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Home The Da Vinci Code CHAPTER 94

CHAPTER 94

King's College, established by King George IV in 1829, houses its Department of
Theology and Religious Studies adjacent to Parliament on property granted by the
Crown. King's College Religion Department boasts not only 150 years' experience in
teaching and research, but the 1982 establishment of the Research Institute in Systematic
Theology, which possesses one of the most complete and electronically advanced
religious research libraries in the world.
Langdon still felt shaky as he and Sophie came in from the rain and entered the library.
The primary research room was as Teabing had described it—a dramatic octagonal
chamber dominated by an enormous round table around which King Arthur and his
knights might have been comfortable were it not for the presence of twelve flat-screen
computer workstations. On the far side of the room, a reference librarian was just
pouring a pot of tea and settling in for her day of work.
“Lovely morning,” she said in a cheerful British accent, leaving the tea and walking
over. “May I help you?”
“Thank you, yes,” Langdon replied. “My name is—”
“Robert Langdon.” She gave a pleasant smile. “I know who you are.”
For an instant, he feared Fache had put him on English television as well, but the
librarian's smile suggested otherwise. Langdon still had not gotten used to these moments
of unexpected celebrity. Then again, if anyone on earth were going to recognize his face,
it would be a librarian in a Religious Studies reference facility.
“Pamela Gettum,” the librarian said, offering her hand. She had a genial, erudite face
and a pleasingly fluid voice. The horn-rimmed glasses hanging around her neck were
thick.
“A pleasure,” Langdon said. “This is my friend Sophie Neveu.”
The two women greeted one another, and Gettum turned immediately back to
Langdon. “I didn't know you were coming.”
“Neither did we. If it's not too much trouble, we could really use your help finding
some information.”
Gettum shifted, looking uncertain. “Normally our services are by petition and
appointment only, unless of course you're the guest of someone at the college?”

Langdon shook his head. “I'm afraid we've come unannounced. A friend of mine
speaks very highly of you. Sir Leigh Teabing?” Langdon felt a pang of gloom as he said
the name. “The British Royal Historian.”
Gettum brightened now, laughing. “Heavens, yes. What a character. Fanatical! Every
time he comes in, it's always the same search strings. Grail. Grail. Grail. I swear that man
will die before he gives up on that quest.” She winked. “Time and money afford one
such lovely luxuries, wouldn't you say? A regular Don Quixote, that one.”
“Is there any chance you can help us?” Sophie asked. “It's quite important.”
Gettum glanced around the deserted library and then winked at them both. “Well, I
can't very well claim I'm too busy, now can I? As long as you sign in, I can't imagine
anyone being too upset. What did you have in mind?”
“We're trying to find a tomb in London.”
Gettum looked dubious. “We've got about twenty thousand of them. Can you be a little
more specific?”
“It's the tomb of a knight. We don't have a name.”
“A knight. That tightens the net substantially. Much less common.”
“We don't have much information about the knight we're looking for,” Sophie said,
“but this is what we know.” She produced a slip of paper on which she had written only
the first two lines of the poem.
Hesitant to show the entire poem to an outsider, Langdon and Sophie had decided to
share just the first two lines, those that identified the knight. Compartmentalized
cryptography, Sophie had called it. When an intelligence agency intercepted a code
containing sensitive data, cryptographers each worked on a discrete section of the code.
This way, when they broke it, no single cryptographer possessed the entire deciphered
message.
In this case, the precaution was probably excessive; even if this librarian saw the entire
poem, identified the knight's tomb, and knew what orb was missing, the information was
useless without the cryptex.

Gettum sensed an urgency in the eyes of this famed American scholar, almost as if his

finding this tomb quickly were a matter of critical importance. The green-eyed woman
accompanying him also seemed anxious.
Puzzled, Gettum put on her glasses and examined the paper they had just handed her.
In London lies a knight a Pope interred.
His labor's fruit a Holy wrath incurred.
She glanced at her guests. “What is this? Some kind of Harvard scavenger hunt?”
Langdon's laugh sounded forced. “Yeah, something like that.”
Gettum paused, feeling she was not getting the whole story. Nonetheless, she felt
intrigued and found herself pondering the verse carefully. “According to this rhyme, a
knight did something that incurred displeasure with God, and yet a Pope was kind
enough to bury him in London.”
Langdon nodded. “Does it ring any bells?”
Gettum moved toward one of the workstations. “Not offhand, but let's see what we can
pull up in the database.”
Over the past two decades, King's College Research Institute in Systematic Theology
had used optical character recognition software in unison with linguistic translation
devices to digitize and catalog an enormous collection of texts—encyclopedias of
religion, religious biographies, sacred scriptures in dozens of languages, histories,
Vatican letters, diaries of clerics, anything at all that qualified as writings on human
spirituality. Because the massive collection was now in the form of bits and bytes rather
than physical pages, the data was infinitely more accessible.
Settling into one of the workstations, Gettum eyed the slip of paper and began typing.
“To begin, we'll run a straight Boolean with a few obvious keywords and see what
happens.”
“Thank you.”
Gettum typed in a few words:
LONDON, KNIGHT, POPE
As she clicked the SEARCH button, she could feel the hum of the massive mainframe
downstairs scanning data at a rate of 500 MB/sec. “I'm asking the system to show us any
documents whose complete text contains all three of these keywords. We'll get more hits
than we want, but it's a good place to start.”

The screen was already showing the first of the hits now.
Painting the Pope. The Collected Portraits of
Sir Joshua Reynolds. London University Press.
Gettum shook her head. “Obviously not what you're looking for.”
She scrolled to the next hit.
The London Writings of Alexander Pope
by G. Wilson Knight.
Again she shook her head.
As the system churned on, the hits came up more quickly than usual. Dozens of texts
appeared, many of them referencing the eighteenth-century British writer Alexander
Pope, whose counterreligious, mock-epic poetry apparently contained plenty of
references to knights and London.
Gettum shot a quick glance to the numeric field at the bottom of the screen. This
computer, by calculating the current number of hits and multiplying by the percentage of
the database left to search, provided a rough guess of how much information would be
found. This particular search looked like it was going to return an obscenely large
amount of data.
Estimated number of total hits: 2,692
“We need to refine the parameters further,” Gettum said, stopping the search. “Is this
all the information you have regarding the tomb? There's nothing else to go on?”
Langdon glanced at Sophie Neveu, looking uncertain.
This is no scavenger hunt, Gettum sensed. She had heard the whisperings of Robert
Langdon's experience in Rome last year. This American had been granted access to the
most secure library on earth—the Vatican Secret Archives. She wondered what kinds of
secrets Langdon might have learned inside and if his current desperate hunt for a
mysterious London tomb might relate to information he had gained within the Vatican.
Gettum had been a librarian long enough to know the most common reason people came
to London to look for knights. The Grail.
Gettum smiled and adjusted her glasses. “You are friends with Leigh Teabing, you are
in England, and you are looking for a knight.” She folded her hands. “I can only assume
you are on a Grail quest.”
Langdon and Sophie exchanged startled looks.

Gettum laughed. “My friends, this library is a base camp for Grail seekers. Leigh
Teabing among them. I wish I had a shilling for every time I'd run searches for the Rose,
Mary Magdalene, Sangreal, Merovingian, Priory of Sion, et cetera, et cetera. Everyone
loves a conspiracy.” She took off her glasses and eyed them. “I need more information.”
In the silence, Gettum sensed her guests' desire for discretion was quickly being
outweighed by their eagerness for a fast result.
“Here,” Sophie Neveu blurted. “This is everything we know.” Borrowing a pen from
Langdon, she wrote two more lines on the slip of paper and handed it to Gettum.
You seek the orb that ought be on his tomb.
It speaks of Rosy flesh and seeded womb.
Gettum gave an inward smile. The Grail indeed, she thought, noting the references to
the Rose and her seeded womb. “I can help you,” she said, looking up from the slip of
paper. “Might I ask where this verse came from? And why you are seeking an orb?”
“You might ask,” Langdon said, with a friendly smile, “but it's a long story and we
have very little time.”
“Sounds like a polite way of saying ‘mind your own business.' ”
“We would be forever in your debt, Pamela,” Langdon said, “if you could find out
who this knight is and where he is buried.”
“Very well,” Gettum said, typing again. “I'll play along. If this is a Grail-related issue,
we should cross-reference against Grail keywords. I'll add a proximity parameter and
remove the title weighting. That will limit our hits only to those instances of textual
keywords that occur near a Grail-related word.”
Search for:
KNIGHT, LONDON, POPE, TOMB
Within 100 word proximity of:
GRAIL, ROSE, SANGREAL, CHALICE
“How long will this take?” Sophie asked.
“A few hundred terabytes with multiple cross-referencing fields?” Gettum's eyes
glimmered as she clicked the SEARCH key. “A mere fifteen minutes.”
Langdon and Sophie said nothing, but Gettum sensed this sounded like an eternity to
them.

“Tea?” Gettum asked, standing and walking toward the pot she had made earlier.
“Leigh always loves my tea.”

The Da Vinci Code

The Da Vinci Code

Score 8.5
Status: Ongoing Type: Author: Dan Brown Released: 2003 Native Language:
Mystery
The Da Vinci Code follows symbologist Robert Langdon and cryptologist Sophie Neveu as they unravel a series of puzzles connected to the murder of a Louvre curator. Their investigation reveals hidden secrets about the Holy Grail and a centuries-old secret society, blending art, history, and religion in a fast-paced thriller.