I’d rather be asleep.
I’d rather have ignored your request at my door, small and pleading and moist with youth. I’d rather the song of your furtive feet retreating as quickly as they’d come had been a stray breeze in the night, or the cackling melody of mating geckos. I’d rather have curled deeper into the naked mattress that carves brutal shapes into my spine, because sleep is something I don’t get enough of.
Yet here I am, groping for a light switch in a kitchen that I spend more time inside than my own head. Slumber clings to my face like a thick, waxen mask; I lean against the sink for a few indulgent heartbeats while my eyes adjust to the light and I wait for the mask to melt. It’s your request, not the consequences of ignoring them, that persuades my fingers to curl around a saucepan on the drying rack and move it to the stovetop. It’s knowing you are at the mercy of a belligerent stomach in your bedroom upstairs that gives me the strength to push aside my needs and my rights as I twist the knob to summon a fire. It’s a hungry fire, one that licks at the metal sides of the saucepan with ravenous orange swipes; I know you are hungry as well because the dinner plate I’d washed a few hours ago had held a half-eaten mound of rice drowning in greasy curry.
It’s not my cooking you hate, but circumstance. Your mother, who does not pay me enough, loves to sort your fragile world into locker-sized compartments, their walls as cold as they are rigid. You are to join her for dinner at six-thirty sharp every day, regardless of how hungry you are, or aren’t. You are a picky eater, folded arms and pouty lips, but I forgive you because you are only acting your age. I was a child once too, a few eternities ago, but this comparison ends where it begins. We hail from different worlds, you and I, cleft apart by the razor-sharp edge of a bank note. My job is to serve, and yours is to flash your porcelain teeth and giggle.
But even the pickiest of eaters, such as yourself, cannot resist what I am about to prepare. I feed water to the saucepan, then move to a cabinet while I wait for it to birth bubbles. I take a mental note of our supplies so I know what needs replenishing the next time your mother sends me to the grocer’s with a wad of cash and a warning. There was a time when I was caught in a daze in the sauce aisle, surrounded by rows upon rows of glass bottles filled with kecap manis—soy sauce thickened with palm sugar, sweet and syrupy and as Indonesian as it gets. I glared daggers at the elegant writing on the piece of paper in my hand; for people like your mother, dinner should only be a few ink strokes away, because there is unnecessary exertion in carrying a shopping bag and hoping there aren’t any pickpockets on the bus ride home. I am expendable, somewhere between a human and a commodity; I could have fled to my village in the middle of nowhere and taken the money with me, but I didn’t. I needed to see you fed, and still do.
There are exactly thirteen white plastic packs in the cupboard, stacked neatly against one another like books on a shelf. I retrieve one; it is rectangular and firm, with a photoshopped image of caramel-brown noodles crawling across a plate, complete with a side of fried egg and vegetables. I scoff. No sane person on the planet eats this with their veggies. The quadruple digits next to the “recommended daily intake” of sodium typed out on the back is a good indication this isn’t something you eat if you want to live long. And yet, eating the stuff makes me feel alive. It’s like cigarettes; three packs a day, because I’m addicted.
By now the water froths and frolics, so I snap the pack open, pull out the compact block of brittle yellow noodles, and feed it to the water. Two minutes until they soften. I squeeze out the other half of the magic into a fresh bowl: seasoning powder, chili sauce, sweet soy sauce, and vegetable oil infused with fragrant spices, all bound in their own sachets that come conveniently with the noodles. Little dimensions of flavor, each with their own story to tell to the human palate. I set one sachet aside, whose contents you prefer to be added last.
While the noodles soften and unwind, I introduce a wok to a second hungry flame. It heats rapidly; the cooking oil shrieks in ecstasy as soon as I pour some in. I crack an egg and watch the white bubble and stretch into soft clouds while the yolk cooks at a gentle pace. There is only one way to fry an egg: rich, runny yolk and a crispy browned underside. Minutes away from perfection.
The noodles have relaxed into limp ribbons, so I pour the contents of the saucepan into a strainer. I jostle them until they’re rid of excess moisture, because water dilutes flavor and I will not have you go to sleep unsatisfied. Then I heap them into the bowl with the sauce and seasoning, and proceed to toss until each strand is coated in a uniform layer of greasy goodness. It’s only now that I garnish with the contents of the final sachet: crunchy fried shallots, a divine textural contrast to tender noodles.
As the egg finishes I tilt the wok and spoon scorching hot oil over the top, just to create a firm outer layer for you to break open. That way, you can relish the spectacle of glistening, golden yolk spilling over noodles like lava. When the egg is done, I lay it over your meal like a blanket.
“Intoxicating” doesn’t even begin to describe the aroma in the kitchen, and I suspect someone fasting during Ramadan wouldn’t be able to resist. You must forgive me in advance; I pluck a single strand from your bowl and drape it over my waiting, salivating tongue. It’s a crescendo of flavor, fine-tuned by a corporate giant to perfection: sharp, brothy, MSG-fuelled bliss, mellowed out by subtly smoky, sweet soy sauce, and a suggestion of spice to give it that final Indonesian touch. Mie goreng. Fried noodles. But what makes me truly happy is knowing you are about to experience this, too.
I set the bowl on a serving tray with a spoon and fork. The house does not protest under my footfalls, but I tread light as a cockroach anyway because to give myself away is to give you away. You’ve already had dinner, remember? And you’re most certainly asleep, not seeking out my room in the garage to request a midnight meal. Your mother knows this, the same way your mother knows you want to be a music teacher when you grow up. I know you actually want to be a princess.
As I knock gently on your door, I wonder why you allow me to cross the boundary between my world and yours so often. Is it because your mother is cold and I am the only warm alternative? Is there something magical about the way food appears at your door minutes after you make the request? Or are you simply too young to see the boundary?
I find the answers on your face when you open the door, nestled into the dimples that form as you smile. I smile back. Your tender hands grab the bowl. It is a wordless exchange, and yet it speaks volumes. I don’t need to remind you to hide your tracks using a few squeezes of a lavender air freshener, because we’ve done this countless times. Our little dance on that thin boundary.
Your smile lingers after you close the door. For now, knowing someone appreciates the things my callused, overworked hands manage to cobble together is enough.
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332 comments
So many comments already but bravo! Beautiful piece, beautiful prose, beautiful Character.
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Raygan I may add that the use of figures of speech and the intricate details of food preparation work in tandem to give your story a sense of immortality. You must be a professional writer! Any way may Allah give more sublimity to your stylistic ingenuity.
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Rayhan you are a literary wizard crafting poetic words at will and combining them together charmingly and creatively. Your love for literature is quite evident mashallah. This story shows fatherly love for his children that filters through to the food and warms it with his devoted filial affection Absolute beauty and well deserved win. You are an exceptional writer.
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This story is like food porn and it made me want to have some. Can't wait til they make it into a film, but honestly your writing is so vivid I felt like it was one. Your writing produces beautiful imagery of the preparation of the meal and the intimacy between the one who prepares it and the one who will receive the gift
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Hey Rayhan I'm a bit late to the party I know but this story is AWESOME So many little things make it just work and it made my heart flutter at the end when I realised (yes, I'm a bit slow) that they are making it for a child. Question: is it 100% first person or could we call this story second person as well because of the use of "you"? Or is it still first person only because the "you" actually isn't the reader? If that makes sense.
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My story Jenna was eating breakfast on the kitchen table when notice something totally strange then usually she had found a computer open to a document to start writing her story she is going to called her stories :darkness it was going to be about a kid who had lost their way of happy because of their successful reach their goal in life is to become a writing books for everyone she had a list of notes on google docs
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Hello ! I used this story as my style model for the coursework section of my English A level , it is so beautifully written and I loved feeling the connection with the character , thank you so much for writing this amazing piece 😁
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How beautiful...
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This had me crying because it hits home so hard? Partly because I've been on the other side of the story- the receiver, but I'm hungry and crying because of this and this really put the strange friendship that one has when they grow up around hired help and a distant parent into a perspective that threw me right back into my childhood 😭😭😭
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I LOVE FRIED NOODLES and an egg, as much as I love your story! I'm not sure if this is a compliment or not, but your style of writing is very familiar to me. It was a real pleasure to digest what your callused overworked hands managed to cobble together. Congratulations.
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Hi Kay, Mountains, rivers, canyons, oceans, skies, green fields and trees, are now all jealous for your attention to them. I have never yearned for packaged noodles which come with their own particular, putrid, processed, some call, poisoned spices...until now. Bravo!
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This is one of the first stories I read on Reedsy. I know this is about so much more than mie goreng but I had to know - I'd never tasted it before. I had to order from Amazon and I just had my first bowl. Of course, I had to add the egg just like in the story. Love it! And I loved your story and a wonderful example of how food brings different people together. Great read! Thank you for sharing it with us.
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Such a beautiful story; the scene came alive with your descriptive writing.
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I AM NOW VERY HUNGRY🌯🌯🌯🌯🌯🌯🌯🌯🌯🌯🌯🌯🌯🌯🌯🌯🌯🌯🌯🌯🌯🌯🌯🌯🌯🌯🌯🌯🌯🌯🌯🌯🌯🌯🌯🌯🌯🌯🌯🌯🌯🌯🌯🌯🌯🌯🌯🌯🌯🌯THIS IS VERRYGOOD🌯🌯🌯🌯
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Just wonderfully written- so many vivid images and some mystery to the odd relationship. I love it. Please read mine if you get a chance. A
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Beautiful prose; I felt completely sucked into the story. Your description truly brings the entire scene to life and I felt like I was the one making the mie goreng.
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Thanks Marcus! 😙
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Took a pause on my break from Reedsy because I saw you won and OMG Rayhan!! Congrats!! I’m starving now, so thanks for that, but seriously. You’ve done a beautiful job of laying out this small, tantalizing moment. The prose is so creative and rich, the relationship between these characters is incredibly sweet, and the situation with the distant mother adds just the right amount of bitterness to balance it all out. You’ve cooked up a work of art here. Congrats again on an absolutely deserved win!!
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Claire! Thank you so much, your feedback has been indispensable since I came back from my hiatus, and I suspect I wouldn't be here without you. I hope you're doing well, and I can't wait for you to come back :)
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