NB:
As always… do read the previous chapters first before reading this. As for those who have left comments and sent me emails, I hope you'll like the following chapter. Do keep on voting and commenting =) You all make my day!
Chapter Four
Beatrice…
What was so special about her… until the four guardians let Dante through the gates into Inferno? No one was powerful enough to overcome them- not even himself when he tried to walk down that path again…
Oh… but Dante had walked through… unscathed through the depths of Inferno, guarded by the four horsemen. He had read Dante's work of course. Impressed as he was with the accuracy of the description that matched his own experiences, he was still unsatisfied not knowing how the poet had done it.
He had tried… in 1337; almost a millennium later to visit that ninth circle in Hell. He had laughed of course when the four horsemen stopped him at the gates. How dare they? They were
his
knights!
"You are not worthy to enter beyond these gates," said the first rider, on his white horse. He recognized that face and that voice from anywhere and proceeded only to be stopped by the sword of the second rider, aimed at his chest.
"You have been judged not worthy. If you proceed, you will have to overpower us first," said the second horseman. The first horseman had already drawn his bow and arrow and both faced the man who wanted to enter the gates of Hell.
"My knights… Abben, Aqurico… I have walked this path on my own and I will do so once again. I command you to step aside you blistering fools!" he had shouted. The first arrow went to his chest and the sword aimed at his throat.
"LEAVE!" the voices of the two horsemen echoed loud in his ears.
When he woke up, he was back, in England; bounded and dragged by the red horse of Aqurico. Aqurico had brought with him war and rivalry on earth. It was punishment for humanity for daring to seek entrance into the afterlife before their time.
Dante had warned in the first few pages of his book
"Abandon hope all ye who enters here!"
and was a fair warning to the likes of Olybrius who was greedy enough to seek favors from the Devil for the second time.
The hundred years war between England and France raged with no mercy; rampaging the lands and sacrificing lives for the nobility. He had watched many of his royal descendants die. Though the war was a struggle for land and resources, he knew who had instigated the intense desire for rivalry in the nobles and it had increased his anger and spite towards the four of them even more.
He didn't care much for the silly lives of his descendants. If he could bear killing his own daughter, what significance do these other lives mean to him? Olybrius had once again tried to walk through the gates of Hell in 1348, but this time, he was only met with one horseman- Adrian, on his black horse.
He had known Adrian as the imperial physician and mentor for his children. The man was gentle as he was kind and spoke only the kindest words. He felt more confident this time of overpowering the third horseman. What worst could come after 10 years of war?
Oh… he had underestimated Adrian. The horseman did not say anything to him but had let him walk through the gates. But after 10 steps, Olybrius had felt his legs growing weaker, unable to carry his weight further into the Inferno. Looking down, he saw boils and blisters the size of saucers eating into his flesh. The pain knocked him unconscious and in 1948, Adrian had descended to earth bringing the Black Death with him. Diseases killed not only humans but plants and animals too- causing widespread famine and deprivation for humanity. This time, with himself inflicted with the pain and suffering brought about by the Black Death, Olybrius had pleaded with Adrian to stop and he will return no more to seek access to the Inferno.
Adrian's massacre killed more than half of the world's population, within a shorter period of time than during Aqurico's descent. Olybrius had begged Adrian to spare his life in return for his promise to safeguard their secret and to protect all of them from the last descent of the fourth horseman. Adrian, who could not judge the truth and sincerity of a man's words, had called Abben and Aqurico down to decide Olybrius's fate.
"I promise! I will safeguard all your secrets! I will not hesitate to kill anyone who comes even an inch close to finding out about us! I promise! Please, please Abben, my most trusted knight! Please believe me!" he had pleaded.
"If you or anyone arrives at the gates of Inferno again, Apocalypse will be doomed on humanity. Remember that, Flavius Anicius Olybrius," said Abben.
Then the three brothers disappeared and the world began to heal; Olybrius had commissioned a young painter to paint his portrait in case he was to die and in his solitary suffering, he had confided to him. No church would accept him for his sins were too great and he had no family left… After Juliana, all he ever craved for was power.
He had given her everything; she was his child and he loved her so much. But she had been ungrateful to him even after he had married her off to Dagalaiphus, who was a royalty and wealthy. He had given her a privileged life she should have been thankful for but she had threatened to reveal his secret and find a way to destroy him.
He had been weakened from his trip down the ninth circle of Inferno to see the Devil; happiness and joy sucked out from his soul as payment for their deal. He now lived, barely alive and lifeless among the living. He had returned to bring with him his four knights for their last journey and had come for some of her possessions.
"Don't go digging into things you cannot understand…" he had said when she asked him why he was doing this.
"Why can't I Papa?" Juliana had challenged as she sat at the edge of her bed. Beside her were weapons that looked far too powerful to be wielded by a woman.
"Because I say so. Now give me those!"he had yelled at her.
Juliana eyed him with great disdain and distrust. His skin were crackled and stripped close to the bone and his face no longer bore resemblance to the man she called her father. It was sunken as if all blood had drained from it; leaving the skin flapping on bones. He had demanded for her hunting bow and her scales which she had used to weigh the herbs and leaves for her studies. They were embalmed with the royal mark and were her precious belongings.