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991
Saunière
s
clever
anagrammatic
message
was
still
on
his
mind
,
and
Langdon
wondered
what
Sophie
would
find
at
the
Mona
Lisa
if
anything
.
She
had
seemed
certain
her
grandfather
meant
for
her
to
visit
the
famous
painting
one
more
time
.
As
plausible
an
interpretation
as
this
seemed
,
Langdon
felt
haunted
now
by
a
troubling
paradox
.
992
P
.
S
.
Find
Robert
Langdon
.
993
Saunière
had
written
Langdon
s
name
on
the
floor
,
commanding
Sophie
to
find
him
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994
But
why
?
Merely
so
Langdon
could
help
her
break
an
anagram
?
995
It
seemed
quite
unlikely
.
996
After
all
,
Saunière
had
no
reason
to
think
Langdon
was
especially
skilled
at
anagrams
.
We
ve
never
even
met
.
More
important
,
Sophie
had
stated
flat
out
that
she
should
have
broken
the
anagram
on
her
own
.
It
had
been
Sophie
who
spotted
the
Fibonacci
sequence
,
and
,
no
doubt
,
Sophie
who
,
if
given
a
little
more
time
,
would
have
deciphered
the
message
with
no
help
from
Langdon
.
997
Sophie
was
supposed
to
break
that
anagram
on
her
own
.
Langdon
was
suddenly
feeling
more
certain
about
this
,
and
yet
the
conclusion
left
an
obvious
gaping
lapse
in
the
logic
of
Saunière
s
actions
.
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998
Why
me
?
Langdon
wondered
,
heading
down
the
hall
.
Why
was
Saunière
s
dying
wish
that
his
estranged
granddaughter
find
me
?
What
is
it
that
Saunière
thinks
I
know
?
999
With
an
unexpected
jolt
,
Langdon
stopped
short
.
Eyes
wide
,
he
dug
in
his
pocket
and
yanked
out
the
computer
printout
.
He
stared
at
the
last
line
of
Saunière
s
message
.
P
.
S
.
Find
Robert
Langdon
.
He
fixated
on
two
letters
.
P
.
S
.
In
that
instant
,
Langdon
felt
Saunière
s
puzzling
mix
of
symbolism
fall
into
stark
focus
.
Like
a
peal
of
thunder
,
a
career
s
worth
of
symbology
and
history
came
crashing
down
around
him
.
Everything
Jacques
Saunière
had
done
tonight
suddenly
made
perfect
sense
.
Langdon
s
thoughts
raced
as
he
tried
to
assemble
the
implications
of
what
this
all
meant
.
Wheeling
,
he
stared
back
in
the
direction
from
which
he
had
come
.