His smile was characteristically warm in response to the younger man's greeting, but the slightest hint of amusement lurked within his old eyes. It wasn't advancing years that meant this harbinger had lost count of how many times he'd offered to help the Typh advocate with his gaelic studies. It was close to becoming a running joke between the two men, even though it never felt as though his offers were truly rejected so much as politely postponed, and he couldn't help but imagine that one day the other would learn to speak - or at least pronounce - fluently the language of the Council.
"May I?" he asked, easing himself into a nearby chair opposite the younger man. There was no sense of urgency in his movements, and nothing about his demeanour suggested that he expected an immediate response to his question. Indeed, he rested his elbows on the arms of his chair, steepling his fingers as he leaned back and closed his eyes. Never pass up the opportunity for a little meditation. Nonetheless, intuition or perhaps long experience meant his eyes were open several seconds before the Typh laid the scroll on the table between them. For a few further moments the men regarded each other in silence. Then Lario's eyes closed briefly, and he sighed, his expression becoming more serious.
"You reach the same conclusion as I was forced into" he agreed. "The first report was some nine months ago, but that was the first time the energies had come to our attention. As you may be aware, there are currently very few of us based in that region, so it's quite possible the disturbances have been going on for some time. And, as you rightly say, a group of rogues could cause these shifts, but it doesn't seem logical they would place themselves so far away. Historically..." he paused, thinking for a moment. It was of course possible that a group or even a rogue couple had chosen this location precisely because it was so far out of the way. But if that was the case, they surely had their reasons. He shook his head. When he spoke again, his voice was a little softer.
"The first elemental I ever met hailed from Venezuela. I had no idea such a place existed at that time, and I always vowed I would visit her land, even after she returned to our element. That is a vow I have, so far, failed to keep. A foolish notion, perhaps, but when I learned of this...circumstance, my long-held curiosity about this part of the world resurfaced. Of course, I could not travel alone, and in such a region, it seems only natural that somebody at one with the air would find the environment easiest to navigate."
This was no clandestine jaunt the old man was suggesting. As one of the six harbingers, he had the right to investigate anything that could threaten the safety of the council, even though he had barely left Inverness in years. And a possible Pythia certainly needed investigation and ultimately bringing to the Council where the child could be properly cared for. But if that was truly what awaited, thousands of miles away...it could be the most dangerous adventure he faced in a century.