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3 PM, the pale gold light of March drew a long, shimmering rectangle on the floor

We returned from the Longteng Broken Bridge with the fine dust of old bricks still clinging to our shoes—a gritty residue of a forgotten era that reminds you how gracefully things fall apart over time. Stepping into our Elegant Double Room at F HOTEL 三義館, the air seemed to instantly settle, the frantic noise of the town receding into a distant, rhythmic hum. I remember thinking, is this where the journey actually begins? The room felt like a sanctuary of curated simplicity. I sank into the high-quality down bedding, which felt less like furniture and more like a heavy, warm cloud that had decided to hold us both in a breathless embrace. There was a specific, heavy silence here, the kind where you can hear your partner's breathing synchronize with your own, and suddenly, the map on the nightstand ceased to matter. We lay there in the amber glow of the afternoon, watching a single shadow stretch slowly across the floor, realizing that home is perhaps not a destination we find on a map, but a rhythm we create when we finally allow ourselves to stop moving. We whispered about renting bicycles from the lobby tomorrow to lose ourselves in the wood-carving alleys, letting the anticipation of tomorrow anchor us in the stillness of now.

11 PM, the world narrowed to the silver dimensions of the bath

By late evening, the universe had shrunk to the edges of the stone Japanese-style bath, where the water felt heavy and silver against our skin. There is something about the soft water system at F HOTEL 三義館 that transforms a simple soak into a ritual; the day's exhaustion felt like a layer of grey dust being gently rinsed away, leaving behind only an essential, pulsing warmth. We didn't speak much; we simply listened to the rhythmic, metallic drip of the tap and the way the thick steam blurred the edges of the room into a soft-focus dream. Earlier, we had shared a bowl of wontons at Jiangji Jiuji, and the memory of that savory, garlic-scented broth still lingered as a warm glow in the back of my throat—a taste of something honest and unhurried. I suppose that is the secret of these stolen moments: the way a shared meal and a warm bath can make two people feel as though they have discovered a secret language that requires no words. As we leaned back against the cool, smooth stone, the temperature of the water mirroring the quiet heat between us, I felt a profound sense of belonging that had nothing to do with geography and everything to do with the person beside me.

A single white wax flower petal resting on the windowsill.