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Dan BrownA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
Two men in Turkish police uniforms approach the WHO’s C-130 and demand to take the provost and Dr. Ferris into custody. The provost tells them to call Dr. Sinskey, as he is there assisting her in the crisis. They say it was Sinskey who sent them to arrest him in the first place.
The police take the provost and Dr. Ferris to a car and drive them away from the airport, but then steps suddenly in front of an old service building on a side road. The men remove their uniforms and reveal themselves as undercover Consortium agents the provost had called in for an extraction. The provost dons a disguise and finds a bottle of Highland Park single malt in a duffel with documentation for his escape. He decides not to drink until he is safely away, but he realizes that, no matter what, his days are numbered.
Suddenly, blue police lights flare up all around the car, and armed officers approach them. The provost takes a swig of Scotch as he realizes these officers are real.
Langdon reconnects with Sinskey at the Swiss consulate and explains that Zobrist has released a vector virus. He also tells her that Sienna wishes to help them deal with the situation. Sinskey at first refuses, but Langdon convinces her and brings Sienna into the room.
Sienna scolds Sinskey alongside members of other global advocacy groups for ignoring and ostracizing Zobrist and driving him underground simply for speaking the truth about an uncomfortable problem. She mourns that Zobrist died isolated, alone, and misunderstood. Sinskey admits that she had done wrong by not listening to Zobrist before, but she is listening to Sienna now.
A summit at the WHO headquarters in Geneva is called, at which leading members of the global health community will decide how to deal with Inferno—including whether they should interfere with its effects at all. Sinskey invites Sienna to sit at the table and argue her perspective.
Sinskey preemptively asks Sienna her opinion; Sienna argues that further tampering with the DNA of the entire human species could be far more dangerous than Zobrist’s reckless vector virus. The trio discusses the moral implications of what has happened, and Langdon argues for the Darwinian point of view that nature’s plans for genetic evolution should not be tampered with artificially. Sienna counters that perhaps Zobrist’s invention was an act of nature, allowing a species to become so intelligent that one of its number elects to single-handedly temper its reproductive capabilities.
Sinskey asks Sienna if she approves of what Zobrist has done. Sienna insists that what Zobrist did was reckless and far too dangerous and that if she could have stopped him, she would have. Sinskey believes her.
At Atatürk Airport, Sinskey and Sienna prepare to board a plane to Geneva while Langdon readies to catch his own flight back to Florence. After parting ways with Sinskey, Langdon has a final moment with Sienna. They kiss and share a long embrace, and Langdon leaves her with a parting quote from Dante: “Remember tonight, for it’s the beginning of forever” (457).
Langdon returns to Florence to attend Ignazio Busoni’s funeral inside Il Duomo. Afterward, he returns to his hotel and finds a package from Sinskey containing his own clothing from before his incapacitation, including his beloved Mickey Mouse watch.
The delivery also contains a second package, which Langdon immediately transports to the Palazzo Vecchio. He attempts to see Marta Alvarez, but the security guard happily tells him that she has had her baby. Langdon sneaks through the museum and stealthily removes Dante’s death mask from the package, placing it back in its display case. He discreetly communicates its return to a passing docent as he slips out of the Palazzo.
Langdon is on a red eye back to Boston and engrossed in a reread of Dante’s Divine Comedy. He marvels at Dante’s poetry and is reminded that the poem is not as much about the horrors of Hell as it is about the “power of the human spirit to endure” (463). He reflects on humanity’s rampant denial of is current state and his own indifference to it, promising to himself not to commit the greatest sin of inaction any longer.
The novel closes with the characters facing a post-Inferno world, discussing its implications and what to do about it, if anything at all. Langdon follows through with his promise to unite Sienna amicably with Sinskey, who forgives Sienna for her crimes and even goes so far as to offer her a place in the global dialogue in Geneva. This marks a considerable shift in Sinskey’s character—having begun the novel fearful and dismissive of Zobrist, willing to go to any lengths to drive him underground and keep him from trying to take the overpopulation crisis into his own hands, she now comes to realize that those very tactics are what drove him to create Inferno in the first place. Readjusting her approach with Sienna, Sinskey decides to add this “new breed of thinkers” to the dialogue in Geneva, allowing them to have a voice in the conversation and avoiding creating any more rogue agents (452). This growth on Sinskey’s part proves Langdon right: If Sienna can find ways to trust more, she will find more welcome in the world.
This adjustment by Sinskey also serves to represent the global system’s response to fringe actors in its midst through Sinskey’s representation of the governmental and global elite within the story. Inferno appears to argue that, instead of creating binary ally-enemy distinctions between those who think along the moral status quo and those who seek to break the mold, systems should find ways to subsume these elements back into the system.
The fall of the provost also completes a trend that began when Sienna betrayed the Consortium in the Palazzo Vecchio—the receding of deception. Believing he has pulled off a cunning escape from Sinskey, the provost instead finds himself surrounded by Turkish police, facing imprisonment for his role in hiding Zobrist from the world. Despite his elaborate and professionally executed final trick, fooling the pilots into thinking Sinskey has sent the police to arrest him when in fact his own agents had disguised themselves as officers, the provost finds his power to deceive can do nothing to keep him from facing justice anymore. Thus, while the dangerous technology of Inferno has been successfully unleashed into the world, the equally dangerous technology of independent espionage—at least on the part of the Consortium—has been contained.
Langdon’s return to Florence at the close of the novel once again hearkens back to Zobrist’s symbolic pairing of life and death. He attends the funeral of Ignazio Busoni—his friend and accomplice in stealing Dante’s death mask who died of a heart attack the night of the theft—and travels back to the Palazzo Vecchio with the intention of returning the mask to find that Marta Alvarez has had her baby.
By Dan Brown
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