The September air in Taichung carries a refrigerated crispness, a sudden clarity that settles over the city like a thin sheet of cool silk, clinging to the skin with a damp, electric energy. Walking into the lobby of He Ti Jiu Dian, our shoulders brushed in a rhythm of hesitant familiarity, the silence between us feeling less like a wall and more like a window opening onto something unnamed. I remember the scent of old paper and polished mahogany as we stood before the towering wall of books, two small figures dwarfed by a thousand printed thoughts, the hushed atmosphere absorbing the sound of our breathing. In our leisure-style room, time seemed to stretch and warp; the distance from the bed to the window felt like a slow migration across a white desert. At six in the morning, the light filtered through the curtains in pale, translucent ribbons, turning the white linens into a frozen lake, still and expectant. In the traditional restaurant, the steam from the milkfish porridge rose in ghostly spirals, the scent of ginger and sea salt grounding us in the present. "Stay a little longer," I whispered, the words barely audible over the soft, rhythmic clink of ceramic spoons. The taste was a quiet agreement, a warmth that seeped into our bones and softened the edges of our shared exhaustion. We watched the distant, hazy silhouette of the mountains near DaKeng, our hands meeting over a shared plate of chicken rice, the friction of our different rhythms finally synchronizing into a portable kind of home. As the evening settled into a bruised purple hue, I watched you slide a single bookmark into a half-read novel—a small, paper promise that there would be a next time, a lingering residue of a day that asked for nothing and gave us everything.
- Savor a slow morning with milkfish porridge in the traditional restaurant.
- Find a shared favorite among the towering books in the He Ti Jiu Dian lobby.