Pressure
April 12 Yagokoro Police Special Forensics Division Director’s Office
The night stretched into the next day. A team of several hundred investigators had begun the search for Touko Aoi. Naturally, Touko Aoi’s whereabouts would not be so easily discovered, and morning came unaccompanied by even the slightest of clues.
There was no post on the Midnight Site either. It was even unclear whether Futodama was alive or dead.
Seven o’clock passed, and Tsuge-san came to work not knowing anything. I told him about Kyouhei Hioka.
“...I see. Kyouhei’s already gone… Well, I kinda thought that was it.”
In the director’s office, I spoke with Tsuge-san about all the events that had unfolded yesterday.
“T-Touko’s Kagu-tsuchi! Not just Kyouhei, but Touko too… How’d it turn out like this…”
Tsuge-san was always lewd and cheerful, but his expression twisted with pain. For Tsuge-san, who had known the two of them ever since they were lovers, the truth surely came as a huge shock. Even though I knew that it was cruel:
“In addition, my partnership with Sousei-san has been dissolved…”
Right now, there was no one I could count on besides Tsuge-san.
“...Gah! Something happened to you guys too? Even though you’re our only hope now…”
Tsuge-san drew his thick eyebrows together and sighed.
“...I apologize. I’m the one at fault. Everything was due to my incompetence, with Touko-san and with Sousei-san…”
Immediately after our separation with Touko-san, Sousei-san told me that he was dissolving our partnership.
After Touko-san left us behind, a period of heavy, empty silence descended between Sousei-san and me. At last, Sousei-san muttered.
“...I quit this case.”
“...Why?”
I asked. I vaguely understood his reasons, but I wanted to hear them straight from his mouth.
“I don’t wanna do something as much of a pain as catching Touko…”
Sousei-san revealed, sounding lonely.
“...And I don’t get it, you know? I’ve got so many questions. Why’d Touko do it? I don’t get it at all and it’s annoying!”
Sousei-san gave an exaggerated shrug of his shoulders.
“But! More importantly, I’m torn! I dunno what to do. You saw it , right? The look in Touko’s eyes? Could you stop her, seeing that look? You couldn’t, right? Those were the eyes of someone ready for the worst. Touko’s already so sure of herself normally, so seeing her so prepared, I really dunno what to do!”
Sousei-san hit the iron fence with his fist, and the entire gate vibrated like a tuning fork.
“...And, Naoto, sorry, but I don’t wanna see your face for a while.”
Just as he said, Sousei-san averted his gaze from me.
“Feels like you betrayed me. No… you really did lie to me. You know exactly what I’m talking about, right, with that perfect fucking memory of yours?”
It did not require a particularly good memory to recall what had transpired a few hours ago.
“You’re too fucking distant! Why didn’t you tell me!? If you suspected Touko and thought she was Kagu-tsuchi, why didn’t you tell me a damn word of it!? Weren’t we supposed to be partners? That means you shouldn’t lie or anything! I’m so fucking pissed off you didn’t trust me at all!”
Sousei-san’s shout resounded and tore through the silence. I was at a loss for words and stood stock-still, silent. His torrent of words stung like thorns.
“...I’m breaking off our partnership. Bye.”
Sousei-san disappeared without giving me a second glance. I felt as if I would shed tears of misery at the departures of first Touko-san, then Sousei-san, due to my mistakes.
However, if I cried here, I would probably not hate myself completely, and so I ground my teeth forcefully as I looked up at the deep blue sky.
I hit the table with the sides of my fists. The teacup containing coffee shook and rattled.
“If only I had been more composed! If only I had had more courage!”
Looking back on the events of yesterday once again, I was disgusted by my own timidity.
“Oi oi, don’t blame yourself like that. In that case, what was Tetsuma Tsuge doing? I know Kyouhei and Touko’s personalities well and I still I couldn’t do anything. You’ll make me want to blame myself.”
In a sudden change from before, Tsuge-san spoke in a lighthearted tone.
“We shouldn’t be focusing on regrets now, right? We can do whatever we want later. Now’s the time to rack our brains and figure out how to stop Touko. And ya know, isn’t it your job as a detective to rack your brains?”
Tsuge-san showed his teeth in a smirk.
“I’ll help if there’s anything I can do, kay? Shouldn’t we fight together to stop Touko?”
Surely this was also painful for Tsuge-san. Even so, he was doing his best to act cheerful and console me through my discouragement. Sousei-san and Ai-chan, and then Touko-san. I believed it was only natural that Tsuge-san missed everyone.
“...Thank you very much,” I murmured softly.
Tsuge-san was a large man. In both appearance and spirit. I had to respond to his consideration.
“I’ve cheered up thanks to you, Tsuge-san. That is the last time you will hear me complain. I’ll try to come up with a method.”
Though it was stiff, I gave him a smile.
“That’s what I’m saying! Don’t try to do it all yourself. You and Touko are both like that. Why do our women try to handle everything themselves? Maybe the men around you are flakes, but it’s better than worrying ‘bout it alone, right?”
I calmed down as he spoke. What a bad habit. I had completely forgotten.
The reassurance from having friends I could count on. I should have already known: if I was with my friends, we would be able to overcome any difficulty we faced, and yet I was becoming embarrassed at my haughtiness in thinking that I would make do alone.
“Anyway, want me to wallop that idiot Sousei and drag him back here? He’s got a mouth on him, but you can more or less count on him.”
I hesitated for a moment and shook my head slightly.
“...No, that is, I don’t know how to face him. I did something extremely discourteous to him.”
I myself insisted that trust was the most essential facet of any partnership, but I had not trusted my partner, Sousei-san.
I had covered up the fact that I suspected Touko-san to be the criminal because I believed that, to him, I was nothing compared to Touko-san.
“That’s, uh, don’t be too hard on yourself. Touko is special to Sousei. He sees his dead mother in her…”
Tsuge-san’s eyes were a bit lonely, and yet they also held nostalgia and fondness.
“His mother…?”
“Is it weird for a robot like him to have a mother? Well, think about it. Isn’t it also weird for a robot like him to have a human-like name like ‘Sousei Kurogami’?”
“–Ah. I didn’t think much of it in the beginning, but it’s true, now that you mention it.”
Sousei-san’s formal designation was – Number R-00, codename “GENESIS”.
“Like Touko said before, the completed Genesis didn’t live up to our Kirijo robot research team’s expectations. To put it bluntly, he was a failed product. You’re a regular kid, but I don’t have to tell you what happens to a failed product, right?”
“...They are disposed of?”
“...Right. Sousei was at a higher level than all the other robots at the time, and if his existence was announced to the world, he’d probably be admired. But we weren’t trying to make just a high-level robot. We were aiming for something that could fight Shadows, an Anti-Shadow Suppression Weapon with a Persona.”
I swallowed deeply, hearing Tsuge-san divulge this inside story full of corporate secrets.
“D’ya remember the basic idea behind Personas I explained before?”
“...Er, if I remember correctly – Personas are a rare power that can be used only by those chosen. There are various theories and phases of study, but one theory is that Personas are an ‘embodiment of the user’s psyche’, called ‘one’s other self’. In addition, they say the ability to call forth a Persona is a latent power only liberated in an extreme situation – is that right?”
“Yeah, yeah! Good job! I heard from Sousei, but you’ve really got a good memory! You’re not famous as a young detective for nothing!”
Tsuge-san’s admiration was so exaggerated that I felt embarrassed.
“That idea was originally proposed by our robot research team like this. ‘If they successfully cultivate the same kind of soul as humans, shouldn’t they awaken as Persona users even if they’re robots?’”
“...Eh? Please wait. Sousei-san is a Persona user, isn’t he? Then doesn’t that count as a success?”
“Now it does. At the time, six years ago, it didn’t look like Genesis would awaken to a Persona. In the first place, it was a mistake to make him a male type; no, maybe the basic structure of the soul was wrong. Anyway, everyone in the research team wanted to give up, but there was one person who proposed we wait before disposing of him. She was the young genius in charge of Genesis’s design – Yuuri Kurogami.”
“Kurogami? Could she be…”
Naturally, I knew the family name, but I had also heard that given name, “Yuuri”. It was a name that Sousei-san had inadvertently mentioned before.
“Yeah, that’s right. Sousei got his last name from Yuuri.”
Tsuge-san nodded emphatically.
“Yuuri suggested we give her Genesis for a year. Genesis’d just been born, so he was innocent as a baby and still mentally a minor. She’d let him live as part of human society, would plant a buncha knowledge into him and let him mature, and try stimulating the birth of a Persona. The Kirijo brass agreed, under a lot of pressure from Yuuri, and gave Genesis a one-year grace period. By the way, Yuuri was the one who started calling him by the name you know, Sousei. That’s how much Yuuri thought of Sousei as her kid.”
“Genesis”, as in the “Book of Genesis”. It seemed his name had been borrowed from there.
[Book of Genesis: 創世記, or “Souseiki”. “Sousei” is Japanese for “Genesis”.]
“...I see, so this Yuuri Kurogami-san took care of Sousei-san for a year. And then Sousei-san started thinking of Yuuri-san as a mother.”
“Yeah. But don’t get me wrong. Sousei’s rude attitude and mouth aren’t because of Yuuri. Yuuri’s heart was in the right place, but she was really a gentle airhead. If I had to say, Sousei was influenced more by TV and Touko, who had a worse mouth then than she does now.”
I thought that Tsuge-san’s blunt personality may also have had a strong influence. Also fascinating was that Touko-san’s name had come up in this context.
“You’ve known Touko-san for six years, haven’t you?”
“Nah, right now it’s closer to ten years. As a Persona user, Touko’s been comin’ and goin’ from the Kirijo Group’s research labs since she was a high schooler. Touko and Yuuri were best friends. They were about the same age and complete opposites, but maybe they got along better ‘cause of it. So naturally, I met Touko. Follows that I met Kyouhei Hioka too, since he was Touko’s friend.”
Tsuge-san snorted slightly.
“Six years ago, Touko’d just become a detective and was colder than she is now, but in front of Kyouhei, she tried her damn hardest to be strong. It was really fun watching the two of them really starting to trust each other, Touko not holdin’ back her words and Kyouhei just smilin’ wryly and taking it.”
Tsuge-san’s face broke into a smile, as if remembering that time. “...That was a pretty lively year.” I caught a glimpse of those happy days within Tsuge-san’s broad grin.
“So, what is Yuuri-san doing now?”
I asked a casual question. I thought she could tell me many stories about Sousei-san and Touko-san.
However, Tsuge-san wore an uncomfortable expression. “Yuuri died five years ago…” His shoulders slumped heavily.
“There was an explosion during an experiment. The accident happened a few days before the deadline to dispose of Genesis. It happened because Yuuri made an unthinkable amateur mistake in connecting machinery, even though she was a genius.”
Tsuge-san’s gaze was like that of a father recalling a daughter who had married and now lived somewhere far away.
“Like Yuuri planned, Genesis matured mentally to a surprising extent over one year. But most importantly, he hadn’t awakened to a Persona, unfortunately. Maybe Yuuri was getting impatient…”
I noticed that Tsuge-san’s fists had clenched tightly on his lap.
“...So then, he’d lived under the same roof with someone like a parent to him, and ‘cause he was a robot and it was job, he couldn’t just roll over and give up on her. He had the human feeling of wanting to save her no matter what…”
I knew well that Tsuge-san was reflecting on his own powerlessness; I had had the same feeling just yesterday.
“Ironic, right! Sousei’s Persona awakened ‘cause of his strong sense of loss from Yuuri’s death! But! Reality is cruel! What the research team really wanted was a combat-type Persona, so they wouldn’t take it!”
It was a dramatic past that made my heart clench just hearing it.
“When you first met Sousei, we said he’d gone wild ‘cause of a mess-up in an experiment, right?”
“...Yes. I remember.”
“That was an instinctive reaction to a huge burden on his soul. We were trying to artificially make him awaken to a combat-type Persona. The same experiment Yuuri was trying when the accident happened. I was carryin’ on Yuuri’s will. But it’s an unprecedented test. T’be honest, there was pretty much no chance it would work…”
Tsuge-san heaved out a huge sigh, like heavy machinery expelling steam.
“Even so! I knew how Sousei felt! It was so Yuuri would be recognized too, even though she was dead! I know he thought if everyone acknowledged him, who was made and raised by Yuuri, they’d praise Yuuri Kurogami, the one who created Genesis, and say she really was a genius! Even if I knew the experiment would fail! I had to help him out!”
Tsuge-san yelled in a loud voice. He laughed feebly for a while, then finally sank deep into the sofa and fell silent, staring up at the white ceiling.
I could not find the words to respond. No matter what I said, I thought the words of an outsider like me would not satisfy Tsuge-san.
“...Here.” At the very least, I could pour him a warm cup of coffee as thanks.
“...Oh, thanks.” I was slightly relieved to see Tsuge-san hungrily drinking the coffee.
“...Thank you very much, Tsuge-san. I’m glad I could hear about Sousei-san’s early life.”
Sousei-san’s past, which I had always wanted to know but did not want to bring up. Our partnership had been hastily arranged, and I knew that we had not pried into each other’s business because we would soon part ways.
However, hearing it like this, I felt regret at my own timidity up until now. It may have been better to know sooner.
“...Well, he’s rude and cheeky and acts all tough, but he’s definitely not a bad kid. Take care of Sousei.”
Tsuge-san finished drinking the coffee and spoke in a calmer voice.
“That’s right. I’ll start by bowing my head to Sousei-san and asking if we can’t be partners again.”
“Ah, no, wait a sec. I’d be happy if you guys let me help patch things up, kinda like a dad, but don’t tell Sousei I told you about the past! He’ll definitely get really mad! You can imagine, right? You wouldn’t know it from looking at him, but Sousei’s pretty shy!”
In the next moment, Tsuge-san snorted as if enjoying himself. I found myself smiling naturally in response. I had been caught up in the mood, and as a result, I felt as if a weight had been lifted from my shoulders.
“...Now that I think about it, it’s not just Sousei-san. I don’t know anything about Touko-san either.”
Now that the situation with Sousei-san was looking up, it was inevitable that my thoughts turned to Touko-san.
“I only know who she is as a detective. I know there’s nothing I can do about it, but I can’t help but feel that things could have turned out differently had I understood Touko-san better.”
I had said myself that I would no longer complain, and I was going against that. I could not help but feel self-deprecating.
“...Geez, there’s nothing you can do.”
Tsuge-san shook his head in a huge motion that matched his body.
“Well, don’t get me wrong. I’m not blamin’ you. I just mean it’s unavoidable. Humans don’t really know much about themselves, an’ there’s no way they’d understand other people. Now, I’m just makin’ excuses, but Touko’s not the kinda woman who’d just wear her heart on her sleeve. I see her all year round and there are still sides of Touko Aoi I don’t know about.”
“...Tsuge-san, do you not know her ‘criminal motive’ either?”
“...T’be honest, no. This is just a pearl of wisdom from an old man, but I can give you an idea. To put it simply, I think it’s got to do with Kyouhei. Can’t really say it’s the main reason for her motive, though.”
However, I had high hopes for this, seeing as it came from Tsuge-san. Why was that?
“If you wanna know about Touko, it would’ve been best to ask Kyouhei. It really is too bad… Ah! No, no! Gotta stop bein’ depressing! Well, let’s see, other than that, all you can do is ask her yourself!”
In the next moment, I stood from the sofa energetically. It was as if I had been electrocuted.
“...That’s it!”
Thanks to Tsuge-san’s words, I could clearly see the steps I should take.
“Hold on, hold on! You’re sayin’ ‘That’s it’, but I was just desperate when I said that, y’know? Isn’t there a lot wrong with tryin’ to ask her yourself?”
Tsuge-san was completely confused.
“Of course we can’t.”
Tsuge-san’s flustered behavior was funny, and the corner of my mouth twitched upward.
“Touko-san herself told me that ‘discovering her criminal motive is my homework’. For her to use that wording specifically means that there is some significance in searching for her motive.”
Tsuge-san rubbed his jaw with his fingertips as he waited for my next words.
“I think Touko means we should hear it from ‘Kyouhei Hioka-san’.”
There was something only we could do–
In the next moment, Tsuge-san cried, “Oh, I get it! That’s what you mean!” and smacked his palm. The strong “whump”, rather than a “whack”, was rather like Tsuge-san.
“Sousei’s ‘Past Reading’, huh. Right, right. He’s pretty reliable, huh?”
“I don’t know about reliable, but he is indispensible. Without Sousei-san, we wouldn’t have been able to corner Touko-san in this case.”
“Yeah! Okay, let me handle things from here. Just wait a bit. Lemme think of places special to Kyouhei and Touko…”
Tsuge-san slapped his cheeks with his hands and began to mumble. I was glad he was so quick to understand.
It was unlikely that we would be able to hear directly from Touko-san herself. In addition, Kyouhei Hioka, who knew the most about her past, was no longer of this world. In that case, there was no other recourse remaining than to detect Kyouhei Hioka’s past conversation in a place special to them when they were intimate.
“Please.” I reseated myself on the sofa and quietly drank coffee so as not to distract Tsuge-san as he searched his memories.
“...Hmm, their favorite bar is in the red light district behind Yagokoro Station, but even if they drank there, in the end it’s a public place and I dunno if Touko would speak her mind there… If they were gonna have a serious conversation ‘bout Touko’s motive, there might be a better chance it was at the apartment they lived in together ‘till five years ago… Ahh, damn, I hate growin’ old, can’t remember the name of the place…”
I waited several dozen more seconds as Tsuge-san muttered.
“–Ah, that was it! Right, right! It was ‘Iwato Apartments’!”
In contrast to Tsuge-san, who looked overjoyed at having picked out that fragment of memory, my expression reflexively stiffened.
“Oh yeah, and I kinda remember hearin’ their place in Iwato Apartments was on a floor with a good view. What was the address again…”
“It’s all right. I know where Iwato Apartments is.”
I answered immediately, and Tsuge-san’s eyes grew round. “Whoa, as expected of the Detective Prince! You don’t miss a thing!” Tsuge-san praised me, nodding. Of course, it was a misunderstanding.
Iwato Apartments was where the body of Miyuki Midorikawa, known as Uzume, had been found.
At that time, an abandoned apartment building outside the city had seemed a suitable place for a murder scene and I had considered no other reason, but in reality, it seemed it was a place Kyouhei Hioka was familiar with and had ties to.
“At that time, if I and Sousei-san had gone over every inch of the mansion, not just the entrance hall where the body was discovered…”
I knew there was no changing what had already happened, even if I regretted it, and yet I could not help but worry at my lower lip.
“Tsuge-san! Thank you for all your help! I’m going to the scene immediately!”
I stood up, meaning to strike while the iron was hot. Then, as soon as I stood, I remembered there was nothing I could do alone. “...That’s right.
“...Er, Tsuge-san, do you know where Sousei-san is now?”
I felt that I owed him an apology. It was irrefutable that I needed him. However, a large part of me felt quite awkward.
When I spoke, Tsuge-san’s shoulders shook hugely and he laughed. I inclined my head to the side, as if to ask why, and Tsuge-san jerked his chin toward the entrance of the director’s office, still grinning. I turned around like he indicated and a person’s silhouette was visible beyond the frosted glass of the door. The person was quite large.
“Ahahaha! He thought back and figured he said too much. But now he’s too scared to show his face and can’t open the door!”
In the next moment, Tsuge-san’s intentionally provocative words echoed loudly through the room.
“Man, he’s really just a big chicken!”
“W-Who the hell are you calling a chicken, Gramps!?”
In the next moment, the door was thrown open forcefully and a tall man in red and black clothes stormed into the room. I was already very familiar with his voice and figure.
“...Ah.” Sousei-san’s eyes met mine and his expression became one of chagrin.
“...Ah.” I had not been able to emotionally prepare myself, and so I also let out a foolish sound.
“Oi! You two! Here’s your chance! Both of you bow and make up!”
Tsuge-san spoke in a booming voice. Perhaps he took in the situation and was trying to encourage us as we stood silent and unmoving, but it evidently had the opposite effect.
“...Geez! You’re hopeless, Naoto! If you haven’t got this Sousei Kurogami with you, you can’t do anything alone! Well, I guess the great me just has to pair up with you again!”
His arms crossed, Sousei-san declared in an overbearing manner.
“...What? You’re much too presumptuous. I’ve worked alone as a detective up until now and solved countless cases by myself. To put it simply, it’s easier for me to work alone. Sousei-san, if you must insist on aiding me, I won’t refuse you.”
I returned his words and his behavior tit for tat.
“...Oi oi, are you guys in preschool!? Why’re you actin’ like this? Stop this weird competition and talk seriously!”
It was only natural that Tsuge-san be shocked. I was more dumbfounded than anyone that my actions were in direct opposition to my feelings. However, when the person facing me acted so arrogant, for some reason my hackles raised unconsciously.
“...Um, I’m in a hurry. If your large body continues to block the entrance, it will only hinder me. Please move.”
“Why you! Naoto! You’re so! Dammit, what an uncute woman! This would all be over if you just apologized! Weren’t you just telling Gramps you’d bow to me!?”
“...You were eavesdropping? Ah, scary.”
“W-what’s with that ‘Ah, scary’!? Don’t fuck with me! You’re trying my fucking patience here!”
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