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fabrications )
Akira hadn't thought seeing him in person would affect him as much as it does. After all, he's had two months to mentally prepare himself for this moment.
And yet, the sight of Goro Akechi, alive and in the flesh, perfectly put-together and looking like he was made to sit under the studio lighting, makes him feel... some kind of way. Unsettled, for sure, knowing what he knows now. Then again, there's a part of him that hasn't stopped feeling unsettled since he first (well, perhaps first isn't accurate) jolted awake to find himself on the train to Yongen-Jaya again. In one piece. Not bleeding out on the ground with a megalomaniacal pseudo-god bearing down on him. And, most importantly, as the only one with any recollection of all they'd been through.
It doesn't take Akira long to come to the most logical conclusion: That somewhere along the line, he screwed up. Somehow, it hadn't been enough, and now he has an opportunity to fix it—which would be a lot easier if he were to have some notion of what, specifically, he needs to fix, or even if this is a one-time deal.
At first, he tries copying his previous motions as closely as possible. People always talk about their regrets like they would change them in a heartbeat, given the chance, but the thought of altering the timeline as he knows it is overwhelming. The more Akira steps away from his previous path, the less accurate his existing knowledge may become, the bigger the chance that he may miss something important from the first time around.
That reasoning goes out the window pretty quickly. Akira finds that he can't watch Shiho Suzui jump off that building again, can't go through hearing that agony in Ann's voice a second time when he can so easily prevent it. So he stops her. It's what the Phantom Thieves would do. And things change... but not in a way that affects the flow of events in any profound way. Ann still stumbles after them into the Metaverse and finds the conviction to awaken her persona, somehow. He's not sure how it works out, but it does. What Akira does know is that fate is what you make of it. If he believes in his teammates, they'll end up where they need to be.
But for all of that, he still wavers as they're leaving the recording area. Up until now, the decisions to change things have been easy. Akechi, on the other hand... where to start? Is it even salvageable? Akira's not certain, but when he thinks of their last meeting in Shido's palace, Akechi's remark about the possibility of them meeting a few years earlier, the sounds of gunshots echoing from the other side of the bulkhead—he can't not try. It's not years, but maybe this handful of months will be enough.
Akira lets Ann go ahead with a nod, sliding his hands into his pockets as he tries to maintain his usual casual demeanor. Any moment now...
And yet, the sight of Goro Akechi, alive and in the flesh, perfectly put-together and looking like he was made to sit under the studio lighting, makes him feel... some kind of way. Unsettled, for sure, knowing what he knows now. Then again, there's a part of him that hasn't stopped feeling unsettled since he first (well, perhaps first isn't accurate) jolted awake to find himself on the train to Yongen-Jaya again. In one piece. Not bleeding out on the ground with a megalomaniacal pseudo-god bearing down on him. And, most importantly, as the only one with any recollection of all they'd been through.
It doesn't take Akira long to come to the most logical conclusion: That somewhere along the line, he screwed up. Somehow, it hadn't been enough, and now he has an opportunity to fix it—which would be a lot easier if he were to have some notion of what, specifically, he needs to fix, or even if this is a one-time deal.
At first, he tries copying his previous motions as closely as possible. People always talk about their regrets like they would change them in a heartbeat, given the chance, but the thought of altering the timeline as he knows it is overwhelming. The more Akira steps away from his previous path, the less accurate his existing knowledge may become, the bigger the chance that he may miss something important from the first time around.
That reasoning goes out the window pretty quickly. Akira finds that he can't watch Shiho Suzui jump off that building again, can't go through hearing that agony in Ann's voice a second time when he can so easily prevent it. So he stops her. It's what the Phantom Thieves would do. And things change... but not in a way that affects the flow of events in any profound way. Ann still stumbles after them into the Metaverse and finds the conviction to awaken her persona, somehow. He's not sure how it works out, but it does. What Akira does know is that fate is what you make of it. If he believes in his teammates, they'll end up where they need to be.
But for all of that, he still wavers as they're leaving the recording area. Up until now, the decisions to change things have been easy. Akechi, on the other hand... where to start? Is it even salvageable? Akira's not certain, but when he thinks of their last meeting in Shido's palace, Akechi's remark about the possibility of them meeting a few years earlier, the sounds of gunshots echoing from the other side of the bulkhead—he can't not try. It's not years, but maybe this handful of months will be enough.
Akira lets Ann go ahead with a nod, sliding his hands into his pockets as he tries to maintain his usual casual demeanor. Any moment now...

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The next question has him looking thoughtful, but it's less that he's searching for an answer and more that Akira is wondering how much is too much. And as is typical of him, he ends up toeing that line.
"I think they would favor someone well-liked... Kind of like Masayoshi Shido, if he were secretly corrupt." He twirls a lock of hair between his fingers as he continues to voice his reasoning. "It'd be the biggest danger to the people and the most shocking exposure."
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"That's... an interesting name to settle on." Again, he sounds thoughtful, but as he turns his gaze back to Akira there's something else in his expression. Most people probably wouldn't catch it but he's suddenly got a look of keen interest in his eyes, like Akira's the only person in the room. "He's not the only popular politician, you know. Why jump right to him?" Shido's image is quite pristine at the moment. If there's just one other person who can see past it, one other person with even one small suspicion, one other person that has even the faintest idea of what Shido is actually like...
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And that's dangerous. He knows better than to give Akechi any leverage in their interactions, especially conversations concerning the Phantom Thieves, but the underlying intensity in his eyes has Akira pinned down, and he's not quite sure he wants to move.
"Something about him bothers me," Akira answers simply, gaze never straying from Akechi. That much is true. Shido has always rubbed him the wrong way—he just didn't know that it was his subconscious filling a gap where his memory couldn't quite make the connection.
That's as far as this can go. Technically, he shouldn't be aware of his own ties to Shido yet. And sure, Akira has considered jumping ahead, blowing this whole thing open and tearing through Shido's Palace early. But what of Haru, Sae, even Akechi? This is one case he can't take a risk on.
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"If that's how you feel, you shouldn't ignore it." Much as part of him wants to jump out of his seat and yell about how right Akira is, he knows better. "Humans are more adept at sensing danger than we realize, and your instincts are particularly sharp." There's a pause while Akechi weighs what he wants to say next, though he covers it by taking another sip of coffee. When he does speak, he sounds like he's making a joke. "Maybe I should be careful if I ever run into him."
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When Akechi does make what seems to be an attempt at a joke, it's considerably less funny. "Yeah, probably," he agrees, a bit subdued, and Akira can't help but look away. After all, it's hard to look Akechi in the eyes when he's thinking back to his last moments. Memories are supposed to become less difficult to deal with over time, but that one only festers more and more raw the closer he gets to Akechi.
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The second he looks away the thought clicks into place and Akechi just can't shake it off. He feels tense, excited, like when he's right on the verge of solving a difficult case. He's tense and wary, sure - there's no telling what it is that Akira knows, or what the implications will be for Akechi - but both emotions are completely overpowered by something that feels a lot like hope. He wants push this opportunity while he can, dig deeper and deeper until he can reach the truth--
"I won't be able to finish our game tonight, by the way." --but he shouldn't. He needs to step back, regroup, and do more research before he tries to make his next move. Even so, he still wears a focused, contemplative expression. "I have some other things to see to, so I'm afraid I only have time for coffee." He's been visiting Leblanc with the intent of sitting and chatting for a while now, so stopping by just for coffee feels a little unusual by now.
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Luckily, the coming days leave him little time to dwell on it. There's the beach trip, then the matter of Kobayakawa. Eventually Akira settles on a risk: changing his heart in hopes that it'll prevent Akechi from being able to target him. The workings of the Metaverse are still a mystery in many ways, but logically, it should work.
It's easy enough to slip in the request, and they complete it a mere couple of days before their class trip. Akira feels pretty good about it, enough that he's able to actually enjoy the vacation. The past few months of strategizing over the timeline, fretting over the fates of his friends, has stressed him out more than he realized, but it melts away once he's out of the country.
Any residual relaxation comes crashing down after they arrive back in Japan. The news from Makoto comes, same as before. Kobayakawa is dead, and Akira realizes—
Stupid. He was stupid. Shido has plenty of sway with the police department, something he's had firsthand experience with, so why wouldn't he use that to deal with Kobayakawa before he can talk? And Akira sent him right into that situation. But what else could he have done? It eats at him. Would the same thing happen with Okumura? Akechi? What's the point of all of this knowledge if it doesn't give him an advantage when it really matters? Has he been wrong in only trying to enact small changes up until now?
That thought swirls and swirls, stewing over the following day. Still, it's really more of a split decision when he messages Akechi: Come to Leblanc when you have some time. I need to talk to you. He doesn't bother expressing any sort of urgency through text. The fact that he's contacting Akechi this way should speak enough to the importance of what he wants to say.
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Admitting the next day that he couldn't track down Kobayakawa's Shadow is the most nervewracking thing Akechi has ever done - and then he finds out that, in essence, everyone else already knows. In a case of truly unlucky timing a request to handle Kobayakawa had been put on the Phantom Thieves' website and, apparently, been handled entirely before Shido even gave his final order to proceed. Kobayakawa was confessing while Akechi was on his assassination mission, and an alternate plan to handle him is already in place when Akechi calls to announce his own failure. By the end of the day Kobayakawa falls victim to a highly unusual and highly messy subway accident that is 'coincidentally' highly beneficial to Shido's plans. His confession never sees the light of day.
Akechi would like to take a break, but he knows that making himself visible somewhere far away from a murder is vital. So he forces himself to go about his daily business like nothing is wrong, but his mind is racing. Now that the excitement has passed his mind keeps tripping over two details.
First, that Kobayakawa is - was - the principal of Shujin Academy.
Second, that the request was accepted and completed within just a couple days.
Akechi is certain, now more than ever, that the Phantom Thieves are students at Shujin. Or at the very least, their founding members are. Otherwise why target a teacher from there first, or be so quick to handle a request to target the principal? It brings him back to one of his earliest suspicions, but this time it only stirs worry instead of interest. Before he's always considered what to do if a theory turns out to be wrong, but now he wonders what he's supposed to do if this one turns out to be right?
The sudden request from Akira inspires another emotion Akechi isn't used to associating with, to put it simply, his only friend: unease. His inexperience with interpersonal relationships doesn't help, nor does the fact that he doesn't even know what to start assuming about such an ominous message. Instinct tells him to bail immediately.
But instead he responds that he'll come by as soon as he can, and within just a couple of days an unexpected cancellation of plans (courtesy of Sae, of all people) leaves him with a free evening. It's short notice, but he messages Akira shortly before school ends to let him know that he's finally free. He makes his way for Leblanc just a few hours later.
He has no idea what to expect, he realizes - even less so than usual when Akira is involved. But he shows up all the same, stepping through Leblanc's door with a subdued but far from unhappy expression.
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They don't stay there for long. When Akechi finally announces that he'll be coming, it throws his brain into overdrive. He ends up offering to help at the café for the afternoon, willing to take anything that'll keep him occupied during the wait.
He's just finished cleaning up after the previous customer when Akechi enters. Seeing him is as much a relief as it is a fresh match to the dumpster fire his head has been. "Hey," he offers, his usual greeting.
Sojiro gives his own and slides off his stool, ready to get started on Akechi's usual, but Akira cuts him off. "Actually, he's just here to check out some books I got." It's not his best excuse, that's for sure, but Akechi is definitely sharp enough to play along. Sojiro regards Akira with an analyzing look, quiet for a moment before he shrugs and returns to his seat. "Alright. You've been at it for a while, go take a break."
Akira unties the apron and slides it off, leaving it behind the counter before he steps out and towards the stairs to the attic.
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But Akira is right: Akechi knows how to play along. Once he's returned the greetings he makes sure to thank Sojiro for his offer and give him a winning but entirely fake smile. And then he's... following Akira up to his room.
It's a normal thing for friends (no, friendly acquaintances) (no, friends) to do, but Akechi finds himself feeling both weirdly apprehensive and weirdly excited. So he's silent as he climbs, smile fading as he refrains from making any of his usual jokes or chatter. While part of him is worried he's about to walk into a bad situation for himself specifically, he's surprised to find that he's mostly worried about why Akira called him here. Even from this brief interaction Akechi gets the feeling he's not himself, but is it alright to ask? And even if it is, should he ask? What if can't do anything about is? What if he can? What if--
Akechi's so wrapped up in his thoughts he doesn't even notice when they reach the top of the stairs, and he shows no signs of zoning back in if he's not interrupted.
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It might seem like he's brought Akechi up here to escape Sojiro's listening range, and that is true, but he's honestly more worried about avoiding the bugs Futaba planted in Leblanc. He might not be sure where this is going to go, but Akira does know that he doesn't want it on tape. Maybe if he were concerned for his safety, he'd feel differently. He's certain Akechi wouldn't murder him in his own home, though.
He glances back as he steps into the bedroom proper to find Akechi with that glazed-over look he tends to get whenever he's deep in thought. "... Hey," Akira speaks up, trying not to startle him. "You can sit down if you want."
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He nods at Akira's offer and take a seat on his small couch, setting his briefcase on the floor and sliding it out of the way. He wants to ask immediately why Akira called him over, but instead...
"They must be interesting books, if you called me over so urgently." Instead he makes another joke, though his tone is so calm and his expression is so neutral it might seem like he actually believes that's why he's here.
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His expression fades back into something more neutral as he pulls out the chair from the desk and lowers himself onto it. Normally, before taking a leap, literally or figuratively, Akira would feel a pulse of adrenaline. There's definitely a wave of something hitting him, but it's not the usual excitement.
This has to happen, though. Their first infiltration of Okumura's Palace is creeping up. Sometime after that, Akechi will discover their identities, and… something about that doesn't sit right with him. It made sense when they were just acquaintances, but who knows it would do to an actual friendship (that's at least what Akira would like to believe this is) for Akechi to find out without ever hearing it from Akira's own mouth. It's not like he hasn't felt guilty about the constant lies, even with the dishonesty stemming from his own sense of self-preservation.
"I have to come clean about something," he starts, leaning his elbows on his knees, although his eyes stay leveled towards Akechi's. This may not even come as a surprise to Akechi. Akira knows that the profiling once led him practically to their doorstep; he has to have at least suspected Akira before, if only in passing. "I'm a member of the Phantom Thieves."
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But still.... still, when he actually says the words Akechi's jaw drops. Even if he's been suspicious, even if he's been open about his suspicions, this is the last thing he expected to hear. The last thing he wanted to hear, he realizes. For once in his life he didn't want to be right. He wants to be totally off base, wants Akira to be just a normal if unusually astute high school student. The Phantom Thieves are his enemy, a group of pests he's already resolved to either utterly crush or flat out kill. They're the biggest threat to his plans, whether they realize it or not.
Akechi closes his mouth and leans forward, unconsciously mirroring Akira's pose as he props his elbows on his knees. He takes it a step further, though, lacing his fingers together and resting his forehead against his hands. Dozens of memories flash past him at once. All the times Akira has played dumb about his connection to the Phantom Thieves; the attempts to dig for information that seem so obvious in hindsight; how easily Akira had 'guessed' at the similarity between the changes of heart and the mental shutdowns.
And just when Akechi thinks he can be angry about that he remembers how Akira had helped him with the Kawanabe case; how readily he'd expressed genuine sympathy for him, even knowing Akechi was his enemy; all the times they'd simply spent time together without a single word about the Phantom Thieves spoken; how painfully happy it had made him to hear something as simple as I want you.
He feels like he's just been knocked over and tumbled around by a wave, with no idea of which way is up and no idea if that's even the direction he wants to go. But eventually he ends up speaking before he realizes it.
"You have to realize how dangerous it is to tell me something like that."
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"Yeah," he admits, wishing that he could catch a glimpse of Akechi's face. It's impossible to tell what's going on beneath the surface. "That's what kept me from it until now." Akira realizes the extent of the danger much more than Akechi knows. "But I'm sick of lying to you."
That much is true. It doesn't help that he's still withholding things. Part of him wants to spill everything, to give it all up and to place his absolute trust in Akechi. But Akira doesn't know if he's going to get another shot at this, and the literal fate of the world hangs in the balance. He has to play it smarter than that and not take a blind risk just because Akechi does funny things to his priorities.
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Once again, though, he's left with no idea what to do.
Akechi finally sits back up, but his expression is a composed mask again. For now, at least, he needs it to be.
"You should stop." He knows that's impossible the second he says it, but he has to try. "You have no idea what some of the people you've threatened are capable of." Revealing that Akechi knows that much about this country's inner workings - or that he knows anything at all about it - is incredibly dangerous and foolish to the point of idiocy - but he has to try. For the sake of both of them, he need to make Akira give this up before he goes too far.
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"I know what they're capable of." A murder in an interrogation room, broadcast as a suicide. But in this timeline... "Kobayakawa, the principal of Shujin—we changed his heart. I'm sure you already know how that turned out." There's no doubt that Akechi's aware of the details of the incident. "Someone made sure his confession wouldn't get out."
Akechi's expression may be carefully blanketed, but his own is carrying the regret from playing the part he did in Kobayakawa's death. "I can't stop," he states, no room for argument. If they were to stop now and allow these things to continue to happen, they'd be no better than all of the people who stayed silent while Kamoshida terrorized the school.
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Worse, he can hear Akira's resolve in his tone. This isn't someone who can just be talked out of his decisions. Not after so long, and not just because someone like Akechi asked. Talking him down is out of the question, but maybe he can work with a different angle.
"Then why trust me?" He looks back up again, unable to keep the wary skepticism out of his expression. "What makes you think I won't expose you immediately?"
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That much, he knows isn't quite accurate. But that's still the angle Akechi is playing, and honestly? Akira likes to think that if he hadn't gone so far down the wrong path, Akechi actually would care about doing what's right, would stand for the same ideals that the Phantom Thieves do. It could just be wishful thinking on his part, but...
"You know how bad it is." Akechi admitted as much just a moment ago. "We can do something about it." They might be the only ones who can do something about it.
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"That's idiotic." Which is a harsh thing to say, maybe, but it's true: trusting Akechi with this situation is tantamount to suicide. Or rather, it should be. If he'd been told this even as recently as a month ago Akechi is certain he still could have proceeded with his loosely laid plan to eliminate the Phantom Thieves. But now... "And if I say I'm going to turn you in anyway - then what? You can't do anything from jail."
His tone is clipped, brittle, and harsh, though he's not even sure how he can begin explaining why he's angry.
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It was always a possibility that Akechi would just use this confession to further his own agenda. Still, Akira can't help the tight squeeze of sadness in his chest now that it's being brought up. He wanted to believe that something had changed, that maybe Akechi has seen something that he hadn't until too late last time.
But maybe something is different, if Akechi is trying to talk him out of it and getting angry at him when he can't.
"Sorry, I put you in a tough position," he speaks up again, sitting up and running his fingers through his hair. Akira does genuinely feel bad. There's no way he can decipher what's going on in Akechi's head, but he can at least see that there's some kind of turmoil there. "You would've found out eventually. I... didn't want it to not be from me."
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Isn't the only way to let the Phantom Thieves win this next conflict? Win in a way that isn't his fault, but his superiors'? Okumura's survival would be another setback for the conspiracy, but not enough to derail their plans. It's likely already too late to put an end to Shido's aspirations, so maybe... That thoughtful expression of his creeps back in, but it passes quicker than usual. He doesn't have time to weigh every single option carefully.
"Three weeks." Akechi stands so suddenly that even he seems a bit startled. "For three weeks, I won't get in your way." Not as Akechi, and not as an assassin. He shoots Akira a quick look, then leans down to pick up his briefcase. "I don't know who you're planning to target next, but you should do it quickly and quietly. Three weeks from now--" He falls silent, uncertain. He wants to say he'll go right back to chasing after them, the same as always, but... "... Three weeks from now, I don't know what I'll do."
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That's... a lot more than he was expecting a moment ago, faced with the sharp edge of Akechi's voice. He could ask for more, for Akechi to admit his own secrets and join up with them, but Akira knows that's unrealistic. This, he can at least work with.
"Thanks, Goro." Where he'd debated over the name last time, it slips out naturally now. "Really," he adds, and although a smile doesn't quite reach his face, there's warmth to the words.
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"You shouldn't thank someone who declared himself your enemy." Idiot, but that's also exactly the sort of behavior that makes sense for Akira. No wonder he has so many strange friends. Akechi starts to turn, ready to leave, but then he freezes.
Something about him bothers me. Akira had said that about Shido just over a week ago, when discussing potential targets for the Phantom Thieves. And now Akechi can't help but wonder if maybe he's totally off base, if they're not going to bother with Okumura at all. He looks back to Akira, unable to keep the serious expression off his face.
"When you said that 'something' bothered you about Shido, is that because you've already decided to change his heart?"
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He's expecting Akechi to head out, so when he instead strikes up a new vein of conversation, Akira first regards him with a bemused silence. It shifts into something more neutral once he registers the question. Of course that would come back to bite him.
How much should he admit? Will Akechi try to step in if he does say that they're going to change Shido's heart? Akira doesn't have much time to debate, so he ends up walking a path somewhere between truth and lie of omission, as he so often does with Akechi.
"At some point." There's a lull before he continues, "Shido's the reason why I'm here in Tokyo. He had me falsely convicted for assault." Hell, Akechi might know about his probation already if he's bothered to look into Akira at all.
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