May humidity in Changhua is a physical weight, a damp velvet curtain clinging to the skin. Stepping into Number 9 Residence, the '8th Platform' theme felt like a quiet invitation to exhale. The air was a crisp shock, smelling of polished wood, blurring the line between a hotel room and a journey.
We looked like shipwreck survivors, drenched in suffocating heat. We bet the 'platform' theme was just a lazy excuse to avoid buying furniture. We were wrong—the commitment was hilarious. We spent twenty minutes roasting Mark for his 'shortcut' while dripping sweat onto the cool floor.
One Golden Pastry, Two Distant Memories
There is a fragile geometry to a Bu Er Fang egg yolk pastry—a golden shell that yields with a buttery snap to reveal salted yolk. It tasted like late-spring patience, the warmth of the filling contrasting with a cooling breeze. The scent of toasted flour lingered, a sweet reward for existing.
I remember the queue more than the taste—the heavy, pre-monsoon air and the way we leaned on each other, complaining as the line moved like a tired snail. We spent the hour mocking Sarah’s 'foodie' obsession, but the moment that warm pastry hit our tongues, we fell into a shared, stunned silence.
The Only Thing We All Agree On
At the Fan-shaped Depot, amidst the scent of oxidized iron, we reached a rare consensus. Watching those massive locomotives felt like an act of rebellion—a reminder that there is a profound dignity in being stationary, refusing to move until the timing is right.
A single firefly blinking in the damp May shadow.
- Visit the Fan-shaped Depot early to smell the oil and avoid crowds.
- Try Bu Er Fang egg yolk pastries; let them cool for a better snap.