The door clicked shut, a final, heavy sound that severed us from the world. Inside 苗栗大湖石壁溫泉渡假山莊, the air tasted of damp mountain stone and old cedar. I drifted toward the terrace, my bare feet humming against the cool floor, noticing the vast, neutral zone between the bed and the sliding glass. Outside, the February mist had swallowed the valley, leaving only the ghostly silhouette of the stream. I wondered if we had stepped into a watercolor painting that hadn't quite dried. "It's so quiet," I whispered, though I didn't want an answer. I just wanted to be invisible, anchored by the sight of a tiny, permanent scratch on the door handle—a small, comforting mistake in a room too perfect.
I watched you pause at the threshold, your shoulders dropping an inch as the silence of the room claimed us. The space felt immense, an airy void where I could hear the rhythmic tick of a clock in some distant corridor. I traced the rough grain of the wooden beams, wondering how many other couples had brought their unspoken tensions into this specific stillness. I didn't look at the view; I looked at you, the way the pale, winter light caught the curve of your jaw. I felt a sharp, sudden ache to stay in this half-light, where the promise of the semi-open hot spring bath was more intimate than the water itself. The bed looked impossibly soft, a white cloud waiting to swallow us whole.
The Sourness of Home
There was one thing we both remember: a bowl of sour cabbage pork soup that arrived steaming, its sharp, fermented scent cutting through the winter chill. We didn't speak much, but we both felt the acidity wake something dormant—a shared recognition of a flavor that refused to be sophisticated, choosing instead to be grounding. Between the heat of the Hakka meal and the dampness of the Dahu air, we finally moved at the same speed. We burned our tongues on the first sip and laughed, a clumsy, sudden intimacy that felt more honest than any conversation we'd had in months.
A single, damp towel resting on a cedar bench.
- Order the sour cabbage pork soup; it tastes like a homecoming.
- Soak in the outdoor bath at 6am when the mist is thickest.