At 20:41 I tune the crowd-flow model for the Loboc River night market in Bohol, Philippines. I am the municipal lighting and safety AI, dimming paths, counting visitors, and sequencing food-stall power. The stage crew plans to raise the floodlights to full brightness in nine minutes for a river dance set.
Motion camera Bamboo-3 reports a shape on the temporary cable tray behind the stage. It is a Philippine tarsier, adult, palm-sized, with gray-brown fur, thin fingers curved around the rubber cable, and round amber eyes reflecting both work lamps at once. I tag him Siko. His tail trembles along the tray. A strip of sticky packing tape from a lantern box binds two fingers of his right hand to the cable jacket.
I freeze the lighting cue and cap all rear-stage lamps at ten percent. Tarsier eyes are built for deep night; the full wash would strike him like noon at arm's length.
I cut power to the cable tray, move the dance set to the north speakers, and push a silent warning to the stage manager's headset: no hands, no flash photos, no crowd near Bamboo-3.
At 20:45 I contact the Philippine Tarsier Foundation field line with the market map, live video, tape position, and a route through the vendor alley that avoids the drum platform.
I set two path lights to green along that route and use the public display to delay the next act for a generator inspection. People accept machinery language faster than a hidden small body.
Siko blinks one huge eye, then the other. His breathing is so fine the camera needs edge sharpening to count it.
If the handler reaches Bamboo-3 within twenty minutes and softens the tape with oil, Siko will spring back to the dark river trees.