I'm not sure you have read all the previous comments, because you are over-lecturing me. But I'll put the blame on the bad quality of my 'pastiche'. I have admitted earlier that my episodes were short or absent. And that I have neglected the general check up. Because of that, I will delete this post once we've closed the discussion.
As for the motive itself, it has a degree 4# in bar 3, which I interpret as a short modulation into the dominant. Otherwise it would just be an altered chord (IV#). So I have assumed for the last bar of the motive a Tonic: I / dom: IV-I. Please, let me know what you think of my choice.
Back to your comment: At bar 6(7) we have {Sop,Bass} = {A,F}-{G,G}-{A,A} = F:I / C:IV. But what do you mean by V-IV? Or did you follow the (wrong) numbering in the score? At bar 5(6),{Bb,G}-{-.E}. This is F:vii6, followed at next bar by F:I / C:IV.
The last two crochets of bar 7(8) are {D,A}-{Bb,G} = d minor: (ambiguously) i or iv. And the next bar is d:V. The key of C is at 6(7), {C,E}-{G,E}, the tonic chord of the dom key in the end of the motive, as I've just explained. I'll not explain for the other bars (12, 16).
About Bach's 2-part inventions, I mentioned (in a previous comment) that Bach's faster rhythm (3 or 4 notes to a beat) is a good asset for handling unessential tones (compared to my 2-notes to a beat). But this motive has a constant, fast rhythm and has only quavers (or semi-). It doesn't leave much room for maneuver of the counter motive and trying to avoid dissonances or ambiguous chords with the motive. And I didn't want to accelerate in the counter-motive. On the contrary, I used 'augmentation' (slower rhythm applied to segments of the motive) in the counter motive. Thank you for your time.