PART THREE β PARIS
- 6 -
Returning to the Louvre, the surroundings now felt familiar enough to Gabe that he no longer needed to follow Saphy's lead to find his way to the gallery where the Hermaphroditus statue lounged on his soft mattress. This familiarity would have been comforting to Gabe were he not such a complete bundle of nerves as to barely register that his feet were instinctively taking him in the right direction. He could not help replaying Atalanta's threat through his mind and imagining the eyes of all the white marble statues following him through the museum as he headed straight back to the one place to which he had been warned not to return.
Every statue of a towering goddess armed and poised to strike, he imagined was one of the murderous naiads about to deal out to him the same treatment that they had to the poor victim at the National Gallery back in London. He could barely concentrate on what Saphy was saying about the mystery as his attention continually darted around the room in search of anything out of the ordinary.
Both the previous times he had encountered Atalanta and the naiads, they had appeared and disappeared silently, with barely a flutter of white fabric for him to notice. This scared him more than anything, the idea that they could suddenly be there just where he was looking without him ever seeing them arrive. For all he knew, they could be there watching him right now. His back twitched and tingled, half expecting to be impaled with the shaft of a deadly arrow at any moment.
Saphy, however, seemed exhilarated by the whole situation. While Gabe glanced around silently and nervously, Saphy was more talkative than he had ever seen her. The mystery and danger seemed to suit her and find her in her element. Gabe did not know whether this newfound chattiness and enthusiasm was just a different reaction to nervous fear to his, or whether she was genuinely excited. Whatever the reason, as they approached the reclining nude hermaphrodite once more, Saphy was in full flow with her latest idea.
"I've been reading some of the books that I, er, borrowed from the library back in Cambridge," she was explaining as they crossed the red and white squares of the gallery floor, "I think we've been looking in the wrong place. It's not the statue itself that holds the clue."
"What? How do you mean?" Gabe asked, distractedly half listening as he suspiciously eyed up the statue of Diana with her quiver full of arrows, "If it's not the statue why are we here? Why are we putting ourselves in danger?"
"It's not the statue. It's the mattress he's lying on."
"Huh?"
"The statue dates right back to the Roman period, but the mattress doesn't," she explained, "It was made after the statue's rediscovery in the 1600s, the time that all of Europe suddenly became excited about the Hermaphroditus and Salmacis legend. If any part of the statue is going to leave us a clue, it's that."
"Why that part, specifically?"
"Because of the artist that made it. Cardinal Borghese commissioned his protΓ©gΓ©, a young sculptor named Gian Lorenzo Bernini to create the mattress. Bernini went on to become the leading sculptor and architect in all of Italy. And, here's the interesting part..."
"What?"
"Bernini was rumoured to be a member of the Illuminati, the secret society, and could not resist containing all manner of coded clues and suggestions in his sculptures. The mattress here is one of his earliest works. If he had any knowledge of the secret of Salmacis, he is bound to have left his mark, left us a clue somewhere."
"OK, but where?" Gabe was beginning to get hooked in by Saphy's excitement, beginning to get interested in the mystery at the expense of his caution, "We can't just turn over all the buttons on the mattress without attracting some suspicion."
"Hmmm, good point," she agreed, "Still, that's a good idea about the buttons. That's probably the best place to hide something. If we could just prize one up without the guard noticing."