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Echoes of a Miaoli Summer

The tailor-made wooden bed, which carried the scent of a forest that had decided to move indoors, its cotton bedding a cool, white cloud against skin sticky from the June humidity; the youngest noticed it first, launching himself into the center with a shout of triumph that echoed through the modern room.

A steaming bowl of wontons from Jiangji Jiuji, where the broth held a depth born of generations of patience and the meat-balls melted like savory secrets on the tongue, providing a warm sanctuary while the world outside was drenched in a summer rain; the oldest insisted we stop, claiming he could smell the garlic and pork from two blocks away.

The afternoon thunderstorm, a rhythmic drumming on the roof of I Sky Villa that synchronized with our own breathing, turning the hills into a saturated emerald and releasing a scent of wet earth and crushed grass—as if the planet were finally exhaling; the middle child noticed first, pressing a small, damp nose against the windowpane.

A slice of golden Miaoli mango, dripping with a sweetness so concentrated it felt almost aggressive, the juice running down our chins in the heavy air as we sat by the roadside, a fleeting moment of shared indulgence that made the chaotic drive feel like a necessary pilgrimage; I noticed first, lured by the intoxicating, floral aroma wafting from a nearby orchard.

The midnight sky, a velvet canopy where the stars felt impossibly close, framed by the jagged silhouettes of camphor trees and punctuated by the rhythmic call of an owl discussing the valley's stillness; the youngest noticed it first, pointing a small finger upward and asking if the stars were actually tiny holes poked in the night to let the light through.

A single, wet footprint on the wooden porch.

  • Try local fruit picking in the morning before the heat becomes heavy.
  • Take a slow walk toward Zaoqiao Station to hear the wind in the trees.