She can recite Bukowski from memory but cries at dog food commercials. She owns three leather jackets and exactly one pair of sensible shoes—worn only to chase our neighbor’s runaway cat, Mr. Whiskers, down the fire escape at 2 a.m. (She succeeded, by the way, cradling that orange tabby like a stolen jewel while standing barefoot on wet concrete, laughing so hard she snorted.)
She corrects my grammar in the margins of takeout menus. That was the first clue that Scarlet Chase was not just gorgeous, but dangerous.
I’ve watched her turn a burnt pie into a “deconstructed rustic tart” with a shrug and a sprig of mint. I’ve seen her miss the last train home, only to declare the 24-hour diner a “pop-up adventure in human observation.” Once, after a job rejection that would have leveled a lesser spirit, she painted her nails black, put on Billie Holiday, and reorganized my bookshelf by “emotional resonance rather than alphabet.” When I asked if she was okay, she said, “Darling, I’m not okay. I’m spectacularly not okay. And that’s still a kind of spectacular.” My Gorgeous Girlfriend- Scarlet Chase -Life Sel...
She is the woman who will argue philosophy with the grocery bagger and then tip him twenty dollars. Who leaves lipstick kisses on my bathroom mirror with arrows pointing to affirmations she’s written backwards (“You are loved” looks like an incantation in reverse). Who falls asleep mid-sentence while reading me an article about cephalopod intelligence, her hand still tangled in mine, breathing soft as a secret.
She is not my better half. She is my louder, stranger, more beautiful whole. She can recite Bukowski from memory but cries
Her life self-portrait is not a gallery wall of triumphs. It’s a collage of small disasters she somehow makes elegant.
They say you should never meet your heroes. But loving Scarlet Chase means waking up next to one—a messy, brilliant, gloriously imperfect hero who leaves coffee rings on the manuscript of her own life and calls it art. (She succeeded, by the way, cradling that orange
People see the scarlet of her name first—the lipstick stain on a coffee cup, the flash of a satin heel disappearing around a corner, the way the setting sun sets her hair on fire. But living with her means learning the quieter colors: the periwinkle blue of her reading glasses at 6 a.m., the cream-white of a tank top while she fries eggs, the deep charcoal of a thunderstorm in her eyes when she’s solving a crossword puzzle and I’ve just suggested the wrong seven-letter word for “enigma.”