"No!" Langdon shouted, knowing the hedges around Carrousel du Louvre were there to hide the
perilous chasm in the center—
La Pyramide Inversée—the upside-down pyramid skylight he had
seen earlier from inside the museum. It was large enough to swallow their Smart-Car in a single
gulp. Fortunately, Sophie decided on the more conventional route, jamming the wheel hard to the
right, circling
properly until she exited, cut left, and swung into the northbound lane, accelerating
toward Rue de Rivoli.
The two-tone police sirens blared louder behind them, and Langdon could see the lights now in his
side view mirror. The SmartCar engine whined in protest as Sophie urged it faster away from the
Louvre. Fifty yards ahead, the traffic light at Rivoli turned red. Sophie
cursed under her breath and
kept racing toward it. Langdon felt his muscles tighten.
"Sophie?"
Slowing only slightly as they reached the intersection, Sophie flicked her headlights and stole a
quick glance both ways before flooring the accelerator again and carving a sharp left turn through
the empty intersection onto Rivoli. Accelerating west for a quarter of a mile, Sophie banked to the
right around a wide rotary. Soon they were shooting out the other side onto the wide avenue of
Champs-Elysées.
As they straightened out,
Langdon turned in his seat, craning his neck to look out the rear window
toward the Louvre. The police did not seem to be chasing them. The sea of blue lights was
assembling at the museum.
His heartbeat finally slowing, Langdon turned back around. "That was interesting."
Sophie didn't seem to hear. Her eyes remained fixed ahead down the long thoroughfare of Champs-
Elysées, the two-mile stretch of posh storefronts that was often called the Fifth Avenue of Paris.
The embassy was only about a mile away, and Langdon settled into his seat.
So dark the con of
man. Sophie's quick thinking had been impressive.
Madonna of the Rocks.
Sophie had said her grandfather left her something behind the painting.
A final message? Langdon
could not help but marvel over Saunière's brilliant hiding place;
Madonna of the Rocks was yet
another fitting link in the evening's chain of interconnected symbolism. Saunière, it seemed, at
every turn, was reinforcing his fondness for the dark and mischievous side of Leonardo da Vinci.
Da Vinci's original commission for
Madonna of the Rocks had come from an organization known
as the Confraternity of the Immaculate Conception, which needed a painting for the centerpiece of
an altar triptych in their church of San Francesco in Milan. The nuns gave Leonardo specific
dimensions, and the desired theme for the painting—the
Virgin Mary, baby John the Baptist, Uriel,
and Baby Jesus sheltering in a cave. Although Da Vinci did as they requested, when he delivered
the work, the group reacted with horror. He had filled the painting with explosive and disturbing
details.
The painting showed a blue-robed Virgin Mary sitting with her arm around an infant child,
presumably Baby Jesus. Opposite Mary sat Uriel, also with an infant,
presumably baby John the
Baptist. Oddly, though, rather than the usual Jesus-blessing-John scenario, it was baby
John who
was blessing Jesus... and Jesus was submitting to his authority! More troubling still, Mary was
holding one hand high above the head of infant John and making a decidedly threatening
gesture—her fingers looking like eagle's talons, gripping an invisible head. Finally, the most
obvious and frightening image: Just below Mary's curled fingers,
Uriel was making a cutting
gesture with his hand—as if slicing the neck of the invisible head gripped by Mary's claw-like
hand.
Langdon's students were always amused to learn that Da Vinci eventually mollified the
confraternity by painting them a second, "watered-down" version of
Madonna of the Rocks in
which everyone was arranged in a more orthodox manner. The second version now hung in
London's National Gallery under the name
Virgin of the Rocks, although
Langdon still preferred
the Louvre's more intriguing original.
As Sophie gunned the car up Champs-Elysées, Langdon said, "The painting. What was behind it?"
Her eyes remained on the road. "I'll show you once we're safely inside the embassy."
"You'll
show it to me?" Langdon was surprised. "He left you a physical object?"
Sophie gave a curt nod. "Embossed with a fleur-de-lis and the initials P.S."
Langdon couldn't believe his ears.
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