“I KEPT MESSAGING HIM… BUT THE REPLIES NEVER CAME.” — As the search for the missing student in Japan continues to grip hearts around the world, his best friend is sharing the final messages he sent before the young man’s disappearance. The two had been inseparable for years. “I saw him as a brother,” his friend said, describing a bond built on trust, loyalty and countless memories together. When news broke that the student had gone missing, he did what many friends would do: he reached for his phone and sent message after message, hoping for a response. But the messages went unanswered. Now, those final texts have taken on a heartbreaking significance as loved ones continue searching for answers. For many following the case, they are a painful reminder of the moment concern turned into fear. And one particular message is leaving readers struggling to hold back tears.

The best friend of the missing Auburn University student who mysteriously vanished during a family trip to Japan revealed their haunting last text exchanges, shortly after the pair reunited in Tokyo.

James “Weston” Higginbotham, 20, reconnected with Hiyu Shikari, 20, in Japan — they were close friends who attended the same middle school in the US before Shikari moved to the island around 2019.

Their final encounter came at a dinner in Shinjuku, a popular tourist destination in Tokyo, after Shikari met up with Higginbotham and his family, the US Sun reported.

A young man with blonde hair and a two-toned shirt walks across a crosswalk with buildings and other people in the background.
Weston Higginbotham.Facebook/Nancy Higginbotham

Shikari told the outlet that he didn’t notice anything out of the ordinary with his friend, and added that Higginbotham seemed excited about the trip he was on with his family to celebrate his younger brother Grayton’s high school graduation.

He texted Higginbotham on May 26, “Thank you so much. … Enjoying your stay in Japan!!”

“Feel free to contact me whenever you face a problem.”

Higginbotham replied to the text with a heart emoji.

The missing student’s cell phone last pinged on Monday, when Shikari messaged him once more asking how his family vacation was going.

“Good evening! How’s the stay going?” he wrote to Higginbotham.

James “Weston” Higginbotham smiling, wearing a white t-shirt and backpack, emerging from a cave.
Their final encounter came at a dinner in Shinjukugofundme

“Hopefully yall are having a good time in Kyoto! Lmk if you need me to recommend any places,”

But the text message failed to deliver — and was never answered.

“We had such a great time at a restaurant in Shinjuku, which is in Tokyo,” Shikari told the Sun about his last encounter with his friend.

“Right after that, I tried to contact him on how he was doing in Kyoto, because I was in Kyoto a couple of weeks ago, and also the typhoon was coming as I was kind of worried, and I messaged him, ‘How’s the trip going?’ And that was after he went missing,” he continued.

“And so I didn’t get any contact with him after I met him. I’ve been doing what I can to spread awareness.”

Unanswered text messages from friends asking how a trip to Japan is going.
Hiyu Shikari’s last texts to Higginbotham.

Higginbotham went for a hike on May 29 and was last seen in the Yamashina section of Kyoto, an area known for its dense forests and mountainous trails.

He had been arguing with his mother, Nancy, who told CNN that he was irritated by her use of ChatGPT to plan their trip to Japan, citing his concerns about the environmental impact of artificial intelligence.

Efforts to find Higginbotham have been complicated by Tropical Storm Jangmim which moved from Okinawa into the mainland — bringing whipping 75mph winds and torrential rainfall on May 30, according to reports. Rescue crews in Yamashina were forced to wade through waist-high mud during their search for the missing American.

“I saw him as a best friend, a brother,” Shikari said.

“He was such a nice friend and when I first met him, I felt like nothing has changed. “We talked about politics, we talked about AI, we talked about a lot of things that’s going on in the world.”

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