res touched down in a puff of smoke. The plane settled in for
deceleration, streaking from right to left in front of the terminal, its
white hull glistening in the wet weather. But rather than braking and
turning into the terminal, the jet coasted calmly past the access lane and
continued on toward Teabing's hangar in the distance.
All the police spun and stared at Edwards. "I thought you said the
pilot agreed to come to the terminal!"
Edwards was bewildered. "He did!"
Seconds later, Edwards found himself wedged in a police car racing
across the tarmac toward the distant hangar. The convoy of police was still
a good five hundred yards away as Teabing's Hawker taxied calmly into the
private hangar and disappeared. When the cars finally arrived and skidded to
a stop outside the gaping hangar door, the police poured out, guns drawn.
Edwards jumped out too.
The noise was deafening.
The Hawker's engines were still roaring as the jet finished its usual
rotation inside the hangar, positioning itself nose-out in preparation for
later departure. As the plane completed its 180-degree turn and rolled
toward the front of the hangar, Edwards could see the pilot's face, which
understandably looked surprised and fearful to see the barricade of police
cars.
The pilot brought the plane to a final stop, and powered down the
engines. The police streamed in, taking up positions around the jet. Edwards
joined the Kent chief inspector, who moved warily toward the hatch. After
several seconds, the fuselage door popped open.
Leigh Teabing appeared in the doorway as the plane's electronic stairs
smoothly dropped down. As he gazed out at the sea of weapons aimed at him,
he propped himself on his crutches and scratched his head. "Simon, did I win
the policemen's lottery while I was away?" He sounded more bewildered than
concerned.
Simon Edwards stepped forward, swallowing the frog in his throat. "Good
morning, sir. I apologize for the confusion. We've had a gas leak and your
pilot said he was coming to the terminal."
"Yes, yes, well, I told him to come here instead. I'm late for an
appointment. I pay for this hangar, and this rubbish about avoiding a gas
leak sounded overcautious."
"I'm afraid your arrival has taken us a bit off guard, sir."
"I know. I'm off my schedule, I am. Between you and me, the new
medication gives me the tinkles. Thought I'd come over for a tune-up."
The policemen all exchanged looks. Edwards winced. "Very good, sir."
"Sir," the Kent chief inspector said, stepping forward. "I need to ask
you to stay onboard for another half hour or so."
Teabing looked unamused as he hobbled down the stairs. "I'm afraid that
is impossible. I have a medical appointment." He reached the tarmac. "I
cannot afford to miss it."
The chief inspector repositioned himself to block Teabing's progress
away from the plane. "I am here at the orders of the French Judicial Police.
They claim you are transporting fugitives from the law on this plane."
Teabing stared at the chief inspector a long moment, and then burst out
laughing. "Is this one of those hidden camera programs? Jolly good!"
The chief inspector never flinched. "This is serious, sir. The French
police claim you also may have a hostage onboard."
Teabing's manservant Rumy appeared in the doorway at the top of the
stairs. "I feel like a hostage working for Sir Leigh, but he assures me I am
free to go." Rumy checked his watch. "Master, we really are running late."
He nodded toward the Jaguar stretch limousine in the far corner of the
hangar. The enormous automobile was ebony with smoked glass and whitewall
tires. "I'll bring the car." Rumy started down the stairs.
"I'm afraid we cannot let you leave," the chief inspector said. "Please
return to your aircraft. Both of you. Representatives from the French police
will be landing shortly."
Teabing looked now toward Simon Edwards. "Simon, for heaven's sake,
this is ridiculous! We don't have anyone else on board. Just the
usual--Rumy, our pilot, and myself. Perhaps you could act as an
intermediary? Go have a look onboard, and verify that the plane is empty."
Edwards knew he was trapped. "Yes, sir. I can have a look."
"The devil you will!" the Kent chief inspector declared, apparently
knowing enough about executive airfields to suspect Simon Edwards might well
lie about the plane's occupants in an effort to keep Teabing's business at
Biggin Hill. "I will look myself."
Teabing shook his head. "No you won't, Inspector. This is private
property and until you have a search warrant, you will stay off my plane. I
am offering you a reasonable option here. Mr. Edwards can perform the
inspection."
"No deal."
Teabing's demeanor turned frosty. "Inspector, I'm afraid I don't have
time to indulge in your games. I'm late, and I'm leaving. If it is that
important to you to stop me, you'll just have to shoot me." With that,
Teabing and Rumy walked around the chief inspector and headed across the
hangar toward the parked limousine.
The Kent chief inspector felt only distaste for Leigh Teabing as the
man hobbled around him in defiance. Men of privilege always felt like they
were above the law.
They are not. The chief inspector turned and aimed at Teabing's back.
"Stop! I will fire!"
"Go ahead," Teabing said without breaking stride or glancing back. "My
lawyers will fricassee your testicles for breakfast. And if you dare board
my plane without a warrant, your spleen will follow."
No stranger to power plays, the chief inspector was unimpressed.
Technically, Teabing was correct and the police needed a warrant to board
his jet, but because the flight had originated in France, and because the
powerful Bezu Fache had given his authority, the Kent chief inspector felt
certain his career would be far better served by finding out what it was on
this plane that Teabing seemed so intent on hiding.
"Stop them," the inspector ordered. "I'm searching the plane."
His men raced over, guns leveled, and physically blocked Teabing and
his servant from reaching the limousine.
Now Teabing turned. "Inspector, this is your last warning. Do not even
think of boarding that plane. You will regret it."
Ignoring the threat, the chief inspector gripped his sidearm and
marched up the plane's gangway. Arriving at the hatch, he peered inside.
After a moment, he stepped into the cabin. What the devil?
With the exception of the frightened-looking pilot in the cockpit, the
aircraft was empty. Entirely devoid of human life. Quickly checking the
bathroom, the chairs, and the luggage areas, the inspector found no traces
of anyone hiding... much less multiple individuals.
What the hell was Bezu Fache thinking? It seemed Leigh Teabing had been
telling the truth.
The Kent chief inspector stood alone in the deserted cabin and
swallowed hard. Shit. His face flushed, he stepped back onto the gangway,
gazing across the hangar at Leigh Teabing and his servant, who were now
under gunpoint near the limousine. "Let them go," the inspector ordered. "We
received a bad tip."
Teabing's eyes were menacing even across the hangar. "You can expect a
call from my lawyers. And for future reference, the French police cannot be
trusted."
With that, Teabing's manservant opened the door at the rear of the
stretch limousine and helped his crippled master into the back seat. Then
the servant walked the length of the car, climbed in behind the wheel, and
gunned the engine. Policemen scattered as the Jaguar peeled out of the
hangar.
"Well played, my good man," Teabing chimed from the rear seat as the
limousine accelerated out of the airport. He turned his eyes now to the
dimly lit front recesses of the spacious interior. "Everyone comfy?"
Langdon gave a weak nod. He and Sophie were still crouched on the floor
beside the bound and gagged albino.
Moments earlier, as the Hawker taxied into the deserted hangar, Rumy
had popped the hatch as the plane jolted to a stop halfway through its turn.
With the police closing in fast, Langdon and Sophie dragged the monk down
the gangway to ground level and out of sight behind the limousine. Then the
jet engines had roared again, rotating the plane and completing its turn as
the police cars came skidding into the hangar.
Now, as the limousine raced toward Kent, Langdon and Sophie clambered
toward the rear of the limo's long interior, leaving the monk bound on the
floor. They settled onto the long seat facing Teabing. The Brit gave them
both a roguish smile and opened the cabinet on the limo's bar. "Could I
offer you a drink? Some nibblies? Crisps? Nuts? Seltzer?"
Sophie and Langdon both shook their heads.
Teabing grinned and closed the bar. "So then, about this knight's
tomb..."
CHAPTER 82
"Fleet Street?" Langdon asked, eyeing Teabing in the back of the limo.
There's a crypt on Fleet Street? So far, Leigh was being playfully cagey
about where he thought they would find the "knight's tomb," which, according
to the poem, would provide the password for opening the smaller cryptex.
Teabing grinned and turned to Sophie. "Miss Neveu, give the Harvard boy
one more shot at the verse, will you?"
Sophie fished in her pocket and pulled out the black cryptex, which was
wrapped in the vellum. Everyone had decided to leave the rosewood box and
larger cryptex behind in the plane's strongbox, carrying with them only what
they needed, the far more portable and discreet black cryptex. Sophie
unwrapped the vellum and handed the sheet to Langdon.
Although Langdon had read the poem several times onboard the jet, he
had been unable to extract any specific location. Now, as he read the words
again, he processed them slowly and carefully, hoping the pentametric
rhythms would reveal a clearer meaning now that he was on the ground.
In London lies a knight a Pope interred.
His labor's fruit a Holy wrath incurred.
You seek the orb that ought be on his tomb.
It speaks of Rosy flesh and seeded womb.
The language seemed simple enough. There was a knight buried in London.
A knight who labored at something that angered the Church. A knight whose
tomb was missing an orb that should be present. The poem's final
reference--Rosy flesh and seeded womb--was a clear allusion to Mary
Magdalene, the Rose who bore the seed of Jesus.
Despite the apparent straightforwardness of the verse, Langdon still
had no idea who this knight was or where he was buried. Moreover, once they
located the tomb, it sounded as if they would be searching for something
that was absent. The orb that ought be on his tomb?
"No thoughts?" Teabing clucked in disappointment, although Langdon
sensed the Royal Historian was enjoying being one up. "Miss Neveu?"
She shook her head.
"What would you two do without me?" Teabing said. "Very well, I will
walk you through it. It's quite simple really. The first line is the key.
Would you read it please?"
Langdon read aloud. " 'In London lies a knight a Pope interred.' "
"Precisely. A knight a Pope interred." He eyed Langdon. "What does that
mean to you?"
Langdon shrugged. "A knight buried by a Pope? A knight whose funeral
was presided over by a Pope?"
Teabing laughed loudly. "Oh, that's rich. Always the optimist, Robert.
Look at the second line. This knight obviously did something that incurred
the Holy wrath of the Church. Think again. Consider the dynamic between the
Church and the Knights Templar. A knight a Pope interred?"
"A knight a Pope killed?" Sophie asked.
Teabing smiled and patted her knee. "Well done, my dear. A knight a
Pope buried. Or killed."
Langdon thought of the notorious Templar round-up in 1307--unlucky
Friday the thirteenth--when Pope Clement killed and interred hundreds of
Knights Templar. "But there must be endless graves of 'knights killed by
Popes.' "
"Aha, not so! "Teabing said. "Many of them were burned at the stake and
tossed unceremoniously into the Tiber River. But this poem refers to a tomb.
A tomb in London. And there are few knights buried in London." He paused,
eyeing Langdon as if waiting for light to dawn. Finally he huffed. "Robert,
for heaven's sake! The church built in London by the Priory's military
arm--the Knights Templar themselves!"
"The Temple Church?" Langdon drew a startled breath. "It has a crypt?"
"Ten of the most frightening tombs you will ever see."
Langdon had never actually visited the Temple Church, although he'd
come across numerous references in his Priory research. Once the epicenter
of all Templar/Priory activities in the United Kingdom, the Temple Church
had been so named in honor of Solomon's Temple, from which the Knights
Templar had extracted their own title, as well as the Sangreal documents
that gave them all their influence in Rome. Tales abounded of knights
performing strange, secretive rituals within the Temple Church's unusual
sanctuary. "The Temple Church is on Fleet Street?"
"Actually, it's just off Fleet Street on Inner Temple Lane." Teabing
looked mischievous. "I wanted to see you sweat a little more before I gave
it away."
"Thanks."
"Neither of you has ever been there?"
Sophie and Langdon shook their heads.
"I'm not surprised," Teabing said. "The church is hidden now behind
much larger buildings. Few people even know it's there. Eerie old place. The
architecture is pagan to the core."
Sophie looked surprised. "Pagan?"
"Pantheonically pagan!" Teabing exclaimed. "The church is round. The
Templars ignored the traditional Christian cruciform layout and built a
perfectly circular church in honor of the sun." His eyebrows did a devilish
dance. "A not so subtle howdy-do to the boys in Rome. They might as well
have resurrected Stonehenge in downtown London."
Sophie eyed Teabing. "What about the rest of the poem?"
The historian's mirthful air faded. "I'm not sure. It's puzzling. We
will need to examine each of the ten tombs carefully. With luck, one of them
will have a conspicuously absent orb."
Langdon realized how close they really were. If the missing orb
revealed the password, they would be able to open the second cryptex. He had
a hard time imagining what they might find inside.
Langdon eyed the poem again. It was like some kind of primordial
crossword puzzle. A five-letter word that speaks of the Grail? On the plane,
they had already tried all the obvious passwords--GRAIL, GRAAL, GREAL,
VENUS, MARIA, JESUS, SARAH--but the cylinder had not budged. Far too
obvious. Apparently there existed some other five-letter reference to the
Rose's seeded womb. The fact that the word was eluding a specialist like
Leigh Teabing signified to Langdon that it was no ordinary Grail reference.
"Sir Leigh?" Rumy called over his shoulder. He was watching them in the
rearview mirror through the open divider. "You said Fleet Street is near
Blackfriars Bridge?"
"Yes, take Victoria Embankment."
"I'm sorry. I'm not sure where that is. We usually go only to the
hospital."
Teabing rolled his eyes at Langdon and Sophie and grumbled, "I swear,
sometimes it's like baby-sitting a child. One moment please. Help yourself
to a drink and savory snacks." He left them, clambering awkwardly toward the
open divider to talk to Rumy.
Sophie turned to Langdon now, her voice quiet. "Robert, nobody knows
you and I are in England."
Langdon realized she was right. The Kent police would tell Fache the
plane was empty, and Fache would have to assume they were still in France.
We are invisible. Leigh's little stunt had just bought them a lot of time.
"Fache will not give up easily," Sophie said. "He has too much riding
on this arrest now."
Langdon had been trying not to think about Fache. Sophie had promised
she would do everything in her power to exonerate Langdon once this was
over, but Langdon was starting to fear it might not matter. Fache could
easily be pan of this plot. Although Langdon could not imagine the Judicial
Police tangled up in the Holy Grail, he sensed too much coincidence tonight
to disregard Fache as a possible accomplice. Fache is religions, and he is
intent on pinning these murders on me. Then again, Sophie had argued that
Fache might simply be overzealous to make the arrest. After all, the
evidence against Langdon was substantial. In addition to Langdon's name
scrawled on the Louvre floor and in Sauniure's date book, Langdon now
appeared to have lied about his manuscript and then run away. At Sophie's
suggestion.
"Robert, I'm sorry you're so deeply involved," Sophie said, placing her
hand on his knee. "But I'm very glad you're here."
The comment sounded more pragmatic than romantic, and yet Langdon felt
an unexpected flicker of attraction between them. He gave her a tired smile.
"I'm a lot more fun when I've slept."
Sophie was silent for several seconds. "My grandfather asked me to
trust you. I'm glad I listened to him for once."
"Your grandfather didn't even know me."
"Even so, I can't help but think you've done everything he would have
wanted. You helped me find the keystone, explained the Sangreal, told me
about the ritual in the basement." She paused. "Somehow I feel closer to my
grandfather tonight than I have in years. I know he would be happy about
that."
In the distance, now, the skyline of London began to materialize
through the dawn drizzle. Once dominated by Big Ben and Tower Bridge, the
horizon now bowed to the Millennium Eye--a colossal, ultramodern Ferris
wheel that climbed five hundred feet and afforded breathtaking views of the
city. Langdon had attempted to board it once, but the "viewing capsules"
reminded him of sealed sarcophagi, and he opted to keep his feet on the
ground and enjoy the view from the airy banks of the Thames.
Langdon felt a squeeze on his knee, pulling him back, and Sophie's
green eyes were on him. He realized she had been speaking to him. "What do
you think we should do with the Sangreal documents if we ever find them?"
she whispered.
"What I think is immaterial," Langdon said. "Your grandfather gave the
cryptex to you, and you should do with it what your instinct tells you he
would want done."
"I'm asking for your opinion. You obviously wrote something in that
manuscript that made my grandfather trust your judgment. He scheduled a
private meeting with you. That's rare."
"Maybe he wanted to tell me I have it all wrong."
"Why would he tell me to find you unless he liked your ideas? In your
manuscript, did you support the idea that the Sangreal documents should be
revealed or stay buried?"
"Neither. I made no judgment either way. The manuscript deals with the
symbology of the sacred feminine--tracing her iconography throughout
history. I certainly didn't presume to know where the Grail is hidden or
whether it should ever be revealed."
"And yet you're writing a book about it, so you obviously feel the
information should be shared."
"There's an enormous difference between hypothetically discussing an
alternate history of Christ, and..." He paused.
"And what?"
"And presenting to the world thousands of ancient documents as
scientific evidence that the New Testament is false testimony."
"But you told me the New Testament is based on fabrications."
Langdon smiled. "Sophie, every faith in the world is based on
fabrication. That is the definition of faith--acceptance of that which we
imagine to be true, that which we cannot prove. Every religion describes God
through metaphor, allegory, and exaggeration, from the early Egyptians
through modern Sunday school. Metaphors are a way to help our minds process
the unprocessible. The problems arise when we begin to believe literally in
our own metaphors."
"So you are in favor of the Sangreal documents staying buried forever?"
"I'm a historian. I'm opposed to the destruction of documents, and I
would love to see religious scholars have more information to ponder the
exceptional life of Jesus Christ."
"You're arguing both sides of my question."
"Am I? The Bible represents a fundamental guidepost for millions of
people on the planet, in much the same way the Koran, Torah, and Pali Canon
offer guidance to people of other religions. If you and I could dig up
documentation that contradicted the holy stories of Islamic belief, Judaic
belief, Buddhist belief, pagan belief, should we do that? Should we wave a
flag and tell the Buddhists that we have proof the Buddha did not come from
a lotus blossom? Or that Jesus was not born of a literal virgin birth? Those
who truly understand their faiths understand the stories are metaphorical."
Sophie looked skeptical. "My friends who are devout Christians
definitely believe that Christ literally walked on water, literally turned
water into wine, and was born of a literal virgin birth."
"My point exactly," Langdon said. "Religious allegory has become a part
of the fabric of reality. And living in that reality helps millions of
people cope and be better people."
"But it appears their reality is false."
Langdon chuckled. "No more false than that of a mathematical
cryptographer who believes in the imaginary number 'i' because it helps her
break codes."
Sophie frowned. "That's not fair."
A moment passed.
"What was your question again?" Langdon asked.
"I can't remember."
He smiled. "Works every time."
CHAPTER 83
Langdon's Mickey Mouse wristwatch read almost seven-thirty when he
emerged from the Jaguar limousine onto Inner Temple Lane with Sophie and
Teabing. The threesome wound through a maze of buildings to a small
courtyard outside the Temple Church. The rough-hewn stone shimmered in the
rain, and doves cooed in the architecture overhead.
London's ancient Temple Church was constructed entirely of Caen stone.
A dramatic, circular edifice with a daunting facade, a central turret, and a
protruding nave off one side, the church looked more like a military
stronghold than a place of worship. Consecrated on the tenth of February in
1185 by Heraclius, Patriarch of Jerusalem, the Temple Church survived eight
centuries of political turmoil, the Great Fire of London, and the First
World War, only to be heavily damaged by Luftwaffe incendiary bombs in 1940.
After the war, it was restored to its original, stark grandeur.
The simplicity of the circle, Langdon thought, admiring the building
for the first time. The architecture was coarse and simple, more reminiscent
of Rome's rugged Castel Sant'Angelo than the refined Pantheon. The boxy
annex jutting out to the right was an unfortunate eyesore, although it did
little to shroud the original pagan shape of the primary structure.
"It's early on a Saturday," Teabing said, hobbling toward the entrance,
"so I'm assuming we won't have services to deal with."
The church's entryway was a recessed stone niche inside which stood a
large wooden door. To the left of the door, looking entirely out of place,
hung a bulletin board covered with concert schedules and religious service
announcements.
Teabing frowned as he read the board. "They don't open to sightseers
for another couple of hours." He moved to the door and tried it. The door
didn't budge. Putting his ear to the wood, he listened. After a moment, he
pulled back, a scheming look on his face as he pointed to the bulletin
board. "Robert, check the service schedule, will you? Who is presiding this
week?"
Inside the church, an altar boy was almost finished vacuuming the
communion kneelers when he heard a knocking on the sanctuary door. He
ignored it. Father Harvey Knowles had his own keys and was not due for
another couple of hours. The knocking was probably a curious tourist or
indigent. The altar boy kept vacuuming, but the knocking continued. Can't
you read? The sign on the door clearly stated that the church did not open
until nine-thirty on Saturday. The altar boy remained with his chores.
Suddenly, the knocking turned to a forceful banging, as if someone were
hitting the door with a metal rod. The young man switched off his vacuum
cleaner and marched angrily toward the door. Unlatching it from within, he
swung it open. Three people stood in the entryway. Tourists, he grumbled.
"We open at nine-thirty."
The heavyset man, apparently the leader, stepped forward using metal
crutches. "I am Sir Leigh Teabing," he said, his accent a highbrow,
Saxonesque British. "As you are no doubt aware, I am escorting Mr. and Mrs.
Christopher Wren the Fourth." He stepped aside, flourishing his arm toward
the attractive couple behind them. The woman was soft-featured, with lush
burgundy hair. The man was tall, dark-haired, and looked vaguely familiar.
The altar boy had no idea how to respond. Sir Christopher Wren was the
Temple Church's most famous benefactor. He had made possible all the
restorations following damage caused by the Great Fire. He had also been
dead since the early eighteenth century. "Um... an honor to meet you?"
The man on crutches frowned. "Good thing you're not in sales, young
man, you're not very convincing. Where is Father Knowles?"
"It's Saturday. He's not due in until later."
The crippled man's scowl deepened. "There's gratitude. He assured us he
would be here, but it looks like we'll do it without him. It won't take
long."
The altar boy remained blocking the doorway. "I'm sorry, what won't
take long?"
The visitor's eyes sharpened now, and he leaned forward whispering as
if to save everyone some embarrassment. "Young man, apparently you are new
here. Every year Sir Christopher Wren's descendants bring a pinch of the old
man's ashes to scatter in the Temple sanctuary. It is part of his last will
and testament. Nobody is particularly happy about making the trip, but what
can we do?"
The altar boy had been here a couple of years but had never heard of
this custom. "It would be better if you waited until nine-thirty. The church
isn't open yet, and I'm not finished hoovering."
The man on crutches glared angrily. "Young man, the only reason there's
anything left of this building for you to hoover is on account of the
gentleman in that woman's pocket."
"I'm sorry?"
"Mrs. Wren," the man on crutches said, "would you be so kind as to show
this impertinent young man the reliquary of ashes?"
The woman hesitated a moment and then, as if awaking from a trance,
reached in her sweater pocket and pulled out a small cylinder wrapped in
protective fabric.
"There, you see?" the man on crutches snapped. "Now, you can either
grant his dying wish and let us sprinkle his ashes in the sanctuary, or I
tell Father Knowles how we've been treated."
The altar boy hesitated, well acquainted with Father Knowles' deep
observance of church tradition... and, more importantly, with his foul
temper when anything cast this time-honored shrine in anything but favorable
light. Maybe Father Knowles had simply forgotten these family members were
coming. If so, then there was far more risk in turning them away than in
letting them in. After all, they said it would only take a minute. What harm
could it do?
When the altar boy stepped aside to let the three people pass, he could
have sworn Mr. and Mrs. Wren looked just as bewildered by all of this as he
was. Uncertain, the boy returned to his chores, watching them out of the
corner of his eye.
Langdon had to smile as the threesome moved deeper into the church.
"Leigh," he whispered, "you lie entirely too well."
Teabing's eyes twinkled. "Oxford Theatre Club. They still talk of my
Julius Caesar. I'm certain nobody has ever performed the first scene of Act
Three with more dedication."
Langdon glanced over. "I thought Caesar was dead in that scene."
Teabing smirked. "Yes, but my toga tore open when I fell, and I had to
lie on stage for half an hour with my todger hanging out. Even so, I never
moved a muscle. I was brilliant, I tell you."
Langdon cringed. Sorry I missed it.
As the group moved through the rectangular annex toward the archway
leading into the main church, Langdon was surprised by the barren austerity.
Although the altar layout resembled that of a linear Christian chapel, the
furnishings were stark and cold, bearing none of the traditional
ornamentation. "Bleak," he whispered.
Teabing chuckled. "Church of England. Anglicans drink their religion
straight. Nothing to distract from their misery."
Sophie motioned through the vast opening that gave way to the circular
section of the church. "It looks like a fortress in there," she whispered.
Langdon agreed. Even from here, the walls looked unusually robust.
"The Knights Templar were warriors," Teabing reminded, the sound of his
aluminum crutches echoing in this reverberant space. "A religio-military
society. Their churches were their strongholds and their banks."
"Banks?" Sophie asked, glancing at Leigh.
"Heavens, yes. The Templars invented the concept of modern banking. For
European nobility, traveling with gold was perilous, so the Templars allowed
nobles to deposit gold in their nearest Temple Church and then draw it from
any other Temple Church across Europe. All they needed was proper
documentation." He winked. "And a small commission. They were the original
ATMs." Teabing pointed toward a stained-glass window where the breaking sun
was refracting through a white-clad knight riding a rose-colored horse.
"Alanus Marcel," Teabing said, "Master of the Temple in the early twelve
hundreds. He and his successors actually held the Parliamentary chair of
Primus Baro Angiae."
Langdon was surprised. "First Baron of the Realm?"
Teabing nodded. "The Master of the Temple, some claim, held more
influence than the king himself." As they arrived outside the circular
chamber, Teabing shot a glance over his shoulder at the altar boy, who was
vacuuming in the distance. "You know," Teabing whispered to Sophie, "the
Holy Grail is said to once have been stored in this church overnight while
the Templars moved it from one hiding place to another. Can you imagine the
four chests of Sangreal documents sitting right here with Mary Magdalene's
sarcophagus? It gives me gooseflesh."
Langdon was feeling gooseflesh too as they stepped into the circular
chamber. His eye traced the curvature of the chamber's pale stone perimeter,
taking in the carvings of gargoyles, demons, monsters, and pained human
faces, all staring inward. Beneath the carvings, a single stone pew curled
around the entire circumference of the room.
"Theater in the round," Langdon whispered.
Teabing raised a crutch, pointing toward the far left of the room and
then to the far right. Langdon had already seen them.
Ten stone knights.
Five on the left. Five on the right.
Lying prone on the floor, the carved, life-sized figures rested in
peaceful poses. The knights were depicted wearing full armor, shields, and
swords, and the tombs gave Langdon the uneasy sensation that someone had
snuck in and poured plaster over the knights while they were sleeping. All
of the figures were deeply weathered, and yet each was clearly
unique--different armory pieces, distinct leg and arm positions, facial
features, and markings on their shields.
In London lies a knight a Pope interred.
Langdon felt shaky as he inched deeper into the circular room.
This had to be the place.
CHAPTER 84
In a rubbish-strewn alley very close to Temple Church, Rumy Legaludec
pulled the Jaguar limousine to a stop behind a row of industrial waste bins.
Killing the engine, he checked the area. Deserted. He got out of the car,
walked toward the rear, and climbed back into the limousine's main cabin
where the monk was.
Sensing Rumy's presence, the monk in the back emerged from a
prayer-like trance, his red eyes looking more curious than fearful. All
evening Rumy had been impressed with this trussed man's ability to stay
calm. After some initial struggles in the Range Rover, the monk seemed to
have accepted his plight and given over his fate to a higher power.
Loosening his bow tie, Rumy unbuttoned his high, starched, wing-tipped
collar and felt as if he could breathe for the first time in years. He went
to the limousine's wet bar, where he poured himself a Smirnoff vodka. He
drank it in a single swallow and followed it with a second.
Soon I will be a man of leisure.
Searching the bar, Rumy found a standard service wine-opener and
flicked open the sharp blade. The knife was usually employed to slice the
lead foil from corks on fine bottles of wine, but it would serve a far more
dramatic purpose this morning. Rumy turned and faced Silas, holding up the
glimmering blade.
Now those red eyes flashed fear.
Rumy smiled and moved toward the back of the limousine. The monk
recoiled, struggling against his bonds.
"Be still," Rumy whispered, raising the blade.
Silas could not believe that God had forsaken him. Even the physical
pain of being bound Silas had turned into a spiritual exercise, asking the
throb of his blood-starved muscles to remind him of the pain Christ endured.
I have been praying all night for liberation. Now, as the knife descended,
Silas clenched his eyes shut.
A slash of pain tore through his shoulder blades. He cried out, unable
to believe he was going to die here in the back of this limousine, unable to
defend himself. I was doing God's work. The Teacher said he would protect
me.
Silas felt the biting warmth spreading across his back and shoulders
and could picture his own blood, spilling out over his flesh. A piercing
pain cut through his thighs now, and he felt the onset of that familiar
undertow of disorientation--the body's defense mechanism against the pain.
As the biting heat tore through all of his muscles now, Silas clenched
his eyes tighter, determined that the final image of his life would not be
of his own killer. Instead he pictured a younger Bishop Aringarosa, standing
before the small church in Spain... the church that he and Silas had built
with their own hands. The beginning of my life.
Silas felt as if his body were on fire.
"Take a drink," the tuxedoed man whispered, his accent French. "It will
help with your circulation."
Silas's eyes flew open in surprise. A blurry image was leaning over
him, offering a glass of liquid. A mound of shredded duct tape lay on the
floor beside the bloodless knife.
"Drink this," he repeated. "The pain you feel is the blood rushing into
your muscles."
Silas felt the fiery throb transforming now to a prickling sting. The
vodka tasted terrible, but he drank it, feeling grateful. Fate had dealt
Silas a healthy share of bad luck tonight, but God had solved it all with
one miraculous twist.
God has not forsaken me.
Silas knew what Bishop Aringarosa would call it.
Divine intervention.
"I had wanted to free you earlier," the servant apologized, "but it was
impossible. With the police arriving at Chuteau Villette, and then at Biggin
Hill airport, this was the first possible moment. You understand, don't you,
Silas?"
Silas recoiled, startled. "You know my name?"
The servant smiled.
Silas sat up now, rubbing his stiff muscles, his emotions a torrent of
incredulity, appreciation, and confusion. "Are you... the Teacher?"
Rumy shook his head, laughing at the proposition. "I wish I had that
kind of power. No, I am not the Teacher. Like you, I serve him. But the
Teacher speaks highly of you. My name is Rumy."
Silas was amazed. "I don't understand. If you work for the Teacher, why
did Langdon bring the keystone to your home?"
"Not my home. The home of the world's foremost Grail historian, Sir
Leigh Teabing."
"But you live there. The odds..."
Rumy smiled, seeming to have no trouble with the apparent coincidence
of Langdon's chosen refuge. "It was all utterly predictable. Robert Langdon
was in possession of the keystone, and he needed help. What more logical
place to run than to the home of Leigh Teabing? That I happen to live there
is why the Teacher approached me in the first place." He paused. "How do you
think the Teacher knows so much about the Grail?"
Now it dawned, and Silas was stunned. The Teacher had recruited a
servant who had access to all of Sir Leigh Teabing's research. It was
brilliant.
"There is much I have to tell you," Rumy said, handing Silas the loaded
Heckler Koch pistol. Then he reached through the open partition and
retrieved a small, palm-sized revolver from the glove box. "But first, you
and I have a job to do."
Captain Fache descended from his transport plane at Biggin Hill and
listened in disbelief to the Kent chief inspector's account of what had
happened in Teabing's hangar.
"I searched the plane myself," the inspector insisted, "and there was
no one inside." His tone turned haughty. "And I should add that if Sir Leigh
Teabing presses charges against me, I will--"
"Did you interrogate the pilot?"
"Of course not. He is French, and our jurisdiction requires--"
"Take me to the plane."
Arriving at the hangar, Fache needed only sixty seconds to locate an
anomalous smear of blood on the pavement near where the limousine had been
parked. Fache walked up to the plane and rapped loudly on the fuselage.
"This is the captain of the French Judicial Police. Open the door!"
The terrified pilot opened the hatch and lowered the stairs.
Fache ascended. Three minutes later, with the help of his sidearm, he
had a full confession, including a description of the bound albino monk. In
addition, he learned that the pilot saw Langdon and Sophie leave something
behind in Teabing's safe, a wooden box of some sort. Although the pilot
denied knowing what was in the box, he admitted it had been the focus of
Langdon's full attention during the flight to London.
"Open the safe," Fache demanded.
The pilot looked terrified. "I don't know the combination!"
"That's too bad. I was going to offer to let you keep your pilot's
license."
The pilot wrung his hands. "I know some men in maintenance here. Maybe
they could drill it?"
"You have half an hour."
The pilot leapt for his radio.
Fache strode to the back of the plane and poured himself a hard drink.
It was early, but he had not yet slept, so this hardly counted as drinking
before noon. Sitting in a plush bucket seat, he closed his eyes, trying to
sort out what was going on. The Kent police's blunder could cost me dearly.
Everyone was now on the lookout for a black Jaguar limousine.
Fache's phone rang, and he wished for a moment's peace. "Allo?"
"I'm en route to London." It was Bishop Aringarosa. "I'll be arriving
in an hour."
Fache sat up. "I thought you were going to Paris."
"I