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CHAPTERĀ 30
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Langdon and Sienna had seized an opportunity.
While the muscular soldier was pounding on the door, they had crawled deeper into the grotto and were now huddled in the final chamber. The tiny space was adorned with rough-hewn mosaics and satyrs. At its center stood a life-size sculpture of a Bathing Venus, who, fittingly, seemed to be glancing nervously over her shoulder.
Langdon and Sienna had ensconced themselves on the far side of the statueās narrow plinth, where they now waited, staring back at the single globular stalagmite that climbed the deepest wall of the grotto.
āAll exits confirmed secure!ā shouted a soldier somewhere outside. He was speaking English with a faint accent that Langdon couldnāt place. āSend the drone back up. Iāll check this cave here.ā
Langdon could feel Siennaās body tighten beside him.
Seconds later, heavy boots were padding into the grotto. The footsteps advanced quickly through the first chamber, growing louder still as they entered the second chamber, coming directly toward them.
Langdon and Sienna huddled closer.
āHey!ā a different voice shouted in the distance. āWeāve got them!ā
The footsteps stopped short.
Langdon could now hear someone running loudly down the gravel walkway toward the grotto. āPositive ID!ā the breathless voice declared. āWe just spoke to a couple of tourists. A few minutes ago, the man and the woman asked them directions to the palaceās costume gallery … which is over at the west end of the palazzo. ā
Langdon glanced at Sienna, who seemed to be smiling ever so faintly.
The soldier regained his breath, continuing. āThe western exits were the first to be sealed . and confidence is high that weāve got them trapped inside the gardens.ā
āExecute your mission,ā the nearer soldier replied. āAnd call me the instant youāve succeeded.ā
There was a flurry of departing footsteps on gravel, the sound of the drone lifting off again, and then, thankfully … total silence.
Langdon was about to twist sideways in order to peer around the plinth, when Sienna grabbed his arm, stopping him. She held a finger to her lips and nodded at a faint humanoid shadow on the rear wall. The lead soldier was still standing silently in the mouth of the grotto.
What is he waiting for?!
āItās Bruder,ā he said suddenly. āWeāve got them cornered. I should have confirmation for you shortly.ā
The man had placed a phone call, and his voice sounded unnervingly close, as if he were standing right beside them. The cavern was acting like a parabolic microphone, collecting all the sound and focusing it at the rear.
āThereās more,ā Bruder said. āI just received an update from forensics. The womanās apartment appears to be a sublet. Under furnished. Clearly short term. We located the biotube, but the projector was not present. I repeat, the projector was not present. We assume itās still in Langdonās possession.ā
Langdon felt a chill to hear the soldier speak his own name.
The footsteps grew louder, and Langdon realized that the man was moving into the grotto. His gait lacked the intensity of a few moments before and sounded now as if he were simply wandering, exploring the grotto as he talked on the phone.
āCorrect,ā the man said. āForensics also confirmed a single outbound call shortly before we stormed the apartment.ā
The U.S. Consulate, Langdon thought, remembering his phone conversation and the quick arrival of the spike-haired assassin. The woman seemed to have disappeared, replaced by an entire team of trained soldiers.
We canāt outrun them forever.
The sound of the soldierās boots on the stone floor was now only about twenty feet away and closing. The man had entered the second chamber, and if he continued to the end, he would certainly spot the two of them crouched behind Venusās narrow base.
āSienna Brooks,ā the man declared suddenly, the words crystal clear.
Sienna startled beside Langdon, her eyes reeling upward, clearly expecting to see the soldier staring down at her. But nobody was there.
āTheyāre going through her laptop now,ā the voice continued, about ten feet away. āI donāt have a report yet, but it is definitely the same machine we traced when Langdon accessed his Harvard e-mail account.ā
On hearing this news, Sienna turned to Langdon in disbelief, gaping at him with an expression of shock … and then betrayal.
Langdon was equally stunned. Thatās how they tracked us?! It hadnāt even occurred to him at the time. I just needed information! Before Langdon could convey an apology, Sienna had turned away, her expression going blank.
āThatās correct,ā the soldier said, arriving at the entrance to the third chamber, a mere six feet from Langdon and Sienna. Two more steps and he would see them for certain.
āExactly,ā he declared, taking one step closer. Suddenly the soldier paused. āHold on a second.ā
Langdon froze, bracing to be discovered.
āHold on, Iām losing you,ā the soldier said, and then retreated a few steps into the second chamber. āBad connection. Go ahead .ā He listened for a moment, then replied. āYes, I agree, but at least we know who weāre dealing with.ā
With that, his footsteps faded out of the grotto, moved across a gravel surface, and then disappeared completely.
Langdonās shoulders softened, and he turned to Sienna, whose eyes burned with a mixture of fear and anger.
āYou used my laptop?!ā she demanded. āTo check your e-mail?ā
āIām sorry . I thought youād understand. I needed to find outāā
āThatās how they found us! And now they know my name!ā
āI apologize, Sienna. I didnāt realize .ā Langdon was racked by guilt.
Sienna turned away, staring blankly at the bulbous stalagmite on the rear wall. Neither one of them said anything for nearly a minute. Langdon wondered if Sienna remembered the personal items that had been stacked on her deskāthe playbill from A Midsummer Nightās Dream and press clippings about her life as a young prodigy. Does she suspect I saw them? If so, she wasnāt asking, and Langdon was in enough trouble with her already that he was not about to mention it.
āThey know who I am,ā Sienna repeated, her voice so faint that Langdon could barely hear her. Over the next ten seconds, Sienna took several slow breaths, as if trying to absorb this new reality. As she did so, Langdon sensed that her resolve was slowly hardening.
Without warning, Sienna scrambled to her feet. āWe should go,ā she said. āIt wonāt take long for them to figure out weāre not in the costume gallery.ā
Langdon stood up with her. āYes, but go … where?ā
āVatican City?ā
āI beg your pardon?ā
āI finally figured out what you meant before . what Vatican City has in common with the Boboli Gardens.ā She motioned in the direction of the little gray door. āThatās the entrance, right?ā
Langdon managed a nod. āActually, thatās the exit, but I figured it was worth a shot. Unfortunately, we canāt get through.ā Langdon had heard enough of the guardās exchange with the soldier to know this doorway was not an option.
āBut if we could get through,ā Sienna said, a hint of mischief returning to her voice, ādo you know what that would mean?ā A faint smile now crossed her lips. āIt would mean that twice today you and I have been helped by the same Renaissance artist.ā
Langdon had to chuckle, having had the same thought a few minutes ago. āVasari. Vasari.ā
Sienna grinned more broadly now, and Langdon sensed she had forgiven him, at least for the moment. āI think itās a sign from above,ā she declared, sounding half serious. āWe should go through that door.ā
āOkay . and weāll just march right past the guard?ā
Sienna cracked her knuckles and headed out of the grotto. āNo, Iāll have a word with him.ā She glanced back at Langdon, the fire returning to her eyes. āTrust me, Professor, I can be quite persuasive when I have to be.ā
The pounding on the little gray door had returned.
Firm and relentless.
Security guard Ernesto Russo grumbled in frustration. The strange, cold-eyed soldier was apparently back, but his timing could not have been worse. The televised football match was in overtime with Fiorentina a man short and hanging by a thread.
The pounding continued.
Ernesto was no fool. He knew there was some kind of trouble out there this morningāall the sirens and soldiersābut he had never been one to involve himself in matters that didnāt affect him directly.
Pazzo e colui che bada aifatti altrui.
Then again, the soldier was clearly someone of importance, and ignoring him was probably unwise. Jobs in Italy were hard to find these days, even boring ones. Stealing a last glance at the game, Ernesto headed off toward the pounding on the door.
He still couldnāt believe he was paid to sit in his tiny office all day and watch television. Perhaps twice a day, a VIP tour would arrive outside the space, having walked all the way from the Uffizi Gallery. Ernesto would greet them, unlock the metal grate, and permit the group to pass through to the little gray door, where their tour would end in the Boboli Gardens.
Now, as the pounding grew more intense, Ernesto opened the steel grate, moved through it, and then closed and locked it behind him.
ā Si ? ā he shouted above the sounds of pounding as he hurried to the gray door.
No reply. The pounding continued.
Insomma! He finally unlocked the door and pulled it open, expecting to see the same lifeless gaze from a moment ago.
But the face at the door was far more attractive.
āCiao,ā a pretty blond woman said, smiling sweetly at him. She held out a folded piece of paper, which he instinctively reached out to accept. In the instant he grasped the paper and realized it was nothing but a piece of trash off the ground, the woman seized his wrist with her slender hands and plunged a thumb into the bony carpal area just beneath the palm of his hand.
Ernesto felt as if a knife had just severed his wrist. The slicing stab was followed by an electric numbness. The woman stepped toward him, and the pressure increased exponentially, starting the pain cycle all over again. He staggered backward, trying to pull his arm free, but his legs went numb and buckled beneath him, and he slumped to his knees.
The rest happened in an instant.
A tall man in a dark suit appeared in the open doorway, slipped inside, and quickly closed the gray door behind him. Ernesto reached for his radio, but a soft hand behind his neck squeezed once, and his muscles seized up, leaving him gasping for breath. The woman took the radio as the tall man approached, looking as alarmed by her actions as Ernesto was.
āDim mak,ā the blond said casually to the tall man. āChinese pressure points. Thereās a reason theyāve been around for three millennia.ā
The man watched in wonder.
āNon vogliamo farti del male,ā the woman whispered to Ernesto, easing the pressure on his neck. We donāt want to hurt you.
The instant the pressure decreased, Ernesto tried to twist free, but the pressure promptly returned, and his muscles seized again. He gasped in pain, barely able to breathe.
āDobbiamo passare,ā she said. We need to get through. She motioned to the steel grate, which Ernesto had thankfully locked behind him. āDov‘e la chiave?ā
āNon ce lāho,ā he managed. I donāt have the key.
The tall man advanced past them to the grating and examined the mechanism. āItās a combination lock,ā he called back to the woman, his accent American.
The woman knelt down next to Ernesto, her brown eyes like ice. āQual e la combinazione?ā she demanded.
āNon posso!ā he replied. āIām not permittedāā
Something happened at the top of his spine, and Ernesto felt his entire body go limp. An instant later, he blacked out.
When he came to, Ernesto sensed he had been drifting in and out of consciousness for several minutes. He recalled some discussion … more stabs of pain … being dragged, perhaps? It was all a blur.
As the cobwebs cleared, he saw a strange sightāhis shoes lying on the floor nearby with their laces removed. It was then that he realized he could barely move. He was lying on his side with his hands and feet bound behind him, apparently with his shoelaces. He tried to yell, but no sound came. One of his own socks was stuffed in his mouth. The true moment of fear, however, came an instant later, when he looked up and saw his television set playing the football match. Iām in my office . INSIDE the grate?!
In the distance, Ernesto could hear the sound of running footsteps departing along the corridor . and then, slowly, they faded to silence. Non e possibile! Somehow, the blond woman had persuaded Ernesto to do the one thing he was hired never to doāreveal the combination for the lock on the entrance to the famed Vasari Corridor.
