“So what’s on your mind? What do you need my help with?” I expected her answer to have to do with an elderly parent or aunt or something of that nature. If there was anything I was known for now, it was taking care of the older set, and I was proud of my achievements. I loved my mom, despite our fight earlier in the year, and I loved the family farm, too. I would do anything for her. But I didn’t want to be known as a farmer. That wasn’t my destiny. This was.
“It’s complicated. Did you know I’m only about five years older than you, and that my family goes back in this town for several generations?” She dried a teacup, being careful to wipe the porcelain down thoroughly before setting it on the shelf next to the others.
“No. I didn’t know that. Did we go to the same high school?” It was the same high school I had visited last year during the investigation of Akiko’s father’s death.
“No. I went to high school in Kawagoe, but my best friend at the time went to your high school. Maybe you remember her? Ria Fukuda?”
I fumbled and dropped the teacup I was washing and blew out a relieved breath that it was undamaged. “Do I remember her? I think the whole town remembers her.”
Ria Fukuda was Chikata’s biggest mystery. Forget the deaths of Akiko’s father or Etsuko or Amanda. The disappearance of Ria plagued our town for many years. One day, she had been laughing and playing with her friends at a town festival. The next morning she was gone. No note. No indication that she was unhappy and had run away. Nothing. The search went on for weeks, and her parents pleaded with town residents endlessly for help. They never gave up on her, even when all her friends had moved on to college and their adult lives. Even when their younger sisters and brothers had done the same.
“She was my best friend from birth. We were inseparable until senior high school when we went different ways.” Akai’s eyes were unfocused and distant, her memories diving back to over a decade ago. “After her mother died, I started visiting two, sometimes three, days a week with her father. You know, helping him with everyday stuff like this.” She lifted her dry teacup and placed it on the shelf. “He never recovered from her disappearance, always waiting at the window, looking outside, hopeful she would return. It broke my heart, but there was nothing I could do for him besides making his home life more comfortable.”
“That’s so sad. I remember her being such a fun girl.” I soaped up another dish as I traveled back in time, to the fields behind Akiko’s house, where we played with her brother, Tama, and his friends, including Ria. Akiko and I had both looked up to her. Ria was pretty and smart, and she had both male and female friends. Her personality was open and welcoming, which was why so many people were affected by her disappearance. “But I haven’t thought about her in years. I always figured she had run away.”
“Yeah, everyone suspected the same. But I knew her well enough to believe differently. She loved her parents, and she wanted to make them proud. She was excited to go to college. Wanted to be a teacher.” Akai chuckled, shaking her head. “She loved kids.”
I smiled as I remembered how Ria had always spent time with us even though the older kids found the little kids annoying.
“Anyway, her father got lung cancer a few years ago. He’d picked up chain-smoking after Ria went missing, and it burned him from the inside out.” Akai grimaced, her lip curled in an angry S. “Ria had no brothers or sisters, and her parents had no family left, so her dad left everything to me in his will.”
I raised my eyebrows at her as I washed the last teacup.
Akai sighed, her shoulders dropping. “It’s not as great as you think. The man was a hoarder, and now I have a fire hazard of a house on my hands, and contracts for network security work are piling up on my desk. I want to get the place cleaned out and on the market before the end of the year, but I don’t think I can do it myself.” Her voice quavered, and my heart constricted. Akai wasn’t one to show emotion, and here she was talking to me about them.
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