The July heat in Taichung was a physical weight, a white-hot glare that seemed to bleach the color from the streets and drain the will from our bones. We had spent the afternoon in a state of frantic agitation, Sarah obsessively reorganizing her suitcase for the fourth time as if a perfectly folded summer dress could somehow ward off the oppressive humidity. By the time we retreated to the cool, marble-scented sanctuary of Tai Zhong Shun Tian Huan Hui Jiu Dian, we had collectively decided that order was a lie. The only truth left was a sudden, urgent craving for something salty and unapologetically unhealthy. It is a peculiar bond, the midnight raid on a convenience store—a shared conspiracy against the concept of a sleep schedule. We returned lugging plastic bags of fried chicken and neon-colored chips, the handles digging into our palms, our footsteps echoing softly through the hushed, climate-controlled corridors that felt like a fortress against the tropical night.
Confessions Over Fried Chicken
"I bet you ten bucks we'll wake up tomorrow and regret every single calorie of this," Mark said, gesturing with a piece of popcorn chicken. He was sprawled across the plush carpet of our room, which was vast enough to hold our collective chaos without us colliding.
"You're only saying that because you're terrified of the extra-spicy sauce," Sarah countered, leaning back against the bed frame. Her laughter rang out, bouncing off the high ceilings and blending with the low, steady hum of the air conditioner.
We sat in a ragged circle, the room's elegant, earth-toned décor providing a sophisticated contrast to the carnage of open snack packets and condensation-beaded drinks. The conversation drifted, floating like the steam from our food, from our failed attempt to reach the Gaomei Wetlands to the surreal feeling of the 21st-floor infinity pool, which had felt like a liquid mirror reflecting a bruised purple sky.
"Honestly, you're the only person I know who can get a sunburn while sitting under a beach umbrella," I noted. The room erupted into that raw, unfiltered laughter that only exists after 1 a.m., when the barriers of politeness dissolve and you are just tired humans clinging to each other in the dark.
The Weight of Shared Silence
Eventually, the noise subsided, leaving behind a heavy, satisfied silence that wrapped around us like a shared blanket. The room, once a battlefield of crumbs and laughter, settled back into its intended elegance. The soft, amber glow of the bedside lamps cast long, lazy shadows across the polished wooden surfaces, and the scent of salt and oil slowly faded, replaced by the crisp, neutral air of the hotel. I lay back on the cool linens, feeling the air conditioning finally win its war against the Taichung summer. I realized then that home isn't necessarily a place, but this: the ability to be completely exhausted and entirely comfortable in the presence of people who know exactly how ridiculous you are. The stillness was our reward, a portable peace we had carried from the neon streets into this quiet, high-rise sanctuary.
A single, golden chip resting on the white duvet.
- 7-Eleven's Taiwanese-style fried chicken and a cold oolong tea
- Local night market bubble tea with extra pearls for a sugar rush