Hayato borrows the keys to Lilli’s minivan, and about half an hour later, we find ourselves on a street lined with apartment buildings.
A blonde woman with bedraggled hair and a thick German accent answers our knock. “Why are you showing up on my doorstep so early in the morning?”
I wince apologetically. “We’re really sorry for coming by so early. We’re looking for Uta.”
“You’ve found her,” she says, her eyes confused and bleary.
“I know you don’t know me, but I’m Kristal Kringle. And this is Hayato, Norio Nakamura’s brother.”
I was concerned I would have to explain who Norio Nakamura was, considering that it had been over four years since she last saw No and his family at Dallas Montana’s funeral. But her face immediately lights up with recognition.
“Oh dear Lord, please tell me Mr. Nakamura, Lilli, and Ruby are okay. I cannot take another tragedy.”
“No, no, they’re all okay,” I say quickly, feeling guilty about alarming her. “It’s just we have something — something that belongs to you.”
I pull out the dusty velvet box that we found hidden underneath a floorboard in the guardhouse where Dallas Montana used to live. “Dallas wanted you to have this. In fact, that was his very last wish.”
I open the box to reveal the simple engagement ring inside and extend it toward her. At first, her face softens. But then it hardens. “Why would you bring that thing here?”
She’s looking at the piece of jewelry inside the velvet box like it’s a dead rat, not the engagement ring her boyfriend had been planning to give her before he died.
“I’ve been trying to get over Dallas for four years. Four years!” she screeches at me. “And now, you appear at my door with this ring he was planning to give me? How am I supposed to respond to this ring? How can I…?”
She dissolves into tears.
I’m not sure what to do. I thought she would be happy. I thought this would be the opposite of drawing a picture of a soon-to-be-departed loved one. But it’s not, and I don’t know what to say to help her with her pain.
I’m surprised when Hayato steps forward.
“This ring is a symbol of Mr. Montana’s love. This ring should give you peace,” he tells her. “Mr. Montana died, but he was happy before he died. Because of you. You are what made his death tolerable. And that is why he wants you to have this. He wants you to keep this ring and know that he loved you. But he also wants you to move on and find someone who makes you as happy as you made him.”
A transformation comes over Uta as Hayato speaks. Her shoulders stop shaking with sobs. And by the time he’s done talking, she’s smiling—at least a little bit.
She sniffs. “Do you really think I made him happy? That his death was okay because of me?”
“Yes, because of you,” Hayato assures her, his voice quiet and sincere. “Because he loved you.”
More tears spill from Uta’s eyes. But she’s nodding now. And it sounds like she’s remembering something previously forgotten when she says, “Yes, yes, he loved me. And I loved him. And for a while, we were happy. Truly happy.”
She sniffs again. Then she wipes her tears away. “May I… May I have the ring he wanted to give me?”
“Of course!” I press the open box into her trembling hands. “It’s yours. It’s always been yours. We just had to find it for Dallas.”
So no…
It wasn’t the most straightforward resolution we’ve made on a spirit’s behalf. But it feels right.
Hayato and I drive back to the Lake Washington mansion in companionable silence. And after we enter the house, Hayato looks toward the staircase. “He’s gone.”
He’s gone…
I’m happy for Dallas, but I have to ask Hayato, “How did you…? How did you know what to say to her? Exactly what to say to make her feel better?”
He looks at me for the longest time. And in the strangest way. His eyes are two pools of black, dark and aching, and it feels like I’m falling into them.
But the sound of faraway beeping disrupts the moment. And the landing above us suddenly fills with noise.
It’s almost 8 AM, I realize with a jolt. Time for our date with the sunrise.
We all gather together on the mansion’s flat roof and watch the sun come up over the tree line. Together. Without warning, a hand wraps around mine. It’s Hayato. Being openly affectionate, right here in front of his family.
He doesn’t seem to notice or care about all the people standing around us as he says, “Stay with me. Don’t return to your job. Forget our deal. Come to Japan with me and stay.”
He swallows hard before adding, “Please. I want you to stay. I want you to stay with me.”
Oh, Hayato…
Both my chest and stomach cave in. It’s like a bomb of guilt and sorrow has exploded inside of me, triggered by his invitation.
“I want to stay with you. You don’t know how bad I want to do that.”
I’m not Uta. Neither of us is dead. But I feel like sobbing as I answer, “But I can’t. I can’t stay with you.”
Don’t embarrass Hayato.
That was all I wanted. It was my only goal for this unexpected visit. But I can feel his family’s eyes on me, quiet and shocked.
I’ve embarrassed him. I’m embarrassing him. And there’s nothing I can do to make this better.
Hayato flinches hard like he’s just taken a punch. But then his eyes heat with anger. “So you don’t want to stay with me beyond the twelve days of Christmas? You’d rather work for free in a factory?”
“It’s a workshop,” I correct, my voice small and miserable.
Hayato shakes his head at me, his handsome features a tight grimace of disbelief. “Why? Why are you choosing that life over the one I could give you?”
Okay…
I was trying to keep my reasons for returning to my job at the workshop a secret. I had wanted to keep the mood of our relationship light and carefree.
But now, it’s beyond obvious that what was supposed to be a shallow twelve days has plunged into a much deeper emotional pool. The truth is, I overstand the frustration he’s feeling. I’m in deeper than I wanted to be, too. Way, way deeper.
“You deserve the truth. So I’m going to tell you —“
“Touchan! Touchan! Look at us, Touchan. We’re up here! We’re up here!”
The cries of Dallas and Montana rip us from our intense conversation.
I look down from the beautiful rooftop just in time to see a man climb out of a dark suburban much like the one that dropped us off here yesterday. Touchan…that must mean father in Japanese. For the man below looks just as happy to see Dallas and Montana as they do him.
“I couldn’t stand spending New Year without you, so I hired a car to drive me here from Portland last night!” he calls up to his family, a wide smile splitting his handsome face.
This must be Norio, Hayato’s brother. My heart rises with cheer at the prospect of getting to meet him before we leave…
Right before my head fills with white noise. The compulsion to draw cramps my stomach and tingles up my arm. Hard. Harder than it ever has before.
“Don’t.” That one word, harsh and angry, breaks through the loud static inside my head.
And when I look away from Norio, I find Hayato staring at me, his expression filled with censure…and anger.
“I’m sorry,” I answer, my voice cracking with sorrow.
Then I rush away before he can tell me not to do what I have to do again. I find my sketchbook exactly where I left it. In my backpack, at the foot of the bed where Hayato and I made love this morning.
And it was love. True Love. As much as I had tried to deny it before, I know exactly what I’m going to lose as I sit down on the edge of the bed and begin to draw.
What I had with Hayato won’t survive this. I know that as I draw. And I know it even more clearly when the two faces emerge…on two separate pieces of sketchbook paper…but exactly the same.
I blink. I blink at the twin drawings so hard.
If not for the usual compulsion to hand the sketches over to the people who would soon lose someone important to them, I might still be sitting on that bed, not quite believing my eyes. But this so-called gift Santa gave me works the same way every time.
Just a few minutes after I’m done drawing, I make my way downstairs.
Everyone’s in the kitchen now, drinking coffee and orange juice and chatting happily. The smell of pancakes wafts in the air. I don’t know that I’ve ever seen such a cheery scene outside of Santa’s workshop.
I hate myself. I hate myself so much for destroying their happy peace. But I have to.
Norio stands up from the same kitchen counter I sat at yesterday when he sees me approaching. “You must be Kristal.”
He’s already smiling as if he’s been waiting to meet me for a very long time. Maybe he has. Maybe like Lilli and Tasha, he never thought he’d see the day when Hayato brought somebody home.
I feel like the sludge on the workshop floor as I hand him the drawing. The kind of waste we always make sure to launch into space when the gift-making season is done, where no one will ever find it.
“Here,” I mumble. “This is for you.”
I didn’t see Hayato before, but he’s standing right behind his brother now. I grimly hand him his drawing while watching Norio scan the sketch.
“Who is this?” Norio asks, his voice baffled.
Hayato answers before I can. “It’s no one. Just throw it away.”
I want to play along. I want to help Hayato save face. But my elf… I can’t not use my gift, even though I really, really don’t want to.
I can only try to cushion the weirdness with the truth. “I have a gift… This seriously horrible gift that I wish I didn’t have, especially now. But I do have it. So I’ve got to tell you that this is actually a picture of somebody you love. Somebody who will die soon. His name is Jae-Hyun. Hayato and I are going to see him in a few days. And I hope you can come too because he’s a great guy. I’m going to miss him a lot. And if I can’t stop him from dying, the least I can do is bring you to him.”
When I’m finished, I let out a huge breath I didn’t know I was holding. There it’s done. I did it. Maybe now Norio can shed some light on who Jae-Hyun is to him and his brother. Solving that mystery might make this excruciating situation worth it. I hope.
But Norio just squints at the drawing, his expression confused and wary.
In the background, I hear Tasha whisper to Lilli, “It looks like we’ve got another Marian on our hands.”
“Do not worry about this drawing,” Hayato says to his brother in Japanese. “It is a quirk of hers. Something I have learned to tolerate.”
“This is the woman you asked to return to Japan with you?” his brother asks with a frown. “The one Lilli says you have been looking at with such affection in your eyes?”
Hayato shifts, so obviously embarrassed. Nevertheless, he insists, “She is harmless. Please do not judge her by this moment.”
I don’t want to be judged by this moment either, but now seems like the time to tell them… “I understand Japanese, and every other human language too. If you want to judge me, that’s okay. I’m used to people doing that when they get to know the real me.”
I glance at Lilli and Tasha, and they both look away with guilty expressions.
That perfect day I had with Hayato’s family… it’s in ruins now. All I want to do is slink away and forget I ever spent a whole 24 hours in the real world trying and inevitably failing to be normal.
But this is about Jae-Hyun; I tolerate how they’re all looking at me now. For Jae-Hyun, I don’t give up. “Can you just think about it? I drew the exact same picture for both of you, so he must be important. Maybe a family member? Or friend you both had?”
“No, I’m quite sure I’ve never seen this person before,” Norio answers, his tone apologetic.
But behind him, Hayato lets out a visible sigh of relief.
I frown. Why is Hayato acting so relieved? Does he know who this is?
My blood ices over, all the previous guilt falling away as a new realization dawns. Has he known who the person in the sketch was all this time and just refused to tell me?
I open my mouth to ask him exactly that. But then, Norio speaks again.
“The eyes…” Hayato’s brother says, his voice soft and quiet. “He looks nothing like him. But the eyes… they remind me of the caretaker from our factory estate.”
Hayato’s jaw tightens again, just like it did on the roof when I told him no. And my heart once again squeezes tight and painful in my chest just like it did on the roof. But this time, not with guilt. With suspicion.
“You mean the caretaker who turned out to be your biological father?” I ask.
I’m talking to Norio but looking at Hayato.
“Yes, that same caretaker.” Norio shifts uncomfortably. Obviously, his complicated family history isn’t a subject he’s used to talking about with strange women he just met. “But that man is dead. Hayato and I watched our father execute him with our own eyes. So this cannot be him.”
I blink at Norio, then turned my gaze back to Hayato. He is looking away, refusing to meet my questioning gaze.
But he doesn’t have to look at me to answer my next question.
“What aren’t you telling us?” I demand. “Whatever it is, it’s time to tell us the truth. Right now.”
Oh, snap!
What the heck is going on???
What isn’t Hayato telling Kristal and his brother?
Find out in the next episodes of
TWELVE MONTHS OF KRISTAL!