An icy numbness flooded Peter’s heart as he searched his son’s eyes for any connection. anything familiar. The man’s eyes, however, although gray like Peter’s, were those of a total stranger, filled with a hatred and a vengefulness that were almost otherworldly.
“Are you strong enough?” his son taunted, glancing at the Akedah knife gripped in Peter’s hand. “Can you finish what you started all those years ago?”
“Son. ” Solomon barely recognized his own voice. “I. I loved. you.”
“Twice you tried to kill me. You abandoned me in prison. You shot me on Zach’s bridge. Now
For an instant, Solomon felt like he was floating outside his own body. He no longer recognized himself. He was missing a hand, was totally bald, dressed in a black robe, sitting in a wheelchair, and clutching an ancient knife.
“Finish it!” the man shouted again, the tattoos on his naked chest rippling. “Killing me is the only way you can save Katherine. the only way to save your brotherhood!”
Solomon felt his gaze move to the laptop and cellular modem on the pigskin chair.
SENDING MESSAGE: 92 % COMPLETE
His mind could not shake the images of Katherine bleeding to death. or of his Masonic brothers.
“There is still time,” the man whispered. “You know it’s the only choice. Release me from my mortal shell.”
“Please,” Solomon said. “Don’t do this. ”
“
Peter’s heart ached.
He was out of time.
Robert Langdon dashed through darkened hallways, winding his way toward the center of the building. Turner Simkins remained close on his heels. As Langdon had hoped, he burst out into the building’s main atrium.
Dominated by eight Doric columns of green granite, the atrium looked like a hybrid sepulcher — Greco-Roman-Egyptian — with black marble statues, chandelier fire bowls, Teutonic crosses, double-headed phoenix medallions, and sconces bearing the head of Hermes.
Langdon turned and ran toward the sweeping marble staircase at the far end of the atrium. “This leads directly to the Temple Room,” he whispered as the two men ascended as quickly and quietly as possible.
On the first landing, Langdon came face-to-face with a bronze bust of Masonic luminary Albert Pike, along with the engraving of his most famous quote: WHAT WE HAVE DONE FOR OURSELVES ALONE DIES WITH US; WHAT WE HAVE DONE FOR OTHERS AND THE WORLD REMAINS AND IS IMMORTAL.
Mal’akh had sensed a palpable shift in the atmosphere of the Temple Room, as if all the frustration and pain Peter Solomon had ever felt was now boiling to the surface. focusing itself like a laser on Mal’akh.
Peter Solomon had risen from his wheelchair and was standing now, facing the altar, gripping the knife.
“Save Katherine,” Mal’akh coaxed, luring him toward the altar, backing up, and finally laying his own body down on the white shroud he had prepared. “Do what you need to do.”
As if moving through a nightmare, Peter inched forward.
Mal’akh reclined fully now onto his back, gazing up through the oculus at the wintry moon.
Mal’akh drew a deep breath.
Standing over Mal’akh, Peter Solomon was trembling. His tear-soaked eyes shone with desperation, indecision, anguish. He looked one last time toward the modem and laptop across the room.