Inferno: (Robert Langdon Book 4)

Free Inferno: (Robert Langdon Book 4) by Dan Brown

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Authors: Dan Brown
protective foam, finally revealing the object nestled inside.
    Sienna stared down at the contents and cocked her head, looking puzzled. “Definitely not what I expected.”
    Langdon had anticipated some kind of futuristic-looking vial, but the content of the biotube was anything but modern. The ornately carved object appeared to be made of ivory and was approximately the size of a roll of Life Savers.
    “It looks old,” Sienna whispered. “Some kind of …”
    “Cylinder seal,” Langdon told her, finally permitting himself to exhale.
    Invented by the Sumerians in 3500 B.C., cylinder seals were the precursors to the intaglio form of printmaking. Carved with decorative images, a seal contained a hollow shaft, through which an axle pin was inserted so the carved drum could be rolled like a modern paint roller across wet clay or terra-cotta to “imprint” a recurring band of symbols, images, or text.
    This particular seal, Langdon guessed, was undoubtedly quite rare and valuable, and yet he still couldn’t imagine why it would be locked in a titanium canister like some kind of bioweapon.
    As Langdon delicately turned the seal in his fingers, he realized that this one bore an especially gruesome carving—a three-headed, horned Satan who was in the process of eating three different men at once, one man in each of his three mouths.
    Pleasant.
    Langdon’s eyes moved to seven letters carved beneath the devil. The ornate calligraphy was written in mirror image, as was all text on imprinting rollers, but Langdon had no trouble reading the letters— SALIGIA .
    Sienna squinted at the text, reading it aloud. “Saligia?”
    Langdon nodded, feeling a chill to hear the word spoken aloud. “It’s a Latin mnemonic invented by the Vatican in the Middle Ages to remind Christians of the Seven Deadly Sins. Saligia is an acronym for: superbia , avaritia , luxuria , invidia , gula , ira , and acedia .”
    Sienna frowned. “Pride, greed, lust, envy, gluttony, wrath, and sloth.”
    Langdon was impressed. “You know Latin.”
    “I grew up Catholic. I know sin.”
    Langdon managed a smile as he returned his gaze to the seal, wondering again why it had been locked in a biotube as if it were dangerous.
    “I thought it was ivory,” Sienna said. “But it’s bone.” She slid the artifact into the sunlight and pointed to the lines on it. “Ivory forms in a diamond-shaped cross-hatching with translucent striations; bones form with these parallel striations and darkened pitting.”
    Langdon gently picked up the seal and examined the carvings more closely. The original Sumerian seals had been carved with rudimentary figures and cuneiform. This seal, however, was much more elaborately carved. Medieval, Langdon guessed. Furthermore, the embellishments suggested an unsettling connection with his hallucinations.
    Sienna eyed him with concern. “What is it?”
    “Recurring theme,” Langdon said grimly, and motioned to one of the carvings on the seal. “See this three-headed, man-eating Satan? It’s a common image from the Middle Ages—an icon associated with the Black Death. The three gnashing mouths are symbolic of how efficiently the plague ate through the population.”
    Sienna glanced uneasily at the biohazard symbol on the tube.
    Allusions to the plague seemed to be occurring with more frequency this morning than Langdon cared to admit, and so it was with reluctance that he acknowledged a further connection. “ Saligia is representative ofthe collective sins of mankind … which, according to medieval religious indoctrination—”
    “Was the reason God punished the world with the Black Death,” Sienna said, completing his thought.
    “Yes.” Langdon paused, momentarily losing his train of thought. He had just noticed something about the cylinder that struck him as odd. Normally, a person could peer through a cylinder seal’s hollow center, as if through a section of empty pipe, but in this case, the shaft was blocked. There’s

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