In Akane's desk drawer there are a few things of interest:
-- Her journal. Entirely written in Japanese. It's pretty mundane -- at first she was using it to chronicle how she spent her time and what she saw here, and after Day Four it takes a turn for the weird. A lot of rambling about "morphogenetic ability;" something called Free the Soul; her continuous failing attempts to contact her brother, Aoi; and her theory discussed earlier with Holden. Some of the pages have wet spots, like she was crying when she wrote them -- notably a page where she discusses her knowledge of her imminent death, and her reflections on her private conversation with Holden. She's frustratingly vague on the latter, as if she herself couldn't decide what to make of it. She does make one thing clear: Whatever happened during that conversation made her quite uneasy about the boy, although not suspicious enough to vote for him.
The last note is the names of those who voted for her at Day 6's trial, with question marks by them. She didn't come to any fruitful conclusions about why they voted for her before she died, although she seemed most suspicious of the two nations.
If you peruse the slice of life section, you can tell she's most attached to Holden here, even in light of her last notes on him.
-- Her voodoo doll, June, wrapped in a single piece of paper that bears (in English) an address within Japan and a note: "Somebody please send this back to my friend." There's another message on here that's been heavily blocked out, like after writing it she thought better than to include it.
Journal, two letters filtered to relevant people and gamehead!
-- Her journal. Entirely written in Japanese. It's pretty mundane -- at first she was using it to chronicle how she spent her time and what she saw here, and after Day Four it takes a turn for the weird. A lot of rambling about "morphogenetic ability;" something called Free the Soul; her continuous failing attempts to contact her brother, Aoi; and her theory discussed earlier with Holden. Some of the pages have wet spots, like she was crying when she wrote them -- notably a page where she discusses her knowledge of her imminent death, and her reflections on her private conversation with Holden. She's frustratingly vague on the latter, as if she herself couldn't decide what to make of it. She does make one thing clear: Whatever happened during that conversation made her quite uneasy about the boy, although not suspicious enough to vote for him.
The last note is the names of those who voted for her at Day 6's trial, with question marks by them. She didn't come to any fruitful conclusions about why they voted for her before she died, although she seemed most suspicious of the two nations.
If you peruse the slice of life section, you can tell she's most attached to Holden here, even in light of her last notes on him.
-- A private letter to Kirigiri Kyoko. In Japanese.
-- A private letter to Holden Caulfield. In English.
-- Her voodoo doll, June, wrapped in a single piece of paper that bears (in English) an address within Japan and a note: "Somebody please send this back to my friend." There's another message on here that's been heavily blocked out, like after writing it she thought better than to include it.