![]() Neveu don’t want that because her grandfather has chosen her to pass on the secret to the ones who are worth it and Teabing is not one of those. Teabing has got the cryptex and forces Neveu and Langdon to tell the solution or else they get shot. He was the one who worked against them and he heard everything they said. Langdon and Neveu do what the message said and when they arrive at that place, they see Teabing standing there whit a Medusa revolver in his hand. When they arrive at Westminster Abbey, they see a message left by the kidnapper that tells that they have to come to a special place in Westminster Abbey. They find Westminster Abbey were they could find the solution for the cryptex. Langdon and Neveu go to the King’s College to search for the solution whit the entry’s they have. Langdon and Neveu realise that the one who has the cryptex, also want to know what’s the solution. Langdon gives them the cryptex and they leave with the cryptex and Teabing. Langdon and Neveu are forced by the monk Silas and the employee of Teabing, Rémy to give them the cryptex because they have kidnapped Teabing. They see that it has to be the wrong chruch and they get an unpleasant surprise. Eventually Langdon, Neveu and Teabing arrive in Londen and go to the Temple Church to find the solution of the second cryptex. Langdon and Neveu have to open that to, but they have in the meantime the French police force behind itself and members of the Opus Dei. But after they have opened the cryptex, they find another second cryptex and not the expected way to the Grail. ![]() ![]() Together with Teabing they could open the cryptex. He is a relious historian and his life passion is the Holy Grail. For that they go to an old friend of Langdon, Leigh Teabing. The keystone is a cryptex, designed by Leonardo Da Vinci. Soon Langdon and Neveu find the keystone in a Swiss bank after they have solved the indications that Saunière made. If this secret comes out, this would be the end of the power of the Vatican en the society Opus Dei. The secret is scrupulously kept by the Priory of Sion (a secret society where Saunière was the master of) until the time is good to reveal the secret. They find out that the clues are related to the great secret around the Holy Greal. With Neveu on his side, Langdon tries to solve the cryptic indications and find out what secret Saunière has tried to pass on after his dead. Together with Neveu, Langdon succeeds to escape from the police, who seems that they gladly want to arrest Langdon for the murder. One refers to Sophie Neveu (cryptographer and Saunières granddaughter). But Saunière also wrote a number of other cryptic texts. Langdon is the most important suspect because he had an appointment with Saunière and the fact that Saunière, before he died, wrote the name of Langdon on the floor. The meeting had never took place because of the murder. Robert Langdon, an American professor of religious symbology on Harvard University, would meet the curator that very same evening. (Mar.The story starts with the murder of the curator of the Louvre museum’s Grand Gallery, Jacques Saunière. Still, Brown has assembled a whopper of a plot that will please both conspiracy buffs and thriller addicts. Brown sometimes ladles out too much religious history at the expense of pacing, and Langdon is a hero in desperate need of more chutzpah. Both have their own reasons for wanting to ensure that the Grail isn't found. As their search moves from France to England, Neveu and Langdon are confounded by two mysterious groups-the legendary Priory of Sion, a nearly 1,000-year-old secret society whose members have included Botticelli and Isaac Newton, and the conservative Catholic organization Opus Dei. The two find several puzzling codes at the murder scene, all of which form a treasure map to the fabled Holy Grail, where proof of the Jesus bloodline supposedly can be found. Seizing control of the case are Sophie Neveu, a lovely French police cryptologist, and Harvard symbol expert Robert Langdon, reprising his role from Brown's last book. The action kicks off in modern-day Paris with the murder of the Louvre's chief curator, whose body is found laid out in symbolic repose at the foot of the Mona Lisa. What if Jesus Christ had a tryst with Mary Magdalene, and the interlude produced a child? Such a possibility-yielding a so-called royal bloodline-provides the framework for Brown's latest thriller (after Angels and Demons), an exhaustively researched page-turner about secret religious societies, ancient coverups and savage vengeance.
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