The concert happens in the lighthouse courtyard, under repaired lights. Yu Zhen’s students play a messy, heartfelt rendition of a folk song. Then Yu Zhen sits at the piano. For the first time, she plays not for fame, but for joy.

“For everyone who stopped playing—and started again.” This story blends Taiwanese drama’s signature emotional realism, family tension, second-chance romance, and the healing power of art. Would you like a full script for a specific scene or character monologue?

The town’s small music school, on the verge of closing, begs Yu Zhen to teach. She refuses—until her mother threatens to sell the family piano. Jing Hao, who volunteers at the school, is assigned to “assist” her. Their first class is a disaster: she’s impatient, he’s methodical. A student cries.

She confronts him. He admits he’s been following her career since they were kids. “I wasn’t your rival,” he says. “I was your first fan.”

Her mother cries. Her father claps. The town stands.

Her mother, who poured everything into her lessons, won’t look her in the eye. Her father quietly fixes fishing nets. The town whispers.

The final scene: A young student asks Yu Zhen, “What’s the best thing a teacher can hear?”