Of course I wasn't kidding is nothing that he says, because he never thought that Togusa thought he was kidding.
"I do..." He puts down the rifle on the table. Even if he remembers being able to use it effortlessly, he is far from comfortable with it right now. If Togusa wants to take a closer look on it though, he's free to. "It was only a very brief memory, and I couldn't see who or what I was fighting." The thought of it though... He doesn't want to fight anyone.
Koutarou's discomfort is obvious, and Togusa is trying to get a lid on his own unease. His friend, well, his friend was almost a fighter, if his father had his way. And he didn't want that life. So anything that drags him back in that direction makes Togusa a little protective of Koutarou.
Togusa snatches up one of the rags that Koutarou keeps around for cleaning before he picks up the gun. Force of habit to not touch it directly and put his prints on the weapon. The first thing he does is flip the gun over and lifts it to examine the underside of the barrel very closely. What he finds, or doesn't find, brings a sharp frown to his face.
"No serial number. Not that something like this could probably be registered anyway." Not again. "But it's old." What on earth is the mechanism on this thing? He peers at the chamber carefully.
Togusa's brow is creased sharply as he puts the gun back down. "I don't want you to get in trouble. I'd have to look up the laws on it, but we could probably get you paperwork on this as a decommissioned antique." But now his friend is in the exact same mess that he's in. Togusa's cheek twitches, but he has to fight that down. Help Koutarou first, get angry later.
As Koutarou has not inspected it closely, he didn't know it didn't have a serial number. Not that he knows much about serial numbers on guns, like where to look or how they're given, or anything of the sort.
He knows though that Togusa knows far more about these sort of things than he ever will know, and he nods slowly. "You're the one who knows how the weapon laws might work... If that's what it would have to be registered as then I will do so, though I don't really know what papers one fill out..... Nor did I ever think I would need to know."
"You shouldn't have to know." The words come out before Togusa can stop them. The look on his face stays one of pure worry. "Why are they dragging you into this? To- give you something like that?" He breathes out a quick sigh.
"I can get you what you need. Just, call it an antique, claim it doesn't work anymore. Because, well, we'd be telling the truth about it. I can't imagine it would be fired." Not in Koutarou's hands. It's just too alien to what he knows of the man.
"Weapons laws are in place to protect people. Both the people who are unarmed, and the people who have weapons that they might not know how to use. This- it's not a danger. It's not to do with just keeping you from getting in trouble. Register it that way, and it'll all be okay." Now, is he saying that to Koutarou, or to himself?
Koutarou shakes his head. "I'm starting to wonder if they have a reason at all."
He makes sure to remember the details on what he's supposed to register it as. He probably won't remember all of the extra details but at least he can remember the important part. Mainly by imagining it in images. A small, grateful smile makes its way up on Koutarou's face as he tucks some hair behind an ear. "Thank you, Hitori." He's not sure the words are completely comforting, but that Togusa is trying matters.
Re: call, midday-ish
"I do..." He puts down the rifle on the table. Even if he remembers being able to use it effortlessly, he is far from comfortable with it right now. If Togusa wants to take a closer look on it though, he's free to. "It was only a very brief memory, and I couldn't see who or what I was fighting." The thought of it though... He doesn't want to fight anyone.
Re: call, midday-ish
Togusa snatches up one of the rags that Koutarou keeps around for cleaning before he picks up the gun. Force of habit to not touch it directly and put his prints on the weapon. The first thing he does is flip the gun over and lifts it to examine the underside of the barrel very closely. What he finds, or doesn't find, brings a sharp frown to his face.
"No serial number. Not that something like this could probably be registered anyway." Not again. "But it's old." What on earth is the mechanism on this thing? He peers at the chamber carefully.
Togusa's brow is creased sharply as he puts the gun back down. "I don't want you to get in trouble. I'd have to look up the laws on it, but we could probably get you paperwork on this as a decommissioned antique." But now his friend is in the exact same mess that he's in. Togusa's cheek twitches, but he has to fight that down. Help Koutarou first, get angry later.
Re: call, midday-ish
He knows though that Togusa knows far more about these sort of things than he ever will know, and he nods slowly. "You're the one who knows how the weapon laws might work... If that's what it would have to be registered as then I will do so, though I don't really know what papers one fill out..... Nor did I ever think I would need to know."
Re: call, midday-ish
"I can get you what you need. Just, call it an antique, claim it doesn't work anymore. Because, well, we'd be telling the truth about it. I can't imagine it would be fired." Not in Koutarou's hands. It's just too alien to what he knows of the man.
"Weapons laws are in place to protect people. Both the people who are unarmed, and the people who have weapons that they might not know how to use. This- it's not a danger. It's not to do with just keeping you from getting in trouble. Register it that way, and it'll all be okay." Now, is he saying that to Koutarou, or to himself?
Re: call, midday-ish
He makes sure to remember the details on what he's supposed to register it as. He probably won't remember all of the extra details but at least he can remember the important part. Mainly by imagining it in images. A small, grateful smile makes its way up on Koutarou's face as he tucks some hair behind an ear. "Thank you, Hitori." He's not sure the words are completely comforting, but that Togusa is trying matters.