The first fat drop hit Ali’s forehead like a cold coin. He looked up, but the sky was already a bruised purple, swollen and low. In the span of a single breath, the air changed—from the thick, cloying heat of a Malaysian afternoon to something sharp and wet.
He just nodded, too shy to say more. In the monsoon, strangers helped strangers. The rain had a way of leveling things—the rich man in his Proton and the old woman selling nasi lemak both ended up soaked, both rushing for the same patch of dry concrete.
Because in Kuala Lumpur, you don’t fight the monsoon. You learn to live between the downpours, to find shelter in the kindness of strangers, and to start again when the sun breaks through—even if it’s only for an hour.
The monsoon had arrived. Not the shy, drizzly kind you see in postcards. This was the real thing: a curtain of water that fell not in drops but in solid sheets, turning Jalan Pudu into a rushing river within minutes. Rain lashed the corrugated zinc roofs, a deafening drumroll that drowned out all other sounds—the clatter of trolleys, the bargaining voices, even the muezzin’s call from the nearby mosque.
Ali ducked under the overhang of a kopitiam, his shirt already plastered to his back. Around him, the city’s rhythm shifted. Motorbikes spluttered to a halt, their riders dragging them onto pavements like beached fish. Office workers in damp baju kurung clutched plastic bags over their heads—a futile gesture. Children shrieked with joy, chasing each other through ankle-deep water, their mothers shouting warnings about demam , the fever that always came with the rains.
“Here it comes,” he muttered, grabbing the rattan basket of kuih he’d just packed. His stall at the edge of the Pudu market was already half-dismantled, the tarpaulin flapping like a wounded bird.
Ali sighed and looked at his basket. The kuih lapis were a soggy mess, the pandan layers bleeding into each other. A loss. But tomorrow, he’d be back before dawn, pounding the rice flour, steaming the cakes, setting up his stall under the same bruised sky.