Chapter 60: Two Rooms or One Room
The long-distance bus ambled forward, with the two people leaning against each other listening to music, occasionally engaging in a brief conversation, while the sun slowly moved from directly overhead toward the west.
As the saying goes, the sun shifts with the day, and the moon wanes with its phase; too much or too little is to be avoided in everything, and this principle also applies to love.
It’s just that love has such a high ceiling, it’s virtually impossible to see the top, and no one has ever heard of loving too much that it turns to not loving; normal people probably could never touch that ceiling—it’s the abnormal that are oftentimes seen, with yanderes being an example.
At the foot of Zhongnan Mountain, there was a small shop.
The shop wasn’t crowded, with just a few tables of customers. Qin Guanglin and He Fang sat on the side near the door. After completing their long bus ride, both of them were hungry. They decided to fill their stomachs before seeking a place to stay.
On the table were two steaming bowls that the server had just brought over, one filled with lamb stewed bun, and the other... also filled with lamb stewed bun.
Oh no, that’s not right, according to the menu’s name, it should be called the special nourishing lamb soup stewed bun.
The buns were broken up by He Fang, each piece the size of beans, even and consistent, with the occasional larger chunk indicating where Qin Guanglin had tried his hand, only to be stopped by He Fang shortly thereafter, as his were both ugly and so big that they reduced the dining experience.
"You’re really skilled with your hands," Qin Guanglin complimented, then scooped up a spoonful of soup and tasted it, "Delicious."
He was indifferent to meats other than chicken, fish, and pork, not that he wouldn’t eat them, but he wouldn’t actively choose them either—if available, he wouldn’t refuse.
This Luo City specialty he had tried a few times before; it always seemed that the small shops made it more flavorful and authentic, unlike the larger establishments that typically set up traps for out-of-towners, always lacking something in taste.
