rs.
"I urge you to reconsider!" one of the doctors said. "Look at the boy! His fever is increasing. He is in
terrible pain. And danger!"
But Max knew his mother's reply before she even said it. "Gott wird ihn beschuetzen."
Yes, Max thought. God will protect me. The conviction in his mother's voice gave him strength. God will
protect me.
An hour later, Max felt like his whole body was being crushed beneath a car. He could not even breathe to
cry.
"Your son is in great suffering," another doctor said. "Let me at least ease his pain. I have in my bag a
simple injection of-"
"Ruhe, bitte!" Max's father silenced the doctor without ever opening his eyes. He simply kept praying.
"Father, please!" Max wanted to scream. "Let them stop the pain!" But his words were lost in a spasm of
coughing.
An hour later, the pain had worsened.
"Your son could become paralyzed," one of the doctors scolded. "Or even die! We have medicines that
will help!"
Frau and Herr Kohler would not allow it. They did not believe in medicine. Who were they to interfere
with God's master plan? They prayed harder. After all, God had blessed them with this boy, why would
God take the child away? His mother whispered to Max to be strong. She explained that God was testing
him . . . like the Bible story of Abraham . . . a test of his faith.
Max tried to have faith, but the pain was excruciating.
"I cannot watch this!" one of the doctors finally said, running from the room.
By dawn, Max was barely conscious. Every muscle in his body spasmed in agony. Where is Jesus? he
wondered. Doesn't he love me? Max felt the life slipping from his body.
His mother had fallen asleep at the bedside, her hands still clasped over him. Max's father stood across
the room at the window staring out at the dawn. He seemed to be in a trance. Max could hear the low
mumble of his ceaseless prayers for mercy.
It was then that Max sensed the figure hovering over him. An angel? Max could barely see. His eyes were
swollen shut. The figure whispered in his ear, but it was not the voice of an angel. Max recognized it as
one of the doctors . . . the one who had sat in the corner for two days, never leaving, begging Max's
parents to let him administer some new drug from England.
"I will never forgive myself," the doctor whispered, "if I do not do this." Then the doctor gently took
Max's frail arm. "I wish I had done it sooner."
Max felt a tiny prick in his arm-barely discernible through the pain.
Then the doctor quietly packed his things. Before he left, he put a hand on Max's forehead. "This will
save your life. I have great faith in the power of medicine."
Within minutes, Max felt as if some sort of magic spirit were flowing through his veins. The warmth
spread through his body numbing his pain. Finally, for the first time in days, Max slept.
When the fever broke, his mother and father proclaimed a miracle of God. But when it became evident
that their son was crippled, they became despondent. They wheeled their son into the church and begged
the priest for counseling.
"It was only by the grace of God," the priest told them, "that this boy survived."
Max listened, saying nothing.
"But our son cannot walk!" Frau Kohler was weeping.
The priest nodded sadly. "Yes. It seems God has punished him for not having enough faith."
"Mr. Kohler?" It was the Swiss Guard who had run ahead. "The camerlegno says he will grant you
audience."
Kohler grunted, accelerating again down the hall.
"He is surprised by your visit," the guard said.
"I'm sure." Kohler rolled on. "I would like to see him alone."
"Impossible," the guard said. "No one-"
"Lieutenant," Rocher barked. "The meeting will be as Mr. Kohler wishes."
The guard stared in obvious disbelief.
Outside the door to the Pope's office, Rocher allowed his guards to take standard precautions before
letting Kohler in. Their handheld metal detector was rendered worthless by the myriad of electronic
devices on Kohler's wheelchair. The guards frisked him but were obviously too ashamed of his disability
to do it properly. They never found the revolver affixed beneath his chair. Nor did they relieve him of the
other object . . . the one that Kohler knew would bring unforgettable closure to this evening's chain of
events.
When Kohler entered the Pope's office, Camerlegno Ventresca was alone, kneeling in prayer beside a
dying fire. He did not open his eyes.
"Mr. Kohler," the camerlegno said. "Have you come to make me a martyr?"
112
A ll the while, the narrow tunnel called Il Passetto stretched out before Langdon and Vittoria as they
dashed toward Vatican City. The torch in Langdon's hand threw only enough light to see a few yards
ahead. The walls were close on either side, and the ceiling low. The air smelled dank. Langdon raced on
into the darkness with Vittoria close at his heels.
The tunnel inclined steeply as it left the Castle St. Angelo, proceeding upward into the underside of a
stone bastion that looked like a Roman aqueduct. There, the tunnel leveled out and began its secret course
toward Vatican City.
As Langdon ran, his thoughts turned over and over in a kaleidoscope of confounding images-Kohler,
Janus, the Hassassin, Rocher . . . a sixth brand? I'm sure you've heard about the sixth brand, the killer had
said. The most brilliant of all. Langdon was quite certain he had not. Even in conspiracy theory lore,
Langdon could think of no references to any sixth brand. Real or imagined. There were rumors of a gold
bullion and a flawless Illuminati Diamond but never any mention of a sixth brand.
"Kohler can't be Janus!" Vittoria declared as they ran down the interior of the dike. "It's impossible!"
Impossible was one word Langdon had stopped using tonight. "I don't know," Langdon yelled as they
ran. "Kohler has a serious grudge, and he also has some serious influence."
"This crisis has made CERN look like monsters! Max would never do anything to damage CERN's
reputation!"
On one count, Langdon knew CERN had taken a public beating tonight, all because of the Illuminati's
insistence on making this a public spectacle. And yet, he wondered how much CERN had really been
damaged. Criticism from the church was nothing new for CERN. In fact, the more Langdon thought about
it, the more he wondered if this crisis might actually benefit CERN. If publicity were the game, then
antimatter was the jackpot winner tonight. The entire planet was talking about it.
"You know what promoter P. T. Barnum said," Langdon called over his shoulder. " 'I don't care what
you say about me, just spell my name right!' I bet people are already secretly lining up to license
antimatter technology. And after they see its true power at midnight tonight . . ."
"Illogical," Vittoria said. "Publicizing scientific breakthroughs is not about showing destructive power!
This is terrible for antimatter, trust me!"
Langdon's torch was fading now. "Then maybe it's all much simpler than that. Maybe Kohler gambled
that the Vatican would keep the antimatter a secret-refusing to empower the Illuminati by confirming
the weapon's existence. Kohler expected the Vatican to be their usual tight-lipped selves about the threat,
but the camerlegno changed the rules."
Vittoria was silent as they dashed down the tunnel.
Suddenly the scenario was making more sense to Langdon. "Yes! Kohler never counted on the
camerlegno's reaction. The camerlegno broke the Vatican tradition of secrecy and went public about the
crisis. He was dead honest. He put the antimatter on TV, for God's sake. It was a brilliant response, and
Kohler never expected it. And the irony of the whole thing is that the Illuminati attack backfired. It
inadvertently produced a new church leader in the camerlegno. And now Kohler is coming to kill him!"
"Max is a bastard," Vittoria declared, "but he is not a murderer. And he would never have been involved
in my father's assassination."
In Langdon's mind, it was Kohler's voice that answered. Leonardo was considered dangerous by many
purists at CERN.Fusing science and God is the ultimate scientific blasphemy. "Maybe Kohler found out
about the antimatter project weeks ago and didn't like the religious implications."
"So he killed my father over it? Ridiculous! Besides, Max Kohler would never have known the project
existed."
"While you were gone, maybe your father broke down and consulted Kohler, asking for guidance. You
yourself said your father was concerned about the moral implications of creating such a deadly
substance."
"Asking moral guidance from Maximilian Kohler?" Vittoria snorted. "I don't think so!"
The tunnel banked slightly westward. The faster they ran, the dimmer Langdon's torch became. He began
to fear what the place would look like if the light went out. Black.
"Besides," Vittoria argued, "why would Kohler have bothered to call you in this morning and ask for help
if he is behind the whole thing?"
Langdon had already considered it. "By calling me, Kohler covered his bases. He made sure no one
would accuse him of nonaction in the face of crisis. He probably never expected us to get this far."
The thought of being used by Kohler incensed Langdon. Langdon's involvement had given the Illuminati
a level of credibility. His credentials and publications had been quoted all night by the media, and as
ridiculous as it was, the presence of a Harvard professor in Vatican City had somehow raised the whole
emergency beyond the scope of paranoid delusion and convinced skeptics around the world that the
Illuminati brotherhood was not only a historical fact, but a force to be reckoned with.
"That BBC reporter," Langdon said, "thinks CERN is the new Illuminati lair."
"What!" Vittoria stumbled behind him. She pulled herself up and ran on. "He said that!?"
"On air. He likened CERN to the Masonic lodges-an innocent organization unknowingly harboring the
Illuminati brotherhood within."
"My God,