"And I can say the same for yourself~... I haven't really seen you cut loose since the Grand Magic Games. Though I suppose that's generally a good thing. For people like you or me to truly let go, we should try and find ourselves a deserted patch of landscape we can rearrange~", she winked back before rubbing behind her neck, a comment made not out of pride or arrogance, but simple self awareness of the power they wielded, and the responsibility that came with it.
They couldn't really fight all out against an opponent of their levels in the middle of their respective cities. If anything, Alisa always tried to look for a deserted patch of beach or forest nobody would visit if she wanted to train some of her more powerful spells. She didn't need to ask him to know Kazimir understood this all too well, any good guildmaster of sufficient power would. And that's one of the reasons that made him such a dependable ally:
"Mmmm, I wont rule out the possibility...", Alisa replied, crossing her arms as she nodded, tilting her head into her hand as she rubbed her temple, "But at the same time, somebody needs to stay back and keep the guild safe. So I sure hope things never get that desperate."
After all, both Blue Pegasus and Fairy Tail had rather powerful members numbered among their ranks... If there were threats they couldn't tackle to the point where the Guildmasters themselves had to step in... It would most likely turn into a pyrric victory at best:
"You and me both... Power fluctuates as time passes, even as you grow stronger in some ways, you'll inevitably lose some abilities you neglect...", Alisa almost immediately thought back to the abilities she once wielded that transcended the limits of human potential, which she'd lost due to lack of use... Part of it due to never finding the reason to use them. She looked at the pale nectar in her glass, admiring how the sunlight beamed off the beverage before taking a sip, "I suppose you and me both have plenty to improve."
But even simply developing their own power would scarcely give them the upper hand they needed... Alisa knew that frustrating truth all too well, and she imagined Kazimir did too. They'd reached a plateau of power from which progress, albeit possible, was now far slower than it had ever been. Their lifespans paled in comparison to those of beings who'd had thousands of years to nurture their own power. With such a grueling gap in front of them. They'd need every advantage they could possibly use:
"Hmmm... That sounds like an awfully self centered goal... But the fact that he needed to jump through so many hoops only goes to show just how difficult crossing dimensions has become, even for them.", she added, placing her glass back down on the table as she tucked a loose black lock behind her ear, just as a gust of wind blew across the plaza, "Fufu~... Her power is her own merit really, I've only really taught her how to use it."
Alisa cupped her cheek, a humbled look drawing on her face, for she really couldn't take credit for how far Esperia had gotten. Even with the best teachers, no student can ever succeed without the will to do so. Alisa could only show her the way, her way, or at least that which she believed Esperia would benefit from the most. The girl didn't always walk through it, but she was happy if at least some of those lessons stuck with her:
"Mmmm, we'd have the element of surprise, since I don't imagine they can ever predict when a whimsical mage will decide to show up in their realm. I don't know if either Kaito or Esperia ever even tried reaching into the heavens, but I'd assume they did if for no reason other than simple curiosity."
They may have no leads, but the existence of this magic clearly proved that it was possible to reach those realms from earthland... At the same time:
"Though we do need to stay mindful... If it's possible for specific magics to peer through the veil from our end... There's no reason they can't do the same from their end with the right magic at their disposal.", she warned, leaning back over the table, arms crossed, "Difficult, certainly... But not impossible by any stretch of the word."