6:30 every morning
Aminah wakes Nur at half past six. Always the same: a hand on his forehead, whispers, no turning on the light. Nur takes ten minutes to sit up. At half past six the world still isn't his, but Aminah is already in the kitchen.
At seven, the table has what it always has: kaya toast and teh tarik. Kaya toast is soft bread spread with coconut and pandan jam, cut into triangles that Aminah props against the edge of the plate so they don't go soggy underneath. Teh tarik is tea with condensed milk, very sweet, very hot at first. Nur doesn't touch it until he can wrap both hands around the mug without burning himself. That's his thermometer: if he can hold it, he can drink it.
He eats little. He eats slow. Really slow. Nur is a child who smells food before tasting it, tilts his head, and sometimes refuses it for no obvious reason. But the reason exists: nothing crunchy-hard, nothing spicy, nothing with a rough texture or that gets stuck in his teeth. Sweet and mild flavors. Kaya toast passes because it's soft, sweet, warm. Teh tarik passes because it's liquid and sugary. Tau huay, mee siam with little spice, ripe banana. Aminah has learned that it isn't pickiness: it's a filter Nur applies to everything that goes in his mouth. If he tries it and likes it, he repeats it every day without variation. If he doesn't like it the first time, there's no second chance.







