The frangipani on the ground floor
In the void deck of Nur's block — the covered ground-floor space in Singapore's HDB blocks, where neighbors sit and children play — there's an old frangipani tree. The trunk is knotted, the gray bark cracks in plates, and the low branches form a fork two meters off the ground. Nur climbs up there.
From the fork he sees the street, the lights of the blocks across from him, the pavement where the neighbors who come back from the hawker centre walk. At that height the void deck looks different. The concrete benches, the table where Uncle Razak fixes bikes, the stretch of tile where Aminah sits at five in the afternoon. It all fits in one glance. It's his lookout. Aminah doesn't tell him to come down anymore.
Nur lives in Toa Payoh, a mature neighborhood of Singapore, in a two-bedroom HDB flat on the eighth floor, with his grandmother Aminah. Toa Payoh is working class, multicultural, with nearby parks and paths where sometimes, at night, wild pangolins cross. Aminah and Nur walk five minutes to school every morning. In the afternoon, they go down to the void deck. It's an extension of the flat.







