<h4>Chapter 10: Good Night</h4>
Now that Kiriko’s magic was fading, everything she “undid” was being returned to its proper state.
It seemed the ident that killed me led to this park being shut down and abandoned.
It had fallen into ruin. Everything was left half-destroyed, as if they gave up in the middle of dismantling it.
We exited the gond filled with dead leaves. I turned around and saw the rusted Ferris wheel without any power lightly swaying in the frigid wind.
No one was in the control booth, and shattered ssy all around it.
Kiriko and I were the only ones left in the park.
“When did you notice I was Mizuho Yugami?”, I asked.
“On Halloween, when I fell asleep on your shoulder on the train, I had a nostalgic feeling,” Kiriko replied. “That led me to realize it.”
Carefully stepping down the stairs full of holes, we held hands and walked around the park.
Not all the lights were dead, necessarily; a few remaining ones still flickered. The pavement was cracked all over, and weeds grew up from the cracks.
Ivy wrapped around the fence surrounding the merry-go-round, the white horses were stripped of paint, and some of the carriages had
fallen over.
The boarding tform for the roller coaster had susuki grass growing on it, and the cars were covered with a blue sheet. Walking along the mossy rails, we saw a pile of wreckage in an unfilled pool underneath. Benches, signs, two-seater bicycles, go- karts, tents, toy soldiers missing their arms, clowns without noses, skates, tires, oil drums, iron slopes, drab flower and bird statues.
I asked a question.
“Kiriko, why could you not postpone your death for even a month, yet be able to postpone someone else’s death for more than five years?”
“It should be easier to understand thinking in reverse,” she suggested. “I just couldn’t postpone my own death for five years.”
I could ept that. Maybe I didn’t need to ask her why.
I felt I also understood now why Kiriko’s revenge on her father had only been hitting him with a hammer. I had already carried out the revenge on him. The revenge she conducted was only continuing on from there.
And then, thest question.
If Kiriko’s death meant everything she “undid” would go back to normal, what would happen to us?
Once the postponement of the ident in which I ran Kiriko over was fully repealed, Kiriko would die.
And as soon as Kiriko died, her postponement of the ident at this
park in which I died would be repealed, and I wouldn’t exist to run Kiriko over.
It was a situationparable to the “grandfather paradox” in the notion of time travel, only with life and deathpletely switched.
Would Kiriko survive? Just as I began to wonder, Kiriko spoke. “Once you’re gone, Mizuho, I think I’ll follow soon after. As settlement for all my crimes, as well.”
“No, I can’t allow it,” I responded. “Whatever happens, I want you to keep living.”
Kiriko bumped her head into my back. “Liar.”
I had no response. She was right; I was a liar. I should have been d she would follow after me in death.
“…Also, how much longer do you think we’ll have to wait?”, I asked. “Just a little longer,” she answered with a lonely smile. “Just a little.”
“I see.”
My mind turned to my impending death. But I couldn’t be particrly sad about it.
Now that my memories were back, I knew that I had been the salvation of at least one girl. My soul was able to properly burn bright.
What more could I want?
After getting off the rails and going around to all the attractions, we sat together on an iron bench in front of the Ferris wheel.
Just like the days when we listened to music together in the gazebo, each using an earbud.
A small white drop of light passed in front of my eyes. I didn’t notice it was snow until my eyes focused.
That’s right, I remembered. They’d said on the radio that the first snow would being sooner this year.
The snowkes gradually got big enough to see without straining my eyes.
“I’m d we could see this onest time,” I said. “Yes.”
I noticed Kiriko’s tone had changed slightly, and turned my gaze toward her.
She was no longer seventeen.
“Hey, Mizuho,” 22-year-old Kiriko said. “Do you hate me?”
“Well, how about you, Kiriko? Do you hate me for running you over?”
She shook her head. “The time I spent with you was my real life. You breathed life into me. I can let you off on killing me once or twice.”
“Then that makes this easy. I feel the same way.” “…Is that right?”
Saying “thank goodness,” Kiriko put her right hand on my left. I flipped it over and put my fingers between hers.
“It might be worthless to say this now, but…” “What is it?”
“I love you, Kiriko.” “I know.”
“See, I told you it was worthless.” “I love you too, Mizuho.” “Yeah, I know.”
“Then can I have a kiss?” “Let’s do it.”
We brought our faces close.
“Oh,e to think of it,” Kiriko said just as we were about to kiss. “It seems “that thing” didn’t exist after all.”
“Way to remember letters from such a long time ago.” “So you’re saying you remember it too, Mizuho?” “Yeah,” I nodded. “And I guess “it” isn’t just a kind lie.”
“So it seems,” Kiriko smiled. “I’m d to know that in the end.”
We put our cold lips together.
As we did, the speakers began ying music to announce closing time.
Right on cue, even the meager light remaining fell away. The park was swallowed up by the night.
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I hate this world. Even so, I think it’s beautiful.
There are countless things too sad to bear, and irrational things I can’t forgive, but I don’t regret being brought to this world as a person rather than a flower, a bird, or a star.
The letters Kiriko and I exchanged day by day. The music we listened to leaning on each other. The moon we looked up at from the mud. The warmth of her hand in mine. Our first kiss in the graveyard. The rhythm of her breathing as she leaned on me. The piano we yed together in my dim apartment.
As long as I had such beautiful memories, I could turn my back to the world and hold hands with it.
In the end, I had a vision of a merry-go-round. Or maybe it was a world Kiriko used thest of her strength to show me, one where all sadness had been “undone.”
We sat on the horses,ughing together, both at child age. We reached out at each other, and our fingertips touched.
Wooden horses swinging up and down like a cradle, music like from a nursery, bright lights twinkling in the darkness.
I wanted that vision tost forever, but it was as fleeting as the me of a match.
Snow piled on my shoulders and head. My eyelids came down, and my senses slowly faded into the distance.
An end wasing to these lovable days full of lies and mistakes.
The only appropriate thing to leave Kiriko with, after she’d lived a life filled with more pain than anyone, was that foolish constion. I gently stroked her head, then pushed out those words.
Pain, pain, go away.