Why I Created This: Scarlet Fever
#5 Scarlet Fever
I created Scarlet Fever because I wanted to write intimacy without crossing into something explicit or dirty.
I wanted stories that feel close. Breath-close. Skin-close. Stories where two people are so focused on each other that the world naturally fades into the background.
Scarlet Fever is not about sex for shock value. It’s about desire that feels intentional. About passion that lingers instead of explodes. About wanting someone—and being wanted back—without having to spell everything out.
At the same time, I also write Soft Daydreams.
Those stories live in a different temperature. They’re gentle, domestic, quiet. Late-night snacks. Shared books. Warm shoulders. Safe silences.
And somewhere along the way, I realized something important:
A relationship doesn’t survive on softness alone. And it doesn’t survive on passion alone either.
It needs both.
Soft Daydream and Scarlet Fever are two sides of the same coin. One is tenderness. The other is heat.
One is safety. The other is hunger.
Both are forms of intimacy. Both are necessary to make love feel whole.
So I write Scarlet Fever not to be explicit, but to be honest. To explore closeness, tension, and desire in a way that still feels human, focused, and intentional.
If Soft Daydream is about building a home together, then Scarlet Fever is about remembering why you chose each other in the first place.
And I think love deserves both. Read Soft Daydreams here Read Scarlet Fever here







