The asphalt is slick with leftover midnight rain. It is 4:30 AM on Balestier Road. The city is completely silent, wrapped in a heavy, humid darkness. I stand on the corner across from Sing Hon Loong Bakery. The air smells intensely of yeast and burnt sugar.
I press the camera against my chest to steady my hands. The streetlights cast a pale, yellow pallor over the empty pavement. I am waiting for the exact moment the morning delivery truck arrives.
Through the open bakery front, a single fluorescent bulb illuminates the back room. Two men are working. They do not speak. One man pulls large, blackened metal trays from a massive oven. The other quickly brushes the top of the hot loaves with water to keep the crust soft. The choreography is entirely silent. They move with the heavy, blunt efficiency of people who have been awake while the rest of the world sleeps.
I look through the viewfinder. I compose the shot to include the dark frame of the street outside. I want the bakery to look like a small, warm cave carved out of the night. I drop the shutter speed. I want the motion of their hands to blur slightly, creating a soft contrast against the rigid, sharp lines of the metal baking racks.
We usually photograph food in its final state. We capture the beautifully plated dishes under perfect daylight. We rarely point our lenses at the dark, solitary hours that make those meals possible. The city runs on this unseen exhaustion. It is built on the quiet labor of people pulling hot bread from ovens long before the sun rises.
A small truck turns the corner. Its headlights wash over me for a brief second, casting long shadows against the wet concrete. I press the shutter. The click is soft. The men inside keep working. They begin to slice the crusts off the soft white bread, stacking them in towering, pillowy columns on the wooden tables.
I lower my camera and take a deep breath of the warm air. The sky above the old shophouses is just beginning to turn a dark, bruising purple. Morning is still a distant promise. But right here on this empty pavement, the day has already quietly begun.
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