National Treasure
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:13:07
It's Templar symbols.
:13:16
"The legend writ. "
:13:18
"The stain effected. "
:13:20
"The key in Silence undetected. "
:13:23
"Fifty-five in iron pen. "
:13:27
"Mr Matlack can't offend. "
:13:33
It's a riddle.
:13:38
I need to think.
:13:43
"The legend writ. "
:13:45
"The stain effected. "
:13:48
What legend?
:13:51
There's the legend of the Templar treasure,
and the stain effects the legend.

:13:55
How?
:13:57
"The key in Silence undetected. "
:14:00
Wait.
:14:03
The legend and the key...
Now there's something.

:14:07
A map.
:14:08
Maps have legends, maps have keys.
:14:11
It's a map, an invisible map.
So now...

:14:13
Wait a minute. What do you mean,
"invisible" - "an invisible map"?

:14:17
"The stain effected"
could refer to a dye or a reagent

:14:21
used to bring about a certain result.
:14:24
Combined with
"The key in Silence undetected",

:14:26
the implication is that the effect is to make
what was undetectable detectable.

:14:32
Unless...
"The key in Silence" could be...

:14:36
Prison.
:14:39
Albuquerque.
:14:41
See, I can do it too.
Snorkel.

:14:44
That's where the map is.
Like he said, "Fifty-five in iron pen. "

:14:46
"Iron pen" is a prison.
:14:48
Or it could be, since the primary writing
medium of the time was iron gall ink,

:14:53
the "pen" is... just a pen.
:14:56
But then why not say a pen?
Why... why say "iron pen"?


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