Sienna, fearful of what the governments of the world might do with Zobrist’s technology, had not intended to release Inferno but to hide it. Overpopulation is a problem and Dan Brown proposes an elegant solution in the form of a 'plague' which PLOT TWIST: Doesnt actually kill anyone, but makes the 1/3 of the population (by random) become infertile. As a result, the human population will decrease over time, thus avoiding what Zobrist saw as an inevitable environmental collapse. He (or She) then goes into an explanation of how the ending has been changed compared to the book. And since the virus embeds in the germline, it will also render one-third of unborn humans infertile as well. Remorseful, Sienna confesses that the Inferno virus will not kill billions but instead will randomly render one-third of the world’s population infertile. She almost escapes but turns back when she realizes she has nowhere else to go. When Langdon discovers that Sienna is also present in the cistern, he chases her across the city. They track Inferno to Istanbul’s ancient cistern, but they are too late, and the virus is released. Fearful that Sienna intends to release the plague on her own, Langdon joins Sinskey, Brüder, and the provost (who allies with the others following the discovery of Zobrist’s plot) in traveling to Istanbul, hoping to find Inferno before Sienna.
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