[[iMPORTANT ACTION: Dialogue with Anna; The knowledge of how Illusory Fields work]]
Will laughed aloud, but promptly thought better of it. He folded his arms across his chest and looked the apparition of that woman square in the eye. "Hmph, just because you have fancy bells and whistles on your magic tricks doesn't mean you're any less of a witch." He dismissed with a raise of his right hand from the cross-arm.
The janitor then let out a loud sigh as he listened to her choices for him. "I'm glad this is all some big game to you. I get to pick one memory? Gee, thanks! I am so humbled by your benevolence." His voice was coated in thick sarcasm. Will changed his position to having his left arm on his hip and his right rubbing his chin, signaling a deep thought.
"But I do realize that getting mad at you won't help my case any. I'm not completely ignorant of that. Still," He returned his gaze to her. "Assuming it's in my best interests to comply with you at the moment, let me keep the memory of how these fields work. It's technical knowledge, which is useful; if someone else happens to have memory issues, I'll be able to figure out what's going on." He nodded, being as satisfied as he could be from this ridiculous situation. His reasoning was that if he chose to remember just talking to Anna, he wouldn't learn anything new; she was already the only witch he knew who was capable of these kinds of things, so if another oddity occurs, it probably wouldn't take him long to connect it to her. While understanding that knowing Tenjo's office is a mysterious place is useful, and could help with leads in further investigations should there be any, Will simply weighed that any investigation might lead there anyway due to the obvious connections Mr. Tenjo had to the strange occurrences. It wasn't even that Will thought he would be investigating; what could he gain from such an undertaking? It was that there was something inherently bothersome about the fact that that woman is keeping things from him. Even in his circumstances, he couldn't trust her completely.