The scent of wet pavement and ozone clung to our skin, a cool, clinging humidity that felt like a shared secret in the April drizzle. We drifted from the station in a four-minute haze, crossing a threshold into a Changhua that had forgotten to hurry, where the ghosts of old lumber mills still whispered through the heavy, velvet air of Xiao Xi Xiang. The Changhua Yinshan Hotel emerged not as a mere hotel, but as a slow-motion archive of longing, its hallways carrying a faint, mineral scent of aged cypress and the quiet, accumulated weight of a thousand departures. The staff greeted us with a warmth that felt like a homecoming to a place we had never been, their kindness softening the edges of our exhaustion. On the seventh floor, we paused before the dedicated service counter for honeymooners—a vintage relic of a time when romance was a formal arrangement, a curated event. "Do you think we're too late for this kind of magic?" I wondered silently, feeling the distance between us shrink in the dim, amber light of the corridor, the air tasting of old paper and dust. Later, the steam from a plate of A-Zhang’s chewy meatballs blurred the space between our faces, the savory, salt-kissed warmth grounding us in the present, a taste of the city's beating heart. In our room, the juxtaposition of one large bed and one solitary small one created a peculiar, silent tension, a physical map of the boundaries we were still negotiating, a choice between intimacy and solitude. Outside, the white petals of Tung blossoms drifted down like misplaced snow, silent and indifferent, coating the streets in a ghostly pallor. I remember the way the light hit the old wooden floor at six in the morning, a pale, tentative gold that didn't demand any answers, just a quiet acknowledgment that we were here, breathing in the stillness of a room we were finally learning how to inhabit together.
- Wander through the Fan-shaped Depot to hear the trains breathe in the spring.
- Savor the buttery, crisp edges of an egg yolk pastry from Bu Er Fang.