Goro Akechi | good ending (
pheasantboy) wrote2023-09-23 12:09 am
Entry tags:
[ic] and it flew into the dark
Shibuya Station is probably the part of Tokyo Akechi knows the best. He goes through there several times a day. It's the main hub between Kichijoji and anywhere else he might want to go, after all—the studio in Akasaka, the shopping districts in Ginza and Shibuya itself, his high school in Nagata-cho, the Public Prosecutor's Office in Kasumigaseki. And Shido's office, which, of course, is also in Nagata-cho.
But he never used to visit for the sake of it. He's fairly sure of that.
It's as if something draws him down there. Something he can't look at too closely. Something that leads him to the steps, to stare down as if into an open maw. And then to take a step down. And another.
A keen observer—say, one with long familiarity with the dead—might be able to tell that this rather dazed-looking boy was dead, at one point. Or perhaps he wasn't. It's a little unclear.
But he never used to visit for the sake of it. He's fairly sure of that.
It's as if something draws him down there. Something he can't look at too closely. Something that leads him to the steps, to stare down as if into an open maw. And then to take a step down. And another.
A keen observer—say, one with long familiarity with the dead—might be able to tell that this rather dazed-looking boy was dead, at one point. Or perhaps he wasn't. It's a little unclear.

no subject
"But if you design the games that others play, aren't you still a gamer? The same activity, but a different level of involvement? Or is that not how it works?"
no subject
His eyes light up, very slightly. (If the Akechi in front of him had any kind of extrasensory perception at all - if they were in the Metaverse, or the UG, or anywhere that wasn't the 'real world' - then he might also sense the invisible wings behind the older Akechi stretch, just a bit.)
"Though, I suppose it wouldn't hurt to tell you, since it's not like you can take it back to the general public in my world - on the downlow, the Game is also a sort of training arena for psychic powers."
Let's see what happens here.
no subject
"You know, I want to tell you that can't be right. But then, one of the children here is a vampire, so I'm trying to row back on what I instinctively disbelieve." A train swishes through behind them; he gives it an uninterested stare.
"You're not reading my mind, I hope?"
no subject
It's the smile-for-fans now, the one that suggests a wink without actually winking, the 'we're in on a secret together' smile. He hates how easily it all comes back, sometimes.
"Most of the powers we run into are pretty minor, actually. Prompting people to remember things they've forgotten, stuff like that. Except then our latest crop included a kid who could time travel - the sort where you just send your consciousness back in time - and that was a headache to figure out that that's what he could do, let me tell you."
He rambles on like it's nothing.
no subject
"You can remind people of things they've forgotten?"
no subject
Eyebrows raised; you do have his interest, now.
"Why? Is there something you've forgotten recently?"
no subject
"Everybody here says I have. They seem so sure. As if I should be like them, and it's a crime that I'm not."
no subject
It's the sort of thing that's not easy, he's aware. Some of the casualness of his posture disappears.
"If there was something there, would you want to try? To remember it?"
no subject
"... it depends. What I want is to go home. My friends are there, not here. I belong there." That wound through the core of his being, leaking futile hope into the ether. "Assuming I have forgotten, what would I do when I return? I wouldn't belong any more."
no subject
"Hmm. Well, to continue this hypothetical - would your friends reject you, if you didn't 'fit' anymore?"
no subject
"Not on purpose, of course"—he hastens to add this. "But there are people it's hard for us to see, for too long. We forget them. We try to help, but... they just aren't there.
"You can tell me it doesn't make sense. I do understand how it is for all of you." And there it is, understated but almost Akechi acerbic. The boy is in there somewhere after all.
no subject
He doesn't comment on the fucked uped-ness of that statement. It goes in the box to process later. He's good at that.
(He can almost see how this could happen, if that box was just... gone.)
"People who 'aren't right' tend to band together, whatever their circumstances are. They find each other and build their own communities and ways of living - make groups that march close enough to the beat of the same drum that they can march together."
no subject
He blinks, remembering part of the conversation but none of the trigger. Awkward—he's tried to talk around the issue, and made it worse. "To be honest with you, there's only one person I know who's like that. I'm not aware of anyone else, though it strains credulity if there aren't any others.
"We've been trying to help him. It's just..." He hesitates, testing the concept. "Someone else here suggested he views us the way all of you view me. As wrong. But I don't want to believe that."
no subject
Just one person who sticks out? That's a cause, or a potential catalyst, or something to be worth noting. Someone who, perhaps, knows the truth.
"Just the one? You're right, it does strain credulity."
If the other him has said it, then saying it back to him isn't going to set anything off, right.
"But it could also be that something happened to this person in the past that makes it difficult for them to relate to others. If everyone around you is happy - it doesn't matter if it's 'real' or otherwise, that can be very isolating. Humans form bonds based on shared experience. If there's no one you can share that experience with..."
He trails off, half to see if it triggers something else, but if it doesn't - to see if the other him can fill in the gaps.
no subject
"I'm afraid I find that hard to believe too. But that's one of the things it hasn't paid to discuss. People have got quite irate about it, and I'd rather avoid that."
If other-Akechi is looking, he may see a hole where a text message should be, and Inaba-Akechi's attempts to explain that you just can't tell people their mother died because it was her time to die.
no subject
Not saying that that must be what happened here, but not denying his own perspective either. He can see why the others find this exhausting, but he's not ready to abandon this yet.
no subject
"Whose word, apparently, counts for nothing." But his face falls. "The only problem being my friend, of course. I know he's not happy, like the rest of us. That's the problem."
no subject
The detective smile goes back on. "When faced with a mystery, it's the things that don't line up that usually prove to be critical, wouldn't you agree? To me, figuring out what makes your world different is a puzzle to solve."
no subject
"You mean it's so different that you find it fascinating? I wish I shared that experience. As you say, being an outlier isn't fun. But I suppose I see the appeal." He does like puzzles, though he's forgotten that that—as well as a healthy dose of hate and obsession—was what made him a detective. A little crease has appeared behind his eyes.
"To be honest with you, I get a headache if I try to think about your worlds too much. It's hard to imagine living that way." It really is—he's not allowed to think about it too much.
no subject
Nor something he's entirely sure he wants to, but he can keep that thought from reaching the surface. Instead, he says, "I know that the point of departure with one version of us is that he found a foster family who actually wanted him, which wasn't my experience. And one of the Rens told me that his world's version of us still has a living mother. So keeping track of the divergences and what they result in is becoming a bit of a hobby for me."
no subject
"There's a version of me whose mother is alive? Really?" He hasn't met that Ren, yet.
no subject
So even in a 'perfect' happy world, his mother remains dead.
no subject
Though his past is misty, he knows he doesn't want her in his present. "Imagine her living with me all the time. I'm sorry, is that a terrible thing to say?"
no subject
On this he's firm. Even if it's only the faintest hints of darkness, it is something real, and he wants this version of himself to know that he won't be punished for it.
"'Grief is the love we didn't get to give.' I read something like that somewhere once. My partner tends to batch-buy philosophy books if I leave him unsupervised long enough." There's a faint fondness as he shakes his head just enough to flick his bangs out of his face. "I'd argue that it goes for every emotion, not just love, but in this case..."
no subject
"You have a partner? I suppose that's your Ren, or Akira?" He's caught on to that commonality, though the idea of being that way with his own Ren puzzles him.
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
slaps done button