Anderson stiffened. “This is not exactly OS domain, is it?”
“Absolutely. This is an issue of national security.”
Anderson looked puzzled as well. “National security? With all due respect, ma’am —”
“The last I checked,” she interrupted, “I outrank you. I suggest you do exactly as I say, and that you do it without question.”
Anderson nodded and swallowed hard. “But shouldn’t we at least print the fingers to confirm the hand belongs to Peter Solomon?”
“I’ll confirm it,” Langdon said, feeling a sickening certainty. “I recognize his ring. and his hand.” He paused. “The tattoos are new, though. Someone did that to him recently.”
“I’m sorry?” Sato looked unnerved for the first time since arriving. “The hand is
Langdon nodded. “The thumb has a crown. And the index finger a star.”
Sato pulled out a pair of glasses and walked toward the hand, circling like a shark.
“Also,” Langdon said, “although you can’t see the other three fingers, I’m certain they will have tattoos on the fingertips as well.”
Sato looked intrigued by the comment and motioned to Anderson. “Chief, can you look at the other fingertips for us, please?”
Anderson crouched down beside the hand, being careful not to touch it. He put his cheek near the floor and looked up under the clenched fingertips. “He’s right, ma’am. All of the fingertips have tattoos, although I can’t quite see what the other —”
“A sun, a lantern, and a key,” Langdon said flatly.
Sato turned fully to Langdon now, her small eyes appraising him. “And how exactly would you know that?”
Langdon stared back. “The image of a human hand, marked in this way on the fingertips, is a very old icon. It’s known as ‘the Hand of the Mysteries.’ ”
Anderson stood up abruptly. “This thing has a
Langdon nodded. “It’s one of the most secretive icons of the ancient world.”
Sato cocked her head. “Then might I ask what the hell it’s doing in the middle of the U.S. Capitol?”
Langdon wished he would wake up from this nightmare. “Traditionally, ma’am, it was used as an invitation.”
“An invitation. to what?” she demanded.
Langdon looked down at the symbols on his friend’s severed hand. “For centuries, the Hand of the Mysteries served as a mystical summons. Basically, it’s an invitation to receive secret knowledge — protected wisdom known only to an elite few.”
Sato folded her thin arms and stared up at him with jet-black eyes. “Well, Professor, for someone who claims to have no clue why he’s here. you’re doing quite well so far.”
CHAPTER 18
Katherine Solomon donned her white lab coat and began her usual arrival routine — her “rounds” as her brother called them.
Like a nervous parent checking on a sleeping baby, Katherine poked her head into the mechanical room. The hydrogen fuel cell was running smoothly, its backup tanks all safely nestled in their racks.
Katherine continued down the hall to the data-storage room. As always, the two redundant holographic backup units hummed safely within their temperature-controlled vault.
Both of her lab’s holographic drives were synchronized and identical — serving as redundant backups to safeguard identical copies of her work. Most backup protocols advocated a secondary backup system
Content that everything was running smoothly here, she headed back down the hallway. As she rounded the corner, however, she spotted something unexpected across the lab.
Trish Dunne — the only other person on earth allowed back here — was Katherine’s metasystems analyst and seldom worked weekends. The twenty-six-year-old redhead was a genius data modeler and had signed a nondisclosure document worthy of the KGB. Tonight, she was apparently analyzing data on the control room’s plasma wall — a huge flat-screen display that looked like something out of NASA mission control.