis?” Anderson spun with a startled look of recognition.
“Yes.” Anderson works here. He knows. “The word apotheosis literally means ‘divine transformation’—that
of man becoming God. It’s from the ancient Greek: apo—‘to become,’ theos—‘god.’ ”
Anderson looked amazed. “Apotheosis means ‘to become God’? I had no idea.”
“What am I missing?” Sato demanded.
“Ma’am,” Langdon said, “the largest painting in this building is called The Apotheosis of Washington. And it
clearly depicts George Washington being transformed into a god.”
Sato looked doubtful. “I’ve never seen anything of the sort.”
“Actually, I’m sure you have.” Langdon raised his index finger, pointing straight up. “It’s directly over your
head.”
CHAPTER 21
The Apotheosis of Washington—a 4,664-square-foot fresco that covers the canopy of the Capitol Rotunda—
was completed in 1865 by Constantino Brumidi.
Known as “The Michelangelo of the Capitol,” Brumidi had laid claim to the Capitol Rotunda in the same
way Michelangelo had laid claim to the Sistine Chapel, by painting a fresco on the room’s most lofty
canvas—the ceiling. Like Michelangelo, Brumidi had done some of his finest work inside the Vatican.
Brumidi, however, immigrated to America in 1852, abandoning God’s largest shrine in favor of a new shrine,
the U.S. Capitol, which now glistened with examples of his mastery—from the trompe l’oeil of the Brumidi
Corridors to the frieze ceiling of the Vice President’s Room. And yet it was the enormous image hovering
above the Capitol Rotunda that most historians considered to be Brumidi’s masterwork.
Robert Langdon gazed up at the massive fresco that covered the ceiling. He usually enjoyed his students’
startled reactions to this fresco’s bizarre imagery, but at the moment he simply felt trapped in a nightmare he
had yet to understand.
Director Sato was standing next to him with her hands on her hips, frowning up at the distant ceiling.
Langdon sensed she was having the same reaction many had when they first stopped to examine the painting
at the core of their nation.
Utter confusion.
You’re not alone, Langdon thought. For most people, The Apotheosis of Washington got stranger and
stranger the longer they looked at it. “That’s George Washington on the central panel,” Langdon said,
pointing 180 feet upward into the middle of the dome. “As you can see, he’s dressed in white robes, attended
by thirteen maidens, and ascending on a cloud above mortal man. This is the moment of his apotheosis . . .
his transformation into a god.”
Sato and Anderson said nothing.
“Nearby,” Langdon continued, “you can see a strange, anachronistic series of figures: ancient gods
presenting our forefathers with advanced knowledge. There’s Minerva giving technological inspiration to our
nation’s great inventors—Ben Franklin, Robert Fulton, Samuel Morse.” Langdon pointed them out one by
one. “And over there is Vulcan helping us build a steam engine. Beside them is Neptune demonstrating how
to lay the transatlantic cable. Beside that is Ceres, goddess of grain and root of our word cereal; she’s sitting
on the McCormick reaper, the farming breakthrough that enabled this country to become a world leader in
food production. The painting quite overtly portrays our forefathers receiving great wisdom from the gods.”
He lowered his head, looking at Sato now. “Knowledge is power, and the right knowledge lets man perform
miraculous, almost godlike tasks.”
Sato dropped her gaze back down to Langdon and rubbed her neck. “Laying a phone cable is a far cry from
being a god.”
“Perhaps to a modern man,” Langdon replied. “But if George Washington knew that we had become a race
that possessed the power to speak to one another across oceans, fly at the speed of sound, and set foot on our
moon, he would assume that we had become gods, capable of miraculous tasks.” He paused. “In the words of
futurist Arthur C. Clarke, ‘Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.’ ”
Sato pursed her lips, apparently deep in thought. She glanced down at the hand, and then followed the
direction of the outstretched index finger up into the dome. “Professor, you were told, ‘Peter will point the
way.’ Is that correct?”
“Yes, ma’am, but—”
“Chief,” Sato said, turning away from Langdon, “can you get us a closer look at the painting?”
Anderson nodded. “There’s a catwalk around the interior of the dome.” Langdon looked way, way up to the
tiny railing visible just beneath the painting and felt his body go rigid. “There’s no need to go up there.” He
had experienced that seldom-visited catwalk once before, as the guest of a U.S. senator and his wife, and he
had almost fainted from the dizzying height and perilous walkway.
“No need?” Sato demanded. “Professor, we have a man who believes this room contains a portal that has the
potential to make him a god; we have a ceiling fresco that symbolizes the transformation of a man into a god;
and we have a hand pointing straight at that painting. It seems everything is urging us upward.”
“Actually,” Anderson interjected, glancing up, “not many people know this, but there is one hexagonal coffer
in the dome that actually swings open like a portal, and you can peer down through it and—”
“Wait a second,” Langdon said, “you’re missing the point. The portal this man is looking for is a figurative
portal—a gateway that doesn’t exist. When he said, ‘Peter will point the way,’ he was talking in metaphorical
terms. This pointing-hand gesture—with its index finger and thumb extended upward—is a well-known
symbol of the Ancient Mysteries, and it appears all over the world in ancient art. This same gesture appears
in three of Leonardo da Vinci’s most famous encoded masterpieces—The Last Supper, Adoration of the
Magi, and Saint John the Baptist. It’s a symbol of man’s mystical connection to God.” As above, so below.
The madman’s bizarre choice of words was starting to feel more relevant now.
“I’ve never seen it before,” Sato said.
Then watch ESPN, Langdon thought, always amused to see professional athletes point skyward in gratitude
to God after a touchdown or home run. He wondered how many knew they were continuing a pre-Christian
mystical tradition of acknowledging the mystical power above, which, for one brief moment, had
transformed them into a god capable of miraculous feats.
“If it’s of any help,” Langdon said, “Peter’s hand is not the first such hand to make an appearance in this
Rotunda.”
Sato eyed him like he was insane. “I beg your pardon?”
Langdon motioned to her BlackBerry. “Google ‘George Washington Zeus.’ ”
Sato looked uncertain but started typing. Anderson inched toward her, looking over her shoulder intently.
Langdon said, “This Rotunda was once dominated by a massive sculpture of a bare-chested George
Washington . . . depicted as a god. He sat in the same exact pose as Zeus in the Pantheon, bare chest exposed,
left hand holding a sword, right hand raised with thumb and finger extended.”
Sato had apparently found an online image, because Anderson was staring at her BlackBerry in shock. “Hold
on, that’s George Washington?”
“Yes,” Langdon said. “Depicted as Zeus.”
“Look at his hand,” Anderson said, still peering over Sato’s shoulder. “His right hand is in the same exact
position as Mr. Solomon’s.”
As I said, Langdon thought, Peter’s hand is not the first to make an appearance in this room. When Horatio
Greenough’s statue of a naked George Washington was first unveiled in the Rotunda, many joked that
Washington must be reaching skyward in a desperate attempt to find some clothes. As American religious
ideals changed, however, the joking criticism turned to controversy, and the statue was removed, banished to
a shed in the east garden. Currently, it made its home at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American
History, where those who saw it had no reason to suspect that it was one of the last vestigial links to a time
when the father of the country had watched over the U.S. Capitol as a god . . . like Zeus watching over the
Pantheon.
Sato began dialing a number on her BlackBerry, apparently seeing this as an opportune moment to check in
with her staff. “What have you got?” She listened patiently. “I see . . .” She glanced directly at Langdon, then
at Peter’s hand. “You’re certain?” She listened a moment longer. “Okay, thanks.” She hung up and turned
back toward Langdon. “My support staff did some research and confirms the existence of your so-called
Hand of the Mysteries, corroborating everything you said: five fingertip markings—the star, the sun, the key,
the crown, and the lantern—as well as the fact that this hand served as an ancient invitation to learn secret
wisdom.”
“I’m glad,” Langdon said.
“Don’t be,” she replied curtly. “It appears we’re now at a dead end until you share whatever it is you’re still
not telling me.”
“Ma’am?”
Sato stepped toward him. “We’ve come full circle, Professor. You’ve told me nothing I could not have
learned from my own staff. And so I will ask you once more. Why were you brought here tonight? What
makes you so special? What is it that you alone know?”
“We’ve been through this,” Langdon fired back. “I don’t know why this guy thinks I know anything at all!”
Langdon was half tempted to demand how the hell Sato knew that he was in the Capitol tonight, but they’d
been through that, too. Sato isn’t talking. “If I knew the next step,” he told her, “I’d tell you. But I don’t.
Traditionally, the Hand of the Mysteries is extended by a teacher to a student. And then, shortly afterward,
the hand is followed up with a set of instructions . . . directions to a temple, the name of the master who will
teach you—something! But all this guy left for us is five tattoos! Hardly—” Langdon stopped short.
Sato eyed him. “What is it?”
Langdon’s eyes shot back to the hand. Five tattoos. He now realized that what he was saying might not be
entirely true.
“Professor?” Sato pressed.
Langdon inched toward the gruesome object. Peter will point the way.
“Earlier, it crossed my mind that maybe this guy had left an object clenched in Peter’s palm—a map, or a
letter, or a set of directions.”
“He didn’t,” Anderson said. “As you can see, those three fingers are not clenched tightly.”
“You’re right,” Langdon said. “But it occurs to me . . .” He crouched down now, trying to see up under the