"Look at his left hand."
Langdon's eyes traced the length of the curator's pale arm to his left hand but saw nothing.
Uncertain, he circled
the corpse and crouched down, now noting with surprise that the curator was
clutching a large, felt-tipped marker.
"Saunière was holding it when we found him," Fache said, leaving Langdon and moving several
yards to a portable table covered
with investigation tools, cables, and assorted electronic gear. "As
I told you," he said, rummaging around the table, "we have touched nothing. Are you familiar with
this kind of pen?"
Langdon knelt down farther to see the pen's label.
STYLO DE LUMIERE NOIRE.
He glanced up in surprise.
The black-light pen or watermark stylus was a specialized felt-tipped marker originally designed
by museums, restorers, and forgery police to place invisible marks on items.
The stylus wrote in a
noncorrosive, alcohol-based fluorescent ink that was visible only under black light. Nowadays,
museum maintenance staffs carried these markers on their daily rounds to place invisible "tick
marks" on the frames of paintings that needed restoration.
As Langdon stood up, Fache walked over to the spotlight and turned it off. The gallery plunged
into sudden darkness.
Momentarily blinded, Langdon felt a rising uncertainty. Fache's silhouette appeared,
illuminated in
bright purple. He approached carrying a portable light source, which shrouded him in a violet haze.
"As you may know," Fache said, his eyes luminescing in the violet glow, "police
use black-light
illumination to search crime scenes for blood and other forensic evidence. So you can imagine our
surprise..." Abruptly, he pointed the light down at the corpse.
Langdon looked down and jumped back in shock.
His heart pounded as he took in the bizarre sight now glowing before him on the parquet floor.
Scrawled in luminescent handwriting, the curator's final words glowed purple beside his corpse. As
Langdon stared at the shimmering text, he felt the fog that had surrounded
this entire night growing
thicker.
Langdon read the message again and looked up at Fache. "What the hell does this mean!"
Fache's eyes shone white.
"That, monsieur, is precisely the question you are here to answer."
Not far away, inside Saunière's office, Lieutenant Collet had returned to the Louvre and was
huddled over an audio console set up on the curator's enormous desk. With the exception of the
eerie, robot-like doll of a medieval knight that seemed to be staring at him from the corner of
Saunière's desk, Collet was comfortable. He adjusted his AKG headphones
and checked the input
levels on the hard-disk recording system. All systems were go. The microphones were functioning
flawlessly, and the audio feed was crystal clear.
Le moment de vérité, he mused.
Smiling, he closed his eyes and settled in to enjoy the rest of the conversation now being taped
inside the Grand Gallery.
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