His companion, Mona, snorted. She was sketching the skyline on a beat-up tablet, her stylus moving in furious, precise strokes. She wore a modest jilbab in lavender, but her makeup was sharp—a graphic white eyeliner wing that looked like a digital glitch. “The grunge is exhaust fumes, Zky. Don’t romanticize the pollution.”
“We’re late for the ngabuburit pop-up,” Agus finally said, referencing the pre-fast-breaking tradition that had been co-opted by Gen Z into a massive, rolling street market for vintage clothes and vegan snacks. “The ‘Y2K Bedug’ stall closes at 4:30.” His companion, Mona, snorted
As Agus went to buy three iced coffees in plastic pouches (the 90s nostalgia was hitting hard), a sudden rain began to pour. The tropical kind that doesn’t ask permission. The crowd didn't run for cover. Instead, they pulled out clear umbrellas—a trend started by a K-pop idol last month—and kept filming. The rain became a filter. “The grunge is exhaust fumes, Zky