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CHAPTERĀ 67
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The NetJets Citation Excel bounced through heavy turbulence as it rocketed skyward out of Tassignano Airport and banked toward Venice. On board, Dr. Elizabeth Sinskey barely noticed the bumpy departure as she absently stroked her amulet and gazed out the window into empty space.
They had finally stopped giving her the injections, and Sinskeyās mind was already feeling clearer. In the seat beside her, Agent Bruder remained silent, probably pondering the bizarre turn of events that had just transpired.
Everything is upside down, Sinskey thought, still struggling to believe what she had just witnessed.
Thirty minutes ago, they had stormed the tiny airfield to intercept Langdon as he boarded the private jet he had summoned. Instead of finding the professor, however, they discovered an idling Citation Excel and two NetJets pilots pacing the tarmac and checking their watches.
Robert Langdon was a no-show.
Then came the phone call.
When the cell phone rang, Sinskey was where she had been all dayā in the backseat of the black van. Agent Bruder entered the vehicle with a stupefied look on his face as he handed her his phone.
āUrgent call for you, maāam.ā
āWho is it?ā she asked.
āHe asked me to tell you only that he has pressing information to give you about Bertrand Zobrist.ā
Sinskey grabbed the phone. āThis is Dr. Elizabeth Sinskey.ā
āDr. Sinskey, you and I have never met, but my organization has been responsible for hiding Bertrand Zobrist from you for the last year.ā
Sinskey sat bolt upright. āWhoever the hell you are, youāve been harboring a criminal!ā
āWeāve done nothing illegal, but thatās notāā
āThe hell you havenāt!ā
The man on the line took a long, patient breath, speaking very softly now. āYou and I will have plenty of time to debate the ethics of my actions. I know you donāt know me, but I do know quite a bit about you. Mr. Zobrist has been paying me handsomely to keep you and others away from him for the past year. I am now breaching my own strict protocol by contacting you. And yet, I believe we have no choice but to pool our resources. Bertrand Zobrist, I fear, may have done something terrible.ā
Sinskey could not fathom who this man was. āYouāre just figuring this out now?!ā
āYes, that is correct. Just now.ā His tone was earnest.
Sinskey tried to shake off the cobwebs. āWho are you?ā
āSomeone who wants to help you before itās too late. Iām in possession of a video message created by Bertrand Zobrist. He asked me to release it to the world … tomorrow. I think you need to see it immediately. ā
āWhat does it say?ā
āNot on the phone. We need to meet.ā
āHow do I know I can trust you?ā
āBecause Iām about to tell you where Robert Langdon is . and why heās acting so strangely.ā
Sinskey reeled at the mention of Langdonās name, and she listened in astonishment to the outlandish explanation. This man seemed to have been complicit with her enemy for the last year, and yet, as she listened to the details, Sinskeyās gut told her she needed to trust what he was saying.
I have no choice but to comply.
Their combined resources made short work of commandeering the ājiltedā NetJets Citation Excel. Sinskey and the soldiers were now in pursuit, racing toward Venice, where, according to this manās information, Langdon and his two traveling companions were at this very moment arriving by train. It was too late to summon the local authorities, but the man on the line claimed to know where Langdon was headed.
St. Markās Square? Sinskey felt a chill as she imagined the crowds in Veniceās most populated area. āHow do you know this?ā
āNot on the phone,ā the man said. āBut you should be aware that Robert Langdon is unwittingly traveling with a very dangerous individual.ā
āWho?!ā Sinskey demanded.
āOne of Zobristās closest confidants.ā The man sighed heavily. āSomeone I trusted. Foolishly, apparently. Someone I believe may now be a severe threat.ā
As the private jet headed for Veniceās Marco Polo Airport carrying Sinskey and the six soldiers, Sinskeyās thoughts returned to Robert Langdon. He lost his memory? He recalls nothing? The strange news, while explaining several things, made Sinskey feel even worse than she already did about involving the distinguished academic in this crisis.
I left him no choice.
Almost two days ago, when Sinskey recruited Langdon, she hadnāt even let him go back to his house for his passport. Instead, she had arranged for his quiet passage through the Florence Airport as a special liaison to the World Health Organization.
As the C-130 lumbered into the air and pointed east across the Atlantic, Sinskey had glanced at Langdon beside her and noticed he did not look well. He was staring intently at the sidewall of the windowless hull.
āProfessor, you do realize this plane has no windows? Until recently, it was used as a military transport.ā
Langdon turned, his face ashen. āYes, I noticed that the moment I stepped aboard. Iām not so good in enclosed spaces.ā
āSo youāre pretending to look out an imaginary window?ā
He gave a sheepish smile. āSomething like that, yes.ā
āWell, look at this instead.ā She pulled out a photo of her lanky, green-eyed nemesis and laid it in front of him. āThis is Bertrand Zobrist.ā
Sinskey had already told Langdon about her confrontation with Zobrist at the Council on Foreign Relations, the manās passion for the Population Apocalypse Equation, his widely circulated comments about the global benefits of the Black Plague, and, most ominously, his total disappearance from sight over the past year.
āHow does someone that prominent stay hidden for so long?ā Langdon asked.
āHe had a lot of help. Professional help. Maybe even a foreign government.ā
āWhat government would condone the creation of a plague?ā
āThe same governments that try to obtain nuclear warheads on the black market. Donāt forget that an effective plague is the ultimate biochemical weapon, and itās worth a fortune. Zobrist easily could have lied to his partners and assured them his creation had a limited range. Zobrist would be the only one who had any idea what his creation actually did.ā
Langdon fell silent.
āIn any case,ā Sinskey continued, āif not for power or money, those helping Zobrist could have helped because they shared his ideology. Zobrist has no shortage of disciples who would do anything for him. He was quite a celebrity. In fact, he gave a speech at your university not long ago.ā
āAt Harvard?ā
Sinskey took out a pen and wrote on the border of Zobristās photoā the letter H followed by a plus sign. āYouāre good with symbols,ā she said. āDo you recognize this one?ā
H+
āH-plus,ā Langdon whispered, nodding vaguely. āSure, a few summers ago it was posted all over campus. I assumed it was some kind of chemistry conference.ā
Sinskey chuckled. āNo, those were signs for the 2010 āHumanity-plusā Summitāone of the largest Transhumanism gatherings ever. H-plus is the symbol of the Transhumanist movement.ā
Langdon cocked his head, as if trying to place the term.
āTranshumanism,ā Sinskey said, āis an intellectual movement, a philosophy of sorts, and itās quickly taking root in the scientific community. It essentially states that humans should use technology to transcend the weaknesses inherent in our human bodies. In other words, the next step in human evolution should be that we begin biologically engineering ourselves.ā
āSounds ominous,ā Langdon said.
āLike all change, itās just a matter of degree. Technically, weāve been engineering ourselves for years nowādeveloping vaccines that make children immune to certain diseases … polio, smallpox, typhoid. The difference is that now, with Zobristās breakthroughs in germ-line genetic engineering, weāre learning how to create inheritable immunizations, those that would affect the recipient at the core germ-line levelāmaking all subsequent generations immune to that disease.ā
Langdon looked startled. āSo the human species would essentially undergo an evolution that makes it immune to typhoid, for example?ā
āItās more of an assisted evolution,ā Sinskey corrected. āNormally, the evolutionary processāwhether it be a lungfish developing feet or an ape developing opposable thumbsātakes millennia to occur. Now we can make radical genetic adaptations in a single generation. Proponents of the technology consider it the ultimate expression of Darwinian āsurvival of the fittestāāhumans becoming a species that learns to improve its own evolutionary process.ā
āSounds more like playing God,ā Langdon replied.
āI agree wholeheartedly,ā Sinskey said. āZobrist, however, like many other Transhumanists, argued strongly that it is mankindās evolutionary obligation to use all the powers at our disposalāgerm-line genetic mutation, for oneāto improve as a species. The problem is that our genetic makeup is like a house of cardsāeach piece connected to and supported by countless othersāoften in ways we donāt understand. If we try to remove a single human trait, we can cause hundreds of others to shift simultaneously, possibly with catastrophic effects.ā
Langdon nodded. āThereās a reason evolution is a gradual process.ā
āPrecisely!ā Sinskey said, feeling her admiration for the professor growing with each passing moment. āWeāre tinkering with a process that took aeons to build. These are dangerous times. We now literally have the capacity to activate certain gene sequences that will result in our descendants having increased dexterity, stamina, strength, even intelligenceāessentially a super-race. These hypothetical āenhancedā individuals are what Transhumanists refer to as posthumans, which some believe will be the future of our species.ā
āSounds eerily like eugenics,ā Langdon replied.
The reference made Sinskeyās skin crawl.
In the 1940s, Nazi scientists had dabbled in a technology theyād dubbed eugenicsāan attempt to use rudimentary genetic engineering to increase the birth rate of those with certain ādesirableā genetic traits, while decreasing the birth rate of those with āless desirableā ethnic traits.
Ethnic cleansing at the genetic level.
āThere are similarities,ā Sinskey admitted, āand while itās hard to fathom how one would engineer a new human race, there are a lot of smart people who believe it is critical to our survival that we begin that very process. One of the contributors to the Transhumanist magazine H+ described germ-line genetic engineering as āthe clear next step,ā and claimed it āepitomized the true potential of our species.ā ā Sinskey paused. āThen again, in the magazineās defense, they also ran a Discover magazine piece called āThe Most Dangerous Idea in the World.ā ā
āI think Iād side with the latter,ā Langdon said. āAt least from the sociocultural standpoint.ā
āHow so?ā
āWell, I assume that genetic enhancementsāmuch like cosmetic surgeryācost a lot of money, right?ā
āOf course. Not everyone could afford to improve themselves or their children.ā
āWhich means that legalized genetic enhancements would immediately create a world of haves and have-nots. We already have a growing chasm between the rich and the poor, but genetic engineering would create a race of superhumans and … perceived subhumans. You think people are concerned about the ultrarich one percent running the world? Just imagine if that one percent were also, quite literally, a superior speciesāsmarter, stronger, healthier. Itās the kind of situation that would be ripe for slavery or ethnic cleansing.ā
Sinskey smiled at the handsome academic beside her. āProfessor, you have very quickly grasped what I believe to be the most serious pitfall of genetic engineering.ā
āWell, I may have grasped that, but Iām still confused about Zobrist. All of this Transhumanist thinking seems to be about bettering humankind, making us more healthy, curing fatal diseases, extending our longevity. And yet Zobristās views on overpopulation seem to endorse killing off people. His ideas on Transhumanism and overpopulation seem to be in conflict, donāt they?ā
Sinskey gave a solemn sigh. It was a good question, and unfortunately it had a clear and troubling answer. āZobrist believed wholeheartedly in Transhumanismāin bettering the species through technology; however, he also believed our species would go extinct before we got a chance to do that. In effect, if nobody takes action, our sheer numbers will kill off the species before we get a chance to realize the promise of genetic engineering.ā
Langdonās eyes went wide. āSo Zobrist wanted to thin the herd … in order to buy more time?ā
Sinskey nodded. āHe once described himself as being trapped on a ship where the passengers double in number every hour, while he is desperately trying to build a lifeboat before the ship sinks under its own weight.ā She paused. āHe advocated throwing half the people overboard.ā
Langdon winced. āFrightening thought.ā
āQuite. Make no mistake about it,ā she said. āZobrist firmly believed that a drastic curbing of the human population will be remembered one day as the ultimate act of heroism . the moment the human race chose to survive.ā
āAs I said, frightening.ā
āMore so because Zobrist was not alone in his thinking. When Zobrist died, he became a martyr for a lot of people. I have no idea who weāre going to run into when we arrive in Florence, but weāll need to be very careful. We wonāt be the only ones trying to find this plague, and for your own safety, we canāt let a soul know youāre in Italy looking for it.ā
Langdon told her about his friend Ignazio Busoni, a Dante specialist, who Langdon believed could get him into Palazzo Vecchio for a quiet after-hours look at the painting that contained the words cerca trova, from Zobristās little projector. Busoni might also be able to help Langdon understand the strange quote about the eyes of death.
Sinskey pulled back her long silver hair and looked intently at Langdon. āSeek and find, Professor. Time is running out.ā
Sinskey went to an onboard storeroom and retrieved the WHOās most secure hazmat tubeāa model with biometric sealing capability.
āGive me your thumb,ā she said, setting the canister in front of Langdon.
Langdon looked puzzled but obliged.
Sinskey programmed the tube so that Langdon would be the only person who could open it. Then she took the little projector and placed it safely inside.
āThink of it as a portable lockbox,ā she said with a smile.
āWith a biohazard symbol?ā Langdon looked uneasy.
āItās all we have. On the bright side, nobody will mess with it.ā
Langdon excused himself to stretch his legs and use the restroom. While he was gone, Sinskey tried to slip the sealed canister into his jacket pocket. Unfortunately it didnāt fit.
He canāt be carrying this projector around in plain sight. She thought a moment and then headed back to the storeroom for a scalpel and a stitch kit. With expert precision, she cut a slit in the lining of Langdonās jacket and carefully sewed a hidden pocket that was the exact size required to conceal the biotube.
When Langdon returned, she was just finishing the final stitches.
The professor stopped and stared as if she had defaced the Mona Lisa. āYou sliced into the lining of my Harris Tweed?ā
āRelax, Professor,ā she said. āIām a trained surgeon. The stitches are quite professional.ā
