
It is 3:15 PM. The ceiling fans push thick, warm air across the empty tables. The lunch rush faded hours ago, and the evening crowd has yet to arrive. I am sitting two rows away from a minced meat noodle stall, resting my hands around a glass of iced barley that has already started to sweat.
The hawker centre exists in a strange, suspended state during these mid-afternoon hours. The rhythmic chopping and shouting are gone, replaced by the low hum of refrigerators and the distant, metallic rattle of a cleaner clearing stray plates.
Behind the glass counter of the noodle stall, the auntie is taking her break. She is not cooking. The large steel pots of broth are still simmering on a low flame, sending thin, lazy curls of steam up into the dim fluorescent light. She sits on a faded red plastic stool in the corner of her cramped workspace, holding a small slip of paper.
I leave my camera resting on the table. I do not lift it to my eye just yet. Instead, I trace the framing of the scene from where I sit. The stacks of porcelain bowls, painted with chipped roosters, form a natural leading line straight to her. The ambient light from the overcast sky outside bleeds into the stall, casting a soft, cool shadow across her tired shoulders.
She reads the paper. She reads it twice, maybe three times. Then she folds it carefully, smoothing the crease with her thumb, and slides it out of sight beneath a stack of styrofoam takeaway boxes. She exhales—a quiet, steady release of breath—and picks up a damp cloth to wipe down the stainless steel counter. The metal catches the overhead light, gleaming for a fraction of a second before the moisture evaporates.
As a street food photographer, it is easy to fall into the habit of chasing the action. We wait for the dramatic flare of a wok, the chaotic blur of the dinner rush, or the intense focus of a cook plating a dish. We want to capture the energy of the food. But sitting here, watching the steam rise in the quiet stall, I realize these still pockets of time carry just as much weight. This is the slow exhale between the noise.
I finally lift the camera. The cold metal of the viewfinder presses against my brow. I wait for her to look up, waiting for the light to catch the side of her face through the rising vapor.
But the moment shifts. A customer steps up to the front of the stall, breaking the silence. The auntie immediately stands, leaving the folded note hidden beneath the boxes. She picks up her slotted spoon, plunging it into the boiling water. The lull is broken.
I press the shutter anyway. The image captures the blur of her arm in motion and the sudden rush of thick steam. But as I lower the camera, my mind stays on the quiet pause, the folded paper, and the unseen spaces between the bowls.
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