I remember how the room absorbed us, the Simmonds mattress offering a surrender that felt like a slow descent into a shared frequency. The scent of Penhaligon's soap—a floral veil of an English garden—drifted through the Taiwanese afternoon, mixing with the cool, sterile breath of the air conditioner. The chocolate-colored glass of 林酒店 filtered the September sun into something amber and thick, casting honeyed shadows that clung to the walls. I spent an hour simply watching dust motes dance in that heavy light, thinking that home is perhaps not a place, but the specific way your breathing synchronizes with mine when the city finally falls silent.
For me, it was the void—the soaring ceilings creating a pocket of silence large enough to hold the things we couldn't yet name. I recall the lobby's Syrian fossil stone, its cold, ancient weight beneath my soles, a reminder of deep time that made our small anxieties feel luminous and insignificant. From the window, the Qiqi district unfolded in sharp geometries and pulsing neon, but inside, the air felt suspended, like a curated reverb tail of a song we had started playing years ago and were only now beginning to understand, wrapped in the hushed, velvet luxury of the space.
The Silver Reflection
We both remember the Forest Buffet, where the air smelled of roasted lobster and the crispness of autumn rain. I recall the clumsy, silent laughter as our spoons collided over a single, oversized dessert, a moment of genuine connection that felt more honest than any planned romance. We stood together on the wooden paths of the Autumn Red Valley, watching the water reflect a sky of shimmering, undecided silver. In that shared stillness, the distance between us felt portable, something we could carry back into the chocolate-glass walls of the hotel.
Damp earth and expensive soap on silk sheets.
- A slow morning at the Forest Buffet, tasting the autumn lobster.
- A quiet walk through the sunken paths of Autumn Red Valley.