The old elemental had a suspicion what this was about. Not the source, or what was actually worrying his young friend, but there was something in the other's stance, the cadence of his words, some small look in the eyes that added up to major concerns. Perhaps not many would see it, but you didn't get to be almost two centuries old without learning to read the smaller nuances of body language that might otherwise be overlooked. Knowing the other man couldn't currently see his facial expression, Lario allowed himself a smile. He could read people, but not his native tongue. Writing and reading in Spanish was something he hadn't learned as a child, and had simply never got around to. Always there had been more pressing matters...and perhaps there always would be, he mused as they walked on.
Lario didn't try to fill up the silence with poorly-chosen words. There was no need, and he was comfortable with the quiet. It gave him time to compose his thoughts, even before he knew exactly why they were there. When Aiolos finally spoke, it was telling that he too spoke in French. The older man had chosen their mutual language to let him know that it was fine to keep this meeting a secret, that whatever was said would remain between friends. So the Incin elemental listened, saying nothing, until he was sure that the other had finished. In his younger days Lario had been impulsive, excitable, and would likely have interrupted after just a few words, assuming he already understood everything about the situation. Strange, how he would have been so eager to advise a century or more earlier when he would have had so much less to say.
Now, he thought over what had been said. Uncomfortable opinions would be anything that directly contradicted the Council's teachings...so someone was suggesting they reject their stance of neutrality? It wouldn't be the first time that had happened, but while Voldemort was powerful those had been exceptional circumstances. Lario couldn't imagine what might prompt someone to make that suggestion. He dismissed the possibility for now, while at the same time keeping an open mind in case there was something he hadn't thought of.
The other disquieting thought that presented itself was that someone disagreed with elementals keeping apart from the rest of the wizarding world. If that was the case... a suspicion crept quietly into the Spaniard's mind and whispered a name. He had barely noticed that they had reached the top of a small cliff, though now they slowed to a halt he recognised the place.
"When I was a small boy I would climb this hill" he said quietly "I thought it was the biggest adventure I could have on my own; everything else was studying and learning...not that I minded, of course. But to come out here, to take a risk that nobody else knew about, that was a thrill I hadn't experienced anywhere else. Until the day I fell, of course, and I was found within minutes, because of course the acolytes knew I was heading out alone. They couldn't risk a ten year old wandering into a bunch of muggles and accidentally setting them on fire." He smiled and shook his head "Secrets in the Council are unusual, but not unheard of, you see. And if they start out that way, they tend not to remain that way for long..."
It was his way of reassuring Aiolos that, while he wouldn't mention their meeting, he would offer what advice he could and they could decide together if anything further needed to be done.