It was then that Max sensed the figure hovering over him.
"I will never forgive myself," the doctor whispered, "if I do not do this." Then the doctor gently took Max’s frail arm. "I wish I had done it sooner."
Max felt a tiny prick in his arm—barely discernible through the pain.
Then the doctor quietly packed his things. Before he left, he put a hand on Max’s forehead. "This will save your life. I have great faith in the power of medicine."
Within minutes, Max felt as if some sort of magic spirit were flowing through his veins. The warmth spread through his body numbing his pain. Finally, for the first time in days, Max slept.
When the fever broke, his mother and father proclaimed a miracle of God. But when it became evident that their son was crippled, they became despondent. They wheeled their son into the church and begged the priest for counseling.
"It was only by the grace of God," the priest told them, "that this boy survived."
Max listened, saying nothing.
"But our son cannot walk!" Frau Kohler was weeping.
The priest nodded sadly. "Yes. It seems God has punished him for not having enough faith."
"Mr. Kohler?" It was the Swiss Guard who had run ahead. "The camerlegno says he will grant you audience."
Kohler grunted, accelerating again down the hall.
"He is surprised by your visit," the guard said.
"I’m sure." Kohler rolled on. "I would like to see him alone."
"Impossible," the guard said. "No one—"
"Lieutenant," Rocher barked. "The meeting will be as Mr. Kohler wishes."
The guard stared in obvious disbelief.
Outside the door to the Pope’s office, Rocher allowed his guards to take standard precautions before letting Kohler in. Their handheld metal detector was rendered worthless by the myriad of electronic devices on Kohler’s wheelchair. The guards frisked him but were obviously too ashamed of his disability to do it properly. They never found the revolver affixed beneath his chair. Nor did they relieve him of the other object… the one that Kohler knew would bring unforgettable closure to this evening’s chain of events.
When Kohler entered the Pope’s office, Camerlegno Ventresca was alone, kneeling in prayer beside a dying fire. He did not open his eyes.
"Mr. Kohler," the camerlegno said. "Have you come to make me a martyr?"
112
All the while, the narrow tunnel called
The tunnel inclined steeply as it left the Castle St. Angelo, proceeding upward into the underside of a stone bastion that looked like a Roman aqueduct. There, the tunnel leveled out and began its secret course toward Vatican City.
As Langdon ran, his thoughts turned over and over in a kaleidoscope of confounding images—Kohler, Janus, the Hassassin, Rocher… a sixth brand?
"Kohler can’t be Janus!" Vittoria declared as they ran down the interior of the dike. "It’s impossible!"
"This crisis has made CERN look like monsters! Max would
On one count, Langdon knew CERN had taken a public beating tonight, all because of the Illuminati’s insistence on making this a public spectacle. And yet, he wondered how much CERN had
"You know what promoter P. T. Barnum said," Langdon called over his shoulder. "'I don’t care what you say about me, just spell my name right!’ I bet people are already secretly lining up to license antimatter technology. And after they see its true power at midnight tonight…"