[That's a nice thing to hear - especially since Giorno knows that Jotaro knows that Giorno isn't being completely honest with him. Nice, but not wholly unexpected. Jotaro is shockingly kind, for someone so loath to express himself.]
I'd like that. Something's come up that I'd like to talk to you about.
[Hmm. Now, the question of the moment is, does he mean something different from the current topic, or is this just an easy pretext to get off the pocketwatches...]
[alas, if his tutelage in emoji had already begun there would probably be a smiling or at least vaguely affirmative one punctuating that, too, but for now that is all there is.]
[He's reasonably on time when he comes rolling in, hat brim pulled down low over his eyes and his hands stuffed into the pockets of his coat, and the good news is he seems...genuinely calmer today than he'd been previously, having made good use of the downtime to settle and begin sorting some things out, and obviously not getting blindsided by unexpected flashbacks to one terrible night in Cairo isn't hurting anything, either.
The empty chair that Kakyoin had occupied, though, does earn a glance that lingers just slightly too long, before he sits and settles himself back in with the same vague discomfort of not precisely fitting into the cafe's chair as before.]
I don't have to ask permission to sit or something, do I?
[It's good to see Jotaro calm. It really is. Not that it's Giorno's place to worry about him, necessarily, but - well, he's never been very good at keeping to his place, and Jotaro is already important to him for several reasons.]
[The probability that this conversation will make him upset again is . . . not zero, but Giorno gave himself a little bit of buffer time to work out how to make is as painless as possible.]
[Still, professionalism or no, he wrinkles his nose at the question.]
Don't be ridiculous. You're not my subordinate.
[Jotaro is - sort of sideways. Probably. He's still working it out.]
[He tips his head a little to the side, taking that in, and as he does he adds it silently to the repertoire of little things that he's gradually picking up from Giorno — not just that words are important, but distinctions are, too. Some of them, he suspects, can overlap, even if he doesn't know what the outcome is when they do. But he can tell that it's important, somehow, subtly so, to have a good grasp of where it is he stands with Giorno Giovanna, which of those distinctions are likely to be applied, and what they mean once they are.
"Family" is the one to watch for; talking with Giorno and Buccellati both has made it abundantly clear that it's a word they both put a lot of significance on. It's something, he suspects, that's earned and not simply discovered. But "friend", that one might be floating around nebulously to acquire someday, and "not my subordinate" strikes him as valuable too, in an equally vague and ambient way.
...Plus, the fact that he cracked enough to make a face is a little encouraging.]
You're right about that.
[Which probably didn't need to be said, but there it is.]
[Part of what makes Jotaro an appealing person to talk to, as Giorno's already discovered in the very small space of time they've known each other, is that he pushes back. Giorno has, at least in the last few years, known himself to thrive best under pressure, with some resistance, not necessarily negative, but not universally positive, either. Yes-men have limited use, certainly, but they're not creative and they're certainly not interesting.]
[Jotaro is interesting. He's also creative, in an oblique way that Giorno is still investigating. And if he is family in one way or another - well, Giorno left his mother behind for a reason, but it wasn't because he thought the ties of blood meant nothing. Far from it. He felt a need to distance himself in order to make decisions on his own, to escape the cycling of his birth family.]
[He doesn't anticipate a need to escape Jotaro.]
I'm usually right, [he says quietly, with a small smile, and thinks about how important it is to be aware that when you watch people, they are very often watching you back.]
Yes. I wanted to let you know that he likes you.
[Which Bruno never actually said; but Giorno's an expert at reading between his particular lines.]
[And that's what makes Giorno an appealing person to talk to in exchange — that graceful way that he can say a lot without mincing any words, which is often a lot easier to absorb and consider than if he were the type to say the same thing in five times as many syllables. "He likes you" is concise, but says everything — yes, Buccellati is one of his; yes, his suspicions were correct; evidently, he'd left an impression; presumably, he'd been discussed or acknowledged between the two of them prior to this.
(It also makes it likely that Buccellati is a Stand user himself, and adds another few names to watch for when it comes to matters involving Giorno — if Buccellati was looking for them, then it stands to reason that they're members of the group, and that the unnamed "others" he was with quite possibly included Giorno himself, who he'd been protecting.
...Which makes it curious that he'd single out those two as safe to name, doesn't it.)
But he recognizes that he can't simply sit there thinking about it, as much as he'd like to, so before his own silence stretches on too long, he fills in with a slight nod and drags his hands out of his pockets.]
I know you like to know what gave it away, when it comes to things like that.
[Even Giorno can't quite hide how pleased he is at this assessment. He is strong on his own - has been for years - and while he did need Bruno once, he doesn't anymore. He's don now, after all, a title that travels with him no matter where he goes; there's a power in him that thrives with support, but doesn't require it. And yet.]
[His fingers curl around the edge of his cup, a slight joyful motion, and he nods - because Bruno is important, and he's been so focused on catching up that he hasn't had time to actually be happy that he's here. Alive, or something far more like it than anything Giorno could do on his own.]
We are. Although . . . some things are a little bit more like convergent evolution, and some things are all his.
[His values, his beliefs, his influence.]
I told you about perspective before, I think. Bruno provides good perspective.
I hope you understand why I didn't tell you right away. For his sake, mostly. [For his sake in a lot of different ways - because if Giorno was cautious before, he's paranoid now.]
I haven't told Kakyoin. Figured I'd get you to confirm the hunch first.
[For a number of reasons, arguably. One is, of course, because Giorno's word is worth something and to have him vouch for a person carries weight; another is not kindness, exactly, but an almost professional sort of courtesy — because the kind of relationships that Jotaro builds now are the ones that start on a solid foundation, and he's not eager to have this one in its fledgling stages come with the impression that he's the type to use something like an unsuspecting new arrival to his own advantage.
Giorno has had the chance to form his own impressions of Kakyoin; moreover, he'd seen them together. He assumes it'll carry some weight of its own, the admission that he went to Giorno with this first, even before Kakyoin.]
It's fine, though. I just wanted to make sure you knew, one way or another. That he was here now, too.
[Although Giorno isn't one to be effusive with praise, he's grateful enough for this to smile again, warmly. It would have been easy for Jotaro to confer with Kakyoin before coming to him with his suspicions - as Giorno had done with Bruno, in fact. Not that he thinks he's done anything wrong (because he is paranoid; because forewarned is forearmed; because Bruno was halfway there anyway; because Bruno is Bruno), but he is aware, at least, that it's not the most honest way of doing things.]
[It does make Giorno wonder, though. One way or another - he tips his head slightly to one side, considering Jotaro, gauging. Were you worried about me? he wants to ask, but it seems intrusive and, anyway, isn't the point. But he does wonder.]
Please, tell Kakyoin anything you feel is pertinent. If we're going to be working together [he includes Bruno in this, instantly and smoothly and effortlessly], we need to have open communication. Besides, I wouldn't be surprised if he already had some idea.
[Even though his tactics are very different from Jotaro's, it was obvious that they were both coming to similar conclusions. Kakyoin was the first one Bruno identified, too, the canny one, laying traps with words. But, of course, just as their tactics are different, so Bruno's assessments and reactions are different. He commented on Kakyoin's savvy, his intelligence, his strategy. He mentioned Jotaro's heart.]
[Which is why he's having this conversation with Jotaro and not with Kakyoin. It's heart that he needs now, no matter how reluctant he'd be to admit it.]
He isn't a danger. Far from it. He's honestly a much more moral man than I am. He was the [den mother] leader of the gang within Passione that I initially infiltrated, and - well, now he's my subordinate, technically.
[But there's a touch of humor in that, something he'd never express to Bruno, because it's ridiculous. Bruno is not his; he is Bruno's, and always will be.]
Edited (it is so late that i can no longer spell) 2015-08-30 09:01 (UTC)
[The smile on Giorno's face when he talks about Buccellati is different from the one he wears when he talks about his own accomplishments. That's the first thing Jotaro notices as he listens, following along with the assurances and other tidbits of detail that help to flesh out the existing relationship between the two of them even further. It'd occurred to him, the last time they spoke, that Giorno has a smile that looks like something you'd see on a marble statue — perfect and elegant but also controlled, somehow sculpted into place. This isn't the same one; Giorno in general is warmer today, which probably makes sense considering this encounter started out on an amicable foot instead of a hostile one, but still.
He seems happy. It's a good look on him, and he makes a quiet note of it, not for now but for sometime later — and whether it'll be for his own benefit or for Giorno's, he's not entirely sure.
He can't remember Dio ever looking happy. Cocky, superior, triumphant, smug, high, full of himself, proud — sure, he'd run that whole spectrum. But never happy, never prompted by something as evidently simple as this, the way that the topic of Bruno Buccellati puts warmth in Giorno's expression and turns up the edges of his mouth.]
So I'll try not to rub it in, that he has to ask permission to sit and I don't. Technically.
["Moral", though. That's an interesting choice of words. Honor, that's something he'd expect to find in a gang in spades, nothing unusual about that. But "moral"...
...He won't say it aloud, but it does occur to him that Giorno conceding Buccellati as being more moral than him might be a double-edged sword. In some respects, it makes him a better person. But organized crime isn't the sort of business that tends to incentivize morality, either.]
[The assessment isn't entirely wrong. Bruno was good at what he did, but it wasn't what he was made for, not really. Giorno doesn't know everything about Bruno's past, only bits and pieces, but what he does know makes it clear that he's always been a caretaker; it's an intrinsic part of his personality, one he could never entirely turn off, not when he was working for Polpo or Diavolo. It's a strength, but in the context of Passione, it was once a great weakness, too. He took a lot of chances on a lot of people who might have proven to be his undoing. Giorno, for just one example.]
[And the question is a good one, too. For a moment Giorno isn't sure if he should say exactly what Bruno said, which almost seems too incisive, too intimate, or what he himself gleaned from how Bruno said it, which might be too revealing of Bruno. It's a fine line he's walking here. His loyalty is to Bruno, of course, but . . . Jotaro is important to him already, someone he feels compelled to protect and someone who deserves - has earned - his honesty.]
[He takes a moment to sip his cooling cappuccino, lowering his eyes to consider his options. In the end, he goes with a blend, one that will hopefully reveal exactly the right amount about each of them.]
He likes you because you're a good person. Because you seemed honest and straightforward to him. Because you wanted to help him, even though you didn't have to. He was impressed with the way you made the connection between us, and the ways you did it that were different from Kakyoin's methods.
And . . .
[Shifting slightly in his seat, he crosses one leg over the other under the table, curling his fingers around his cup.]
Because he likes people he can see potential in. I think he saw potential in you.
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I'd like that. Something's come up that I'd like to talk to you about.
[Which is a sideways kind of promise.]
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Is it urgent?
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[An hour is probably enough time to. Gear up for this.]
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[alas, if his tutelage in emoji had already begun there would probably be a smiling or at least vaguely affirmative one punctuating that, too, but for now that is all there is.]
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[And he is, of course, there promptly, looking as though he never left the table, right down to the half-drunk cappuccino.]
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The empty chair that Kakyoin had occupied, though, does earn a glance that lingers just slightly too long, before he sits and settles himself back in with the same vague discomfort of not precisely fitting into the cafe's chair as before.]
I don't have to ask permission to sit or something, do I?
[He says, already seated.]
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[The probability that this conversation will make him upset again is . . . not zero, but Giorno gave himself a little bit of buffer time to work out how to make is as painless as possible.]
[Still, professionalism or no, he wrinkles his nose at the question.]
Don't be ridiculous. You're not my subordinate.
[Jotaro is - sort of sideways. Probably. He's still working it out.]
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"Family" is the one to watch for; talking with Giorno and Buccellati both has made it abundantly clear that it's a word they both put a lot of significance on. It's something, he suspects, that's earned and not simply discovered. But "friend", that one might be floating around nebulously to acquire someday, and "not my subordinate" strikes him as valuable too, in an equally vague and ambient way.
...Plus, the fact that he cracked enough to make a face is a little encouraging.]
You're right about that.
[Which probably didn't need to be said, but there it is.]
So. Something's come up?
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[Jotaro is interesting. He's also creative, in an oblique way that Giorno is still investigating. And if he is family in one way or another - well, Giorno left his mother behind for a reason, but it wasn't because he thought the ties of blood meant nothing. Far from it. He felt a need to distance himself in order to make decisions on his own, to escape the cycling of his birth family.]
[He doesn't anticipate a need to escape Jotaro.]
I'm usually right, [he says quietly, with a small smile, and thinks about how important it is to be aware that when you watch people, they are very often watching you back.]
Yes. I wanted to let you know that he likes you.
[Which Bruno never actually said; but Giorno's an expert at reading between his particular lines.]
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(It also makes it likely that Buccellati is a Stand user himself, and adds another few names to watch for when it comes to matters involving Giorno — if Buccellati was looking for them, then it stands to reason that they're members of the group, and that the unnamed "others" he was with quite possibly included Giorno himself, who he'd been protecting.
...Which makes it curious that he'd single out those two as safe to name, doesn't it.)
But he recognizes that he can't simply sit there thinking about it, as much as he'd like to, so before his own silence stretches on too long, he fills in with a slight nod and drags his hands out of his pockets.]
I know you like to know what gave it away, when it comes to things like that.
[He considers carefully for a moment.]
...You're a lot alike, right?
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[His fingers curl around the edge of his cup, a slight joyful motion, and he nods - because Bruno is important, and he's been so focused on catching up that he hasn't had time to actually be happy that he's here. Alive, or something far more like it than anything Giorno could do on his own.]
We are. Although . . . some things are a little bit more like convergent evolution, and some things are all his.
[His values, his beliefs, his influence.]
I told you about perspective before, I think. Bruno provides good perspective.
I hope you understand why I didn't tell you right away. For his sake, mostly. [For his sake in a lot of different ways - because if Giorno was cautious before, he's paranoid now.]
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[For a number of reasons, arguably. One is, of course, because Giorno's word is worth something and to have him vouch for a person carries weight; another is not kindness, exactly, but an almost professional sort of courtesy — because the kind of relationships that Jotaro builds now are the ones that start on a solid foundation, and he's not eager to have this one in its fledgling stages come with the impression that he's the type to use something like an unsuspecting new arrival to his own advantage.
Giorno has had the chance to form his own impressions of Kakyoin; moreover, he'd seen them together. He assumes it'll carry some weight of its own, the admission that he went to Giorno with this first, even before Kakyoin.]
It's fine, though. I just wanted to make sure you knew, one way or another. That he was here now, too.
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[It does make Giorno wonder, though. One way or another - he tips his head slightly to one side, considering Jotaro, gauging. Were you worried about me? he wants to ask, but it seems intrusive and, anyway, isn't the point. But he does wonder.]
Please, tell Kakyoin anything you feel is pertinent. If we're going to be working together [he includes Bruno in this, instantly and smoothly and effortlessly], we need to have open communication. Besides, I wouldn't be surprised if he already had some idea.
[Even though his tactics are very different from Jotaro's, it was obvious that they were both coming to similar conclusions. Kakyoin was the first one Bruno identified, too, the canny one, laying traps with words. But, of course, just as their tactics are different, so Bruno's assessments and reactions are different. He commented on Kakyoin's savvy, his intelligence, his strategy. He mentioned Jotaro's heart.]
[Which is why he's having this conversation with Jotaro and not with Kakyoin. It's heart that he needs now, no matter how reluctant he'd be to admit it.]
He isn't a danger. Far from it. He's honestly a much more moral man than I am. He was the [den mother] leader of the gang within Passione that I initially infiltrated, and - well, now he's my subordinate, technically.
[But there's a touch of humor in that, something he'd never express to Bruno, because it's ridiculous. Bruno is not his; he is Bruno's, and always will be.]
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He seems happy. It's a good look on him, and he makes a quiet note of it, not for now but for sometime later — and whether it'll be for his own benefit or for Giorno's, he's not entirely sure.
He can't remember Dio ever looking happy. Cocky, superior, triumphant, smug, high, full of himself, proud — sure, he'd run that whole spectrum. But never happy, never prompted by something as evidently simple as this, the way that the topic of Bruno Buccellati puts warmth in Giorno's expression and turns up the edges of his mouth.]
So I'll try not to rub it in, that he has to ask permission to sit and I don't. Technically.
["Moral", though. That's an interesting choice of words. Honor, that's something he'd expect to find in a gang in spades, nothing unusual about that. But "moral"...
...He won't say it aloud, but it does occur to him that Giorno conceding Buccellati as being more moral than him might be a double-edged sword. In some respects, it makes him a better person. But organized crime isn't the sort of business that tends to incentivize morality, either.]
Why does he like me? Or is that a secret?
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[And the question is a good one, too. For a moment Giorno isn't sure if he should say exactly what Bruno said, which almost seems too incisive, too intimate, or what he himself gleaned from how Bruno said it, which might be too revealing of Bruno. It's a fine line he's walking here. His loyalty is to Bruno, of course, but . . . Jotaro is important to him already, someone he feels compelled to protect and someone who deserves - has earned - his honesty.]
[He takes a moment to sip his cooling cappuccino, lowering his eyes to consider his options. In the end, he goes with a blend, one that will hopefully reveal exactly the right amount about each of them.]
He likes you because you're a good person. Because you seemed honest and straightforward to him. Because you wanted to help him, even though you didn't have to. He was impressed with the way you made the connection between us, and the ways you did it that were different from Kakyoin's methods.
And . . .
[Shifting slightly in his seat, he crosses one leg over the other under the table, curling his fingers around his cup.]
Because he likes people he can see potential in. I think he saw potential in you.
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