[About two weeks after his second arrival into Ryslig, Fugo pushes a dossier underneath Giorno's door. It's all written out in his mechanically perfect handwriting, because he doesn't trust the security of the network or their laptops. A small note is paperclipped to the front reads as follows:]
Giorno,
Let me know if you need any further clarifications.
- Fugo
[When opened, Giorno will find three very neat and meticulously written documents. The first is a record of Passione's activities, to the best of Fugo's knowledge, between April and October. Rather than a blow-by-blow, it is more of a general summary of Giorno's strategy in dismantling the drug trade. It includes, funnily enough, some rumors that Fugo heard on his own. Apparently, Giorno is known as a "secret gangster prince".
The second is a brief document detailing Fugo's movements from when they parted ways. This includes the route he took first back to Naples, then the more winding and difficult-to-track path to his final hiding place in Milan. There is an address, for the apartment he rented, as well as a list of jobs he took under a number of aliases. The final job he took was as a pianist at a bar.]
[The final document is a mission report, describing how Fugo, alongside two other Passione operatives by the name of Sheila E and Canollo Murolo, took down the former narcotics squad and eliminated a man named Massimo Volpe. Most of it is fairly standard: how he was found and who gave him the mission; a list of locations that were investigated and what was found there; descriptions of encounters with the enemy; profiles on enemy Stand users and their abilities; and a final body and injury count. There's even a brief section about how Purple Haze's ability seemed to change, although Fugo himself doesn't seem to understand it very well yet.
But then, in closing, Fugo takes the time to include a very detailed recount of a conversation he had with Giorno after everything was said and done. He describes the restaurant Giorno had him brought to and how his wounds were healed; the food they ate, the music that was playing on the radio, the photograph Giorno returned to him. And, of course, an account of what they talked about. The vow Fugo made to him.
Half of a step.]
[It's probably a little too much. But, in Fugo's mind, it's better to be too thorough rather than potentially miss something significant.]
a couple weeks post-arrival
Giorno,
Let me know if you need any further clarifications.
- Fugo
[When opened, Giorno will find three very neat and meticulously written documents. The first is a record of Passione's activities, to the best of Fugo's knowledge, between April and October. Rather than a blow-by-blow, it is more of a general summary of Giorno's strategy in dismantling the drug trade. It includes, funnily enough, some rumors that Fugo heard on his own. Apparently, Giorno is known as a "secret gangster prince".
The second is a brief document detailing Fugo's movements from when they parted ways. This includes the route he took first back to Naples, then the more winding and difficult-to-track path to his final hiding place in Milan. There is an address, for the apartment he rented, as well as a list of jobs he took under a number of aliases. The final job he took was as a pianist at a bar.]
[The final document is a mission report, describing how Fugo, alongside two other Passione operatives by the name of Sheila E and Canollo Murolo, took down the former narcotics squad and eliminated a man named Massimo Volpe. Most of it is fairly standard: how he was found and who gave him the mission; a list of locations that were investigated and what was found there; descriptions of encounters with the enemy; profiles on enemy Stand users and their abilities; and a final body and injury count. There's even a brief section about how Purple Haze's ability seemed to change, although Fugo himself doesn't seem to understand it very well yet.
But then, in closing, Fugo takes the time to include a very detailed recount of a conversation he had with Giorno after everything was said and done. He describes the restaurant Giorno had him brought to and how his wounds were healed; the food they ate, the music that was playing on the radio, the photograph Giorno returned to him. And, of course, an account of what they talked about. The vow Fugo made to him.
Half of a step.]
[It's probably a little too much. But, in Fugo's mind, it's better to be too thorough rather than potentially miss something significant.]