The Lost Symbol (Robert Langdon)

The Lost Symbol (Robert Langdon) by Dan Brown Page B

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Authors: Dan Brown
Tags: Fiction
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feel any hesitation creating it?”
    Trish didn’t blink. “Absolutely not. My software is no different than say . . . a flight simulator program. Some users will practice flying first-aid missions into underdeveloped countries. Some users will practice flying passenger jets into skyscrapers. Knowledge is a tool, and like all tools, its impact is in the hands of the user.”
    Katherine sat back, looking impressed. “So let me ask you a hypothetical question.”
    Trish suddenly sensed their conversation had just turned into a job interview.
    Katherine reached down and picked up a tiny speck of sand off the deck, holding it up for Trish to see. “It occurs to me,” she said, “that your metasystems work essentially lets you calculate the weight of an entire sandy beach . . . by weighing one grain at a time.”
    “Yes, basically that’s right.”
    “As you know, this little grain of sand has
mass
. A very small mass, but mass nonetheless.”
    Trish nodded.
    “And
because
this grain of sand has mass, it therefore exerts
gravity
. Again, too small to feel, but there.”
    “Right.”
    “Now,” Katherine said, “if we take trillions of these sand grains and let them attract one another to form . . . say, the
moon,
then their combined gravity is enough to move entire oceans and drag the tides back and forth across our planet.”
    Trish had no idea where this was headed, but she liked what she was hearing.
    “So let’s take a hypothetical,” Katherine said, discarding the sand grain. “What if I told you that a
thought
. . . any tiny idea that forms in your mind . . . actually has
mass
? What if I told you that a thought is an actual
thing,
a measurable entity, with a measurable mass? A minuscule mass, of course, but
mass
nonetheless. What are the implications?”
    “Hypothetically speaking
?
Well, the obvious implications are . . . if a thought has mass, then a thought exerts gravity and can pull things toward it.”
    Katherine smiled. “You’re good. Now take it a step further. What happens if many people start focusing on the
same
thought? All the occurrences of that same thought begin to merge into one, and the cumulative mass of this thought begins to grow. And therefore, its gravity grows.”
    “Okay.”
    “Meaning . . . if enough people begin thinking the same thing, then the gravitational force of that thought becomes tangible . . . and it exerts actual force.” Katherine winked. “And it can have a measurable effect in our physical world.”

CHAPTER 19
    Director Inoue Sato stood with her arms folded, her eyes locked skeptically on Langdon as she processed what he had just told her. “He said he wants you to unlock an ancient portal? What am I supposed to do with
that,
Professor?”
    Langdon shrugged weakly. He was feeling ill again and tried not to look down at his friend’s severed hand. “That’s exactly what he told me. An ancient portal . . . hidden somewhere in this building. I told him I knew of no portal.”
    “Then why does he think
you
can find it?”
    “Obviously, he’s insane.”
He said Peter would point the way.
Langdon looked down at Peter’s upstretched finger, again feeling repulsed by his captor’s sadistic play on words.
Peter will point the way.
Langdon had already permitted his eyes to follow the pointing finger up to the dome overhead.
A portal? Up there? Insane.
    “This man who called me,” Langdon told Sato, “was the
only
one who knew I was coming to the Capitol tonight, so whoever informed
you
I was here tonight, that’s your man. I recommend—”
    “Where I got my information is not your concern,” Sato interrupted, voice sharpening. “My top priority at the moment is to cooperate with this man, and I have information suggesting
you
are the only one who can give him what he wants.”
    “And
my
top priority is to find my friend,” Langdon replied, frustrated.
    Sato inhaled deeply, her patience clearly being tested. “If we want to find Mr. Solomon, we have

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