We had a bet about who would melt first in the thirty-two degree humidity, and I lost the moment we stepped off the street. The lobby of Moxy Taichung hit us like a neon fever dream, a collision of electric reds and deep purples that felt less like a hotel and more like a nightclub that had forgotten to turn off the lights. The air conditioning provided a sharp, shivering contrast to the wet heat clinging to our shirts.
The welcome drink was a kumquat concoction, served at the lobby bar with a tartness that made my jaw ache. The glass sweated in my palm, cold and slick. We drank it in a shared, heavy silence, the sharp citrus cutting through the thick August air, while we wondered, with a sort of collective irony, if we were far too old for a place that looked like a professional DJ booth.
"Is this a bedroom or a very expensive closet?" someone asked. We spent ten minutes deciphering the logic of the wall-mounted furniture, laughing at the way the room forced us into a choreographed dance just to reach the luggage rack. It was a puzzle box of a room that demanded a certain kind of physical cooperation.
The sparkling water machine became our accidental sanctuary. We developed a ritual, a pilgrimage every few hours to the corridor. The hotel's eco-friendly lack of bottled water turned us into a team of hydration hunters, our shared annoyance evolving into a private joke that only made sense to the three of us.
I sometimes think the rooftop is where the city finally breathes. We stood there as a sudden rain shower washed the dust off the skyline, the air turning an electric blue. The tension between the loud party vibe below and the vast, silent horizon above created a space where we didn't feel the need to fill the silence with talk.
The bathroom was a shock of neon pink that felt almost aggressive at 3 a.m. I remember the biting temperature of the tiles under my bare feet and the way the light made the steam from the shower look like a scene from a low-budget sci-fi movie. There was a strange, synthetic comfort in that glow.
A thunderstorm trapped us in the lobby for three hours. We played pool with a level of intensity usually reserved for Olympic finals, the rhythmic click of the balls echoing against the industrial wood walls while we roasted each other's terrible aim.
We left without a grand conclusion, just the memory of shared laughter in a space that tried very hard to be cool. I suppose that is the point of these trips—the realization that home is not a fixed point but a portable rhythm we carry, held together by the people we are willing to be ridiculous with.
A single neon sign humming in the rain.
- Grab a drink at the rooftop bar right as the sun dips.
- Hit the gym to burn off the energy of the lobby party.