((OOC: Screw snow))
Raul speaks English without an accent, he has spent years developing a more guttural enunciation that comes off as the work of a native speaker. The theory was simple, one less reason to ask about paperwork. He is also gregarious, addressing strangers on the ferry as the harbor and trying to understand the people and also just to look normal.
Just your average law abiding human. Not an illegal immigrant. Not a mutant.
Raul isn't ashamed about either of those facets of himself, quite to the contrary, but he also knows that they come with some serious political repercussions. One of these strangers is the first to tell him about the Subway.
Police are still looking for the girl, the old man had finished. Raul was calm and acted with the utmost deference to the older man despite his outrageous statements about dangerous strangers who could shock you with lightning and walk through walls and were all intending to harm him personally.
Go in peace, Raul shook his hand, made eye contact before shifting it downwards. New Yorkers have a reputation for ill spirits, and Raul knows that this man is a tourist, but even so he has found that a humility and respect did a lot to break down walls even in hardened Manhattanites, Serve the Lord.
The radio in his small, unassuming two door has better information, although it is all just as prejudiced. A description, this girl with a hoodie, NYU seemed as good a place as any to start, and Raul begins driving to their library, Bobst, a brick building on the campus, still open, he flashes a smile to the guard at the front and mumbles the name of a Professor in the English Department and comments about him being a slave-driver. The guard doesn't bat an eye. New York, Raul smiles, is a wide open playground if you research enough to drop the right names.
He sits in the back, watching the other patrons. In half an hour he moves to the next floor. He glances through a Spanish language edition of Don Quixote.
Chivalry is dead. Second floor.
On the second floor there is a table full of students either involved in an ill timed study session or furtively playing a role playing game, the steady occasional click of dice dominates the half hour. Raul pages through a National Geographic full of spectacular aerial photographs of canyons and gulches.
On the third floor all the lights are much brighter, and there is only one person. She sulks in her hoodie, and Raul represses a smile, there is no need to show emotion as if he is excited to have captured her, she will be frightened and probably paranoid enough.
He sits down across from her and notices that her mascara has run, she gives him a single frightened glance and starts to push her chair back, Raul holds up his hand, Wait.
For some reason she does.
When the future arrives, the first instinct has always been to feed it's heralds to the lions, he says, It is a shame that people do this, but it has never stopped the future from happening.
What?
Christians in Roman times, people who promoted democracy in Europe when there were Kings there, or Communism when there were Tsars. Persecution has an extremely poor record, if you look at it as a goal oriented strategy.
What? She clearly does not know what to think about all of this. He simply frowns.
There was an organization in Uruguay in the sixties, they called themselves the Tupamaros and they committed public protests to advance a social agenda.
Like what?
Shut down corporate headquarters, they got pretty militant and started robbing banks to throw the money in the streets, kidnapping CIA agents and Government officials.
Why are you telling me this?
Nobody chooses to spend their Holidays in the library. There are people in this country who exert a lot of influence, and because of that they fear a future where the important dynamics have changed. They will persecute the future wherever they see it, feed us all to the lions.
You want to rob banks?
Raul shakes his head, and chuckles, Hardly, I'm not in it for the money.
Yeah right.
Raul pulls a lead slug, a coin shaped piece of scrap metal that isn't even reliable in vending machines these days, out of his pocket. He shows it to her perched between his fingers, I find that value, and the coin flashes yellow in an instant, glittering in the too bright, power surging, lights of the third floor, Is an extremely relative concept.
He slides the coin across the desk, along with a small card only big enough for ten digits. Raul stands and turns to the stairs.
What happened to those bank robbers? she asks.
He chuckles, Brought on twenty years of dictatorship devoted to exterminating them. But then again the last two presidents have been former members. Go in Peace.