The scent of old cedar and the biting chill of a Miaoli December clung to our skin like a second, colder layer of clothing, a sharp contrast to the heavy, cloud-like embrace of the down duvet at F HOTEL 三義館/苗栗住宿/勝興火車站/龍騰斷橋/親子友善/商務住宿/寵物友善. I remember the way the room felt—a simple, quiet sanctuary where the world outside slowed to a rhythmic, distant hum, and the air smelled faintly of clean linen and winter rain. "Do you think the city still moves at that frantic pace?" I whispered, my voice barely disturbing the stillness as we stared at the ceiling, the silence between us feeling like a portable home we could pack into a suitcase and carry back to the noise. We spent the afternoon on rented bicycles, the wind biting at our cheeks and the metallic click of the gears providing a steady heartbeat to our journey through the pale, thin sunlight. Later, the taste of warm wontons from Jiangji Jiuji—the broth a rich, golden kindness that warmed the throat and settled the soul—felt like a tangible anchor in the middle of a cold afternoon. I watched the steam rise in swirling patterns, a momentary pause that felt longer than the entire journey here, as if we had discovered that the only thing worth rushing toward was this exact moment of doing nothing. In the stone Japanese bath, the mineral heat pressed against our shoulders with a slow, insistent gravity, blurring the edges of the room until the walls became mere suggestions and the steam became our only shared language. I felt the tension leave my spine, a slow unraveling that mirrored the way the winter light faded into a bruised purple dusk. As we walked back, the rhythm of our footsteps on the road began to sync, a slow, tentative alignment of two souls finding a common frequency, ending in the image of our two shadows merging into one long, dark line on the pavement.
- A slow walk through the Longteng Broken Bridge in the soft winter light
- Sharing a bowl of warm wontons at Jiangji Jiuji before the sun sets