The air at Chinatown Complex Food Centre always carries a thin layer of grey soot by the time the evening arrives. I stand near the edge of the green tiled floor. The noise of the dinner rush is a steady, overwhelming wave. My shirt sticks to my back in the dense humidity. The distinct scent of charred rice and salted fish clings to my clothes. I am watching the corner stall where the claypot rice is made.
An older woman stands in front of a row of small, fiercely burning charcoal stoves. The heat radiating from the fires forms a physical wall. Her face is slick with sweat and illuminated by the harsh orange glow of the embers. She holds a pair of heavy metal tongs in her right hand. She does not stop moving. The rhythm of her labor is entirely stripped of hesitation. She shifts a blackened clay pot from one stove to another, adjusting the temperature by memory alone. She pours a thin stream of dark soy sauce over the rice. The sudden hiss of steam swallows her silhouette for a brief second.
I raise my camera. The heavy glass of my 50mm lens feels cold against my palm. I frame her through the rising smoke, dropping my exposure to protect the bright orange details of the fire. The contrast is extreme. The bright coals blow out the highlights, plunging the rest of the stall into deep shadow. I wait for her to step back into the light. She reaches for a small, folded towel resting on the metal counter and wipes her forehead. I press the shutter. The mechanical click is completely lost in the noise of the hawker centre.
We come here to consume, rarely stopping to measure the physical weight of what we are given. This is not a task that truly ends when the metal shutters roll down at night. The fire is extinguished, but the heat remains in the bones. Tomorrow morning, long before the sun rises, she will wash the scorched pots and ignite the charcoal all over again. There is no grand applause for this kind of endurance. There is only the quiet dignity of doing the work, day after day.
She hands a steaming pot to a waiting customer. Her expression does not change, but her shoulders drop by a fraction of an inch. I pack my camera away in my canvas bag. I leave her to the fires, stepping away from the smoke and out into the cool night air.
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