The rooftop pool water, a shimmering liquid silk that clung to our skin like a warm embrace against the 22-degree November breeze. The pale blue light danced on the surface, mirroring the vast, open Taichung sky until the horizon blurred into a humid, iridescent haze. "Look, I'm a dolphin!" the youngest shouted, his voice echoing off the glass railings as he swam in dizzying circles, noticed first by the youngest.
The heavy, cream-colored duvet in our refined suite at Tai Zhong Zhong Xin Jin Yu Jin Xiang Jiu Dian, smelling faintly of sun-dried starch and a quiet, clinical peace. The fabric was a dense, enveloping cloud that seemed to swallow the distant hum of the city, turning the act of waking up into a slow, luxurious ascent from a dream. "It's like a marshmallow!" the eldest whispered, treating the bed as a landing strip for a series of increasingly daring leaps, noticed first by the eldest.
The elastic snap of Fuzhou noodles from the Second Market, where the air was a thick, aromatic fog of minced pork and old-world steam. The taste was a salty, savory anchor, a grounding warmth that reminded us that the most honest flavors are found in the most crowded, chaotic alleys. This tastes like home, the father thought, closing his eyes to reclaim a forgotten fragment of his own childhood in every bite, noticed first by the father.
The bruised crimson of the leaves at Autumn Red Valley, where we descended into the sunken earth and felt the urban noise vanish. The ground beneath our sneakers gave way with a dry, rhythmic crunch, a sound that echoed the slowing of our own heartbeats in the cool, damp air. The mother stood frozen, her breath a small ghost in the air, trying to capture the exact moment the golden light filtered through the canopy, noticed first by the mother.
The cool, smooth plastic of the room key card at Tai Zhong Zhong Xin Jin Yu Jin Xiang Jiu Dian, which the youngest gripped as if it were a sacred talisman. The satisfying, metallic click of the lock signaled a sudden transition from the public friction of the streets to the private sanctuary of our room, a small object holding the power to unlock absolute safety. "My treasure," he murmured, refusing to let it leave his hand for three whole days, noticed first by the youngest.
Their synchronized breaths drift in the dim light.
- Savor the breakfast buffet; the variety is perfect for satisfying the whole family.
- Walk to Central Park at 7am to watch the city wake up in the autumn mist.