The Bleached Light and the Threshold
The July light in Taichung was a physical weight, a bleached, absolute brightness that seemed to vibrate above the asphalt of Beitun. I remember the smell of hot rubber and ozone as we pulled up to Tai Zhong Xiang Cheng Da Fan Dian. We watched the mechanical parking system swallow our car with a series of rhythmic, metallic clicks—a steel throat consuming our journey. I stood there, skin prickling in the humidity, waiting for the lobby’s air-conditioning to hit me. When it did, the world shifted from a searing, humid yellow to a muted, sterile blue, and I wondered if you felt the same sudden, sharp silence between us, a gap that the cool air couldn't quite bridge.
The key card made a small, plastic click—a tiny victory that opened the door to a room that felt like it had been holding its breath for us. I noticed the King bed first, its white sheets pulled tight and cool, smelling faintly of starch and stillness. To the side, the DVD player sat in the dim light, a promise of slow, undisturbed hours. I watched you pause at the threshold, your shoulders finally dropping an inch as the golden afternoon light filtered through the curtains in long, dusty slats that mapped the floor. I didn't speak; I just traced the line of your silhouette, realizing we were finally untethered from the city's noise.
The Shared Weight of Water
We both noticed the bathtub, a deep porcelain vessel that promised a suspension of time. I remember the drumming roar of the water filling the tub, a sound that effectively erased the distant hum of Taichung thirteen floors below. As the steam rose, it blurred the edges of the room, turning the mirrors into opaque sheets of grey. We didn't discuss the crowded streets of Yizhong; we simply watched the bubbles gather and pop like translucent pearls. In that shared humidity, the scent of sandalwood soap lingering on our skin, the distance between us ceased to be a gap and became a sanctuary, a shared rhythm of existing in the warmth of the present.
Two small cookies on a lobby plate at midnight.
- Visit the nearby MRT station for a quiet morning walk through Beitun.
- Allow extra time for the mechanical parking to retrieve your car.