-
Главная
-
- Книги
-
- Авторы
-
- Дэн Браун
-
- Код да Винчи
-
- Стр. 86/436
Для того чтобы воспользоваться озвучкой предложений, необходимо
Войти или зарегистрироваться
Озвучка предложений доступна при наличии PRO-доступа
Купить PRO-доступ
Emerging
from
the
shadows
,
Langdon
and
Sophie
moved
stealthily
up
the
deserted
Grand
Gallery
corridor
toward
the
emergency
exit
stairwell
.
As
he
moved
,
Langdon
felt
like
he
was
trying
to
assemble
a
jigsaw
puzzle
in
the
dark
.
The
newest
aspect
of
this
mystery
was
a
deeply
troubling
one
:
The
captain
of
the
Judicial
Police
is
trying
to
frame
me
for
murder
«
Do
you
think
,
»
he
whispered
,
»
that
maybe
Fache
wrote
that
message
on
the
floor
?
»
Sophie
didn
’
t
even
turn
.
«
Impossible
.
»
Langdon
wasn
’
t
so
sure
.
«
He
seems
pretty
intent
on
making
me
look
guilty
.
Maybe
he
thought
writing
my
name
on
the
floor
would
help
his
case
?
»
«
The
Fibonacci
sequence
?
The
P
.
S
.
?
All
the
Da
Vinci
and
goddess
symbolism
?
That
had
to
be
my
grandfather
.
»
Langdon
knew
she
was
right
.
The
symbolism
of
the
clues
meshed
too
perfectly
–
the
pentacle
,
TheVitruvian
Man
,
Da
Vinci
,
the
goddess
,
and
even
the
Fibonacci
sequence
.
A
coherent
symbolic
set
,
as
iconographers
would
call
it
.
All
inextricably
tied
.
«
And
his
phone
call
to
me
this
afternoon
,
»
Sophie
added
.
«
He
said
he
had
to
tell
me
something
.
I
’
m
certain
his
message
at
the
Louvre
was
his
final
effort
to
tell
me
something
important
,
something
he
thought
you
could
help
me
understand
.
»
Langdon
frowned
.
O
,
Draconian
devil
!
Oh
,
lame
saint
!
He
wished
he
could
comprehend
the
message
,
both
for
Sophie
’
s
well
-
being
and
for
his
own
.
Things
had
definitely
gotten
worse
since
he
first
laid
eyes
on
the
cryptic
words
.
His
fake
leap
out
the
bathroom
window
was
not
going
to
help
Langdon
’
s
popularity
with
Fache
one
bit
.
Somehow
he
doubted
the
captain
of
the
French
police
would
see
the
humor
in
chasing
down
and
arresting
a
bar
of
soap
.
«
The
doorway
isn
’
t
much
farther
,
»
Sophie
said
.
»
Do
you
think
there
’
s
a
possibility
that
the
numbers
in
your
grandfather
’
s
message
hold
the
key
to
understanding
the
other
lines
?
»
Langdon
had
once
worked
on
a
series
of
Baconian
manuscripts
that
contained
epigraphical
ciphers
in
which
certain
lines
of
code
were
clues
as
to
how
to
decipher
the
other
lines
.
«
I
’
ve
been
thinking
about
the
numbers
all
night
.
Sums
,
quotients
,
products
.
I
don
’
t
see
anything
.
Mathematically
,
they
’
re
arranged
at
random
.
Cryptographic
gibberish
.
»
«
And
yet
they
’
re
all
part
of
the
Fibonacci
sequence
.
That
can
’
t
be
coincidence
.
»