[It was funny, really. Little gestures like this always reminded him of Jotaro now. Everyone he loved had their unique ways of loving back. Izabel worked to make him laugh. Jotaro distracted him with words or actions, or asked what he liked best in secret and then made it happen. Bruno was just there, a constant supportive presence, a good man, his family. Trish refused to give him any slack and rested her head on him and called him nicknames, and Mista was an extension of him, openly and unabashedly devoted in a way no one had ever been before, a way he'd earned.]
[But here Kakyoin was, in typical fashion, with a pincer attack: words not only clever and articulate but undeniably logical, and the ability to make beautiful, thoughtful things out of nothing. And once again, it seemed as though he hadn't really thought about it. It was so strange to think that someone like this didn't understand the depths of his own capacity for kindness, that he thought his only value was being valuable, rather than in some intrinsic rightness he possessed without any effort at all.]
[Giorno took the emerald between his fingers, turning it, inspecting it from all angles in the light streaming through the window. He wasn't shaking anymore. Just smiling.]
Thank you, Kakyoin. Very much. I always feel as though when I speak to you, I come away a thousand times more clear-headed.
Do you have any idea, though, how much you remind me of myself sometimes? It's uncanny. We're not the same, I know we're not, but - it took me so long to learn what I was and what I wanted to be, to leave uncertainty behind, for the most part at least. And sometimes it still seems like there's so much work left to do.
I was about to say exactly the same thing, on both counts. You have the unique ability to point out the obvious things that I've somehow overlooked in the clearest way possible. Straightforward people like that are something I honestly appreciate.
[Hierophant changed form as he spoke, disappearing from Kakyoin's hands and retreating around its user's arm to hide under his sleeve like a snake looking for warmth.]
It doesn't take long for me to decide whether or not I like someone, and I've respected you immeasurably since that first night, the minute you told us about what you wanted for Passione. Like you, I'm willing to do what others would consider 'immoral' in the name of what's really right--obviously I've killed people, and may have even hotwired a car or two on the way to Egypt. It's hardly on the scale of reforming a criminal organization, but I leave the larger-picture things to other people. To put it in perspective, you're the kind of person I would follow without hesitation, of my own free will. ...even if my parents would probably disapprove of organized crime as a viable career path.
[A genuine smile came across Kakyoin's face, sincere instead of the pleasantly diplomatic or passive-aggressive looks he so often wore.]
You compared Passione under Diavolo to a tree choked with wisteria, too. At the time and even more so now, I thought wisteria suited you just as much--not because of that, but because of its meaning. Victory over hardship, loving support, enduring through heartache...I think we can both understand that. Right?
[Oh. Well. He had to smile at that, and while there was an element of beatific pleasure in it as in all (well, most) of his smiles, it was just as genuine as Kakyoin's own expression, this time. He turned the ladybug a couple more rotations in his hands, glancing down at it almost shyly, because . . . from Kakyoin, that meant so much, to be someone he would follow. Without hesitation.]
Right.
[And for a moment that seemed to be all of it; but then:]
Once, with Bruno, I stole a hundred cars as a diversion. And we stole a plane, but Bruno was very polite about it.
[Kakyoin's smile turned to something amused, for once looking his age himself. A plane was one thing, but how in the hell did one steal a hundred cars as a diversion?]
I stole a truck in Calcutta. Ask Polnareff sometime, he might tell you. He got himself into trouble with a couple of particularly troublesome enemy Stand users, and we needed a fast getaway.
[Beat.]
It didn't actually occur to me until later that I had no idea how to drive. Not that it really mattered.
[But it was fond, not exasperated, because for all that Polnareff was annoying sometimes, it really did sound as though he'd sobered a lot since Kakyoin knew him. And that was sort of sad, honestly, because it tasted like survivor's guilt more than growing up, and - well. That wasn't what they were talking about, though.]
[He leaned forward a little bit across the table, grinning.]
I didn't, either. Because I was fifteen at the time, and Mista forgot. He was yelling at me to drive better. I had to remind him while he was fighting a Stand user following us that I couldn't drive because I was fifteen.
[Kakyoin broke out into a quiet but very genuine laugh, hurriedly hiding it behind his hand.]
Mista's a little more infuriating than Polnareff ever was, but I've noticed they're very similar in a way. That's exactly the kind of thing he might have done in any other circumstances.
[Strangely, he found himself recalling Death Thirteen again, but in a context lacking the sheer mortal terror of the incident. He never really did get Polnareff back for making Kakyoin want to throttle him, but he supposed it kind of evened itself out in the end.]
...He's a good person, but he drove us all insane more than a few times.
[Okay, so making Kakyoin laugh was vaulting quickly to the top of his important-things-to-do-regularly list. He sat back in his seat, satisfied, and nodded, understanding completely.]
There's always got to be one of those, right? Someone to be ridiculous and drive everyone crazy in the little ways, so they don't lose it in the big ways.
I don't know, though, it was very . . . I did need him from the start. I don't think I would be who I am now without him.
[So there's that decision made, it seems; he looked at Kakyoin carefully, still smiling, but softer.]
Would it be all right if I told you something? It's not a big life-changing secret or anything, I just think it might be the right thing to do, to tell you.
No, I absolutely know what you mean. Polnareff is my closest friend after Jotaro, and frankly I could probably stand the troublesome influence once in a while.
['I need to lighten up', in other words.]
Of course, you can tell me whatever you need to. I'm listening.
[Because of course he was. Wasn't Kakyoin always listening to everyone but himself?]
[And now that he'd decided to do it, it didn't seem all that scary. He balanced the emerald ladybug between his first fingers, marveling at the details of it, the slight depressions that indicated spots and the slender demarcations of its legs.]
Since we were talking about names earlier, I thought you might be the best person to know - I'm not actually Italian. At all. The name I was given at birth was Shiobana Haruno. But when we moved to Italy so my mother could get married, my stepfather thought it should be changed, so it was.
I've never actually told anyone since I was . . . five? It was easier to pretend I belonged. But it was a lot to adjust to, on top of everything else.
[That was something he hadn't seen coming. Obviously, predicting that was impossible--even so, Kakyoin felt just a little guilty for having blindly mentioned changing one's name at all.]
It's a nice name--they both are, honestly. [Choosing his words very carefully, Kakyoin's restless hands lightly wrapped around his cup of coffee again--with a faint green glow still hidden under the sleeve of his jacket.] As I said...I understand the significance of a name no matter what it might be or how it could change.
[A pause...Kakyoin took a breath and looked up, facing Giorno steadily and with calm confidence.]
'Kakyoin Tenmei.' That's the name my parents gave me--only a few people here know that. I tell them I just don't like the way it sounded. Which I don't, but it's more than that. Either way, it's not really the same situation, considering I changed mine by choice.
But as long as we're exchanging names, it's only fair for you to have mine, too.
[He looked up at that, smiling again, curious but not invasively so, just very willing to hear whatever Kakyoin is willing to tell him. It was a good thing to know, even if he never used or heard the name Tenmei again - a part of Kakyoin's history, even if it was one that he'd rejected.]
Part of the importance of Don Giovanna to me is . . . that it's mine. All mine. Something that I made and took for myself.
I understand--'Noriaki' is something I needed when I was younger. Something I crafted and built on my own as well. It's written the same way...all I did was read it differently. Even at that age, I wanted to make myself into something...not what I was.
'Kakyoin' is fine--it's my name, obviously. I'm used to everyone using it, even Jotaro. I don't really think-...I'm not sure I ever really managed to become the kind of person I wanted to be, not yet. So I don't think I want anyone to casually use what I call myself just yet.
[...]
I might break Mista's nose if he continues the way he does, you understand. Nothing personal.
[You know how when you teach a kid to do something new and hilarious, like peek-a-boo or clapping games, they giggle and clap all excited? Yeah, that's what's happening here right now.]
See, you'd fit right in. Narancia used to threaten us with knives all the time.
...neither did I. It was far too much work that ended in persistent disappointment.
[. . .]
It's been long enough that I thought I'd be used to it...you know, having actual friends. But I guess I just still don't know how to react around them sometimes.
[Secretly had a big old conversation about your inability to chill at the prospect of having friends, Kakyoin.]
I wouldn't have gotten even remotely competent at . . . dealing with people, really connecting, if it weren't for Bruno, I don't think. All of them, but--
[He looked down at the ladybug again.]
Bruno taught me how to treat people with love, and Mista taught me how to prioritize my friends' lives over victory.
[Kakyoin glanced away, expression turning to a fond but forlorn smile.]
I don't know who or what I'd be if not for them. If I hadn't been involved in all this, I'd...just be on my own, even now. Still that miserable, despairing, isolated coward that wanted to change himself. They weren't the most conventional group of friends, but they're mine. I'll never forget a second of the time we spent together, even if it was short.
[Even if it ended the way it did, and even if he never saw the rest of them again. If he really did end up having to die for them, that was fine.]
Like I told you before...we belong here now. Even if we're not family, we're...family. Right?
[He nodded, still not quite looking up yet, just thinking about all of this. He'd still be on his own, too - even if he'd succeeded at becoming Don of Passione without Bruno, he'd be running it into the ground. And he'd be miserable. Because . . . Bruno taught him how to treat people with love, and Mista taught him how to be happy.]
[In the end, when he did glance up at Kakyoin again, it was a little too solemn, maybe, considering how light things had been a moment ago. But it was genuine, and he felt that was important, more important than being misleading to maintain some arbitrary standard of politeness. They were both beyond that with each other at this point, he though.]
We are. And you know that you're my family, too, if you want to be. Right? One of us.
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[It was funny, really. Little gestures like this always reminded him of Jotaro now. Everyone he loved had their unique ways of loving back. Izabel worked to make him laugh. Jotaro distracted him with words or actions, or asked what he liked best in secret and then made it happen. Bruno was just there, a constant supportive presence, a good man, his family. Trish refused to give him any slack and rested her head on him and called him nicknames, and Mista was an extension of him, openly and unabashedly devoted in a way no one had ever been before, a way he'd earned.]
[But here Kakyoin was, in typical fashion, with a pincer attack: words not only clever and articulate but undeniably logical, and the ability to make beautiful, thoughtful things out of nothing. And once again, it seemed as though he hadn't really thought about it. It was so strange to think that someone like this didn't understand the depths of his own capacity for kindness, that he thought his only value was being valuable, rather than in some intrinsic rightness he possessed without any effort at all.]
[Giorno took the emerald between his fingers, turning it, inspecting it from all angles in the light streaming through the window. He wasn't shaking anymore. Just smiling.]
Thank you, Kakyoin. Very much. I always feel as though when I speak to you, I come away a thousand times more clear-headed.
Do you have any idea, though, how much you remind me of myself sometimes? It's uncanny. We're not the same, I know we're not, but - it took me so long to learn what I was and what I wanted to be, to leave uncertainty behind, for the most part at least. And sometimes it still seems like there's so much work left to do.
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[Hierophant changed form as he spoke, disappearing from Kakyoin's hands and retreating around its user's arm to hide under his sleeve like a snake looking for warmth.]
It doesn't take long for me to decide whether or not I like someone, and I've respected you immeasurably since that first night, the minute you told us about what you wanted for Passione. Like you, I'm willing to do what others would consider 'immoral' in the name of what's really right--obviously I've killed people, and may have even hotwired a car or two on the way to Egypt. It's hardly on the scale of reforming a criminal organization, but I leave the larger-picture things to other people. To put it in perspective, you're the kind of person I would follow without hesitation, of my own free will. ...even if my parents would probably disapprove of organized crime as a viable career path.
[A genuine smile came across Kakyoin's face, sincere instead of the pleasantly diplomatic or passive-aggressive looks he so often wore.]
You compared Passione under Diavolo to a tree choked with wisteria, too. At the time and even more so now, I thought wisteria suited you just as much--not because of that, but because of its meaning. Victory over hardship, loving support, enduring through heartache...I think we can both understand that. Right?
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Right.
[And for a moment that seemed to be all of it; but then:]
Once, with Bruno, I stole a hundred cars as a diversion. And we stole a plane, but Bruno was very polite about it.
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[Kakyoin's smile turned to something amused, for once looking his age himself. A plane was one thing, but how in the hell did one steal a hundred cars as a diversion?]
I stole a truck in Calcutta. Ask Polnareff sometime, he might tell you. He got himself into trouble with a couple of particularly troublesome enemy Stand users, and we needed a fast getaway.
[Beat.]
It didn't actually occur to me until later that I had no idea how to drive. Not that it really mattered.
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[But it was fond, not exasperated, because for all that Polnareff was annoying sometimes, it really did sound as though he'd sobered a lot since Kakyoin knew him. And that was sort of sad, honestly, because it tasted like survivor's guilt more than growing up, and - well. That wasn't what they were talking about, though.]
[He leaned forward a little bit across the table, grinning.]
I didn't, either. Because I was fifteen at the time, and Mista forgot. He was yelling at me to drive better. I had to remind him while he was fighting a Stand user following us that I couldn't drive because I was fifteen.
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Mista's a little more infuriating than Polnareff ever was, but I've noticed they're very similar in a way. That's exactly the kind of thing he might have done in any other circumstances.
[Strangely, he found himself recalling Death Thirteen again, but in a context lacking the sheer mortal terror of the incident. He never really did get Polnareff back for making Kakyoin want to throttle him, but he supposed it kind of evened itself out in the end.]
...He's a good person, but he drove us all insane more than a few times.
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There's always got to be one of those, right? Someone to be ridiculous and drive everyone crazy in the little ways, so they don't lose it in the big ways.
I don't know, though, it was very . . . I did need him from the start. I don't think I would be who I am now without him.
[So there's that decision made, it seems; he looked at Kakyoin carefully, still smiling, but softer.]
Would it be all right if I told you something? It's not a big life-changing secret or anything, I just think it might be the right thing to do, to tell you.
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['I need to lighten up', in other words.]
Of course, you can tell me whatever you need to. I'm listening.
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[Because of course he was. Wasn't Kakyoin always listening to everyone but himself?]
[And now that he'd decided to do it, it didn't seem all that scary. He balanced the emerald ladybug between his first fingers, marveling at the details of it, the slight depressions that indicated spots and the slender demarcations of its legs.]
Since we were talking about names earlier, I thought you might be the best person to know - I'm not actually Italian. At all. The name I was given at birth was Shiobana Haruno. But when we moved to Italy so my mother could get married, my stepfather thought it should be changed, so it was.
I've never actually told anyone since I was . . . five? It was easier to pretend I belonged. But it was a lot to adjust to, on top of everything else.
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[That was something he hadn't seen coming. Obviously, predicting that was impossible--even so, Kakyoin felt just a little guilty for having blindly mentioned changing one's name at all.]
It's a nice name--they both are, honestly. [Choosing his words very carefully, Kakyoin's restless hands lightly wrapped around his cup of coffee again--with a faint green glow still hidden under the sleeve of his jacket.] As I said...I understand the significance of a name no matter what it might be or how it could change.
[A pause...Kakyoin took a breath and looked up, facing Giorno steadily and with calm confidence.]
'Kakyoin Tenmei.' That's the name my parents gave me--only a few people here know that. I tell them I just don't like the way it sounded. Which I don't, but it's more than that. Either way, it's not really the same situation, considering I changed mine by choice.
But as long as we're exchanging names, it's only fair for you to have mine, too.
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[He looked up at that, smiling again, curious but not invasively so, just very willing to hear whatever Kakyoin is willing to tell him. It was a good thing to know, even if he never used or heard the name Tenmei again - a part of Kakyoin's history, even if it was one that he'd rejected.]
Part of the importance of Don Giovanna to me is . . . that it's mine. All mine. Something that I made and took for myself.
You do still prefer your surname?
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'Kakyoin' is fine--it's my name, obviously. I'm used to everyone using it, even Jotaro. I don't really think-...I'm not sure I ever really managed to become the kind of person I wanted to be, not yet. So I don't think I want anyone to casually use what I call myself just yet.
[...]
I might break Mista's nose if he continues the way he does, you understand. Nothing personal.
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[. . . Basic respect, and then there's Mista. He sighed, but - still smiling, because. You know.]
If you break it for that, I'll tell him he has to wait for it to heal normally.
[And then probably fix it anyway. But, you know.]
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I guess we'll have to see what happens. I certainly won't do anything unless he deserves it.
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[Or a pummeling into hell. Mista's usually a little better than that, though.]
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[LEANS FORWARD EAGERLY.]
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[FRIENDSHIP]
I don't think I broke his nose, but it must have been close.
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See, you'd fit right in. Narancia used to threaten us with knives all the time.
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That's high praise, coming from you. I have to confess I'm not used to fitting in many places.
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[. . .]
It's been long enough that I thought I'd be used to it...you know, having actual friends. But I guess I just still don't know how to react around them sometimes.
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[Secretly had a big old conversation about your inability to chill at the prospect of having friends, Kakyoin.]
I wouldn't have gotten even remotely competent at . . . dealing with people, really connecting, if it weren't for Bruno, I don't think. All of them, but--
[He looked down at the ladybug again.]
Bruno taught me how to treat people with love, and Mista taught me how to prioritize my friends' lives over victory.
And how to have fun. That, too.
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[Kakyoin glanced away, expression turning to a fond but forlorn smile.]
I don't know who or what I'd be if not for them. If I hadn't been involved in all this, I'd...just be on my own, even now. Still that miserable, despairing, isolated coward that wanted to change himself. They weren't the most conventional group of friends, but they're mine. I'll never forget a second of the time we spent together, even if it was short.
[Even if it ended the way it did, and even if he never saw the rest of them again. If he really did end up having to die for them, that was fine.]
Like I told you before...we belong here now. Even if we're not family, we're...family. Right?
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[He nodded, still not quite looking up yet, just thinking about all of this. He'd still be on his own, too - even if he'd succeeded at becoming Don of Passione without Bruno, he'd be running it into the ground. And he'd be miserable. Because . . . Bruno taught him how to treat people with love, and Mista taught him how to be happy.]
[In the end, when he did glance up at Kakyoin again, it was a little too solemn, maybe, considering how light things had been a moment ago. But it was genuine, and he felt that was important, more important than being misleading to maintain some arbitrary standard of politeness. They were both beyond that with each other at this point, he though.]
We are. And you know that you're my family, too, if you want to be. Right? One of us.
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WE'RE UNDER ATTACK AND COULD DIE AT ANY TIME
THERE IS ALWAYS TIME FOR A SECRET HANDSHAKE, JOSEPH
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