Tonight, however, a troubled thought followed her inside. Where is Peter?
CHAPTER 12
Capitol police chief Trent Anderson had overseen security in the U.S. Capitol Complex for over a decade. A
burly, square-chested man with a chiseled face and red hair, he kept his hair cropped in a buzz cut, giving
him an air of military authority. He wore a visible sidearm as a warning to anyone foolish enough to question
the extent of his authority.
Anderson spent the majority of his time coordinating his small army of police officers from a high-tech
surveillance center in the basement of the Capitol. Here he oversaw a staff of technicians who watched visual
monitors, computer readouts, and a telephone switchboard that kept him in contact with the many security
personnel he commanded.
This evening had been unusually quiet, and Anderson was pleased. He had been hoping to catch a bit of the
Redskins game on the flat-panel television in his office. The game had just kicked off when his intercom
buzzed.
“Chief?”
Anderson groaned and kept his eyes on the television as he pressed the button. “Yeah.”
“We’ve got some kind of disturbance in the Rotunda. I’ve got officers arriving now, but I think you’ll want
to have a look.”
“Right.” Anderson walked into the security nerve center—a compact, neomodern facility packed with
computer monitors. “What have you got?”
The technician was cueing a digital video clip on his monitor. “Rotunda east balcony camera. Twenty
seconds ago.” He played the clip.
Anderson watched over the technician’s shoulder.
The Rotunda was almost deserted today, dotted with just a few tourists. Anderson’s trained eye went
immediately to the one person who was alone and moving faster than all the others. Shaved head. Green
army-surplus jacket. Injured arm in a sling. Slight limp. Slouched posture. Talking on a cell phone.
The bald man’s footfalls echoed crisply on the audio feed until, suddenly, arriving at the exact center of the
Rotunda, he stopped short, ended his phone call, and then knelt down as if to tie his shoe. But instead of
tying a shoe, he pulled something out of his sling and set it on the floor. Then he stood up and limped briskly
toward the east exit.
Anderson eyed the oddly shaped object the man had left behind. What in the world? It was about eight inches
tall and standing vertically. Anderson crouched closer to the screen and squinted. That can’t be what it looks
like!
As the bald man hurried off, disappearing through the east portico, a little boy nearby could be heard saying,
“Mommy, that man dropped something.” The boy drifted toward the object but suddenly stopped short. After
a long, motionless beat, he pointed and let out a deafening scream.
Instantly, the police chief spun and ran for the door, barking orders as he went. “Radio all points! Find the
bald guy with the sling and detain him! NOW!”
Dashing out of the security center, he bounded up the treads of the well-worn staircase three at a time. The
security feed had shown the bald man with the sling leave the Rotunda via the east portico. The shortest route
out of the building would therefore take him through the east-west corridor, which was just ahead.
I can head him off.
As he reached the top of the stairs and rounded the corner, Anderson surveyed the quiet hallway before him.
An elderly couple strolled at the far end, hand in hand. Nearby, a blond tourist wearing a blue blazer was
reading a guidebook and studying the mosaic ceiling outside the House chamber.
“Excuse me, sir!” Anderson barked, running toward him. “Have you seen a bald man with a sling on his
arm?”
The man looked up from his book with a confused expression.
“A bald man with a sling!” Anderson repeated more firmly. “Have you seen him?”
The tourist hesitated and glanced nervously toward the far eastern end of the hallway. “Uh . . . yes,” he said.
“I think he just ran past me . . . to that staircase over there.” He pointed down the hall.
Anderson pulled out his radio and yelled into it. “All points! The suspect is headed for the southeast exit.
Converge!” He stowed the radio and yanked his sidearm from its holster, running toward the exit.
Thirty seconds later, at a quiet exit on the east side of the Capitol, the powerfully built blond man in the blue
blazer stepped into the damp night air. He smiled, savoring the coolness of the evening.
Transformation.
It had been so easy.
Only a minute ago he had limped quickly out of the Rotunda in an army-surplus coat. Stepping into a
darkened alcove, he shed his coat, revealing the blue blazer he wore underneath. Before abandoning his
surplus jacket, he pulled a blond wig from the pocket and fit it snugly on his head. Then he stood up straight,
pulled a slim Washington guidebook from his blazer, and stepped calmly from the niche with an elegant gait.
Transformation. This is my gift.
As Mal’akh’s mortal legs carried him toward his waiting limousine, he arched his back, standing to his full
six-foot-three height and throwing back his shoulders. He inhaled deeply, letting the air fill his lungs. He
could feel the wings of the tattooed phoenix on his chest opening wide.
If they only knew my power, he thought, gazing out at the city. Tonight my transformation will be complete.
Mal’akh had played his cards artfully within the Capitol Building, showing obeisance to all the ancient
etiquettes. The ancient invitation has been delivered. If Langdon had not yet grasped his role here tonight,
soon he would.
CHAPTER 13
For Robert Langdon, the Capitol Rotunda—like St. Peter's Basilica—always had a way of taking him by
surprise. Intellectually, he knew the room was so large that the Statue of Liberty could stand comfortably
inside it, but somehow the Rotunda always felt larger and more hallowed than he anticipated, as if there were
spirits in the air. Tonight, however, there was only chaos.
Capitol police officers were sealing the Rotunda while attempting to herd distraught tourists away from the
hand. The little boy was still crying. A bright light flashed—a tourist taking a photo of the hand—and several
guards immediately detained the man, taking his camera and escorting him off. In the confusion, Langdon
felt himself moving forward in a trance, slipping through the crowd, inching closer to the hand.
Peter Solomon's severed right hand was standing upright, the flat plane of the detached wrist skewered down
onto the spike of a small wooden stand. Three of the fingers were closed in a fist, while the thumb and index
finger were fully extended, pointing up toward the soaring dome.
“Everyone back!” an officer called.
Langdon was close enough now that he could see dried blood, which had run down from the wrist and
coagulated on the wooden base. Postmortem wounds don't bleed . . . which means Peter is alive. Langdon
didn't know whether to be relieved or nauseated. Peter's hand was removed while he was alive? Bile rose in
his throat. He thought of all the times his dear friend had extended this same hand to shake Langdon's or
offer a warm embrace.
For several seconds, Langdon felt his mind go blank, like an untuned television set broadcasting only static.
The first clear image that broke through was utterly unexpected.
A crown . . . and a star.
Langdon crouched down, eyeing the tips of Peter's thumb and index finger. Tattoos? Incredibly, the monster
who had done this appeared to have tattooed tiny symbols on Peter's fingertips.
On the thumb—a crown. On the index finger—a star.
This can't be. The two symbols registered instantly in Langdon's mind, amplifying this already horrific scene
into something almost otherworldly. These symbols had appeared together many times in history, and always
in the same place—on the fingertips of a hand. It was one of the ancient world's most coveted and secretive
icons.
The Hand of the Mysteries.
The icon was rarely seen anymore, but throughout history it had symbolized a powerful call to action.
Langdon strained to comprehend the grotesque artifact now before him. Someone crafted the Hand of the
Mysteries out of Peter's hand? It was unthinkable. Traditionally, the icon was sculpted in stone or wood or
rendered as a drawing. Langdon had never heard of the Hand of the Mysteries being fashioned from actual
flesh. The concept was abhorrent.
“Sir?” a guard said behind Langdon. “Please step back.”
Langdon barely heard him. There are other tattoos. Although he could not see the fingertips of the three
clenched fingers, Langdon knew these fingertips would bear their own unique markings. That was the
tradition. Five symbols in total. Through the millennia, the symbols on the fingertips of the Hand of the
Mysteries had never changed . . . nor had the hand's iconic purpose.
The hand represents . . . an invitation.
Langdon felt a sudden chill as he recalled the words of the man who had brought him here. Professor, tonight
you are receiving the invitation of your lifetime. In ancient times, the Hand of the Mysteries actually served
as the most coveted invitation on earth. To receive this icon was a sacred summons to join an elite group—
those who were said to guard the secret wisdom of all the ages. The invitation not only was a great honor, but
it signified that a master believed you were worthy to receive this hidden wisdom. The hand of the master
extended to the initiate.
“Sir,” the guard said, putting a firm hand on Langdon's shoulder. “I need you to back up right now.”
“I know what this means,” Langdon managed. “I can help you.”
“Now!” the guard said.
“My friend is in trouble. We have to—”
Langdon felt powerful arms pulling him up and leading him away from the hand. He simply let it happen . . .
feeling too off balance to protest.
A formal invitation had just been delivered. Someone was summoning Langdon to unlock a mystical portal
that would unveil a world of ancient mysteries and hidden knowledge.
But it was all madness.
Delusions of a lunatic.
CHAPTER 14
Mal’akh’s stretch limousine eased away from the U.S. Capitol, moving eastward down Independence
Avenue. A young couple on the sidewalk strained to see through the tinted rear windows, hoping to glimpse
a VIP.
I’m in front, Mal’akh thought, smiling to himself.
Mal’akh loved the feeling of power he got from driving this massive car all alone. None of his other five cars
offered him what he needed tonight—the guarantee of privacy. Total privacy. Limousines in this city
enjoyed a kind of unspoken immunity. Embassies on wheels. Police officers who worked near Capitol Hill
were never certain what power broker they might mistakenly pull over in a limousine, and so most simply
chose not to take the chance.
As Mal’akh crossed the Anacostia River into Maryland, he could feel himself moving closer to Katherine,
pulled onward by destiny’s gravity. I am being called to a second task tonight . . . one I had not imagined.
Last night, when Peter Solomon told the last of his secrets, Mal’akh had learned of the existence of a secret
lab in which Katherine Solomon had performed miracles—staggering breakthroughs that Mal’akh realized
would change the world if they were ever made known.
Her work will unveil the true nature of all things.
For centuries the “brightest minds” on earth had ignored the ancient sciences, mocking them as ignorant
superstitions, arming themselves instead with smug skepticism and dazzling new technologies—tools that led
them only further from the truth. Every generation’s breakthroughs are proven false by the next generation’s
technology. And so it had gone through the ages. The more man learned, the more he realized he did not
know.
For millennia, mankind had wandered in the darkness . . . but now, as had been prophesied, there was a
change coming. After hurtling blindly through history, mankind had reached a crossroads. This moment had
been predicted long ago, prophesied by the ancient texts, by the primeval calendars, and even by the stars
themselves. The date was specific, its arrival imminent. It would be preceded by a brilliant explosion of
knowledge . . . a flash of clarity to illuminate the darkness and give mankind a final chance to veer away
from the abyss and take the path of wisdom.
I have come to obscure the light, Mal’akh thought. This is my role.
Fate had linked him to Peter and Katherine Solomon. The breakthroughs Katherine Solomon had made
within the SMSC would risk opening floodgates of new thinking, starting a new Renaissance. Katherine’s
revelations, if made public, would become a catalyst that would inspire mankind to rediscover the knowledge
he had lost, empowering him beyond all imagination.
Katherine’s destiny is to light this torch.
Mine is to extinguish it.
CHAPTER 15
In total darkness, Katherine Solomon groped for the outer door of her lab. Finding it, she heaved open the
lead-lined door and hurried into the small entry room. The journey across the void had taken only ninety
seconds, and yet her heart was pounding wildly. After three years, you’d think I’d be used to that. Katherine
always felt relieved to escape the blackness of Pod 5 and step into this clean, well-lit space.
The “Cube” was a massive windowless box. Every inch of the interior walls and ceiling was covered with a
stiff mesh of titanium-coated lead fiber, giving the impression of a giant cage built inside a cement enclosure.
Dividers of frosted Plexiglas separated the space into different compartments—a laboratory, a control room,
a mechanical room, a bathroom, and a small research library.
Katherine strode briskly into the main lab. The bright and sterile work space glistened with advanced
quantitative equipment: paired electro encephalographs, a femtosecond comb, a magneto-optical trap, and
quantum-indeterminate electronic noise REGs, more simply known as Random Event Generators.
Despite Noetic Science’s use of cutting-edge technologies, the discoveries themselves were far more
mystical than the cold, high-tech machines that were producing them. The stuff of magic and myth was fast