Six in the morning
César gets up at four-thirty. By quarter to five he's already at the kopitiam downstairs from his block in SS2, Petaling Jaya. Kopi-o kosong — black, no sugar. The Hokkien couple who run the place keep his table for him. No need to tell them: they've been doing it for years. If he forgets his wallet, they'll put it on a tab. He's never had to ask.
At that hour the kopitiam is nearly empty. A ceiling fan turning slowly, the sound of boiling water, the radio in Malay at low volume. The air smells of fresh coffee and kaya butter toast in the toaster. César reads or looks out the window. Sometimes he does neither — he just sits there with the mug between his hands, waiting for the coffee to cool down enough.
By six, people start arriving. The other early risers of the neighborhood: a bus driver going on shift at seven, two retirees sharing a newspaper, the odd student reviewing notes before class. That was the hour he met Priya, the botanist who works at FRIM. Both alone with a book at a table. They started sharing space out of practicality. Then out of habit. Then because they discovered they could sit in silence for an hour without it getting awkward.







