Aina walked home with Li Qin. The rain had stopped. The sun was fierce now, drying the pavement in patches. They passed the mosque, the Chinese temple, the little Hindu shrine tucked between two shoplots. A familiar sound drifted from an open window – someone practicing the piano. Chopin. Aina recognized it from her own piano lessons, which she had quit three years ago because there was no time.
"Don't remind me."
This was the unspoken rhythm of Malaysian school life: the strict schedule, yes, but also the cracks in between where real life happened. The five-minute sprint between classes when you bought a kuih for RM0.50. The way the prefects looked the other way when you snuck your phone out during recess. The sudden, solemn pause when the azan played from the surau speakers at lunch. Budak Sekolah Tunjuk Burit