Southwest Nights (Semiautomatic Sorceress Book 1) Kal Aaron (best book club books for discussion txt) đ
- Author: Kal Aaron
Book online «Southwest Nights (Semiautomatic Sorceress Book 1) Kal Aaron (best book club books for discussion txt) đ». Author Kal Aaron
Lyssa rolled her eyes. She wasnât a witch, and the only people who could get away with bowties were college professors, guys who always went by three names, and English actors playing ancient alien time travelers.
The anchor nodded. âThatâs a big concern, especially with recent revelations about alleged accidents and dangerous occurrences that turned out to be the result of sorcery.â
There were many mysterious explosions and dead bad people all over the world whoâd been done in by Torches. Before M-Day, the leaders of the Illuminated Society hadnât been above trying to manipulate countries and societies both directly and indirectly. With greater numbers, they might have been more effective.
Lyssa took a sip of her drink. Grant Harris and his friends might be paranoid, but that didnât make them wrong. The problem was his people wanted to take down all Sorcerers.
âThatâs what led to the formation of the ACSS and our sister organizations across the world.â Grant shook a finger. âItâs important for everyone to remember that this Illuminated Society hid for thousands of years. Even if we believe their fanciful claims that they are descendants of people from a lost sunken continent, that doesnât change the fact it was an accident that revealed them to the world five years ago, not their honest attempt to reach out. I donât know about you, but if someoneâs been lying and hiding from me for a long time, it makes me suspect theyâre not being honest about a lot of other things.â
âThe Society claims theyâd been intending to go public for a much longer time,â the anchor replied. âThey simply took advantage of that incident to come out of the top hat, as it were.â
âCome out of the top hat?â Lyssa chuckled. She might not like the term âmagic,â but that expression was clever. Sheâd have to use it.
âItâs obvious thatâs a lie.â Grant furrowed his brow. âAnd it doesnât change that these people didnât have a problem with hiding themselves for so long. Itâs shocking to me that the government maintains such a cavalier attitude toward them.â
The anchor replied, âThe Extraordinary Affairs Agency insists the situation is well in hand.â
Grant guffawed before wiping away a tear of mirth. âI donât know about you, but hearing a government agency say, âDonât worry, weâve got this under controlâ worries me on the best of days, let alone when weâre talking about sorcery.â
The anchor laughed. Lyssa controlled herself. Unsurprisingly, growling at random TVs in public attracted attention.
âGiven the range of magical abilities,â Grant said, âwe canât rule out undue influence on the government by the Society.â
âAre you stating here, in public, that you believe the US government has been infiltrated or supernaturally influenced by Sorcerers?â the anchor asked, sounding surprised.
âIâm only noting itâs a possibility we shouldnât ignore.â Grant frowned. âIâm far more concerned about the local risks. Letâs not ignore the other frightening aspect of this situation. Dangerous criminals had illegal magical items.â He clucked his tongue. âGiven how rare that used to be, itâs obvious the Society isnât doing enough to keep their criminals in check, and now theyâre flooding our streets with their dangerous magical weapons.â
âIsnât that more reason to hire Torches and other Sorcerers?â
Grant looked offended. âDonât you think thatâs convenient?â
âConvenient?â The anchorâs eyebrows lifted.
âDangerous criminals suddenly have magic items, forcing the government to rely more on the Society, but the only possible source of those items is the Society.â Grantâs smile became more of a smirk. âIâm not accusing the Society of anything. Iâm only noting we have to keep all possibilities in mind when weâre looking into the situation.â
Lyssa clenched her jaw so hard it started to hurt. The extra-annoying thing was Grant was right. Alvarez wasnât a god. He was a cartel thug, and unless something awful had happened, there was only a single source for shards.
She didnât buy into Grantâs convoluted logic of a dark plan by the Society as a whole, but there could be a Sorcerer at the end of the tunnel. That didnât fit with her paranoia about it being a trap, but a good conspiracy theory wasnât stopped by mere evidence.
âAlso,â Grant continued, his cheeks red, âwe canât ignore that we donât even know where the capital territory of these people is. I continue to find that amazing.â
âIsnât that Last Remnant?â the anchor asked.
âWe know a name, and we know itâs an island that is, by their admission, hidden by their magic somewhere in the Indian Ocean. But where exactly is it? Would you sign a treaty with another country if you didnât even know where they were? The Cold War didnât become World War III because the Russians realized if they nuked us, weâd nuke them. We donât have a similar balance with the Society.â
The anchor looked concerned. âWeâre not at war with the Illuminated Society, and weâre not engaged in a Cold War either. Donât you think most people would say the situations arenât analogous? Sorcerers live among us.â
Grant shook his head. âAnd doesnât that ever keep you up at night? You never sit in a restaurant and look around, wondering if someone eating a meal next to you might be one of them?â
An old man close to the exit slowly surveyed the restaurant. His gaze skipped right past Lyssa and landed on a Goth high-school boy wearing a t-shirt with a band logo
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