“Peter Thiel called Greta the antichrist. If he can call a teenage climate activist that, imagine what he’ll say about you, Nelly. Be ready — the billionaire boys’ club doesn’t like women who threaten their empires of data and debt. They’ll call you Antichrista, the singer who dares to sing Jubilee.”
Nelly raises an eyebrow, half-smiling.
“Antichrista? That’s poetic,” she says. “Let them talk. Maybe I’ll make it a song.”
Joe nods.
“Just remember: in the tarot, 6 is The Lovers, and 7 is The Chariot. Love must take the wheel if we’re gonna ride through this storm. They’ll try to turn love into war, unity into division — but that’s our test. The chariot only moves when both horses pull in the same direction.”
He takes her hand.
“They’ll call you names, but that’s because you threaten their false gods. Keep driving, Nelly. Don’t let them steer your destiny.”
Joe sat beside Nelly as the loading bar finished. “George W. Bush: MasterClass in Politics and Power” blinked on the screen. The former president’s familiar drawl echoed through the speakers, half-folksy charm, half boardroom command.
Joe leaned back, arms crossed. “Get ready, Nelly. This is going to be a masterclass in gaslighting.”
Nelly laughed nervously. “You think he actually believes half the stuff he says?”
“Oh, he believes it,” Joe said. “That’s what makes it work. Politics is worse than the music industry—no producer, no label, just millions of critics with megaphones and zero mercy. You’ve gotta lead, not follow.”
Bush’s video paused mid-sentence, eyes frozen in an awkward smirk. Joe pointed at the screen. “That’s the face of a man who sold hope like a brand and fear like a product.”
Nelly shook her head. “And we’re supposed to learn from that?”
“Exactly,” Joe said. “Learn the moves, so we never use them. They’ll call our Jubilee plan insane—every banker, every billionaire feeding off people’s debts will panic. But that’s how you know it’s real.”
Nelly looked at him, her voice steady. “So what do I do?”
Joe smiled. “You lead. You don’t take the bait. You tell the truth so clearly they can’t twist it. We’re not here to play their game—we’re here to end it.”
The screen flickered, Bush’s face replaced by the words “Lesson 1: Defining Power.”
Scene: St. Joseph’s School Gymnasium — spring evening
The waxed floor gleams under the soft gym lights. Paper streamers hang between the basketball hoops, and Sister Helen’s record player spins a wobbly old square-dance tune. The air smells like lemon cleaner and punch.
The students of St. Joseph’s stand in a nervous square, hands fidgeting, shoes squeaking. But at the center — Nelly and Joe — stand perfectly calm. Their hands meet, fingers locking naturally, as if they’d practiced all their lives.
Across the gym, Paulo leans against the wall with his gang, smirking. His laughter cuts through the record’s scratches.
Sister Helen claps once. “All right, my lambs — bow to your partners!”
The music swells, and something changes.
Joe bows, Nelly curtseys. Perfect timing. They take two steps forward, two steps back, turn, clap, and spin — every motion smooth, mirrored, effortless.
The other pairs follow their lead. Joe calls a step before it happens, his voice clear but humble. Nelly beams, radiant but composed, guiding the rhythm like a metronome.
Sister Helen’s face softens. “Beautiful! Keep it steady now!”
Joe swings Nelly by the hand — she spins like a comet, her skirt twirling just as the record hits its sweet spot. They cross, turn, do-si-do, then bow again. Not a single step falters.
Even Paulo’s grin fades. His friends stop laughing. One of them mutters, “Whoa… they’re good.”
When the record scratches to an end, the whole class bursts into applause.
Sister Helen wipes her glasses, eyes misting. “That,” she says softly, “was grace in motion.”
Joe and Nelly don’t speak — they just stand there, hands still joined, breathing in rhythm, hearts steady.
And though they’re only children in a school gym, for that moment they are timeless — two souls in perfect synchronicity, moving the world one flawless step at a time.