We drove into the private garage of Mi Yue Jing Pin Shi Shang Lv Guan, the heavy door sliding shut behind us with a muted thud that felt, I sometimes think, like the closing of a chapter. There is a profound relief in disappearing, in knowing that for a few hours, the world cannot find you unless you wish to be found. Inside the spacious room, the air carried the faint, herbal sweetness of VALVOLA chamomile, a scent that seemed to settle the dust of our journey like a soft, invisible blanket. I watched you sink into the bed—which was an enveloping cloud of white linen, softer than any dream we had planned—and for a moment, we didn't speak. "Do you feel that?" I whispered, though the silence answered for us. We just listened to the stillness of the high floor, a silence that didn't feel empty but rather full of the things we hadn't yet found the words to say. I think we were both just adjusting our breathing, trying to find a rhythm that belonged only to us, far from the jagged, neon noise of the city.
11 PM, the air outside had turned sharp and brittle
The December cold is the sort of air that makes you pull your coat tighter and lean into the person beside you, seeking a shared, desperate heat. We had spent the evening drifting through the neon haze of the Christmas Carnival and the chaotic, steaming energy of Hanxi Night Market, where the smell of grilled seafood and sweet potato balls lingered on our wool sweaters. I remember us laughing over a small, misshapen sweet potato ball, still warm in the paper bag, a tiny, sugary victory against the biting chill. Returning to Mi Yue Jing Pin Shi Shang Lv Guan felt like stepping back into a warm, private sanctuary, a fortress against the wind. I remember the water pressure in the massage tub—strong, insistent, almost demanding—washing away the physical fatigue of the day. We sat there in the billowing steam, the bathroom tiles warm underfoot, talking in low voices about nothing in particular, the kind of conversations that only happen when you are tired enough to be honest. It occurred to me then that home isn't a place you find on a map, but perhaps it is this: the shared warmth of a room, the scent of chamomile, and the knowledge that we are, for tonight, completely invisible.
The distant glow of the city lights blurred through the window, like a painting left out in the rain.