Langdon felt a pang of truth in the statement. Leonardo Vetra had indeed been branded with the Illuminati symbol. Where had it come from? The sacred brand seemed too difficult a hoax for someone trying to cover his tracks by casting suspicion elsewhere. There had to be another explanation.
Again, Langdon forced himself to consider the implausible.
He refused to accept the preposterous thought. "There is," he said suddenly, "a logical explanation other than terrorism."
Kohler stared, obviously waiting.
Langdon tried to sort out the thought. The Illuminati had always wielded tremendous power through
Kohler looked incredulous. "Financial gain? Where does one sell a droplet of antimatter?"
"Not the specimen," Langdon countered. "The technology. Antimatter technology must be worth a mint. Maybe someone stole the specimen to do analysis and R and D."
"Industrial espionage? But that canister has twenty-four hours before the batteries die. The researchers would blow themselves up before they learned anything at all."
"They could recharge it before it explodes. They could build a compatible recharging podium like the ones here at CERN."
"In twenty-four hours?" Kohler challenged. "Even if they stole the schematics, a recharger like that would take
"He’s right." Vittoria’s voice was frail.
Both men turned. Vittoria was moving toward them, her gait as tremulous as her words.
"He’s right. Nobody could reverse engineer a recharger in time. The interface alone would take weeks. Flux filters, servo-coils, power conditioning alloys, all calibrated to the specific energy grade of the locale."
Langdon frowned. The point was taken. An antimatter trap was not something one could simply plug into a wall socket. Once removed from CERN, the canister was on a one-way, twenty-four-hour trip to oblivion.
Which left only one, very disturbing, conclusion.
"We need to call Interpol," Vittoria said. Even to herself, her voice sounded distant. "We need to call the proper authorities. Immediately."
Kohler shook his head. "Absolutely not."
The words stunned her. "No? What do you mean?"
"You and your father have put me in a very difficult position here."
"Director, we need help. We need to find that trap and get it back here before someone gets hurt. We have a responsibility!"
"We have a responsibility to
"You’re worried about CERN’s
"Perhaps you and your father should have considered that before you created the specimen."
Vittoria felt like she’d been stabbed. "But… we took every precaution."
"Apparently, it was not enough."
"But nobody
Vittoria had told no one. That left only two explanations. Either her father had taken someone into his confidence without telling her, which made no sense because it was her
The thought spurred her to action. She pulled her cell phone from her shorts pocket.
Kohler accelerated toward her, coughing violently, eyes flashing anger. "Who… are you calling?"
"CERN’s switchboard. They can connect us to Interpol."