By Laurence Hughes (Publishers Weekly)
-- In the Louvre, Robert Langdon's thoughts turned back to Sauniere,
the chief curator. A remarkable man, Langdon mused. Shot in the
stomach, with just minutes to live, Sauniere had managed to arrange a
trail of clues for Langdon to follow and - incredibly - still had time
to complete the crossword in Le Monde before he died.
Now Sophie had discovered another
clue in the museum bookstore. On the floor, scrawled in Sauniere's own
blood, was a set of vertical lines with corresponding numbers. Below
that was another string of numbers, interspersed with dashes. Beneath
it all, a cryptic message: "PIE CAN SNUB"
"What does it mean?" Sophie asked.
"What kind of pie?"
"The message is an anagram,"
Langdon said. He took out a notebook and pen and rearranged the
letters of "PIE CAN SNUB" to read "UPC ISBN EAN."
"That makes less sense than the
first message," Sophie said. "And those lines look like... like prison
bars."
"You're close," Langdon said. "Not
prison bars, but bar codes!"
"A UPC! I must be blind," she said.
"I see them all the time, on everything from adult diapers to
Dippity-Doo. Of course, they aren't usually printed in blood."
"That's not a Universal Product
Code," Langdon said. He pointed at the floor. "You see that set of
numbers, separate from the bar code? That's an ISBN - International
Standard Book Number. It's specific to the publishing industry and
identifies books and book-related products. Those 10 digits tell you
the country of manufacture, the publisher, the title - everything."
"You're amazing!" she said. "How do
you know all this?"
"You forget, I'm a published
author." Langdon's latest book, Holy Grail - Holy Cow!, was
already climbing bestseller lists. "The bar code Sauniere drew
corresponds to a 13-digit EAN - European Article Number. Notice
anything about it?"
Sophie stared at the symbol.
"Nope."
Good thing she's cute, Langdon
thought. "The EAN includes the ISBN," he told her. "It's called
'ISBN-13.'"
"What's the significance of the
first three numbers: 978?" she asked.
"You're familiar with 666? From the
Book of Revelation? The Mark of the Beast?"
"Yes...."
"Well, this has nothing to do with
that. Those digits indicate a country of origin. The prefix 978
identifies the country as Bookland. 978 is also an area code in
Massachusetts," he added.
"The things you know! But wait a
minute - there is no such country as Bookland."
"You won't find it on any map,"
Langdon said, "but it exists all right - at least in the minds of a
handful of powerful people in the publishing industry."
"Who are they?"
"BISG," Langdon said. "Book
Industry Study Group - an innocuous-sounding name for a very
mysterious organization. Not much is known about them. We believe the
founders were once Freemasons who were expelled for actually doing
masonry - patios, retaining walls, that sort of thing. They formed a
splinter group, and began to infiltrate the book business. Today their
tentacles reach into every area of publishing."
"And Bookland?"
"A shadow country," Langdon said.
"If BISG has its way, Bookland will one day encompass the entire
world. All books everywhere will be bought and sold within its
borders."
"It's insidious! Can anything be
done?"
Langdon shook his head. "I'm afraid
it started more than a year ago. They called it 'Sunrise 2005' - the
dawn of a New Age. Nothing can stop it now. By January 1, 2007,
ISBN-13 will be the dominant bar code in the publishing world.
Forever."
"Robert, I'm scared."
Langdon pointed again. "That ISBN
and EAN denote the same product. Don't you see? Sauniere was trying to
lead us to a specific book!" He grabbed the scanning gun, stretched it
to the scrawled symbol, and scanned the bloody bar code. Then he
hurried behind the counter and stared at the display.
"Of course!" he cried. "It's the
answer to a question I put to Sauniere before he died!"
"Was it about Leonardo?" Sophie
asked, hurrying to join him. "Opus Dei? The Holy Grail?"
"No," Langdon said. "I asked him if
he knew a good airplane read for my flight back to Boston."
Open-mouthed, Sophie stared at the
words on the screen:
The Da Vinci Code by Dan
Brown
Copyright © 2006 Publishers Weekly