Chapter Twelve: Chapter Nine
AN: Same as before. Enjoy! I also have two polls up, for any of you who would like to decide what goes on in this story.
AN2: Since some of my reviewers from my past story are being kind and are reading this, I'll post this one up, just for them.
'Nine,' Sophie read.
'The corpse on the floor before Langdon was hideous. The late Leonardo Vetra lay on his back, stripped naked, his skin bluish-gray. His neck bones were jutting out where they had been broken, and his head was twisted completely backward, pointing the wrong way. His face was out of view, pressed against the floor. The man lay in a frozen puddle of his own urine, the hair around his shriveled genitals spidered with frost.'
"Disgustoso. Devi essere segnati a vita, perche io so di essere," Logan said, shuddering at the mental image that the paragraph produced.
"Whaa?" everyone but Vittoria said.
"He said, 'Disgusting. You must be scarred for life, because I know I am," Vittoria translated.
'Fighting a wave of nausea,'
"Don't worry," Carlos said, " we're fighting that wave, too."
'Langdon let his eyes fall to the victim's chest. Although Langdon had stared at the symmetrical wound a dozen times on the fax, the burn was infinitely more commanding in real life. The raised, broiled flesh was perfectly delineated. . .the symbol flawlessly formed.
Langdon wondered if the intense chill now raking through his body was the air-conditioning or his utter amazement with the significance of what he was now staring at.'
"Is that supposed to be 'Illuminati'?" Sophie asked Logan.
Logan looked at it and said, "Yeah."
'His heart pounded as he circled the body, reading the word upside down, reaffirming the genius of the symmetry. The symbol seemed even less conceivable now that he was staring at it.
"Mr. Langdon?"
Langdon did not hear.'
"Do you think what I'm thinking?" Carlos said.
"That he's probably just ignoring him like Logan does sometimes?" the teens but Logan asked.
"I'm right here," Logan said.
"You do get like that sometimes," Courtney said. "Granted, it's only when you're trying to think of a way to save their a**** from either Bitters or Gustavo."
"I do not."
"Logan."
"Fine."
"Whipped," the teens but Logan and Courtney stage-whispered.
Jennifer was about to say something when she caught the look in Courtney's eyes. She had that innocent look on her face, but her eyes promised retribution. So, Jennifer decided to stay out of it and let Courtney take care of it in her own way.
"Hey, Logan?" Courtney said.
"Yeah?"
"Do you know where my pocket knife is?"
"You left it at the apartment because of the metal detectors."
"D***." She pouted for a little bit, but then that smile crept back onto her face. "Mr. Holt?"
"Yes, Ms. Davis?"
"Do you by chance have a letter opener?"
At this point, the teens had a look of horror on their faces. Jennifer decided to step in.
"Courtney," she said warningly.
Courtney looked over at the other teens, saw that they looked terrified, and said, "Alright."
"She can be brutal when she wants to be, can't she?" Peter asked Gustavo, who was sitting between him and Robert.
Gustavo just stayed silent and nodded.
'He was in another world. . .his world, his element, a world where history, myth, and fact collided, flooding his senses. The gears turned.
"Mr. Langdon?" Kohler's eyes probed expectantly.
Langdon did not look up. His disposition now intensified, his focus total. "How much do you already know?"
"Only what I had time to read on your website. The word Illuminati means 'the enlightened ones.' It is the name of some sort of ancient brotherhood."'
The teens looked at Logan. He sighed. "What?"
"Is that the actual translation?" Kendall asked.
"Not really no."
"What do you mean by that?" James asked.
"I mean, I wouldn't say it's not a word, but it really doesn't have a translation."
"Meaning?" Carlos asked.
"Meaning we got the word Illuminati from the Italians," Courtney said. "Same thing with pizza, spaghetti, and lasagna."
"Oh."
'Langdon nodded. "Had you heard the name before?"
"Not until I saw it branded on Mr. Vetra."
"So you ran a Web search for it?"
"Yes."
"And the word turned out hundreds of references, no doubt."
"Thousands," Kohler said. "Yours, however, contained references to Harvard, Oxford, a reputable publisher, as well as a list of related publications. As a scientist I have come to learn that information is only as valuable as its source. Your credentials seemed authentic."
Langdon's eyes were still riveted on the body.
Kohler said nothing more. He simply stared, apparently waiting for Langdon to shed some light on the scene before them.
Langdon looked up, glancing around the frozen flat. "Perhaps we should discuss this in a warmer place?"
"This room is fine." Kohler seemed oblivious to the cold. "We'll talk here."
Langdon frowned. The Illuminati was by no means a simple one. I'll freeze to death trying to explain it. He gazed again at the brand, feeling a renewed sense of awe.
Although accounts of the Illuminati emblem were legendary in modern symbology, no academic had ever actually seen it. Ancient documents described the symbol as an ambigram - ambi meaning "both" - signifying it was legible both ways. And although ambigrams were common in symbology - swastikas, yin yang, Jewish stars, simple crossed - the idea that a word could be crafted into an ambigram seemed utterly impossible. Modern symbologists had tried for years to forge the word "Illuminati" into a perfectly symmetrical style, but they had failed miserably. Most academics had now decided the symbol's existence was a myth.
"So who are the Illuminati?" Kohler demanded. Yes, Langdon thought, who indeed? He began his tale.
"Since the beginning of history," Langdon explained, "a deep rift has existed between science and religion. Outspoken scientists like Copernicus -"
"Were murdered," Kohler interjected. "Murdered by the church for revealing scientific truths. Religion has always persecuted science."
"Yes. But in the 1500s, a group of men in Rome fought back against the church. Some of Italy's most enlightened men - physicists, mathematicians, astronomers - began meeting secretly to share their concerns about the church's inaccurate teachings. They feared that the church's monopoly on 'truth' threatened academic enlightenment around the world. They founded the world's first scientific think tank, calling themselves 'the enlightened ones.'"
"The Illuminati."
"Yes," Langdon said. "Europe's most learned minds. . .dedicated to the quest for scientific truth."
Kohler fell silent.
"Of course, the Illuminati were hunted ruthlessly by the Catholic Church. Only through rites of extreme secrecy did the scientists remain safe. Word spread through the academic underground, and the Illuminati brotherhood grew to include academics from all over Europe. The scientists met regularly in Rome at an ultrasecret lair they called the Chuch of Illumination."
Kohler coughed and shifted in his chair.
"Many of the Illuminati," Langdon continued, "wanted to combat the church's tyranny with acts of violence, but their most revered member persuaded them against it. He was a pacifist, as well as one of history's most famous scientists."
Langdon was certain Kohler would recognize the name.'
"Galileo?" Logan asked.
"How...?" Robert said, wondering if this kid's mother produced a brain-child.
"When he presented the theory that the earth revolved around the sun," Logan said, "he was put under house arrest by the church, who believed that the other way around was correct."
"Most teenagers don't even recognize the name," Peter said, "let alone the reason."
"He's Italian," Logan said. "When I asked my mom about him, I thought he was my ancestor or something, but we'll never know because we have nothing to compare DNA to."
'Even nonscientists were familiar with the ill-fated astronomer who had been arrested and almost executed by the church for proclaiming that the sun, and not the earth, was the center of the solar system. Although his data were incontrovertible, the astronomer was severely punished for implying that God had placed mankind somewhere other than at the center of His universe.
"His name was Galileo Galilei," Langdon said.
Kohler looked up. "Galileo?"
"Yes. Galileo was an Illuminatus. And he was also a devout Catholic. He tried to soften the church's position on science by proclaiming that science did not undermine the existence of God, but rather reinforced it. He wrote once that when he looked through his telescope at the spinning planets, he could hear God's voice in the music of the spheres. He held that science and religion were not enemies, but rather allies - two different languages telling the same story, a story of symmetry and balance. . .heaven and hell, night and day, hot and cold, God and Satan. Both science and religion rejoiced in God's symmetry. . .the endless contest of light and dark." Langdon paused, stomping his feet to stay warm.
Kohler simply sat in his wheelchair and stared.
"Unfortunately," Langdon added, "the unification of science and religion was not what the church wanted."
"Of course not," Kohler interrupted. "The union would have nullified the church's claim as the sole vessel through which man could understand God. So the church tried Galileo as a heretic, found him guilty, and put him under permanent house arrest. I am quite aware of scientific history, Mr. Langdon. But this was all centuries ago. What does this have to Leonardo Vetra?"
The million dollar question. Langdon cut to the chase. "Galileo's arrest threw the Illuminati into upheaval. Mistakes were made, and the church discovered the identities of four members, whom they captured and interrogated. But the four scientists revealed nothing. . .even under torture."'
"Torture?"
'"Torture?"
Langdon nodded. "They were branded alive. On the chest. With the symbol of the cross."
Kohler's eyes widened, and he shot an uneasy glance at Vetra's body.
"Then the scientists were brutally murdered, their dead bodies dropped in the streets of Rome as a warning to others thinking of joining the Illuminati. With the church closing in, the remaining Illuminati fled Italy."
Langdon paused to make his point. He looked directly into Kohler's dead eyes. "The Illuminati went deep underground, where they began mixing with other refugee groups fleeing the Catholic purges - mystics, alchemists, occultists, Muslims, Jews. Over the years, the Illuminati began absorbing new members. A new Illuminati emerged. A darker Illuminati. A deeply anti-Christian Illuminati. They grew very powerful, employing mysterious rites, deadly secrecy, vowing someday to rise again and take revenge on the Catholic Church. Their power grew to the point where the church considered them the single most dangerous anit-Christian force on earth. The Vatican denounced the brotherhood as Shaitan."'
"Satan," Logan stated.
"Whaa?" everyone but Robert and Peter asked.
Logan nodded to Sophie to keep reading.
'"Shaitan?"
"It's Islāmic. It means 'adversary'. . .God's adversary. The church chose Islam for the name because it was a language they considered dirty." Langdon hesitated. "Shaitan is the root of an English word. . .Satan."
An uneasiness crossed Kohler's face.
Langdon's voice was grim. "Mr. Kohler, I do not know how this marking appeared on this man's chest. . .or why. . .but you are looking at the long-lost symbol of the world's oldest and most powerful satanic cult."'
"That's it," Sophie said. When she said that, Logan's phone rang. He looked at the caller ID before answering it.
"Ehi, mamma, come stai?" Silence, then Logan frowned and he said, "Perche avere il suo telefono, se si suppone di essere al lavoro, papa?"
He stood up. "Hai ucciso lei, non e vero?"
Silence again. Logan's eyes got teary as he said, "No mentirmi figlio di una cagna!"
He hung up, sat down again, and buried his head in his hands.
Vittoria's lip trembled as she translated in a whisper that carried across the room. Courtney immediately hugged Logan as he tried to stop himself from crying.
"I think that will be it for today," Mike said quietly. Everyone agreed.
