a Maria del Popolo stood out like a misplaced battleship, askew at the base of a hill on
the southeast corner of the piazza. The eleventh-century stone aerie was made even more clumsy by the
tower of scaffolding covering the façade.
Langdon's thoughts were a blur as they raced toward the edifice. He stared up at the church in wonder.
Could a murder really be about to take place inside? He wished Olivetti would hurry. The gun felt
awkward in his pocket.
The church's front stairs were ventaglio-a welcoming, curved fan-ironic in this case because they were
blocked with scaffolding, construction equipment, and a sign warning: CONSTRUZZIONE. NON ENTRARE.
Langdon realized that a church closed for renovation meant total privacy for a killer. Not like the
Pantheon. No fancy tricks needed here. Only to find a way in.
Vittoria slipped without hesitation between the sawhorses and headed up the staircase.
"Vittoria," Langdon cautioned. "If he's still in there . . ."
Vittoria did not seem to hear. She ascended the main portico to the church's sole wooden door. Langdon
hurried up the stairs behind her. Before he could say a word she had grasped the handle and pulled.
Langdon held his breath. The door did not budge.
"There must be another entrance," Vittoria said.
"Probably," Langdon said, exhaling, "but Olivetti will be here in a minute. It's too dangerous to go in. We
should cover the church from out here until-"
Vittoria turned, her eyes blazing. "If there's another way in, there's another way out. If this guy
disappears, we're fungito."
Langdon knew enough Italian to know she was right.
The alley on the right side of the church was pinched and dark, with high walls on both sides. It smelled
of urine-a common aroma in a city where bars outnumbered public rest rooms twenty to one.
Langdon and Vittoria hurried into the fetid dimness. They had gone about fifteen yards down when
Vittoria tugged Langdon's arm and pointed.
Langdon saw it too. Up ahead was an unassuming wooden door with heavy hinges. Langdon recognized it
as the standard porta sacra-a private entrance for clergy. Most of these entrances had gone out of use
years ago as encroaching buildings and limited real estate relegated side entrances to inconvenient
alleyways.
Vittoria hurried to the door. She arrived and stared down at the doorknob, apparently perplexed. Langdon
arrived behind her and eyed the peculiar donut-shaped hoop hanging where the doorknob should have
been.
"An annulus," he whispered. Langdon reached out and quietly lifted the ring in his hand. He pulled the
ring toward him. The fixture clicked. Vittoria shifted, looking suddenly uneasy. Quietly, Langdon twisted
the ring clockwise. It spun loosely 360 degrees, not engaging. Langdon frowned and tried the other
direction with the same result.
Vittoria looked down the remainder of the alley. "You think there's another entrance?"
Langdon doubted it. Most Renaissance cathedrals were designed as makeshift fortresses in the event a
city was stormed. They had as few entrances as possible. "If there is another way in," he said, "it's
probably recessed in the rear bastion-more of an escape route than an entrance."
Vittoria was already on the move.
Langdon followed deeper into the alley. The walls shot skyward on both sides of him. Somewhere a bell
began ringing eight o'clock . . .
Robert Langdon did not hear Vittoria the first time she called to him. He had slowed at a stained-glass
window covered with bars and was trying to peer inside the church.
"Robert!" Her voice was a loud whisper.
Langdon looked up. Vittoria was at the end of the alley. She was pointing around the back of the church
and waving to him. Langdon jogged reluctantly toward her. At the base of the rear wall, a stone bulwark
jutted out concealing a narrow grotto-a kind of compressed passageway cutting directly into the
foundation of the church.
"An entrance?" Vittoria asked.
Langdon nodded. Actually an exit, but we won't get technical.
Vittoria knelt and peered into the tunnel. "Let's check the door. See if it's open."
Langdon opened his mouth to object, but Vittoria took his hand and pulled him into the opening.
"Wait," Langdon said.
She turned impatiently toward him.
Langdon sighed. "I'll go first."
Vittoria looked surprised. "More chivalry?"
"Age before beauty."
"Was that a compliment?"
Langdon smiled and moved past her into the dark. "Careful on the stairs."
He inched slowly into the darkness, keeping one hand on the wall. The stone felt sharp on his fingertips.
For an instant Langdon recalled the ancient myth of Daedelus, how the boy kept one hand on the wall as
he moved through the Minotaur's labyrinth, knowing he was guaranteed to find the end if he never broke
contact with the wall. Langdon moved forward, not entirely certain he wanted to find the end.
The tunnel narrowed slightly, and Langdon slowed his pace. He sensed Vittoria close behind him. As the
wall curved left, the tunnel opened into a semicircular alcove. Oddly, there was faint light here. In the
dimness Langdon saw the outline of a heavy wooden door.
"Uh oh," he said.
"Locked?"
"It was."
"Was?" Vittoria arrived at his side.
Langdon pointed. Lit by a shaft of light coming from within, the door hung ajar . . . its hinges splintered
by a wrecking bar still lodged in the wood.
They stood a moment in silence. Then, in the dark, Langdon felt Vittoria's hands on his chest, groping,
sliding beneath his jacket.
"Relax, professor," she said. "I'm just getting the gun."
At that moment, inside the Vatican Museums, a task force of Swiss Guards spread out in all directions.
The museum was dark, and the guards wore U.S. Marine issue infrared goggles. The goggles made
everything appear an eerie shade of green. Every guard wore headphones connected to an antennalike
detector that he waved rhythmically in front of him-the same devices they used twice a week to sweep
for electronic bugs inside the Vatican. They moved methodically, checking behind statues, inside niches,
closets, under furniture. The antennae would sound if they detected even the tiniest magnetic field.
Tonight, however, they were getting no readings at all.
65
T he interior of Santa Maria del Popolo was a murky cave in the dimming light. It looked more like a
half-finished subway station than a cathedral. The main sanctuary was an obstacle course of torn-up
flooring, brick pallets, mounds of dirt, wheelbarrows, and even a rusty backhoe. Mammoth columns rose
through the floor, supporting a vaulted roof. In the air, silt drifted lazily in the muted glow of the stained
glass. Langdon stood with Vittoria beneath a sprawling Pinturicchio fresco and scanned the gutted shrine.
Nothing moved. Dead silence.
Vittoria held the gun out in front of her with both hands. Langdon checked his watch: 8:04 P.M. We're
crazy to be in here, he thought. It's too dangerous. Still he knew if the killer were inside, the man could
leave through any door he wanted, making a one-gun outside stakeout totally fruitless. Catching him
inside was the only way . . . that was, if he was even still here. Langdon felt guilt-ridden over the blunder
that had cost everyone their chance at the Pantheon. He was in no position to insist on precaution now; he
was the one who had backed them into this corner.
Vittoria looked harrowed as she scanned the church. "So," she whispered. "Where is this Chigi Chapel?"
Langdon gazed through the dusky ghostliness toward the back of the cathedral and studied the outer
walls. Contrary to common perception, Renaissance cathedrals invariably contained multiple chapels,
huge cathedrals like Notre Dame having dozens. Chapels were less rooms than they were
hollows-semicircular niches holding tombs around a church's perimeter wall.
Bad news, Langdon thought, seeing the four recesses on each side wall. There were eight chapels in all.
Although eight was not a particularly overwhelming number, all eight openings were covered with huge
sheets of clear polyurethane due to the construction, the translucent curtains apparently intended to keep
dust off the tombs inside the alcoves.
"It could be any of those draped recesses," Langdon said. "No way to know which is the Chigi without
looking inside every one. Could be a good reason to wait for Oliv-"
"Which is the secondary left apse?" she asked.
Langdon studied her, surprised by her command of architectural terminology. "Secondary left apse?"
Vittoria pointed at the wall behind him. A decorative tile was embedded in the stone. It was engraved
with the same symbol they had seen outside-a pyramid beneath a shining star. The grime-covered
plaque beside it read:
COAT OF ARMS OF ALEXANDER CHIGI
WHOSE TOMB IS LOCATED IN THE
SECONDARY LEFT APSE OF THIS CATHEDRAL
Langdon nodded. Chigi's coat of arms was a pyramid and star? He suddenly found himself wondering if
the wealthy patron Chigi had been an Illuminatus. He nodded to Vittoria. "Nice work, Nancy Drew."
"What?"
"Never mind. I-"
A piece of metal clattered to the floor only yards away. The clang echoed through the entire church.
Langdon pulled Vittoria behind a pillar as she whipped the gun toward the sound and held it there.
Silence. They waited. Again there was sound, this time a rustling. Langdon held his breath. I never should
have let us come in here! The sound moved closer, an intermittent scuffling, like a man with a limp.
Suddenly around the base of the pillar, an object came into view.
"Figlio di puttana!" Vittoria cursed under her breath, jumping back. Langdon fell back with her.
Beside the pillar, dragging a half-eaten sandwich in paper, was an enormous rat. The creature paused
when it saw them, staring a long moment down the barrel of Vittoria's weapon, and then, apparently
unmoved, continued dragging its prize off to the recesses of the church.
"Son of a . . ." Langdon gasped, his heart racing.
Vittoria lowere