Origin

Origin by Dan Brown Page A

Book: Origin by Dan Brown Read Free Book Online
Authors: Dan Brown
Ads: Link
cloth behind him.
    All illusions evaporated.
    Ávila was no longer standing in a meadow.
    He was in an enormous rectangular space that was dominated by a sprawling oval-shaped bubble.
A room built within a room.
The construction before him—a domed theater of sorts—was surrounded by a towering exoskeleton of scaffolding that supported a tangle of cables, lights, and audio speakers. Pointing inward, a shimmering array of video projectors glowed in unison, casting wide beams of light downward onto the translucent surface of the dome, and creating the illusion within of a starlit sky and rolling hills.
    Ávila admired Kirsch’s knack for drama, although the futurist could never have imagined just how dramatic his night would soon turn out to be.
    Remember what is at stake. You are a soldier in a noble war. Part of a greater whole.
    Ávila had rehearsed this mission in his mind numerous times. He reached into his pocket and pulled out the oversized rosary beads. At that moment, from an overhead bank of speakers inside the dome, a man’s voice thundered down like the voice of God.
    “Good evening, friends. My name is Edmond Kirsch.”

CHAPTER 16
    IN BUDAPEST, RABBI Köves paced nervously in the dim light of his
házikó
study. Clutching his TV remote, he flipped anxiously through the channels as he awaited further news from Bishop Valdespino.
    On television, several news channels had interrupted their regular programming during the past ten minutes to carry the live feed coming out of the Guggenheim. Commentators were discussing Kirsch’s accomplishments and speculating about his mysterious upcoming announcement. Köves cringed at the snowballing level of interest.
    I have seen this announcement already.
    Three days ago, on the mountain of Montserrat, Edmond Kirsch had previewed an alleged “rough-cut” version for Köves, al-Fadl, and Valdespino. Now, Köves suspected, the world was about to see the same exact program.
    Tonight everything will change
, he thought sadly.
    The phone rang and jolted Köves from his contemplation. He seized the handset.
    Valdespino began without preamble. “Yehuda, I’m afraid I have some more bad news.” In a somber voice, he conveyed a bizarre report that was now coming out of the United Arab Emirates.
    Köves covered his mouth in horror. “Allamah al-Fadl … committed
suicide
?”
    “That is what the authorities are speculating. He was found a short time ago, deep in the desert … as if he had simply walked out there to die.” Valdespino paused. “All I can guess is that the strain of the last few days was too much for him.”
    Köves considered the possibility, feeling a wave of heartbreak and confusion. He too had been struggling with the implications of Kirsch’s discovery, and yet the idea that Allamah al-Fadl would kill himself in despair seemed wholly unlikely.
    “Something is wrong here,” Köves declared. “I don’t believe he would do such a thing.”
    Valdespino fell silent for a long time. “I’m glad you said that,” he finally agreed. “I have to admit, I too find it quite difficult to accept that this was a suicide.”
    “Then … who could be responsible?”
    “Anyone who wanted Edmond Kirsch’s discovery to remain a secret,” the bishop replied quickly. “Someone who believed, as we did, that his announcement was still weeks away.”
    “But Kirsch said nobody else
knew
about the discovery!” Köves argued. “Only you, Allamah al-Fadl, and myself.”
    “Maybe Kirsch lied about that too. But even if the three of us
are
the only ones he told, don’t forget how desperately our friend Syed al-Fadl wanted to go public. It’s possible that the
allamah
shared information about Kirsch’s discovery with a colleague in the Emirates. And maybe that colleague believed, as I do, that Kirsch’s discovery would have dangerous repercussions.”
    “Implying what?” the rabbi demanded angrily. “That an associate of al-Fadl
killed
him in order to keep this

Similar Books

Red

Kate Serine

Noble

Viola Grace

Dream Warrior

Sherrilyn Kenyon

Chains and Canes

Katie Porter

Gangland Robbers

James Morton

The Tale of Cuckoo Brow Wood

Susan Wittig Albert