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
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