Justin was the one who met me in the lobby shortly after I arrived for
our meeting. Angeline, he said, was saving a conference room. As we walked, he
kept flashing me smiles as if that made up for something wrong. From where I
was standing, there was nothing wrong. The smiles were flattering; I could see
why she might like him, though I could also see how his confidence could be
annoying.
The conference room was all windows on two walls, 30 stories up, and had an
oblong table in the center surrounded by cushioned chairs. Angeline was
standing at the window when we entered, enjoying the view of downtown; at this
height, you could barely hear the traffic below.
“It’s wonderful to see you again, Miss Jones,” Angeline said with a
strained smile. “You’re looking wonderful, though you could stand to use some
sun.”
That must have been why Caroline liked her. “It’s a medical condition,” I
lied, smiling. There was nothing wrong with the woman; she was pretty much just
like Caroline, even if it didn’t make her the most eloquent or flattering of
people. “And please, call me Leirba.”
It was still strange giving people a name that wasn’t technically mine;
all the practice in my spare time helped, though.
“Shall we sit?” Justin asked, pulling a seat out for me. I took the seat,
on the corner of the table. He helped Angeline sit, as well, before sitting
across from me.
“So what is the goal of your revolution?” Angeline asked, sitting back in
her chair.
Passing them each an overview sheet, I summarized, “The goal is to reveal
the corruption of our government through the oppression and mistreatment of
elementals—citizens who are gifted with the ability to manipulate a certain primary
element.” When I said elementals, Justin
tensed and his brows knit; a second later he had regained a neutral composure. “In
the process, the current government may be completely removed, but that remains
to be seen. For sure we’re aiming for exposure and liberation, our rights as
people and citizens.”
“Are you sure you want to do this?” Justin asked after a moment. A bead
of sweat creeped down his right temple.
Justin’s response didn’t worry me as Kora had already reacted similarly;
Angeline was different, though. She stared, her lips pursed and eyes widened in
disbelief, and a single thought scrolled continuously through her mind.
“It’s already in the works,” I answered, flipping to the front of my binder
and pulling out the disks. “One of the disks is the rough draft of the
commercials we’re putting together.”
“Commercials?” Angeline asked, one of her eyebrows arching high.
“To intrigue viewers into visiting the website, which the content for is
on the other disk if you wanted to look over that; in that case is also a paper
with the information needed to view the developing website. It’s mostly set up
already and it explains our cause.”
“People won’t believe it’s real,” Justin said, staring at the CDs on the
table before him.
“That’s where we disagree,” I politely said, sitting forward. I knew this
was going to be an uphill battle; the whole two years were going to be an
uphill battle. So far I was doing pretty good, but I wasn’t sure how long I was
going to be able to last at this rate. “I think most people want to believe
there’s some magic left in the world. It’s why people are interested in Wicca,
even if they won’t ever practice it. Why supernatural books sell and movies are
made. Deep down, we all want to believe there’s some kind of magic left in the
world, that miracles can still happen.”
He stared at me and I wasn’t sure if that was a good thing. After neither
of them said anything, I stood. Right now, it didn’t matter if they believed
me. All they had to do was keep my movement from sinking due to legal issues.
“Just do your job.”
I was halfway down the hall before Justin stopped me. He instructed me to
follow and then led me past the elevators and into what I presumed to be his
office. Once there, he closed the blinds on all of the windows and locked the
door.
“Why do you want to do this?” he asked, sitting on the black leather couch
he had in the corner.
Still standing, I said, “Because it has to be done.”
“Exposing all of us is the only way?”
Ian’s instinct about the past was seeming more right by the second; given
the opposition I was coming against, it seemed easy to believe everyone else
who had tried before had been stopped by someone else; discouraged by someone
telling them it was wrong. But no one could convince me what I was doing was
wrong. Not because it wasn’t frightening to think how others might handle the
news, but because there was a greater wrong happening that needed to stop. We
weren’t weapons; we were people, and we deserved the right to live our lives.
“If you expose yourself, it’s your own thing. But people have to know we
exist. If they don’t, we can’t stop what’s happening.” It struck me suddenly
that he might not have known what was happening to us, how oppressed we were. “You
do know about that, right?”
“Of course, I know. We all know.” He bowed his head, rubbing his temples.
“So, wild guess, fire?”
“Yeah. I’m guessing you’re air.”
Nodding, I sat down next to him. “I’m not forcing anyone to admit
anything they don’t want to. I have given everyone on my team a choice, and any
of them are allowed to back out when they feel it’s too much. You’re only
association with us will be as a lawyer,” I said, feeling a need to comfort him.
“It’s completely up to you if people learn otherwise.”
Justin sighed and looked at me. “Okay.”
“I need to be going now.”
He unlocked the door and walked me to the elevator. I hoped he would be
okay; part of me also hoped he would choose to reveal himself as an elemental and truly accept himself.
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