#Formula 1 driver dr
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shiftingwithadam · 11 months ago
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@itsangelicasworld AHHHH Thank you for asking these questions!!!
- Who's your favorite person in your F1 DR?
Ooooof that’s hard. I have to say it’s probably a tie between my boyfriend Leo, and my adoptive dad Jenson Button! In terms of other folks on the grid, Max is my teammate and very distant relative (that’s not even just a DR thing, that’s also a CR thing as well, he seriously is my very distant cousin 💀) and I spend a lot of time with him. Also hands down the two funniest people to hang around with on the grid are absolutely Gabriel and Daniel, and I also have so much appreciation for my boy Roman for being the only other Czech driver on the grid and also just so nice to be around. 🙏
- Any favorite memories from your MCU DR?
To be honest it’s when I accidentally told Pietro I was bisexual and he just looked at me for a split second. Ran. Came back in 1.29 seconds. Holding a pride flag and multiple assorted pride merchandise. He then just casually mentioned he was pan which was cool! Also I’m just a sucker for whenever I get to go on patrol with Matt (Murdock), he’s my 2nd cousin and so on the missions that Steve dub “too dangerous” for me, I get to go and hang out with my equally dangerous lawyer cousin!
- Have you scripted any scenarios in your Madam Secretary DR? If so, and if you're comfortable, which ones are your favorite?
My Madam Secretary DR is by far my most emotional(?) I guess 😭 one of my favorites was getting to take Dimitri ice skating for the first time. He fell down so many times and kept cursing while laughing, plus I found out he hated peanut butter that day which was fun! Another was when I got to go to dad’s class and teach a segment when they got to the section on disability in their curriculum and teach a bunch of 20 somethings about the disabled identity and how workplace ableism is frequently overlooked. OHOHOH and when me and Stevie were going to go to a concert and we were able to get past the security detail and went down this massive road belting out “It’s my life” by Bon Jovi together at like 1 in the morning.
- What are the things your most excited to shift for in each DR? :D
F1: My two favorite races on the calendar which is Monaco, because Monaco, and Austin because it’s my home race and I just can’t wait for that 💗
Marvel: Getting to go on missions with Bucky (him and Steve are my adoptive dads so they always end up being a lot of fun to go on), and getting to get my science class credit when I can’t go to school in person by helping out in the lab with Dr. Banner!!!
Madam Secretary: Hinestly just spending time with my family, meeting diplomats, translating for presidents and prime ministers as the secretary’s son, and getting to hang out with all of mg mom’s staff after I was hired as her translator (plus going on missions with Dimitri!!! Oh my god I can’t wait for that.)
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exkaases · 4 months ago
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how're we feeling about race week
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kathlare · 7 months ago
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across the world, for us
Lando Norris x Amelie Dayman
Summary: Lando travels to Tokyo to reconcile with Amelie after a fight, demonstrating his commitment to their relationship.
Wordcount: 1.2 k
Warnings: just fluff
full masterlist // request over here!
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February 11th, 2024 - Tokyo, Japan
Lando Norris adjusted his cap as he stepped out of the taxi, the bright lights of Tokyo illuminating the city in a mesmerizing glow. The crisp February air bit at his skin, but it was nothing compared to the nervous energy buzzing in his chest. He had flown halfway across the world to fix this—whatever "this" was. He and Amelie hadn’t spoken since their fight days ago, and it gnawed at him.
She didn’t know he was here. He hadn’t told her. But when he found out she’d just finished the last of her shows in Japan before heading back to the States, he knew he had to make things right.
Now, standing in front of her hotel room door, he took a deep breath and knocked. A few seconds later, the door cracked open, and there she was.
—Lando?— Amelie’s voice was a mix of surprise and confusion. Her makeup was wiped clean, her hair tied up in a messy bun, and she was wearing an oversized hoodie—his hoodie.
He smiled softly, the sight of her easing some of the tension in his chest. —Hey.—
She stepped back to let him in, her movements hesitant. Once inside, the door clicked shut behind him, and silence settled over them.
—What are you doing here?— she asked, her arms crossed.
—Fixing us,— he said simply. —Or at least trying to.—
Her eyes softened, but she still looked wary. —Lando…—
—Ames, listen,— he interrupted, his voice gentle but firm. —I get it. Your family is important to you, and this isn’t easy for you. But I need to know that you’re serious about this. About us.—
She blinked, her eyes shimmering with unshed tears. —I am serious, Lando. You know I am.—
—Then why does it feel like you’re ashamed of me?— he asked, his voice cracking slightly.
Her lips parted, but no words came out. She looked away, her hands fidgeting nervously.
—It’s not you,— she whispered after a moment. —It’s me. I’ve always been the one who… who messes things up. My relationships, my career, everything. I don’t want to bring you into that. I don’t want you to get hurt because of me.—
He stepped closer, tilting her chin up so she was forced to look at him. —You don’t get to decide that for me. I want to be here. With you. But I need to know you want that too.—
A tear slipped down her cheek, and she quickly wiped it away, her walls crumbling. —I’m scared, Lando. Of losing you. Of my family not understanding. Of everything going wrong like it always does.—
—You won’t lose me,— he promised, his thumb brushing against her cheek. —Not unless you push me away.—
She let out a shaky breath, her resolve breaking. —I don’t want to push you away. I don’t.—
—Then tell them, Ames,— he urged. —Not for me. For us. For you. If you don’t believe this can work, how am I supposed to?—
She nodded slowly, her tears falling freely now. —You’re right. I know you’re right.—
He pulled her into his arms, holding her tightly as she clung to him. —It’s going to be okay. We’ll figure it out together.—
They stood there for what felt like hours, her quiet sobs eventually subsiding. When she finally pulled back, her eyes were red and puffy, but there was a new determination in them.
—I’ll tell them,— she said, her voice steady despite the tears. —I’ll tell them everything.—
Lando smiled, brushing a strand of hair from her face. —That’s my girl.—
She laughed softly, the sound lightening the tension in the room. —You’re impossible, you know that?—
—Yeah, but you like me for it,— he teased, his tone playful.
Her cheeks flushed, but she didn’t deny it. Instead, she leaned up to press a soft kiss to his lips, the warmth of it chasing away the lingering shadows of their fight.
—Thank you for coming all this way,— she murmured against his lips.
—I’d cross the world for you, Ames,— he replied, his voice sincere.
As they sat on the bed, talking and laughing like they always did, Lando felt the weight of their fight lift. They weren’t perfect, and there were still challenges ahead, but for the first time in days, he felt like they were on the same page.
And that was more than enough.
Amelie pulled away from the kiss with a small laugh, her fingers brushing against Lando's jaw. —You’re ridiculous, you know that?— she teased, though her eyes shone with affection.
—Ridiculous enough to fly halfway across the globe for you,— Lando quipped, leaning back on his hands. He grinned as she rolled her eyes, but his tone softened. —But I meant what I said, Ames. I’ll always show up for you.—
Her smile faltered for a moment, the weight of his words sinking in. She tucked her legs beneath her, curling up beside him on the bed. —I don’t deserve you sometimes, Lan,— she admitted quietly, her voice tinged with guilt.
—Hey, stop that,— he said firmly, shifting to face her fully. —We’ve both made mistakes. Hell, we’ve both been idiots at times.— He paused, a cheeky smirk tugging at his lips. —You especially.—
She swatted his arm with a laugh, her cheeks flushed. —You’re the worst.—
—And yet, here you are, stuck with me,— he teased, pulling her closer until her head rested on his chest. His fingers trailed absentmindedly through her hair, the silence between them comfortable now.
Amelie let out a content sigh, her cheek pressed against his hoodie. —It’s scary, you know? Being with someone like you.—
—Someone as handsome and charming as me?— Lando quipped, earning another playful shove from her.
—I’m serious,— she said, her tone soft but sincere. She tilted her head up to meet his gaze. —You’re… everything. And I don’t want to screw this up.—
He stared at her for a moment, his heart twisting at the vulnerability in her eyes. —Ames, you’re not going to screw this up. We’re not going to screw this up. Okay?—
She nodded, though the doubt lingered in her expression. —Okay.—
They stayed like that for a while, wrapped up in each other, the city lights of Tokyo casting a faint glow through the curtains. Eventually, Amelie shifted, glancing at the clock on the bedside table.
—Shit,— she muttered, sitting up abruptly. —I still need to pack.—
Lando raised an eyebrow. —For the States?—
She nodded, already moving around the room to gather her things. —Super Bowl tomorrow. Then I’m straight to Australia. My schedule’s insane.—
—Yeah, no kidding,— he said, watching her with an amused grin. —Need some help?—
—You offering to fold my clothes, Norris?— she teased, tossing him a T-shirt from her suitcase.
—Anything for you, love,— he shot back with a wink, catching the shirt and setting it aside. He stood and joined her by the suitcase, his hands deftly folding the items she handed him.
They worked in tandem, the easy rhythm of their friendship blending seamlessly with the intimacy of their relationship. Amid the quiet chatter and shared smiles, Amelie glanced at him, her heart swelling.
—Lando,— she said softly, her voice pulling his attention. —Thank you. For being here. For... being you.—
He smiled, leaning down to press a quick kiss to her forehead. —Always, Ames.—
As they finished packing, Amelie couldn’t help but feel a weight lift from her shoulders. They still had so much to figure out, but for the first time in days, she felt like they were heading in the right direction—together.
And that made all the difference.
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vroomvroomvroommf · 1 year ago
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Mclaren istg you better figure out the straight line speed NOW. I expect Oscar (and Lando) to fight for podiums in the next couple races
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fandom · 7 months ago
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Ships
Love is in the air (in hell).
Billford Bill Cipher & Stanford Pines, Gravity Falls
Farcille Falin Touden & Marcille Donato, Dungeon Meshi
Poolverine Wade Wilson & Logan Howlett, the Marvel universe
Ineffable Husbands -3 Aziraphale & Crowley, Good Omens
Destiel -2 Dean Winchester & Castiel, Supernatural
Radioapple Lucifer Morningstar & Alastor, Hazbin Hotel
Buddie +3 Evan Buckley & Edmundo Diaz, 9-1-1
Phan Daniel Howell & Phil Lester, YouTubers
Polin Penelope Featherington & Colin Bridgerton, Bridgerton
Satosugu +16 Gojo Satoru & Geto Suguru, Jujutsu Kaisen
Percabeth +76 Percy Jackson & Annabeth Chase, the Percy Jackson universe
Bucktommy Evan Buckley & Tommy Kinard, 9-1-1
Hannigram -4 Hannibal Lecter & Will Graham, Hannibal
Labru Laios Touden & Kabru, Dungeon Meshi
Zosan +18 Roronoa Zoro & Vinsmoke Sanji, One Piece
Narilamb Narinder & the Lamb, Cult of the Lamb
Huskerdust Husk & Angel Dust, Hazbin Hotel
Steddie -16 Steve Harrington & Eddie Munson, Stranger Things
Sonadow +27 Sonic & Shadow, Sonic the Hedgehog
Ghostsoap -6 Simon “Ghost” Riley & John “Soap” MacTavish, the Call of Duty franchise
Jegulus -3 James Potter & Regulus Black, the Harry Potter universe
Fiddauthor Fiddleford McGucket & Stanford Pines, Gravity Falls
Byler -19 Will Byers & Mike Wheeler, Stranger Things
Wolfstar -8 Remus Lupin & Sirius Black, the Harry Potter universe
Soukoku -3 Nakahara Chuuya & Dazai Osamu, Bungou Stray Dogs
Bakudeku -6 Bakugou Katsuki & Midoriya Izuku, Boku no Hero Academia
Loustat +5 Louis de Pointe du Lac & Lestat de Lioncourt, Interview with the Vampire
Hualian +30 Hua Cheng & Xie Lian, Tian Guan Ci Fu
Chaggie Charlie Morningstar & Vaggie, Hazbin Hotel
Lestappen +37 Charles Leclerc & Max Verstappen, Formula 1 drivers
Hilson James Wilson & Gregory House, House
Narumitsu +13 Phoenix Wright & Miles Edgeworth, Ace Attorney
Spirk +15 Spock & James T. Kirk, Star Trek
Stolitz Stolas & Blitzo, Helluva Boss
Lokius +43 Loki Laufeyson & Mobius M. Mobius, Loki
Merthur -19 Merlin & Arthur Pendragon, Merlin
Payneland Edwin Payne & Charles Rowland, Dead Boy Detectives
Chilshi Chilchuck Tims & Senshi, Dungeon Meshi
Rhaenicent +61 Rhaenyra Targaryen & Alicent Hightower, House of the Dragon
Astarion x Tav +48 Astarion & Tav, Baldur's Gate 3
Armandaniel Armand & Daniel Molloy, Interview with the Vampire
Griddlehark -2 Gideon Nav & Harrowhark Nonagesimus, The Locked Tomb series
Superbat +12 Superman & Batman, the DC universe
Zolu Roronoa Zoro & Monkey D. Luffy, One Piece
Zelink -33 Zelda & Link, The Legend of Zelda
Jonmartin +5 Jonathan Sims & Martin Blackwood, The Magnus Archives
Vashwood -36 Vash the Stampede & Nicholas D. Wolfwood, Trigun
Zukka +20 Zuko & Sokka, Avatar: The Last Airbender
Staticradio Alastor & Vox, Hazbin Hotel
Ratiorine Dr. Ratio & Aventurine, Honkai: Star Rail
Blackbonnet -36 Edward "Blackbeard" Teach & Stede Bonnet, Our Flag Means Death
Hanamusa -9 Jessie & Delia Ketchum, the Pokémon franchise
Wangxian -28 Lan Wangji & Wei Wuxian, Mo Dao Zu Shi
Pearlina Pearl Houzuki & Marina Ida, Splatoon
Firstprince -32 Alex Claremont-Diaz & Henry Fox-Mountchristen-Windsor, Red, White & Royal Blue
Shuake Kurusu Akira & Goro Akechi, Persona 5
Drarry +6 Draco Malfoy & Harry Potter, the Harry Potter universe
Landoscar Lando Norris & Oscar Piastri, Formula 1 drivers
Bingqiu Luo Binghe & Shen Qingqiu, The Scum Villain's Self-Saving System
Shadowpeach +2 Sun Wukong & the Six-Eared Macaque, Lego Monkie Kid
Zutara Zuko & Katara, Avatar: The Last Airbender
Itafushi Itadori Yuji & Fushiguro Megumi, Jujustu Kaisen
Loumand Louis de Pointe du Lac & Armand, Interview with the Vampire
Timkon +25 Tim Drake & Conner Kent, Young Justice
Klance +18 Keith & Lance, Voltron: Legendary Defender
Nuzi N & Uzi Doorman, Murder Drones
Durgetash The Dark Urge & Enver Gortash, Baldur's Gate 3
Cherik Charles Xavier & Erik Lehnsherr, the Marvel universe
Kathony Kate Sharma & Anthony Bridgerton, Bridgerton
Staticmoth Vox & Valentino, Hazbin Hotel
Shin Soukoku Akutagawa Ryunnosuke & Nakajima Atsushi, Bungou Stray Dogs
Huntlow -65 Hunter & Willow Park, The Owl House
Haikaveh Kaveh & Alhaitham, Genshin Impact
Chainshipping Lawrence Gordon & Adam Stanheight, Saw
ButtonBlossom Ragatha & Pomni, The Amazing Digital Circus
Agathario Agatha Harkness & Rio Vidal, the Marvel universe
Broppy Branch & Poppy, the Trolls franchise
Lumity -65 Luz Noceda & Amity Blight, The Owl House
Radiorose Alastor & Rosie, Hazbin Hotel
Imodna -53 Imogen Temult & Laudna, Critical Role
Rosekiller Barty Crouch Jr. & Evan Rosier, the Harry Potter universe
Everlark Katniss Everdeen & Peeta Mellark, The Hunger Games
Wenclair -78 Wednesday Addams & Enid Sinclair, Wednesday
Kataang Katara & Aang, Avatar: The Last Airbender
Caitvi -5 Caitlyn Kiramman & Vi, Arcane
Adrienette -50 Adrien Agreste & Marinette Dupain-Cheng, Miraculous: Tales of Ladybug & Cat Noir
Davekat +3 Dave Strider & Karkat Vantas, Homestuck
Adamsapple Adam & Lucifer Morningstar, Hazbin Hotel
Twiyor -58 Loid Forger & Yor Forger, SPY x FAMILY
Shuggy Shanks & Buggy, One Piece
Scollace Scott Pilgrim & Wallace Wells, the Scott Pilgrim franchise
Madohomu Kaname Madoka & Homura Akemi, Puella Magi Madoka Magica
Solangelo -23 Will Solace & Nico di Angelo, the Percy Jackson universe
Kimharry Kim Kitsuragi & Harry Du Bois, Disco Elysium
Klapollo -2 Apollo Justice & Klavier Gavin, Ace Attorney
Maxley Max Goof & Bradley Uppercrust III, An Extremely Goofy Movie
Megop Megatron & Optimus Prime, Transformers
Wilmon -34 Prince Wilhelm & Simon Eriksson, Young Royals
Johnshi Johnny Cage & Kenshi Takahashi, Mortal Kombat
Korrasami -5 Korra & Asami Sato, The Legend of Korra
The number in italics indicates how many spots a ship moved up or down from the previous year. Bolded ships weren’t on the list last year.
Love love? Create a Community for your OTP today, and enjoy yelling about it with others in the comfort of your own dedicated online yelling space.
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pucksandpower · 1 month ago
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Midnight Sun
Oscar Piastri x astrophysicist!Reader
Summary: for the first time, the girl who studies stars becomes someone’s sun
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You are not built for this.
Not the headphones clamped too tight on your ears, not the sterile studio lighting that hums faintly overhead, and definitely not the bright-eyed producer trying to coax a smile out of you like it’s some quantum equation.
“You’ll be great,” she insists, bouncing on her toes like the floor’s electrified. “Just … a little looser, yeah?”
You blink. “That sounds like medical advice.”
She laughs too hard, probably to cover up the silence on the other side of the glass where the sound engineer sits. You glance toward him, but he’s preoccupied adjusting levels. You consider making a run for it.
“You said the guest was from Doctor Who,” you say instead, squinting at the notes you scribbled on the back of an old star chart. “I prepared for someone who at least pretends to know physics.”
���Close,” she chirps, already halfway to the door. “He’s dealt with time — just at 300 kilometers an hour.”
You don’t process that fully before the studio door swings open and someone breezes in with the kind of easy, unhurried energy of a man who lives without traffic or consequences.
“Hi,” he says, and it’s almost apologetic. His accent curls around the syllables like it’s trying to make them less obtrusive. “Sorry I’m late. Cab driver took us to the wrong building. Twice.”
You look up.
And you blink.
“That’s Oscar Piastri,” someone whispers into your headphones — probably the producer, definitely smiling — and suddenly you understand the joke. He’s not from Doctor Who. He’s from McLaren.
You stare at him. He notices.
“I know,” he says, rubbing the back of his neck, “not exactly Neil deGrasse Tyson.”
“No,” you reply, slowly peeling off one headphone. “But he also hasn’t won Baku.”
“Yet,” he grins.
You’re not smiling. Not exactly. But you’re no longer glaring either, and he seems to take that as a win.
***
They mic him up quickly. He sits across from you, spinning a pencil between his fingers like he’s back in school, half-listening to the rules being rattled off in his ear. When the producer gives the signal, the red recording light blinks on.
“Welcome to Stars Between Us,” you say into the mic, voice steady, clipped. “I’m Dr. Y/N Y/L/N. I study black holes, gravitational waves, and all the strange ways time can bend and fold. Joining me today is — unexpectedly — Oscar Piastri.”
He laughs. “Unexpectedly is fair.”
You glance at your notes. They're useless. None of your questions about the TARDIS or relativity in sci-fi apply now.
“So,” you say, pivoting, “what brings a Formula 1 driver to a podcast about astrophysics?”
He leans in, suddenly serious. “Honestly? I’m curious. There’s a lot about racing that feels … surreal. Like time moves differently when you’re in the car. I wanted to know if that’s just adrenaline or if there’s something real behind it.”
You narrow your eyes, reluctantly intrigued. “You’re asking about time dilation?”
“Is that what it’s called?”
You nod. “Special relativity. When you approach the speed of light, time moves slower for you compared to someone standing still.”
“Sounds useful in a race.”
“Only if you’re traveling at 299,792 kilometers per second. You’re just … fast.”
He smiles. “Thanks, I think.”
There’s a beat of silence. Not awkward, but considering.
“What does that feel like?” You ask, almost against your better judgment. “Driving that fast?”
He pauses, and something shifts in his face. He doesn’t reach for a joke.
“It’s quiet,” he says. “Everything else fades. The noise becomes background. It’s just … instinct and motion. Like the world slows down and speeds up at the same time. You’re nowhere and everywhere.”
You stare at him.
“That’s … poetic.”
He looks startled. “Wasn’t trying to be.”
“That’s worse.”
He laughs again. It’s warm, low, not forced. The producer signals something behind the glass, but you wave it off.
Oscar rests his elbows on the table, eyes fixed on yours like the room’s contracted around the two of you.
“What about you?” He asks. “What’s your version of being in the car?”
You pause.
There’s a constellation blooming behind your ribs now, hesitant and bright.
“I watch stars collapse,” you say finally. “And try to make sense of why they do. I teach, late at night. I go home. I draw them, sometimes.”
He raises his brows. “Draw them?”
“In a notebook,” you mutter. “It’s not important.”
“No, it is.” His eyes flicker. “Why draw them if you already know what they look like?”
You don’t have an answer for that. Not really.
“To remember that they’re real,” you say after a while. “That they’re not just data. That they existed.”
He nods, slow.
“That’s the thing about fame, too,” he says. “People think it’s this massive, burning light. But it’s only a flare. It burns out quick.”
“Like a supernova.”
“Exactly.”
You both sit with that for a minute.
Then he glances down, sees your fingers resting on a battered leather notebook, and grins.
“Let me guess — constellations?”
“Mostly. Sometimes nebulae.”
“You ever draw racetracks?”
You snort. “No.”
He looks disappointed in the theatrical way, like you’ve just told him Santa isn’t real.
“Guess I’ll have to bring my own then.”
You roll your eyes, but you don’t tell him to leave.
The red light on the mic blinks off. You both pull off your headphones. The studio suddenly feels smaller.
He stands, brushing nonexistent dust from his sleeves, and stretches like he’s been sitting still for too long.
“Thanks for not kicking me out,” he says, half-teasing.
“I considered it.”
“Yeah, I could tell.” He smiles. “But seriously. That was cool. Weirdly calming.”
“You don’t strike me as someone who needs calming.”
He gives a little shrug. “That’s ‘cause I’m good at pretending.”
You should say something polite. Professional. You don’t.
Instead, you ask, “Do you ever wish you’d done something else?”
He looks genuinely surprised by the question. But he doesn’t brush it off.
“Sometimes,” he says. “I don’t know what. But sometimes I think about it. Especially when I’m not sure who I’m doing this for anymore.”
You nod. Quiet understanding passes between you like an electrical current.
“Maybe you should draw more racetracks,” you murmur.
He smiles, opens his mouth to respond-
Then his phone buzzes. A sharp interruption.
He checks it, winces. “I’ve got to go. Team thing.”
You nod, already pulling your thoughts back into your chest like a turtle retreating into its shell.
“Good luck,” you say, casual, a little too clinical.
He hesitates, then starts to walk to the door — stops, spins back.
“Oh. My water bottle-” He looks around. “Did I leave it?”
You glance at the table. “No idea.”
“Damn. Well, no worries.”
He waves, one last flash of a smile, then he’s gone. The door clicks shut.
You exhale, sit for a moment, then begin to gather your things. The headphones. Your notebook. A pen that’s run dry.
And there, tucked just beneath the edge of the table, almost hidden-
His water bottle.
Plain. Scuffed. You reach for it, about to set it on the counter for someone to return, when you see it:
A small sketch drawn in Sharpie.
It’s crude, but deliberate. A racetrack — one you recognize from the way the corners loop, the way the chicane bends back on itself. Monaco.
You pause.
Your thumb runs gently over the linework.
Then, without really thinking, you slide it into your bag.
Later, when the lights are off and the stars are out, you’ll press your fingers to that curve again and try to understand why your heart is moving like it’s found some new orbit.
***
The message arrives two days later.
It’s early evening and your phone buzzes as you’re halfway through transferring rough calculations from a whiteboard to your notebook, elbow-deep in chalk dust and equations about stellar death. You glance at the screen.
Instagram DM from oscarpiastri
Your first thought is why do I even have notifications on for this app?
Your second thought is oh no.
You stare at it. Don’t open it. Just … look.
You’ve barely touched your Instagram account since undergrad. It’s a digital graveyard of telescope selfies and star trail experiments. You don’t even know how he found you. You consider not opening it at all. But curiosity — that wretched, shimmering thing — wins.
The message is short. Innocent.
oscarpiastri
Thanks for the chat the other day. Really enjoyed it.
You don’t reply.
You tell yourself it’s not personal. You’re just not someone who does casual messaging. You don’t like small talk, and Oscar Piastri feels like small talk. Fast cars, bright lights, the occasional philosophical tangent — but none of it rooted in the quiet gravity you orbit.
You close the app.
And then, three days later — another ping.
This time, it’s 2:17 a.m. You’re on your balcony with a mug of tea, too wired from class to sleep and watching Orion climb over the skyline like he owns the place.
oscarpiastri
What’s the name of that star you mentioned? The red one near the edge of Taurus?
You stare at it, baffled.
He remembers. He listens.
You type. Delete. Type again.
Then finally, you send.
yourusername
Aldebaran.
The response comes in less than a minute.
oscarpiastri
That’s the one. Looked it up, but your way of describing it was better.
You bite your lip. He’s probably just being nice. But something flickers inside you anyway — soft and unsettling.
You should leave it there.
But then you type:
yourusername
It’s often called the “eye” of the bull. It’s not actually part of the Hyades cluster, it just looks like it is from here.
oscarpiastri
So it’s a loner pretending to be part of the group?
You pause.
yourusername
Something like that.
***
After that, it unspools gradually. Almost imperceptibly.
Not a flood of texts or calls. Nothing loud or demanding.
Just … voice notes. Little ones. Scraps of sound tossed across time zones.
The first is from him. Late. You can hear hotel AC in the background and the faint rumble of a distant elevator.
“Hey. I’m in Suzuka now. Couldn’t sleep. Watched this video about neutron stars you mentioned in the podcast and my brain hurts. Did you really say one teaspoon of that stuff weighs four billion tonnes?”
He pauses.
“I think that’s the weight of my eyelids right now. Good night. Or good morning. Or whatever it is where you are.”
You listen to it twice.
Then you send one back.
It’s short. You’re walking home after a night lecture, boots crunching over salt-stiff pavement. Your voice is low, breath visible in the cold.
“Technically, it’s about a billion tonnes, not four. But the number’s less important than the idea. Density like that — it defies everything we understand. Anyway. Hope you got some sleep.”
You almost don’t send it. But then you do.
And after that, it becomes a habit.
A quiet ritual.
***
“Have you ever felt like time changes depending on the country?” He says one day. “Like, I landed in Australia and my brain reset to childhood. Haven’t been here in ages. The stars are upside-down.”
You laugh into your phone.
“They’re not upside-down. You just never learned the southern sky.”
“Then teach me.”
And so you do. Piece by piece. Over fragmented voice notes and links to star charts. He sends photos from hotel windows — night skies dulled by light pollution, but earnest in their effort.
One day, you’re in the lab, cleaning equipment after a lecture, and a colleague walks past your open laptop.
“Is that Oscar Piastri quoting you?”
You glance up. “What?”
She points at the screen. A muted interview is playing on auto-repeat from a motorsport feed. You hadn’t realized the tab was still open.
The caption underneath reads.
“We think of time as constant, but it stretches and shrinks depending on your frame of reference. It’s wild.”
— Oscar Piastri, in an interview from Jeddah.
You stare at the screen.
You don’t breathe.
Because that line — that exact phrasing — is yours. You said it to him. Offhand. At 3 a.m. in a voice note while explaining why GPS satellites have to account for relativity.
You sit down.
Hard.
Your heart’s doing something very stupid in your chest. And the worst part?
You don’t hate it.
***
Later that night, he sends you a photo from a Melbourne airport bookstore.
It’s a star map. Rolled up, rubber-banded, creased in one corner.
oscarpiastri
Thought of you. Bought this while flying back from visiting family. Gonna hang it above my bed.
You grin despite yourself.
yourusername
That’s the northern sky. You’re in the southern hemisphere, genius.
oscarpiastri
… Shit. What if I hang it upside down?
Then, a follow-up photo.
It’s blurry. The lighting’s terrible. But the subject is clear.
A tiny telescope. Child-sized. Plastic. The kind you buy in the “educational toys” aisle.
It’s perched on a hotel windowsill.
oscarpiastri
Bought one. Fix it?
You laugh so hard you drop your phone.
***
By the time you realize what’s happening, it’s too late.
You’re used to him now.
To the unpredictable pings of his name across your screen. To the long silences followed by sudden outbursts of curiosity. To the way he says “your stars” like they belong to you.
You don’t tell anyone. Not because it’s secret, but because it’s yours. And that — somehow — feels rarer than anything.
And it’s not romantic. Not exactly.
But it’s also not not romantic.
You’re standing in a grocery store one evening, half-reading a list off your phone when your screen lights up with a new message.
oscarpiastri
What’s the name of the star that’s always behind you?
You frown.
yourusername
Behind me when?
oscarpiastri
When you’re walking home. I see it in your stories sometimes. The one that flickers near the rooflines. Looks stubborn.
You blink.
You hadn’t realized he watched those.
You scroll through your own stories. Grainy footage. A lamppost. A shimmer.
yourusername
Altair. Part of the Summer Triangle.
oscarpiastri
Sounds like a spaceship.
yourusername
It kind of is. It’s spinning so fast it’s not even round anymore.
There’s a pause.
Then another photo comes through. His telescope again, now perched next to a hotel room cup of tea and a very rumpled travel pillow.
oscarpiastri
Gonna find it tonight.
You reply before you can stop yourself.
yourusername
You won’t. It’s not visible from where you are.
Another pause.
oscarpiastri
Then tell me what is. I’ll watch your stars tonight instead.
You freeze.
The message sits there. Not loud. Not pushy. Just … real.
You stare at it for a long time.
Then you record a voice note. Your voice is soft, uneven.
“Look due west. About thirty degrees up. You’ll see Canopus, it’s one of the brightest. You’ll know it when you do. It doesn’t twinkle as much.”
You hesitate.
Then add, almost inaudibly. “It’s always made me feel less alone.”
You hit send.
And the night moves on. But something else stays.
***
A few days later, you receive a package at your office.
No note.
Just a Southern Hemisphere star map — this one beautifully illustrated — and a sleek black journal with faint constellations etched into the cover.
You trace the lines.
And in that moment, for the first time in your measured, structured little life, you let yourself fall just a little bit out of orbit.
***
You’re not supposed to be watching the race.
You’re supposed to be prepping slides for your 6 p.m. lecture on stellar nucleosynthesis — the chart on the evolution of elemental abundances still half-finished, your notes scattered like meteor debris across the desk.
But your laptop, traitorous and gleaming, is open to a livestream. The race is in its final laps.
Oscar is leading.
Your heart is misbehaving in ways you’ve tried to intellectualize and failed. It pounds — not like something mechanical, but like something alive, startled and pacing.
You adjust the volume and pretend this is just … scientific curiosity. A physics-enthusiast’s idle interest in speed, aerodynamics, G-forces. But when his name flashes across the top of the leaderboard, glowing in white against black, you make a sound — soft and involuntary — that doesn’t belong in any academic setting.
When he crosses the line first, fist raised, team yelling in the background, you press a hand to your mouth.
And then, quietly, you whisper to no one, “You did it.”
You don’t message him.
You know his phone’s probably a furnace of alerts. It’d be ridiculous. Presumptuous.
Still, you keep the window open, watching the post-race interviews unfold like a dance you’re learning in reverse.
At one point, he smiles — really smiles — and it’s like the stars blink out for a second, jealous of the attention.
You close the laptop.
Then you do something completely uncharacteristic.
You open your camera.
Not the front-facing one. Never that.
Instead, you aim it upward, from the park bench outside the department building. The sky tonight is low and smeared with a watercolor wash of indigo and silver. There’s a crescent moon tucked behind the clouds like a secret. Your notebook is open on your lap, constellations half-sketched in pencil. A tea flask beside you. Your coat wrapped around your legs like armor.
You take the photo.
And, after five full minutes of hovering over the send button, you DM it to him.
yourusername
Congratulations.
That’s it.
No emoji. No overthinking.
You shut your phone off and go back to your lecture slides, trying not to hope.
***
He calls two hours later.
Not with a voice note.
A video call.
You freeze when you see his name blinking on the screen.
The rational part of your brain — mildly frantic, deeply British — screams, decline it, for god’s sake, you’re not even wearing proper socks.
But your hand moves of its own accord.
You answer.
The screen goes black, then flickers to life.
He’s on a rooftop.
Lit by golden streetlamps and distant city noise. His hair’s damp, curled a little from the shower. He’s wearing a hoodie and eating something out of a paper bag.
“Hi,” he says, like it’s not 3 a.m. in London. Like this isn’t completely insane.
Your mouth opens. Then closes.
“Hi,” you manage. “You won.”
“I did.” He grins, mouth full. “Thought about you.”
You blink. “Sorry?”
“During the cooldown lap. I was thinking about that thing you said. About time. How it stretches.”
“Time dilation.”
“Yeah. It felt like that. Like I was moving through something slower than everyone else. It was … quiet. Clear.”
You stare at him through the screen, barely breathing.
“And then,” he adds, grinning again, “I saw the photo.”
You look down, cheeks hot.
“I wasn’t going to send it,” you mutter. “It’s not even of me, not really.”
“I know,” he says, voice softer now. “But it is you.”
You don’t say anything.
He shifts the camera. Shows you the skyline — soft orange lights, a tower blinking red in the distance.
“I’m on the team hotel roof,” he explains. “It’s quiet up here. I wanted to see stars but there’s too much light. Still nice though.”
You smile without meaning to. “I can tell you which ones are behind the clouds.”
“I’d like that.”
And just like that, you fall into orbit again.
The conversation stretches.
From the sky to the race to the taste of churros from a street vendor (“Life-changing,” he says, waving the bag at the screen). He asks about your students, and you tell him about the undergrad who thought neutron stars were “just edgy white dwarfs.”
He laughs so hard you worry he’ll drop the phone.
Time dilates, just like you said it would.
You only realize how much of it has passed when the sky behind you turns pale.
“Is that dawn?” He asks, blinking.
You glance behind you. “Looks like.”
He rests his chin on his fist. “Should we sleep?”
You consider it. “Probably.”
But neither of you ends the call.
Instead, you both sit there.
Watching a world shift toward morning.
***
You don’t mean to let him in.
Not like that.
But three nights later, it all breaks open.
You’re supposed to be asleep. You’ve got your departmental review the next morning — a committee of stone-faced academics armed with funding reports and agendas.
But you wake up in a cold sweat. Palms tingling. Heart galloping like it’s trying to outpace the past.
You sit on the bathroom floor, knees pulled to your chest, and try to breathe through it.
It’s not your first panic attack. It is your first in months.
You try every trick: grounding, counting, reciting star names like prayers.
It’s not working.
So — on a reckless, breathless impulse — you call him.
He picks up on the second ring.
Doesn’t say anything.
Just listens.
You don’t speak either. Not for a full minute. All he hears is your breathing — ragged, shallow, afraid.
Finally, you whisper, “I’m okay. I just … I didn’t want to be alone with it.”
Still, he doesn’t speak. He doesn’t need to.
He’s there. Solid and quiet as gravity.
After a while, your breathing evens out. You wipe your face. You lean back against the cold tile.
You don’t even realize you’re speaking until the words are already halfway out of your mouth.
“My mother died when I was seventeen,” you say.
Oscar’s breath catches faintly on the other end.
“She was sick for a long time. I’d just gotten my first telescope. She used to sit outside with me, even when she was too tired to stand. Said the stars helped her forget her body was failing.”
You close your eyes.
“After she died, I stopped going outside for a while. But eventually … I came back to it. Because it was the only thing that still made sense. The only thing that felt big enough to hold it all.”
You swallow.
“Stars are all I have left.”
Silence.
Then, his voice — rough, certain.
“You have more than that now.”
You don’t reply.
You can’t.
Because if you speak, you’ll cry again.
But you don’t hang up.
And he doesn’t go anywhere.
***
The next day, your departmental review passes without incident.
Your pulse is steady the whole time.
When you get home, there’s a message waiting for you.
oscarpiastri
I found Canopus again. Still stubborn.
You smile.
And for the first time in your life, the space between stars doesn’t feel so lonely.
***
You say yes to the awards ceremony because saying no would have drawn more attention.
That’s the irony, isn’t it?
You’d rather drink comet dust than be in a room full of polished people and flashbulbs. But this is for a science outreach grant, and your department is quietly ecstatic. You’ve become a reluctant poster child for “brilliant and relatable,” thanks to the podcast and your stargazing voice notes that somehow got repurposed for a university social media campaign without your permission.
You try to laugh it off.
But it feels like your insides are folding.
Because Oscar will be there.
McLaren’s a sponsor of the initiative. Something about youth engagement and STEM and sleek orange backdrops. He texted you about it with the kind of emoji-free confidence you’ve come to recognize as his version of enthusiasm.
oscarpiastri
Looks like we’re both on the guest list. Wear something with stars.
You hadn’t replied.
You couldn’t.
***
The night before the event, you ghost him.
Delete your Instagram account.
Turn your phone off and shove it into the bottom drawer of your desk.
You spend the evening in the astronomy lab with the lights dimmed low, pretending to fine-tune your lecture notes while your chest caves in by the hour. Your email inbox piles up. Your hands tremble.
You try to picture yourself standing next to him. In public. Under bright lights, photographers shouting names you don’t even want to be called.
But the picture won’t form.
Not fully.
Not without a fight inside your skin.
So you stay.
Safe.
Invisible.
***
You don’t expect him to come.
You definitely don’t expect him to show up in person.
But the next day, mid-afternoon, you’re walking across the stone quad on your way back from a student meeting, notebooks clutched tight, trying not to overanalyze a second-year’s strange interpretation of gravitational lensing.
You see the hoodie first.
Then the cap, pulled low.
Then the boy underneath it, standing awkwardly beside the bench under the cherry tree that never quite blooms properly in spring.
Oscar.
Your breath stops.
He’s holding nothing. No bag. No sunglasses. No shield.
Just his hands jammed into his hoodie pocket like it’s the only armor he’s got.
You freeze mid-step. The wind kicks at your coat.
He sees you.
And it’s over.
He walks toward you, slowly. Not fast. Like you’re a scared animal and he doesn’t want to startle you.
“I was going to wait,” he says, voice low and wrecked and somehow still gentle. “But I figured if I waited, I might not get the chance.”
You glance behind you. Around. Anywhere but directly at him.
“Why are you here?”
He doesn’t answer at first.
Then-
“You disappeared.”
“I had to.”
“No, you didn’t.”
You hug the notebooks closer to your chest. “You don’t understand. I’m not built for that world.”
“It’s just an event-”
“No.” You cut him off, shaking your head. “It’s not just an event. It’s cameras. It’s questions. It’s people looking at me like they know who I am because they watched a five-minute clip. It’s being asked to perform a version of myself that I don’t even recognize.”
He steps forward, slow again.
“I wasn’t asking you to perform.”
You’re already unraveling, you can feel it — the tightening in your throat, the heat behind your eyes.
“You don’t get it,” you say, voice cracking now. “You live in the spotlight. You’re seen. All the time. You get parades and podiums. I survive by disappearing.”
He stares at you. Really stares. Not like he’s judging. Just … taking it in.
Then he exhales.
Hard.
“I didn’t come here to drag you into anything,” he says, quieter now. “I just wanted to say one thing.”
You say nothing.
He takes one more step, and you don’t back away this time.
He lifts a hand — carefully — and cups your face like it’s something fragile and familiar all at once.
“Then I’ll find you in the dark,” he says, his thumb brushing just under your cheekbone, “every time.”
The words hit you like gravity.
Your breath shudders out.
And for a moment, it’s just the two of you in that pocket of the world where time bends — somehow still, somehow heavy with the weight of everything you’ve been afraid to say.
“You shouldn’t have come,” you whisper.
He smiles, barely.
“I couldn’t stay away.”
***
The conversation that follows isn’t neat.
You cry. Not in some cinematic, graceful way — your nose runs, your eyes puff, and at one point, your voice cracks so hard you almost don’t recover it.
But you tell him.
You tell him about the version of yourself you’ve had to build over years — quiet, professional, unobtrusive. A woman of data and precision and folded-back emotions, so she couldn’t be mistaken for weak or needy or out of place in a room full of men.
You tell him about being seventeen and seeing your mother’s name etched into a hospital form the day she stopped responding to treatments.
You tell him about watching friends peel away in the aftermath. About learning how to be okay alone.
And then, at the end, you say it again.
“I don’t want to be seen.”
His hand is still on your cheek.
“Too late,” he says.
***
Later, somehow, you end up sitting beside him on that same campus bench, your shoulder brushing his.
He offers you half a chocolate croissant from a paper bag. “Bribery,” he says.
You take it.
Only because your hands are shaking less now.
He nudges you gently.
“I didn’t come here to pull you out of hiding,” he says. “I came here to be wherever you are.”
You look down.
“Even if where I am is nowhere?”
He tilts his head, considering. “Then I’ll make nowhere feel like home.”
***
You stay up all night. Thread between your teeth and needle in hand, stitching constellations you know will be beyond the clouds tomorrow onto the hem of your sleeves.
You only poke your finger twice.
***
The next morning, you show up at the awards ceremony.
Wearing a dress with tiny embroidered constellations along the sleeves.
Oscar’s already there, talking with someone from the foundation, looking infuriatingly calm. He spots you and stills completely.
Then smiles.
It’s not for the cameras.
It’s for you.
And just for a second, you let yourself smile back.
Even if you still want to disappear.
Even if you’re still afraid.
Because maybe you don’t have to do it alone anymore.
***
You don’t speak for weeks.
Not after the ceremony. Not after the photos. Not even after you sat beside each other in a quiet car on the way home, his pinky brushing yours like a question you never answered.
It starts with silence.
Then continues because neither of you knows how to break it.
You think about texting him every day.
You draft a hundred different messages.
Delete them all.
Because what would you even say?
“Sorry I panicked?”
“Sorry I don’t know how to be someone people look at?”
“Sorry I don’t know what you want from me?”
No version sounds like enough. Or safe.
So instead, you disappear again.
But this time, the quiet isn’t comforting. It’s suffocating. You don’t retreat into stargazing or sketching or soft evenings with tea. You just fold inward. Disappear even from yourself.
You cancel two nights of lecture Q&As. You stop checking your work email. You ignore your friends’ texts, your supervisor’s concerned voicemails. You walk home in the rain without an umbrella, letting it soak through your coat, because maybe that’s what it takes to feel something right now.
You convince yourself it’s over.
That you ruined it.
That he must’ve realized what a terrible idea it all was — that you’re too much, or too little, or just too you.
You sit at your desk one night, chin in your hand, staring at the mug of cold tea beside your notebook, and whisper, “You idiot.”
Not to him.
To yourself.
Because why would someone like him wait for someone like you?
***
The package arrives on a Thursday morning.
No sender listed. Just a small cardboard box with a Woking return address you don’t recognize. It’s light, padded, taped up neatly.
You hesitate before opening it.
Then tear the seal.
Inside is a mug.
A simple white ceramic mug with a black line printed around the side.
You stare at it, blinking, because it’s the track.
That track. The one from his water bottle. The one you held in your hands months ago, running your fingers over the tiny, smudged Sharpie lines like they meant something.
And they did.
Now, they’re printed clean and perfect on the mug’s curve, looping around like a silent orbit.
Underneath the track, in unmistakable handwriting:
Still orbiting.
You don’t mean to cry.
But your throat tightens instantly.
You press a hand to your face. Sit down hard in your desk chair. Stare at the mug like it just cracked open a part of your chest you’d buried deep under logical layers.
And then — without thinking — you pick up your phone.
No hesitation this time.
No drafts.
You dial.
He picks up on the first ring. “You got it?”
You close your eyes. “Yeah.”
Another beat. You think maybe he’s holding his breath too.
“I didn’t want to crowd you,” he says. “But I didn’t want to disappear either.”
“I thought you were done,” you say, voice thin. “I thought I pushed you too far.”
He exhales, low and rough. “You could push me into another galaxy, and I’d still find a way back.”
Your hand tightens around the mug. “Oscar …”
“I missed your voice,” he says. “Even when it’s telling me about gamma-ray bursts at 2 a.m.”
You let out a sound somewhere between a laugh and a sob.
“I’ve been a coward.”
“No,” he says. “You’ve been surviving.”
You don’t reply.
You can’t.
Not until your voice steadies.
Then, softly, like the words are being born as you say them. “I want to come to you.”
Silence again.
But this time, it’s charged with something electric.
“You sure?”
“No,” you say. “But I want to try.”
***
You book the ticket that night.
Direct to Nice.
Your first time flying in years.
You don’t tell anyone, not even your department. Just leave a sticky note on your office door that reads back soon, not quitting and hope no one panics.
The airport is chaos. The flight is worse. You nearly turn around three times, your heart hammering at the gate, in the bathroom, mid-air turbulence over the Channel.
But then Monaco.
Sunlight. Sea. Heat.
And him.
He’s waiting just outside arrivals.
Baseball cap. Hoodie. Trainers. A bouquet of white daisies in one hand.
No cameras.
No entourage.
Just him.
When he sees you, his whole face lights up. Not in a dramatic, movie-star kind of way. Just quietly. Completely.
Like the sun came out of him instead of above.
You walk toward him, suitcase wheels humming.
Neither of you says anything at first.
You stop right in front of him.
His hands twitch — like he wants to hug you but isn’t sure if you’ll let him.
So you make the first move.
You step in, press your face to his shoulder, and wrap your arms around his middle.
He exhales against your hair.
And holds you like he’s been waiting a lifetime.
“Hi,” you murmur.
“Hi,” he says, kissing your temple. “You’re here.”
“I am.”
You don’t cry.
But you want to.
***
His flat is all sun-washed wood and minimalist lines.
Too clean. Too quiet.
He tosses his keys on the counter. Offers you a bottle of sparkling water and a blanket, in that order. Like he knows your order of priorities.
You curl up on his sofa, legs tucked under you, mug of tea he made (with sugar, but not too much — he remembered), and your notebook open in your lap.
He sits beside you, one leg folded, body angled toward yours.
You start to read. An old favourite — Sagan or Leavitt or something soft and scientific and laced with poetry. You lose your place halfway through a sentence when his fingers brush your shoulder.
You pause.
“Keep going,” he says.
So you do.
And his hand moves gently — tracing constellations down your back with one finger.
Scorpius. Orion. Cassiopeia.
“Is this creepy?” He murmurs, lips close to your ear.
“No,” you whisper. “It’s … perfect.”
More silence.
“You know,” he says, “I never cared about stars before you.”
You glance sideways. “And now?”
“Now,” he says, his finger drawing a spiral just above your spine, “they remind me of your voice.”
You swallow. Hard.
He leans in closer, forehead nearly resting against yours.
“You’re not just my sun,” he whispers. “You’re the whole damn sky.”
You close your eyes.
Breathe in.
And let yourself believe it.
***
It’s been six months.
Six months since Monaco. Since a rooftop and daisies and a too-clean flat you made imperfect by shedding your cardigan on his floor and your doubts in his bed.
Six months of airports and voice notes and the soft click of your toothbrush beside his.
He still lives fast. You still live quietly. But the distance doesn’t feel as dangerous as it used to. He finds you in every city. You follow him in the night sky, even when you can’t be there.
You leave him notes in his luggage — tiny Post-its with sketches of constellations he hasn’t learned yet.
He sends you blurry pictures of hotel ceilings and titles them missing you, probably upside down.
Neither of you says “forever.”
But you both say “soon.”
And that’s enough.
***
Now it’s September, and you’re standing backstage at the Barbican, adjusting the mic clipped to your collar, trying not to vomit.
The TED Talk team is bustling behind the curtain. Someone hands you a bottle of water. Someone else adjusts your lighting.
You’re dressed in black, simple, classic. Hair tucked behind one ear. Notebook in hand — not to read from, just to hold. A small anchor.
The talk is on entropy.
You’ve practiced it a hundred times.
But it doesn’t stop your hands from shaking.
Not until you glance out past the curtain, eyes scanning rows of shadowy heads, and spot him.
Front row.
Oscar.
No cap. No hoodie. Just a dark jacket and that stupid, perfect grin.
He’s sitting with one ankle crossed over a knee, hands folded in his lap, like he’s never been more at home in his life.
You mouth, you came.
He winks.
You don’t remember walking out onto the stage.
You just know you’re there.
***
“I want to talk to you about decay,” you begin. “And about love.”
A few eyebrows raise.
You smile.
It’s a soft, self-deprecating thing.
“The second law of thermodynamics tells us that entropy always increases. That systems move toward disorder. That heat dissipates. That structures break down. It’s a law. Not a suggestion.”
You let the words settle.
“There’s a strange comfort in that. That the universe doesn’t make mistakes. That even our undoing follows a pattern.”
You shift on your feet, fingers brushing the edge of the podium.
“But I think about how stars collapse — how they burn through all their fuel and still find a way to shine brighter, just once, before the end.”
Pause.
“And I think about love. How it, too, can feel like entropy. Unpredictable. Messy. Disruptive. We spend so much time trying to contain it. Understand it. Prove it won’t fall apart. But maybe …”
You glance down.
Then up again.
Right at him.
“Maybe it doesn’t need to be controlled. Maybe love is beautiful because it follows its own physics.”
You take a breath.
“In my own work — mapping dark matter, tracing invisible currents through the universe — I’ve learned that the things we can’t see often shape us the most. And that some constants are worth holding on to.”
You close your notebook.
And smile directly at him.
“Even if it breaks the rules.”
***
Backstage is a blur of applause and champagne flutes and someone from MIT asking for your slides.
But Oscar is waiting just beyond the wings, hands in his pockets, leaning against the wall like he’s been standing there his whole life.
You spot him the second you exit.
He lifts an eyebrow. “So, entropy and love, huh?”
“Don’t.”
“What?” He says, holding his hands up in mock innocence. “I was just wondering if I’m the heat loss or the unpredictable variable.”
“You’re the interruption,” you say, smirking, stepping into him. “The system disturbance.”
“I’ll take it.”
He tucks a strand of hair behind your ear, eyes still full of something that makes your stomach twist in that dangerous, lovely way.
“You were brilliant.”
“I was terrified.”
“You didn’t look it.”
“I was staring at you the whole time.”
He kisses you before you can say anything else.
Quick. Certain.
Like punctuation.
Like gravity.
***
That night, back at your flat, you’re the one who’s quiet.
You’re lying across your bed in your TED Talk outfit, heels kicked off, toes brushing the duvet, hair spilling across the pillow like you forgot you’re not supposed to be the disheveled one in this dynamic.
Oscar is sitting beside you, his shirt wrinkled, tie loosened. He’s holding your hand absentmindedly, like he doesn’t want to forget it’s there.
“I’m proud of you,” he says.
You nod, but don’t reply.
He shifts. “Hey.”
You look up.
“You okay?”
You hesitate. “Yeah. Just … I don’t know. That felt like a before-and-after moment.”
“It was.”
You close your eyes. “What if people expect more of me now? What if that was the peak?”
“Then we climb another mountain,” he says, completely serious.
You laugh.
Then sigh. “It’s stupid. I should be happy.”
“You’re allowed to be scared and proud at the same time.”
You squeeze his hand. “Thanks, Professor Piastri.”
He chuckles. “Please. I’d be a terrible professor. I’d forget to assign homework and bring everyone donuts.”
You nudge him. “You’d be great at it.”
“Only if I taught a class on you.”
“That’s creepy.”
“Is it?” He says, standing suddenly and walking to the window.
You sit up. “What are you doing?”
He draws the curtain back.
“Come here.”
You stand, wary. “It’s midnight.”
“Exactly.”
He opens the window wide. The city air rushes in — cool, sweet, a little smoky.
“Lay down,” he says.
You glance around. “On the floor?”
“No,” he says. “On the windowsill.”
You stare at him.
He raises a brow. “Trust me.”
You do.
God help you, you do.
You climb onto the wide windowsill — an old Victorian flat, stone ledge cool beneath you — and lie back, careful not to knock over a half-dead succulent.
Oscar settles beside you, shoulder to shoulder.
Above you: stars.
Scattered faintly, blurred by the city glow, but still there.
He points.
“That’s Orion.”
You smile. “I know.”
“That’s the one with the belt, right?”
“Yes.”
“And over there …”
He squints.
You wait.
“… is the one I’m naming after you.”
You blink.
“Me?”
He nods solemnly. “Yep. It doesn’t have a name yet, so I’m calling dibs.”
“That’s not how astronomy works.”
He shrugs. “Sue me.”
You turn your head. He’s still looking up, eyes tracking some invisible pattern across the night.
“You don’t even know which one it is,” you say.
“I do,” he says. “It’s the one that’s always there. Even when the others fade.”
Your heart lurches.
He turns to you then, face barely lit by the city lights.
“I don’t care about the physics,” he says. “Or the rules. Or entropy.”
Pause.
“I care about this. You. Right now.”
You close your eyes.
His hand finds yours on the windowsill.
And somehow, that’s enough to make the whole sky feel closer.
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vitalverstappen · 3 months ago
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Man's Best Wingman - C. Leclerc
summary: they say dogs are a man’s best friend, but a certain dachshund may be man’s best wingman
pairing: Charles Leclerc x veterinarian!reader
warnings: none ( i mean use of y/n if you count that)
word count: 2.6k
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It was no surprise that Charles Leclerc adored animals, specifically dogs. So, when word spread like wildfire around Monaco that he had adopted Leo, it was only a matter of time before the duo showed up in your clinic. 
You had heard about Leo from the gossip mill - Charles had been spotted walking the dog around the streets of Monte Carlo, and the photos of the two of them quickly made the rounds on social media. The sight of the Formula 1 driver, usually so composed and intense, walking around with an adorable dachshund puppy had the whole city cooing with affection. 
You had been working as a vet for a few years now, as one of the only ones in Monaco, so you were no stranger to having a celebrity walk through your doors. In fact, you had Alex Albon walking through your doors practically every month with the zoo he had. But hearing your techs swoon at the fact Charles was in your clinic, made you question how big this guy really was. 
“Y/n, Leo Leclerc is in room four for you. He’s here for his routine exam. So far everything looks good,” one of your techs said. 
“I bet Charles looks even better,” another one called, overhearing the conversation. 
Your eyes rolled, but you couldn’t help but chuckle at their remarks. “Focus on Leo, not Charles,” you teased, though you knew their excitement was understandable. 
Taking a deep breath to prepare yourself, you grabbed your stethoscope and walked toward room four. You were a professional, after all, and your job was to make sure Leo was in tip-top shape, not to let the celebrity connection distract you. 
As you knocked lightly on the door, you heard a soft voice call from the other side. “Come in!”
You opened the door to find Charles sitting on the exam table, with Leo happily bouncing around at his feet. The little dachshund’s tail wagged furiously as soon as he spotted you, making a beeline for you as though he’d known you for ages. 
“Hey there, Leo,” you said, crouching down to meet the enthusiastic puppy. You pet him for a second before standing back up. “I’m Dr. Y/L/N, but you can call me Y/N. I’ll be your primary veterinarian.”
Leo’s little tail wagged even harder at the mention of his name, and you couldn’t help but to smile at the sight. His big brown eyes stared up at you, full of trust and excitement. 
“It’s nice to meet you, Y/N,” Charles said as he got off of the exam table. His smile was easy, and you noticed how much more approachable he looked when he wasn’t in his racing suit. “I’m glad to see you’re the one handling Leo today.”
You nodded, doing your best to focus on the task at hand, though your heart was pounding into your throat. “He’s a cutie. And I’ve heard a lot about him from the clinic’s gossip mill. Seems like you two are quite the duo.”
Charles chuckled lightly, glancing down at Leo, who was now sitting patiently at his feet, as if sensing the shift in attention. “Yeah, Leo’s been a good distraction for me. Definitely makes my life a bit more fun, and I think he’s a great companion for my downtime.”
You turned to Leo, picking him up and placing him on the exam table, where Charles once sat. “He’s got a lot of energy for a little guy. Looks like he’s been keeping you on your toes.”
Charles shrugged, the slightest hint of amusement in his expression. “He definitely does, but I love having him around. Plus, he’s a great way to relax after a stressful weekend, just walking him around and enjoying the quieter side of things.”
“Sounds perfect,” you replied, settling your stethoscope into place. “Let’s make sure everything is going well with him. I’ll just start with a quick check-up, get his vitals and make sure he’s healthy.”
You focused on Leo, quickly going through the routine exam. His heart rate was normal, his coat was shiny and healthy, and his eyes were bright. After a quick examination, you looked up at Charles. “He’s in great shape, Charles. No issues at all. He’s a happy, healthy little guy.” 
Charles sighed in relief, his smile widening. “I’m glad to hear that. I was worried I might be doing something wrong.”
“Not at all,” you assured him, chuckling. “You’re doing everything right. It’s clear you care about him a lot.”
You scooped Leo into your arms and informed Charles you would be taking Leo into the back room to give him his shots. What you didn’t mention was that it was also an opportunity for all of the techs to fawn over the puppy. 
Once you brought Leo back into the exam room, Charles' eyes lit up, though you were unsure if it was at you, or the dog. You gave him a few instructions for Leo’s next few weeks, including a reminder to keep up with his vaccinations. “He’s good to go! Just a few follow-ups, but nothing to worry about.”
You bid goodbye to the driver as you guided him up to the receptionist's desk. There, you gave instructions on the next exam date. 
Charles had the day of the exam circled on his calendar the minute he got home. Sure, he wanted to be a good dog dad and pay attention to Leo’s appointments, but he also couldn’t wait to see you again. 
Unfortunately, he didn’t realize that since Leo had done so well, the follow up appointments that had been scheduled were only with the techs, not with you. He went through with the appointments, but in the back of his mind, he had to find a way to see you again. And thankfully, Leo gave him plenty of excuses. 
It all started when Leo ate a blade of grass. 
Now, Charles knew that eating grass wasn’t going to kill his dog, but he was worried it might make him a little sick… and he wanted to see you again. 
So, he scheduled an appointment.
As soon as you saw Charles and Leo’s names on the schedule, a smile tugged at the corner of your lips. You tried to shake it off, you were just doing your job, but there was something about seeing him that made you feel a little lighter. 
As the time drew nearer, you found yourself making sure everything was in order, the clinic bustling with its usual activity. Your techs were curious no doubt - they’d fawned over the duo when they took care of the dog’s follow up appointments, and definitely talked about the “celebrity dog dad” a little more than they probably should’ve. 
“Y/n, Charles and Leo are in room three for you. He mentioned Leo had eaten some grass earlier today, but so far, everything seems normal,” your tech informed you 
You walked towards the exam room, preparing yourself to see the driver and his dog again. As you entered, you saw Charles sitting on the chair this time, gently scratching behind Leo’s ears. The little dachshund’s tail was wagging, and he immediately perked up when he saw you, jumping down from Charles��� lap. 
“Hey, Leo,” you greeted, crouching down to pet the excited pup. “What’s all this fuss about grass, huh?” 
Charles looked up from his phone and smiled when he saw you. “Hey, Y/N. Yeah, Leo decided to sample some grass this morning, and now I’m just a little paranoid.”
You chuckled, standing up to meet his gaze. “I wouldn’t worry too much about it. Dogs eat grass all the time. Most of the time, it’s harmless. But let’s take a quick look just to be sure.”
You began your routine examination of Leo, checking his belly, feeling for any signs of discomfort, and listening to his heart. Leo seemed perfectly fine, happily squirming and wagging his tail as you worked. 
“See?” you said, glancing up at Charles. “He seems to be in good spirits. No signs of anything bothering him.” 
Charles let out a relieved sigh, but there was still a hint of concern in his eyes. “Yeah, I’ve just been overthinking it. But I’m still getting used to being a dog dad, you know?” 
You smiled warmly, meeting his gaze. “Like I said at our first appointment, you’re going great, Charles. Leo’s in good hands.” 
He looked at you with a soft smile, and for a moment, there was a brief pause in the conversation. It was like neither of you wanted to break the moment, but eventually, Charles cleared his throat and stood up. 
“Thanks again, Y/N. Seriously,” he said, giving you an appreciative look. “I’m glad I came in today, even if it was just for a little blade of grass.” 
“It’s no problem at all,” you replied, trying to keep your composure. “Take care of Leo, and we’ll see you for the next check-up.” 
But you saw him much sooner than the next check-up. 
Only a few weeks after the grass related appointment, your receptionist came into the back area, where you and your techs were prepping for surgery. You had a busy day ahead of you, with having back to back appointments all day, and the only break you got was your thirty minutes of lunch. 
“Mr. Leclerc is on the phone,” your receptionist began, causing a bunch of oooo’s from your staff. “He said that Leo stubbed his toe and wanted to see if you had availability for today.”
You paused for a moment, wiping your hands on your scrubs as you turned toward your receptionist. “Leo stubbed his toe?” you asked, trying to suppress a smile. You could hear the excitement in your staff’s whispers behind you, but you didn’t want to give them the satisfaction of knowing how much Charles’ calls were starting to feel like little breaks from the clinic chaos. 
“Yeah, that’s what he said,” your receptionist replied, her tone amused. “Should I tell him to hold on or that you’re in surgery?” 
You quickly ran through your schedule in your head. It was packed, but a stubbed toe? You could squeeze that in. You didn’t want to seem like you were too eager, but you couldn’t help but feel a little excitement at the thought of seeing Charles again. 
“I can take a shorter lunch,” you said, giving your receptionist a quick nod. “Schedule him for the last twenty minutes of that half hour.” 
Your receptionist raised an eyebrow but didn’t say anything as she turned to make the call. As soon as the door closed behind her, your techs immediately leaned in, their eyes sparking with curiosity.
“You know you two aren’t fooling anyone, right?” one of them teased. “You’re excited to see Charles again.
“And he’s got to be wanting to see you if he’s making an appointment over a stubbed toe,” another one chimed in. 
You rolled your eyes, trying to stifle a grin. ‘It’s just a stubbed toe,” you replied, but your voice betrayed you, laced with a hint of amusement. “He’s just a concerned dog dad. Nothing more.” 
Your techs exchanged knowing glances, clearly not buying it. 
“Uh-huh,” one of them smirked. “A ‘concerned dog dad’ who keeps calling in for the tiniest little thing. Sure.”
“Maybe you should get him a frequent flyer card,” another suggested, grinning. 
You shook your head, trying to ignore the warmth growing in your cheeks. “Focus, guys. You have things to do, remember?” 
They held up their hands in mock surrender, but you could still feel their eyes on you as you turned back to finish prepping for the day. 
When the status of Leo’s appointment changed to “arrived” on your computer, it took everything in you to remain calm and composed. The butterflies in your stomach only grew as you heard Leo’s excited barks from down the hall. 
Once your techs informed you that the Leclercs were ready to see you, you made your way to the exam room, trying to keep yourself steady with every step. When you opened the door, Charles was sitting there, looking as relaxed as ever, with Leo perched on his lap. 
“Hey there, you,” you greeted Leo first, just like you always did. “I heard you got a stubbed toe this time around.”
Charles chuckled, giving you a sheepish look. “I know, it’s ridiculous. But he seemed to be limping a little, and I didn’t want to take any chances.”
You nodded, appreciating his concern for his dog. “It’s never ridiculous to take care of our furry friends,” you said, your eyes briefly meeting his. There was a warmth in his gaze, and for a moment, the world seemed to slow down. 
You got Leo up on the exam table, gently checking his paws and making sure everything looked good. As you worked, you noticed Charles’ gaze lingering on you - though this time, it felt different. His smile was softer, more intentional, and there was something in his eyes that made your heart skip a beat. 
Finally, after checking Leo’s paw, you turned to Charles. “Good news. It’s just a little sore, probably from the way he landed. No major damage.”
Charles visibly relaxed, his tension easing as he gave a small sigh of relief. “I’m glad to hear that.” 
As you gave Leo a few gentle pats and wrote down the instructions for recovery, you could feel Charles’ eyes on you again. There was a quiet moment between you two, one that made the air feel just a little thicker, like there was more unsaid than spoken. 
“Thank you for always being so patient with me, and with Leo, and I appreciate you squeezing us in at the last minute,” Charles said, standing up to walk toward the door. He paused for a beat, then glanced back at you with a small but meaningful smile. “Would I be able to squeeze into your schedule again sometime, for coffee or drinks?”
You felt your heart flutter as the words hung in the air. It was the question you’d been waiting for, yet the reality of it still made your breath catch in your throat. For a second, you just looked at him, the familiar warmth in his smile making your pulse quicken. 
You tried to play it cool, but you couldn’t hide the slight blush creeping onto your cheeks. “I think I could make some time for you,” you said, your voice soft but sure. “I’m not usually this free, but for you? I’ll make an exception.”
Charles’s smile widened, and you could see a spark of relief in his eyes. He stepped back into the room, the distance between you narrowing as he moved closer. “Tomorrow? After work?” he asked, his tone a little more tentative, as if waiting for your confirmation. 
You nodded, your heart racing a little faster now. “Tomorrow works. Let’s say, six?” 
He gave a small, excited nod, clearly trying to contain his enthusiasm. “Perfect. I’ll pick you up. I’ll make sure not to keep you waiting.”
You both stood there for a moment, the air thick with anticipation, before he gave a final smile and turned to leave. “See you tomorrow, Y/N.” 
As he exited the room, Leo wagged his tail, clearly eager to follow. You watched him walk out, a mixture of excitement and nervousness bubbling up inside you. You leaned against the exam room table for a second, trying to catch your breath, before shaking yourself out of the daze. You still had a job to do, but you couldn’t help but smile to yourself as the thought of tomorrow played over in your mind.
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fanfictionismyaddiction · 3 months ago
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Not just a pretty face
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Part 2 Part 3
Word count: 696
Pairing: Lando Norris x reader
Summary: At a Grand Prix, influencer Y/n overhears Lando Norris dismissing her as a clueless, fame-chasing “dumb” influencer.
________________________________________________________
The roar of the engines vibrated through your chest as you stood in the paddock, the scent of burnt rubber and fuel filling the air. Your grandpa, dressed in a vintage Schumacher cap and an old Ferrari team shirt, stood beside you, his eyes twinkling with the excitement of being back at a race in person.
“Ach, this takes me back,” he murmured, gripping his paddock pass like it was a golden ticket.
You smiled, squeezing his arm. You had been invited to the Grand Prix as a VIP guest—your status as an international influencer granting you exclusive access—but you knew the real reason you were here. This wasn’t just another event to post about. It was the sport you had loved since childhood, the one your grandpa had introduced you to with hours of race footage and stories about legendary drivers.
No one knew how much you adored Formula 1. Your brand online was all about fashion, luxury, and travel, and you had never bothered to share this side of yourself. Maybe you liked having something that was just yours.
That, of course, was why Lando Norris’s words stung so much.
You had been passing by the McLaren hospitality when you heard him talking with his team. You weren’t eavesdropping—he wasn’t exactly being subtle.
“Yeah, she’s hot, but you know how these influencers are,” Lando scoffed. “She probably doesn’t even know what DRS is. Here for clout, like all of them.”
Your steps faltered.
“Dumb as rocks, too,” he added.
You clenched your jaw. Excuse me?
Taking a deep breath, you turned on your heel and stepped into the McLaren area, ignoring the surprised glances of the team members. Lando, seated casually on a couch, looked up just as you stopped in front of him.
“Wow, so rude and wrong,” you said, crossing your arms. “First of all, I went to university, so I’m not dumb—as you so eloquently put it.”
Lando blinked, caught off guard.
“And second,” you continued, tilting your head, “I’ve probably been watching Formula 1 longer than you’ve been racing in it. I know what DRS is, I know about tire degradation, I know why McLaren’s been struggling with drag lately, and I even know that your qualifying performances tend to be better than your race pace because of how the car handles over long stints. So maybe next time you assume a woman is just a brainless influencer, you should actually check your facts first.”
Silence.
The McLaren team members suddenly found their phones and coffee cups very interesting. Lando stared at you, mouth slightly open, the first flickers of embarrassment flashing across his face.
You gave him one last unimpressed look before turning on your heel and walking away.
Your grandpa, who had been watching the whole thing with mild amusement, chuckled. “Well, that was fun.”
Lando’s Redemption Arc
Lando couldn’t stop thinking about you.
The second you walked away, he knew he had screwed up. He had made assumptions—stupid ones, at that. And the way you had put him in his place so effortlessly? It was… annoyingly attractive.
That night, he found himself scrolling through your Instagram, going beyond the polished luxury photos and clicking on every story, every caption. And that’s when he noticed it—the subtle clues that you were more than what met the eye.
A throwback post with a Schumacher documentary in the background. A tiny Ferrari charm on your bracelet in an old photo. A blurry shot of an F1 race from the grandstands years ago, hidden among travel content.
You had been a fan all along.
Lando groaned, running a hand through his hair. He felt like an idiot.
He wanted to see you again. Not just to apologize, but because now he was intrigued. You were gorgeous, yes, but you were also smart. Passionate. And clearly not someone who tolerated nonsense.
So when he spotted you in the paddock the next day, laughing with your grandpa near the Mercedes garage, he hesitated only for a moment before heading your way.
Time to fix his mistake.
And maybe—just maybe—make you see him in a different light, too.
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makis-eyebrows · 2 months ago
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Request: 💕
Paddock Nap Queen
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The saying "The apple doesn't fall from the tree" has never been so clear every time Lando had his daughter at the paddock.
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If there was one thing everyone in the Formula 1 paddock knew about Y/n Norris, it was this:
She had two modes:
A full-on, sugar-fueled tornado of giggles and squeaky Crocs.
Fast asleep, dead to the world, in the strangest places imaginable.
It was an uncanny talent passed down from her father — Lando Norris — who had once been caught napping in a tire blanket during a rain delay. The drivers never let him live it down. Now, his daughter had taken the title of "Grid’s Best Sleeper" and turned it into an Olympic sport.
It was a typical race weekend — sunny skies, fans screaming, engines revving — and Y/n was zipping around the McLaren hospitality like she owned the place.
“Y/n, slow down before you crash into someone’s knee!” Lando called, only mildly concerned as he watched her zoom past with a cookie in one hand and a mini helmet in the other.
“Can’t catch me, Daddy!” she yelled gleefully before darting behind the coffee station.
Lando chuckled, sipping his drink. “She gets it from my mum. Swear.”
Oscar Piastri, walking by, raised an eyebrow. “Mate, she gets it from you. That kid has your energy — and your lack of an off-switch.”
“Please,” Lando snorted, “I have an off-switch.”
“Yeah. And it kicks in when you sit still for more than three minutes.”
They both laughed.
Twenty minutes later, chaos ensued.
Y/n had somehow made her way to the Mercedes motorhome, where George Russell found her sitting cross-legged in a chair, asking his engineer questions about the buttons on the steering wheel.
“She was very curious,” George said to Lando later, “and alarmingly knowledgeable about DRS.”
Then, when Carlos Sainz tried to lift her off the ground to return her to McLaren, she announced she was “on a scientific mission” and couldn’t leave.
Eventually, Charles Leclerc found her trying to get Leo, his dachshund, to talk to her like a human.
And then… silence.
Which, for Y/n, was unusual.
Too quiet.
“Where is she?” Lando asked suddenly, looking up from his tablet.
Oscar looked around. “She was literally here five seconds ago.”
A paddock-wide Y/n Hunt™ began — which, by now, was just part of race weekend tradition.
Max Verstappen checked under tables. Alex Albon opened a cupboard in the Williams hospitality. Jack Doohan searched behind one of the team trucks. Even Sebastian Vettel, visiting that weekend, chuckled and joined the search.
Until finally, Isack Hadjar found her.
In the Red Bull simulator room.
Asleep.
On the fake car.
Her small body was curled up neatly in the seat of the sim, one hand still loosely gripping the steering wheel like a tiny future world champion. Her mouth was slightly open, drool starting to threaten the upholstery. Her mini McLaren cap had slipped over her eyes.
Isack took a photo.
Then another.
Then texted Lando: Isack 🥖: “Found her. She’s napping in Max’s sim. 😂” Lando 🧡: “Classic. Be there in 2.”
When Lando arrived, he stepped into the room and paused.
His little girl — his firecracker, his chaos monster — completely knocked out in the Red Bull simulator like it was her crib.
He bent down, brushing a loose strand of hair from her forehead. “You wore yourself out, didn’t you, baby?”
She stirred, mumbled something about cookies and “being the fastest,” then went right back to sleep.
Oscar peeked over his shoulder and whispered, “She’s going to run the grid one day.”
Lando smiled, eyes soft. “She already does.”
They didn’t wake her — no one dared.
Instead, Max, despite his initial horror, let her nap undisturbed.
“For the record,” Max told Lando, “this is the only time I’ll allow a McLaren person in my sim.”
“Appreciate it, mate,” Lando chuckled. “She’ll repay you with crumbs and glitter stickers, probably.”
Later that day, the sim was dubbed “Y/n’s Throne” by the grid group chat.
George posted a photo of her sleeping with the caption: “Queen of Chaos, Princess of Power Naps 👑”
Lando simply added a sticker on the photo: #LikeFatherLikeDaughter
And from that day on, a small plaque was taped inside the Red Bull simulator:
“In honour of Y/n Norris, age 5 — fastest giggle in the paddock, deepest sleeper in the world.”
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Done!!
I had to add some rookie appreciation in here somehow and still make it seem normal. Onto my last request.
That's Gang Gang out!!!!
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wroetolando · 4 months ago
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𝚁𝚊𝚌𝚒𝚗𝚐-𝙸𝚗𝚜𝚙𝚒𝚛𝚎𝚍 𝙽𝚒𝚌𝚔𝚗𝚊𝚖𝚎𝚜 | 𝙻𝙽𝟺
𝗽𝗮𝗶𝗿𝗶𝗻𝗴: lando norris x fem!reader
𝘀𝘂𝗺𝗺𝗮𝗿𝘆: the one where lando gives you endless racing-inspired nicknames, from DRS to soft tyres, but checkered flag is the one that truly makes your heart race
𝗺𝘂𝘀𝗶𝗰: happier than ever - billie eilish
𝘄𝗮𝗿𝗻𝗶𝗻𝗴𝘀: none!
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.・。.・゜✭・.・✫・゜・。. .・。.・゜✭・.・✫・゜・
You should’ve known better than to date a Formula 1 driver and expect a normal relationship.
But normal had never really been Lando’s thing, and honestly, you wouldn’t want it any other way.
It started as a joke. The first time he called you Speedy, you were running late for a dinner reservation in Monaco. You had just finished getting ready when Lando, already leaning against the doorframe in his usual hoodie and joggers, tapped at his watch with exaggerated impatience.
“Oi, Speedy, hurry up! You walk like you’re on a cooldown lap.”
You rolled your eyes and shoved his shoulder on the way out, but he only laughed, slipping his fingers between yours as he pulled you down the steps.
That was months ago, and somehow, it had only gotten worse.
It didn’t matter where you were—at home, at a race weekend, FaceTiming while he was away for back-to-back Grands Prix—Lando had an endless supply of racing-inspired nicknames for you.
Some were sweet, some were ridiculous, and some made you question how his brain even worked.
.・。.・゜✭・.・✫・゜・。. .・。.・゜✭・.・✫・゜・
DRS
“DRS, pass me the remote?”
You blinked at him from your spot on the couch, curled up in one of his oversized hoodies. Lando was sprawled beside you, legs stretched out, barely paying attention to the Netflix episode playing in the background.
“Did you just call me DRS?” you asked, raising an eyebrow.
He smirked, reaching over to tuck a strand of hair behind your ear. “Mhm. You’re my DRS—always giving me that extra boost when I need it.”
“That’s awful.”
“But cute.”
“You’re lucky I love you,” you muttered, tossing the remote at him anyway.
The worst part? He actually started using it more. If he was tired before an early morning flight, he’d mumble a sleepy “Activate DRS and get me coffee, love?” If he was nervous before a race, he’d squeeze your hand and whisper, “Give me that DRS boost, babe.”
It was both infuriating and adorable.
.・。.・゜✭・.・✫・゜・。. .・。.・゜✭・.・✫・゜・
Soft Tyres
The worst one, though, had to be Soft Tyres.
It had been a lazy Sunday morning, the kind where neither of you wanted to get out of bed. The sun was barely peeking through the curtains, casting a golden glow over the room. You had been arguing—halfheartedly—about who was going to get up and make tea, neither of you willing to leave the warmth of the blankets.
“Please,” you begged, nudging his leg. “You’re closer to the kitchen.”
“But you’re soft,” he mumbled into his pillow, his voice still thick with sleep. “Like soft tyres. Fast, but high maintenance.”
You gasped, smacking his arm. “Excuse me?”
“It’s true!” He grinned, finally opening one eye to look at you. “High maintenance, but worth every second.”
“You’re so lucky I don’t kick you out of this bed.”
“You won’t.” He shifted closer, arms wrapping around you as he buried his face into your neck. “You love me too much.”
And damn it, he was right.
.・。.・゜✭・.・✫・゜・。. .・。.・゜✭・.・✫・゜・
Pole Position
Not all of his nicknames were ridiculous, though. Some were softer, spoken in moments when the world around you felt quiet.
Like Pole Position.
“You’ll always be my number one,” he had whispered one night, his fingers tracing lazy patterns on your back. It had been a rare weekend off, just the two of you tangled in bed after a long day at the beach. The only sound was the ocean outside the open window and the steady rhythm of his breathing.
You had laughed at first, thinking he was joking. But when you looked up, he was watching you with that look—the one he only ever gave you, the one that made your chest feel too small for your heart.
“I mean it,” he murmured, brushing a kiss against your temple. “Always.”
You never made fun of that nickname.
.・。.・゜✭・.・✫・゜・。. .・。.・゜✭・.・✫・゜・
Slipstream
Some of them were just Lando trying to be annoying.
Like Slipstream, which he only used when he was trying to weasel his way into getting what he wanted.
“Baby,” he would say, drawing out the word like it was some sort of negotiation tactic.
You wouldn’t even look up from your laptop. “No.”
“You don’t even know what I was going to say!”
You sighed, setting your work aside. “Fine. What?”
He grinned, moving to sit beside you, his arm draping lazily over your shoulders. “You should go make me a snack.”
You deadpanned. “Absolutely not.”
“C’mon, you’re my Slipstream,” he teased, nudging you with his shoulder. “Always pulling me closer. No resistance at all, love.”
You scoffed. “Lando, I swear to God—”
“—And you’re so fast at getting things! It’s like you’re on fresh mediums.”
“You’re on your own for food,” you huffed, standing up.
And just when you thought he’d finally given up—
“Wait,” he pouted. “Where are you going?”
“To take myself out of your DRS zone.”
That shut him up real quick.
.・。.・゜✭・.・✫・゜・。. .・。.・゜✭・.・✫・゜・
Checkered Flag
The one that made your heart race the most came after his latest podium.
You were waiting for him in the McLaren hospitality suite, still buzzing with excitement when he walked in, sweaty, exhausted, but grinning like a kid on Christmas morning. Before you could say anything, he grabbed you, lifting you off the ground as he spun you in a circle.
“You, my love,” he said, voice breathless against your ear, “are my Checkered Flag.”
You pulled back just enough to meet his eyes, confused. “What do you mean?”
Lando smiled, softer this time. “Because no matter what, I’m always coming home to you.”
Your breath caught in your throat.
For a moment, all the noise faded—the celebrations outside, the distant roar of the crowd, the sound of champagne bottles popping open. None of it mattered.
It was just you and him.
And suddenly, every ridiculous nickname, every groan-worthy racing pun, every moment he had teased you about Slipstream or Soft Tyres—it was all worth it.
Because at the end of the day, Lando Norris loved you.
And that was the only title that really mattered.
.・。.・゜✭・.・✫・゜・。. .・。.・゜✭・.・✫・゜・
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cressidagrey · 2 months ago
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Daylight
Pairing: Lando Norris x Emilie Abadie (Original Character)
Welcome to a short side story, featuring Emilie and Lando, set in the White Horse Universe. There are specific scenes copy and pasted from White Horse, so it’s easier to follow along timeline wise.
Summary:
Emilie Abadie hadn’t planned on caring about Formula 1. Until she saw a boy with curly hair win the Miami GP in 2024. 
Warnings and Notes: 
we have now moved on from Charles bashing to bashing his whole family, Discussions of toxic past relationships, toxic families
As always big thanks to @llirawolf , who listens to me ramble
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Emilie Abadie hadn’t planned on caring about Formula 1.
In fact, she actively avoided caring about it— Mostly because of her best friend. 
Belle, with her soft green eyes and gentle heart, who had already survived too many years of being invisible in a family that only seemed to remember she existed when it was convenient. 
Belle, who was one of the best people Emilie had ever met, who had been born into a family that cared about podiums and trophies, about DRS and pit stops… and not about their daughter, their sister. 
Even Max Verstappen hadn’t changed Emilie’s dislike for everything Formula 1. 
Granted, of course, Emilie had googled him when Belle had first mentioned him to her. 
There had been some amusement somewhere in the back of her head that Belle had found a guy to date who had 2 World Championship titles and 4 dozen wins to his name, while Belle’s brother was still on his 5th career win after Austria 2022. 
Emilie didn’t care about Max’s wins. Or his podiums. Or whatever he did for a living. She’d seen enough of Belle’s face when she talked about him to know he was good—really, properly good—and that was enough.
But then came that Sunday in May, and Twitter exploded.
Emilie wasn’t even trying to pay attention. She was lounging on her balcony with an espresso, mindlessly scrolling between Vogue articles and TikToks of people organising their fridges. 
And then—suddenly—orange hats, all-caps screaming, and multiple photos of a grinning man half-drenched in champagne.
“HE FINALLY DID IT.”
“LANDO. FREAKING. NORRIS.”
Someone had posted a clip of him standing on the top step of the podium, cheeks flushed, eyes glassy, trying to keep it together while the crowd roared. And God help her, Emilie had clicked it.
He wasn’t even her type.
Too boyish. 
Too chaotic. 
Probably smelled like Monster Energy and nerves.
But he’d smiled like it meant something. Like it had taken years. Like he couldn’t quite believe the universe had finally let him have this moment.
And something in Emilie’s chest—usually locked up tight behind snark and cashmere—shifted.
She frowned.
Closed the app.
Opened it again.
Googled him.
Lando Norris. 25. British. McLaren driver. Five seasons. No wins—until now.
She even found a quote: “It’s about damn time.”
And still, Emilie was deeply annoyed to find herself staring at photos of this Lando person and wondering what his laugh sounded like in real life.
And that was exactly when she opened her texts and messaged Belle.
***
Text Messages: Emilie Abadie & Isabelle Leclerc
Emilie: Okay so… Question
Isabelle: That’s always a dangerous start.
Emilie: Who is this Lando person And why is everyone crying because he won something
Isabelle: Oh my God. You really don’t know anything about F1, do you?
Emilie: Absolutely not. I know Max drives fast, and you’re too pretty to be emotionally stable, that’s it.
Isabelle: Valid.
Emilie: But seriously. My entire timeline is full of sweaty orange hats and people screaming “HE FINALLY DID IT.” What did he do? Did he climb a mountain? Invent a vaccine?
Isabelle: He won his first Formula 1 Grand Prix. He’s been in F1 for five years. Always came close. Never quite made it.Everyone’s been waiting for this.He’s a good guy. Deserved it.
Emilie: Huh. He’s the guy with the curly hair, right?
Isabelle: Yes.
Emilie: And the jawbones?
Isabelle: Yes.
Emilie: And the voice that’s suspiciously hot for someone named Lando?
Isabelle: …Why do you care?
Emilie: I don’t!!
Isabelle: You do. You’ve never asked me about a single driver. Not once. And now you’re googling him like a concerned historian.
Emilie: I’m just… doing research. You know. investigating the cultural phenomenon
Isabelle: Uh-huh. Is this cultural phenomenon wearing a papaya-colored race suit and has curly hair?
Emilie: Fine. He’s cute. He looked happy. The bar is so low.
Isabelle: He is cute. And he should be happy. He’s a good guy.
Emilie: You sound like you’re trying to sell me a family dog.
Isabelle: He’s very sweet! Loyal! Thoughtful! Max calls him chaotic sunshine. I call him emotionally transparent. You’d like him.
Emilie: So a golden retriever.
Isabelle: With slightly better hair.
Emilie: Does he bite?
Isabelle: Only when provoked. Or when Max makes a joke about his height.
Emilie: Hmm.
Isabelle: Oh no.
Emilie: What?
Isabelle: You’re thinking about him.
Emilie: Absolutely not.
Emilie: This is slander.
Isabelle: This is me knowing you better than you know yourself. And I’m telling you: he’s a good one. A little chaotic. But real.
Emilie: He smiled like…like he waited years for this. I noticed that. I hate that I noticed that.
Belle: Yeah. That’s why people cried. It wasn’t just about the win—it was about him. He needed it. And he earned it.
Emilie: …Okay maybe I get the hats now.
Isabelle: Give it three days. You’ll be watching fan edits on TikTok and pretending it’s research. I have been there. 
***
Emilie tossed her phone down onto her table, flopping back into her chair with a groan.
God, what was wrong with her?
She never did this. Never caught herself noticing smiles. Never cared about people’s stories. 
She’d always been good at getting the guy.
Usually, she saw a man she liked, decided she liked him, and that was it. 
If she wanted him, she got him. 
Easy.
The harder part—the impossible part—was getting them to stay.
Not that she ever admitted that out loud.
They got infatuated with the packaging—pretty blonde, sharp tongue, quick wit—but none of them wanted to know what was underneath. Or if they did, they ran.
So she never gave them the chance.
Emilie knew what she was. What she had been taught to be: polished, pretty, disposable.
Raised by grandparents who valued appearances more than affection, she’d learned early that emotions were a liability. Her family was a cold, glittering mess of old money and colder expectations. 
Emotionally unavailable parents who vacationed in the Alps more than they parented. Her grandparents had raised her—fierce, stylish people who taught her how to dress, how to argue, how to build walls no man could climb. 
Emilie knew how to play the part—how to be charming, captivating, just unattainable enough to keep her pride intact when everything inevitably crumbled.
Old money. Cold manners. 
And Belle—sweet, gentle Belle—hadn’t been raised in a world much kinder.
Emilie still hated Belle’s family for that. For making her believe she had to earn love, that she had to be perfect to deserve being seen. Even now, even after Belle had found Max—the only man who seemed to see her fully and without condition—Emilie’s chest still burned with protective rage whenever she thought about it.
She’d watched Belle spend her whole life being overlooked. Forgotten. Ignored by people who were supposed to love her. And now she had Max, who looked at her like she was the whole damn world.
She was happy for Belle. Truly. Because Belle deserved good things—finally. Especially after growing up in a family that prioritized podiums over people. 
And Emilie, for all her sass and designer boots, had never liked the Leclercs. Not really.
Belle was happy now. Radiantly, irrevocably happy. And Max—grumpy, blunt Max—loved her like it was the only thing that had ever made sense.
Maybe that’s why Emilie couldn’t look away from a stranger’s victory lap on Twitter.
 Maybe, deep down, she still believed there were people worth betting on.
Even if she didn’t believe it for herself.
God help me, she thought grimly, dragging a hand over her face.
She was absolutely going to end up watching fan edits.
In three days. Tops.
Maybe two.
Lando Norris had looked like someone who didn’t think the world would ever give him a win.
And for some reason… she couldn’t stop thinking about that.
***
Text Messages: Isabelle Leclerc & Emilie Abadie
Isabelle: Max and I are getting married tomorrow. City hall. Just something small. Just for us. Will you come?
Emilie: EXCUSE ME???? TOMORROW??? CITY HALL??? SMALL???
Isabelle: Yes. No fuss. Just us. That’s all I want.
Emilie: Oh my GOD. You are not getting married like you’re renewing a driver’s license. You need flowers. A cake. A moment, Belle.
Isabelle: I don’t need any of that. I just want him. That’s it.
Emilie: Yes, yes, eternal love, devotion, blah blah blah. BUT. You are still getting married. You will wear a dress. You will hold a bouquet. You will eat something that tastes like joy and sugar and victory.
Isabelle: I’m not even sure what I’m wearing yet 😅 We haven’t thought that far ahead.
Emilie: THAT IS WHY YOU HAVE ME. Do you still have the white dress we got a few weeks ago? The one that made you look like a romantic novel with legs?
Isabelle: ...Yes.
Emilie: Good. Wear that. It’s perfect. Simple. Elegant. You. I’ll take care of the rest.
Isabelle: Em—no pressure, really. Please. I don’t want a production.
Emilie: This won’t be a production. It’ll be a love letter. With flowers. And maybe a three-layer cake.
Isabelle: Emilie 😭 You really don’t have to—
Emilie: Belle. You’ve planned everyone else’s birthdays, surprises, parties, and holidays since you were like what, twelve?! Let someone do it for you this once. Let me.
Isabelle: ...Okay. But just a little. No spark machines. No confetti cannons.
Emilie: Deal. But I am bringing champagne. And I will cry.
Isabelle: I wouldn’t want it any other way. 💛
***
Text Messages: Max Verstappen & Lando Norris
Max: You have a camera, right?
Lando: …yes?? What kind of question is that?
Max: Like, a real one. Not your phone.
Lando: Yes, Max, I own a camera. Why??
Max: I need you to document something.
Lando: What kind of something?
Max: Just be at Monaco City Hall tomorrow. 10:30. Bring your camera. Wear a suit. Preferably not orange.
Lando: MAX.
Max: Yes?
Lando: ARE YOU GETTING MARRIED TOMORROW???
Max: Yes.
Lando: YOU’RE JUST DROPPING THAT ON ME AT MIDNIGHT???
Max: It’s 11:43.
Lando: Oh, my mistake. PLENTY OF TIME TO PROCESS THE FACT YOU’RE SECRETLY GETTING MARRIED.
Max: Not secretly. Just quietly.
Lando: Max.
Max: What.
Lando: I’M HONORED BUT ALSO PANICKING. Do you want, like, pictures or VIBES?? Do I need a tripod?? Am I the witness?? Do I bring champagne?? WHAT’S MY ROLE HERE.
Max: Your role is “friend with a camera who knows how to shut up.”
Lando: I can be that.
 Wait—can I still cry a little?
Max: Only if it’s behind the camera.
Lando: Deal. Lando:I don’t even know what shoes to wear for a Verstappen emergency elopement
Max: Don’t overthink it. You’re just the photographer.
Lando: You’re getting married in Monaco city hall and I’m the photographer?? What the hell kind of fairy tale speedrun is this?
Max: The efficient kind.
Lando: Who else is gonna come?
Max: Just us. People we trust. 
***
Emilie Abadie had been awake since three in the morning. .
Not because she was nervous. She wasn’t the one getting married. 
It was Belle’s wedding. And that meant it had to be perfect.
Because Belle would never ask for perfect. Belle would shrug and say “just something quiet, just us” with that soft look in her eyes like she didn’t dare hope for more. But Emilie had spent the last seven years learning the difference between what Belle asked for and what she deserved.
And today, she deserved everything.
And perfection, as it turned out, required bribing a florist with a bottle of Dom Pérignon, whispering at a baker’s front door like a criminal, and coordinating a last-minute restaurant buyout with a maître d’ who still remembered Belle and Max’s first date like it had happened yesterday.
It was still early. The sun hadn’t quite cleared the rooftops of Monaco. But Emilie was already in motion—dressed, phone in hand, espresso in the other, a determined woman on a mission.
The florist had said it couldn’t be done. Snowdrops weren’t in season. They’d laughed—laughed—when Emilie asked.
Laughed. Emilie still remembered when Belle had told her about her favourite flowers. Fragile, quiet, perfect. Blooming in the cold, when nothing else did. Just like Belle. 
Emilie Abadie didn’t take no for an answer.
She made five calls. 
Then ten. 
Then offered double the price. 
Then triple. 
Someone from a specialty hothouse near Nice came through. A courier had arrived an hour ago, carrying a chilled box like it held diplomatic secrets.
Now, the bouquet sat in a vase on Emilie’s kitchen counter. Fragile white snowdrops, soft eucalyptus, and one or two sprigs of pale forget-me-nots.
Because Emilie was dramatic, and because Belle deserved to be remembered in every way that mattered.
The cake was next.
Not a tiered monstrosity. Just something beautiful. Elegant. White chocolate and raspberry with buttercream. The baker—an angel Emilie had gone to culinary school with for exactly three weeks—had rolled her eyes at the timeline and then agreed with a huff. “Only because it’s for Belle.”
Of course it was.
Emilie knew how much Belle had given. To her family. To her brothers. To Ferrari. To everyone except herself.
She’d watched Belle quietly shrink herself for years—make room for Lorenzo, for Charles, for Arthur, for Charles’ career, for the Leclerc family myth. 
Belle never asked for much. Never expected anything back.
So today, Emilie would give her everything.
The final piece fell into place just after sunrise: lunch at the restaurant where Max had taken Belle on their first date. The cozy one tucked behind the port with the ivy-covered terrace and the little hand-painted plates. Emilie had called the manager at 6:15 a.m.
“I need the whole place,” she’d said. “15 people. Three bottles of Perrier-Jouët Belle Époque. No fuss. No press. Max and Belle Verstappen.”
The Manager had paused and looked at Emilie:. “Ah,” he’d said, eyes twinkling. “For the couple who ordered the wine, then forgot to drink it because they were too busy falling in love?”
By 6:00, the venue was booked. The menu was set. The staff had already started laying out fresh linen.
Emilie checked the list one more time—flowers, cake, lunch, Max’s boutonnière, Belle’s shoes.
Everything was ready.
Emilie slipped her phone into her bag, gave the bouquet one last fond glance, and smiled to herself.
Because today—finally—was about Belle. Not Charles. Not their mother. Not a team or a trophy or anyone else’s spotlight.
Today was hers.
And Emilie Abadie would make sure not a single petal was out of place.
***
Emilie Abadie arrived with the force of a hurricane compressed into five feet and a few inches of blonde ambition and French fire.
She stood in the doorway like she’d conquered nations before breakfast, her icy blue eyes narrowing the moment they landed on him.
Lando’s stomach immediately did that stupid swoopy thing it did when he just knew he was fucked. 
She was Belle’s best friend. He had known that in an offhand way, had seen her make appearances on Belle’s Instagram and in stories Belle told…but Lando had never met her. 
“Why,” she said, voice crisp and imperious, “are half of you not wearing ties?”
Lando glanced around as if he might be able to blend into the cabinetry.
Too late.
“You,” Emilie snapped, pointing at him with all the grace and threat of a commander selecting someone for sacrifice.
“Me?” Lando squeaked.
She stalked toward him like a missile in heels. “You call that a tie? What is that knot? A shoelace? A cry for help?”
Lando glanced down at the pale blue mess under his collar. It did, in fact, look like it had lost a bar fight. “Technically… yes?”
Emilie sighed. Dramatically. Award-winningly. “Come here.”
He obeyed, despite every instinct screaming to flee. Blushing furiously, Lando stepped toward her like a man accepting his fate.
“You’re kind of scary,” he muttered.
“I’m not scary,” she replied, already undoing his tie with practiced hands, “I’m just French and disappointed.”
He stood still, heart hammering far too fast, hyper-aware of how close she was, of the way she reached up to fix the tie like she’d done it a hundred times. She smelled like roses and battle plans. Her fingers brushed his throat, adjusting the collar with delicate but precise movements, and Lando very seriously considered the possibility that this was what dying felt like.
“Can I breathe yet?” he whispered.
“When I say you can,” she said sweetly, tilting his chin. “Fashion is pain. Suffer with dignity.”
“I’m… terrified of her,” Lando muttered under his breath once she turned her attention elsewhere.
Max, still leaning casually against the counter, didn’t even blink. “You should be.”
And Lando was, but also… he was hopelessly in love with her. 
Or at least something very inconvenient and fluttery that made it hard to breathe when she was near. 
She was absolutely stunning in her sharply tailored outfit and meticulous energy, her blonde hair swept up, and her eyes laser-focused on whipping the room into shape. She’d turned wedding planning into a military campaign—and somehow made it look elegant.
But even as she herded grown men into order with eyebrow raises and verbal artillery, Lando couldn’t stop watching Max.
Because Max—who had never seemed interested in fanfare or spectacle—was getting married today. And he looked… happy. Genuinely, deeply happy in a way that made Lando’s chest go warm.
And Belle—sweet, gentle, quietly brave Belle—was the reason.
He couldn’t be happier for them.
Even if Charles was definitely going to kill him.
Lando had been trying not to think about that bit—the Charles-is-going-to-strangle-him-when-he-finds-out bit. Because once the truth came out, once Charles realized his little sister had married Max, and Lando had known, there was going to be hell to pay.
But he couldn’t bring himself to feel too guilty about it. Not when Max looked like that. Not when Belle had finally been seen the way she deserved.
The chaos in the room only paused when Emilie cornered Tom, who was valiantly attempting to pass off a cravat as formalwear.
“This is Monaco, not Pemberley,” Emilie said, already pulling a tie from her tote like Mary Poppins preparing for war.
Even Jos wasn’t immune. When Emilie raised her brows at him with military precision, he actually reached for the tie GP handed him—without protest.
“I like her,” Jos muttered, half to himself.
Yeah, Lando thought, hopeless and dazed. Me too.
Daniel’s cartoon tie didn’t stand a chance. Neither did his excuses.
“I have a lighter in my purse,” Emilie said, entirely too calmly.
And just like that, Daniel disappeared to change.
Only Oscar and GP escaped with their dignity intact. Emilie gave them a nod that could’ve launched ships.
Then Max—cool, unbothered Max—lifted his chin with the smugness of a man who had already tied his tie correctly.
“It’s crooked,” Emilie said, pulling him forward to fix it anyway.
Max didn’t even argue. Just let her do it, then shot her a crooked grin.
“You’ll do,” Emilie declared.
“You’re marrying my best friend,” she added. “You’re lucky I didn’t make you wear the floral pocket square.”
Lando snorted. Max only grinned. “Yes, ma’am.”
And then the world stopped moving.
Because the bedroom door opened.
Belle stepped out.
And everything else just… dropped away.
Lando forgot about his camera. Forgot about his tie. Forgot about the fact he was probably about to die by Leclerc rage.
Because Belle was breathtaking.
She looked like she belonged in one of those old black-and-white movies—ethereal and quiet, in a dress that shimmered like water, snowdrops tucked gently into her dark curls. Her eyes swept the room until they found Max.
And Max—his friend, the fiercest driver he’d ever known—just stood there like the ground had been ripped out from under him.
“Hi,” Belle said softly.
Max walked toward her like he couldn’t quite believe she was real. And when he told her she looked like a dream he’d never let himself have, Lando had to turn away, just for a second.
His chest hurt in a good way.
Maybe love didn’t have to be loud or dramatic or perfect. Maybe it could just be this. A quiet kitchen. A white dress. A soft “Hi.” The kind of thing that made a man forget how to breathe.
Daniel sniffled. Oscar told him to shut up.
And Lando—caught somewhere between awe and a slight panic over Charles Leclerc’s eventual reaction—just smiled.
Because one of his best friend had everything he’d ever wanted.
And Lando? Lando might be crushing on the tiny French hurricane currently terrorizing everyone with her sense of style.
But he had hope.
***
The wedding luncheon was held at a small, sun-washed restaurant tucked into one of Monaco’s corners. 
It was perfect, of course. Belle perfect.
The place where Belle and Max had had their first date. Where they had fallen in love and forgotten to drink the bottle of wine they had ordered it. 
Emilie sat at one of the long wooden tables, a glass of champagne in hand, watching Belle laugh over something Max whispered in her ear, her cheeks pink and glowing.
And for the first time in a long time, Emilie felt something unspool in her chest—something fragile and aching.
Belle was happy.
Finally.
After years of being treated like an afterthought by people who should have fought for her, she was loved by someone who saw her. It made Emilie both stupidly emotional and faintly murderous when she thought about the people who hadn't.
Her fingers curled loosely around the stem of her glass.
She didn't cry at weddings. That was not her brand.
But if she were going to cry, it would’ve been for this.
Someone bumped her elbow, breaking the spell.
She looked up—and into the bright, apologetic face of Lando Norris.
"Sorry! Sorry," he said immediately, holding up his hands like a man under arrest. "Didn’t mean to—uh, interrupt. Or spill anything. Or—"
He was wearing a navy blue suit, rumpled already, tie askew again even after her earlier threats. His curls were fighting a losing battle against whatever product he’d tried to tame them with. There was a crookedness to him—a kind of chaotic, restless energy buzzing just under his skin.
He looked like a golden retriever trying desperately not to knock over a priceless vase.
Emilie raised an eyebrow. Cool. Appraising.
She knew boys like him. Bright smiles. Quick laughs. Attention spans like sparklers: burning hot, burning out.
He should’ve been easy to dismiss.
So why wasn’t she?
"You’re safe," she said dryly, tipping her glass toward him. "For now."
Lando's grin widened, lopsided and a little breathless. "Good. I was warned you might have a taser."
Emilie allowed herself a small, sharp smile. "Only for men who deserve it."
His eyes—bright greenish blue, annoyingly nice eyes—crinkled at the corners. He shifted from foot to foot like he didn’t know whether to stay or retreat. She could practically see the gears turning in his brain, second-guessing everything.
Cute, she thought reluctantly. In that maddening, boyish way.
And real.
There was something startlingly unguarded about him. No polished script, no careful charm. Just... all messy heart.
"Can I—uh, sit?" he asked, nodding toward the empty chair beside her.
Emilie could have said no. Should have, maybe.
Instead, she tilted her head and said, "If you must."
He practically collapsed into the chair with relief, bumping the table and nearly knocking over a bread basket in the process. Emilie caught it one-handed, setting it upright with a sigh that was more amused than exasperated.
"Smooth," she said.
"I try," Lando said, flashing another grin. "But usually it goes like this."
They fell into an awkward, oddly endearing silence. The lunch buzzed around them: clinking glasses, bursts of laughter, Belle’s voice lifting and carrying across the room like music.
Lando fiddled with the edge of the napkin, sneaking glances at her when he thought she wasn’t looking.
Emilie noticed.
She noticed everything.
And it made her want to fold herself back into the armor she wore with men. The one that said: you can look, but you will never touch anything real.
But he wasn’t looking at her like she was an acquisition to win or a prize to brag about.
He was looking at her like she was a puzzle he was trying—hopelessly—to figure out.
She sipped her champagne. Let him squirm a little longer. Then, finally:
"So," Emilie said, tilting her head just enough to make him sweat, "are you going to make conversation, or are you just planning to stare at me and hope it counts?"
Lando blinked, then laughed—a quick, surprised sound that made something warm spark low in her chest.
"I was thinking... both?" he said, scratching the back of his neck. "You’re kind of intimidating."
"Good," Emilie said, leaning back in her chair with a smirk. "I work hard at it."
He shook his head, still smiling, eyes glinting with something that might have been mischief-or admiration.
Probably both.
And Emilie—who got whatever guy she wanted but never trusted any of them to stay—felt the faintest, most treacherous flicker of curiosity.
Maybe Belle wasn’t the only one who deserved good things.
Maybe.
But not yet.
For now, she just raised an eyebrow, tore a piece of bread in half, and said, "You’ve got five minutes to impress me, Norris. Don’t waste it."
Lando leaned forward like a man accepting a dare.
"Oh," he said, grinning wide and unrepentant. "I’m definitely going to waste it."
And to her absolute horror—
Emilie found herself smiling.
Real and warm and helpless against it.
Maybe chaotic sunshine wasn’t the worst thing to let into her life after all.
Emilie watched him over the rim of her glass, amused in the way one might watch a golden retriever attempt calculus. She was prepared for the usual: some half-flirty line, some brag, something easy to roll her eyes at and dismiss.
Instead, Lando immediately, and spectacularly, fumbled it.
“So, uh,” he began, sitting up straighter like he was about to give a business presentation, “I have a driver's license.”
Emilie blinked. “I should hope so,” she said dryly, “given your profession.”
“Yeah, but like,” Lando forged on, waving a hand vaguely, “I passed my first test. No minors. No majors. Totally clean sheet. Instructor said I was ‘shockingly competent.’” He smiled at her like this was an accomplishment that should win him a Nobel Prize.
Emilie couldn’t help it: she laughed.
A small one, sharp and unexpected, escaping before she could stop it.
Lando lit up like a Christmas tree. Actually lit up.
Encouraged, he kept going, words tumbling out like he couldn’t stop them if he tried.
“And—and I can cook a bit. Like, real cooking. Not just the ‘put something in the microwave and pray’ thing.”
“What’s your specialty?” Emilie asked, playing along, one eyebrow lifted.
He considered this with deep, theatrical seriousness.
“Pasta,” he said finally. “But, like, real pasta. I once made fresh tagliatelle for a girl I liked.”
Emilie smirked. “And did she survive?”
“She did,” Lando said solemnly. “She even asked for seconds. Probably because I didn’t tell her I dropped half the dough on the floor and had to start over.”
Emilie shook her head, sipping her champagne to hide the curve of her mouth.
God, he was awful at this. And somehow—somehow—it was working.
Not because he was slick.
But because he wasn’t.
He was throwing everything out there, a whole messy human open on the table, with no polish, no angles, no agenda except: please like me.
And it was dangerously, horribly endearing.
Emilie, who had been courted by men with yachts and family names older than democracy, who had been wooed with Cartier and poetry and private jets, found herself genuinely, terrifyingly charmed by a boy who thought shockingly competent driving was an acceptable conversation starter.
“You’ve got two minutes left,” she said lightly.
Lando gasped in mock horror. “Pressure’s on.”
He drummed his fingers on the table, thinking.
Then he leaned closer, lowering his voice like he was telling her a state secret."Okay. Here's the real selling point: I'm friends with Max, and you know what that means?"
She gave him a look that said choose your next words very carefully.
"It means," Lando said solemnly, "I have survived approximately fourteen near-death experiences involving go-karts, jet skis, and very questionable Red Bull stunts. So I'm basically immortal."
Emilie snorted into her glass.
"And," Lando added, beaming now, "I'm very good at getting bloodstains out of clothes. Just in case."
"You expect me to believe you're domestically capable," she said, eyeing him skeptically.
"I can use a washing machine," he said proudly. "Mostly."
"Terrifying."
Lando grinned wider, basking in the fact she hadn't told him to go away yet. His foot accidentally bumped hers under the table, and he yelped, jerking back like he'd been electrocuted.
"Sorry! Sorry—" he spluttered, flailing slightly. "Didn’t mean—"
"Relax," Emilie said, amused despite herself. "I don't bite."
She paused.
"Unless provoked," she added sweetly, echoing Belle’s earlier words.
Lando looked half in love already.
The realization hit Emilie like a cold glass of water poured down her back.
No.
No, no, no.
This wasn’t how it went. She flirted. She played. She walked away before anyone got the chance to look at her like that.
But Lando didn’t seem to be strategizing, didn’t seem to be measuring her up like some glossy prize. He just looked... happy. A little awestruck. A little proud of himself for surviving her.
It was stupid. And messy. And probably a terrible idea.
But when Belle caught her eye across the room and gave her a tiny, knowing smile—the same smile Belle had worn when Max had first reached for her hand like it was instinct—
Emilie thought, maybe, just maybe, she could let herself enjoy this. For today. For a minute.
For herself.
She set her champagne down and looked at Lando, who was still watching her like she might vanish if he blinked.
"Alright, Norris," Emilie said, sitting back with a mock-sigh. "You've survived the first round."
Lando brightened so much it was almost dangerous.
"And what’s round two?" he asked eagerly.
Emilie smirked.
"You’ll find out," she said, standing up, brushing invisible crumbs off her sleek dress. She leaned down, just enough to whisper near his ear:
"If you're lucky."
And when she sauntered off to steal a slice of cake before the toddlers got to it, she didn’t even have to look back to know Lando was grinning like he’d just won the Miami Grand Prix again.
***
It started innocently enough.
At least, that's what Lando told himself.
It was late, he was jetlagged, and he was lying in bed with one arm slung over his face, phone glowing much too brightly against the dark hotel room ceiling. He should’ve been asleep.
Instead, he was... scrolling.
Specifically, scrolling through Emilie Abadie’s Instagram.
In his defense, she’d posted a new story earlier that day—something about a bookstore in Paris—and he’d swiped up without thinking, curious. From there, well... it was a slippery slope.
He clicked on her profile. Scrolled a little. Then a little more. And a little more. Until suddenly he wasn’t just seeing today's cute coffee shop photo; he was deep in 2019 territory, where the grid looked different—less polished, more chaotic.
And there it was.
The Bikini Picture.
Emilie, standing on a beach somewhere impossibly blue, wearing sunglasses, a tiny black bikini, and a smirk that could have started wars. Hair loose, skin sun-kissed, hand holding some drink with a tiny paper umbrella in it.
She looked effortless. Untouchable. Dangerous.
Lando, because he had the survival instincts of a drunk moth around a flame, stared at it for too long.
And then, as if his thumb had a mind of its own—
He liked it.
The screen flashed red.
Hearted.
The panic hit instantly.
"NO—NO, NO, NO—" he yelped, scrambling like he'd just touched a live wire. He frantically unliked it—smashed the heart again until it turned back to grey—but it was too late.
He knew how Instagram worked.
She got the notification.
He sat there, paralyzed, mortified, vibrating with shame.
He had liked a bikini photo from five years ago.
He was that guy.
The type of guy who accidentally cyberstalked someone so hard he time-traveled.
Lando buried his face in his pillow and groaned loud enough to scare himself.
At some point, he gave up and texted Oscar.
***
Text Messages: Lando Norris & Oscar Piastri
Lando: Mate. I just liked a 2019 bikini pic on Emilie’s Instagram. Kill me.
Oscar: 😂😂😂
Lando: I’m actually dying. This is fatal. I’ve died.
Oscar: How did you even GET to 2019??
Lando: I was just looking!! And then scrolling!! And then it happened!! I didn’t MEAN TO.
Oscar: Famous last words.
Lando: I hate you.
Lando: I'm gonna throw myself into the sea.
Oscar: Before you do, serious question. You like her, don’t you?
***
Later, when Lando had the courage to crawl out from under his metaphorical rock, he found himself sitting in Oscar’s hotel room, tossing a mini water bottle up and down, trying not to look like he wanted to crawl into the mini fridge and hide.
Oscar just sat on the bed, arms folded, regarding him with the amused patience of someone who had absolutely seen this coming.
“So,” Oscar said, grinning slightly. “Emilie, huh?”
Lando groaned. “It’s not like that.”
Oscar raised a brow.
Lando dropped the water bottle onto the floor with a thunk. “Okay. Fine. Maybe it’s a little like that.”
Oscar didn’t say anything, just nodded sagely, like he was some ancient wisdom god instead of a 23-year-old who still ate cereal for dinner sometimes.
“She’s just…” Lando floundered for words, pushing a hand through his hair. “She’s scary. And beautiful. And scary.”
“You said scary twice.”
“It felt necessary.”
Oscar snorted. “Sounds like you’ve got it bad, mate.”
Lando slumped. “I don’t even know if she likes me. She could crush me like a bug if she wanted.”
“Would you be mad about it?” Oscar asked.
Lando considered it. “…No.”
Oscar laughed, then sobered slightly, watching him.
“You ever just know?” Lando asked suddenly, voice quieter. “That someone’s different? Like—you’re still kind of terrified, but you don’t want to run away?”
Oscar leaned back against the headboard, thinking for a second.
“Yeah,” he said finally. “With Lily, I knew.”
Lando glanced at him, genuinely curious.
“I mean, it wasn’t like lightning bolts or fireworks or anything,” Oscar said, shrugging. “It was quieter. Like... I realized I was happier when she was around. And when she wasn’t, it felt like something was missing. She made life easier. Not harder. You know?”
Lando nodded slowly.
“People talk about love like it’s supposed to be this huge, dramatic thing,” Oscar continued. “But honestly? The real thing’s just... peace. Trust. Someone you want to tell stupid jokes to at 2 a.m.”
Lando swallowed.
He thought about Emilie.
The way she made fun of him mercilessly, but smiled when she thought he wasn’t looking.
The way she laughed—not a polite, reserved laugh, but a real, from-the-gut laugh—when he told the world’s dumbest jokes.
The way he felt when she was near. Like maybe he could stop trying to be impressive and just... be.
Maybe it wasn’t supposed to be easy.
Maybe it was just supposed to be real.
“You think I’ve got a chance?” Lando asked, half-joking, half-serious.
Oscar smiled.
“You’ve already got one,” he said. “You’re just too scared to believe it.”
Lando sat back, heart thudding a little too fast, a little too hopeful.
Maybe he’d make an idiot of himself.
Maybe Emilie would laugh him off.
Maybe she’d crush him like a bug.
But maybe—maybe—he’d survive it.
And maybe, just maybe, it would be worth it.
***
Instagram Direct Messages: Lando Norris & Emilie Abadie
Emilie: So.
Emilie: I noticed you liked a little throwback.
Emilie: From 2019, no less. Deep cuts.  Impressive research skills.
Emilie: You know, you could’ve just asked me to dinner.  Would’ve been less creepy than liking my bikini photos at 2 a.m.
Emilie:  (But I guess this way was more entertaining.)
Emilie: You still can ask, by the way. If you’re brave enough.
Lando: Would you maybe want to have dinner with me? Without bikinis. I mean you can wear one if you want but not like a requirement— This is going badly.
Emilie: I’m free Thursday. Pick somewhere good.
Emilie: And try not to like any more photos from my past while you’re planning it.
Emilie: Or do. It’s cute. In a tragic way.
Lando: Bold of you to assume I won’t.
Emilie: Bold of you to assume I’ll say yes if you like the duck-face selfie from 2017.
Lando: Challenge accepted.
Emilie: Challenge lost.
***
Text Messages: Max Fewtrell & Lando Norris
Max Fewtrell: BRO. You saw it, right??  Charles fully crashed his soul mid-interview??
Lando: Unfortunately, yes. It was like watching someone remember they left the oven on... and also their sister.
Max Fewtrell: Iconic. Karun was like “her birthday, right?”  And Charles just downloaded a full panic attack.
Max Fewtrell: I screamed. Like—out loud. In public.
Lando Norris: It was kind of beautiful tbh. Like watching karma arrive with a mic and a production crew.
Max Fewtrell: Is his sister okay though? Do we know? Does she have a burner Twitter? I feel like she would.
Lando Norris:  She’s fine. Emilie’s with her.
Max Fewtrell: Who’s Emilie?
Lando Norris: ... She's Belle’s best friend.  Sharp. Dangerous. Possibly psychic. Says terrifyingly accurate things about my emotional state and then walks away in heels
Lando: She’s terrifying. Also brilliant.  And she’s like…scarily beautiful. 
Max Fewtrell: You have a crush on her, don’t you.
Lando: …I didn’t say that.
Max Fewtrell: YOU ABSOLUTELY DO OH MY GOD YOU DO This is the best gossip of the day and Charles had a meltdown on live TV
Lando: Shut up Also can we go back to Charles??
Max Fewtrell: No Because now I want to know why you know where Belle is And how you know Emilie’s with her And why you’re being so weirdly calm
Lando: …because I went to the wedding?
Max Fewtrell: THE WHAT
Lando: ...
Max Fewtrell: LAN THE WEDDING
Lando: Yeah. Belle and Max Verstappen. They got married. I was invited. Very small. City Hall. No media. Emilie picked the flowers
Max Fewtrell: MAX. VERSTAPPEN?!
Lando: Yes
Max Fewtrell:  YOU MEAN TO TELL ME CHARLES IS HAVING A BREAKDOWN ABOUT FORGETTING HIS SISTER’S BIRTHDAY AND DOESN’T EVEN KNOW SHE’S MARRIED TO HIS RIVAL???
Lando: Correct
Max Fewtrell: I need to lie down. And then I need popcorn And possibly therapy But also more of this
Lando: Same. Group chat is chaos Do not ask to be added It’s war in there
Max Fewtrell: This is better than Drive to Survive You’ve been sitting on this gossip for HOW LONG?
Lando: Long enough to know I value my life And Max Verstappen would kill me if I leaked it before they were ready
Max Fewtrell: Fair
Lando: You think Charles is spiraling now… Wait until he finds out Max is family now
Max Fewtrell: My god. This is better than Netflix.
***
Text Messages: Emilie Abadie & Lando Norris
Lando Norris
hey is belle okay?
Emilie: She will be. She’s hurting, but she’s strong. And she has Max. That helps. (And me, obviously. I threaten people on her behalf.)
Lando: yeah i’d be more scared of you tbh Lando:  but good Lando: she doesn’t deserve to feel that way Lando:  no one does
Emilie: this is very rude. I was not prepared for sincerity. Please warn me next time
Lando: sorry next time i’ll open with a meme but i meant it
Emilie: I know. That’s why I’m weirdly touched. Ugh. Gross. I hate this. Emotions are banned after 10pm.
Lando: it’s 9:58
Emilie: you’re on thin ice, Norris.
Lando: wouldn’t be the first time but thanks for telling me and tell her i said… i don’t know that i’m rooting for her and that she deserves  better brothers and maybe a pony idk what people say in these situations
Emilie: you’re doing fine she’ll appreciate it and so do I
Emilie: you’re a good guy, Lando.
Lando: 😳 wow ok i’m printing this and framing it
Emilie: Don’t push it. ***
The restaurant buzzed softly around them—quiet conversations, clinking silverware, candlelight glinting off glasses. It was the kind of cozy, tucked-away Monaco spot that felt private even when it was packed, the kind of place that made Lando loosen his shoulders for the first time in days.
Or, at least, it should have.
But honestly, Lando was too busy trying not to screw this up to relax.
Sitting across from Emilie Abadie—in a dim corner booth, with a bottle of wine between them and a shared plate of something fried—was more nerve-wracking than qualifying on a wet track.
She was devastating.
Not just in the obvious way, with her wild blonde hair and sharp mouth and the way she sipped wine like she was judging the entire country of France—but in the way she looked at him. Like she was trying to decide if he was worth the effort of knowing.
And God help him, he wanted to be worth it.
He was halfway through trying to come up with something clever when he saw her expression shift. Just a flicker—something hard and tight slipping across her face.
Lando followed her gaze.
Across the restaurant, standing up too fast, was Charles Leclerc.
And he was coming right for them.
"Uh," Lando said, sitting up a little straighter. "Is that...?"
"Unfortunately," Emilie said under her breath, setting her wineglass down with a soft clink.
Charles didn’t even hesitate. Just stormed across the room, panic practically pouring off him. He stopped at their table, ignoring Lando completely, and zeroed in on Emilie.
"Emilie," Charles said, voice tight, "we need to talk. About Belle."
Emilie didn’t even blink.
"I’m having dinner," she said coolly. "Sit down or leave."
Charles didn’t sit. He stood there, vibrating with panic and guilt and about four too many emotions for the room they were in.
“She posted a horse,” Charles burst out, voice climbing. “A horse! She never said anything! She’s still not answering me. You’ve seen her. You know. Why won’t you just—just tell me what’s going on?!”
Lando, still frozen in his seat, watched Emilie set her napkin down. Slowly. Precisely. Like she was a surgeon preparing for a very delicate operation.
Her smile disappeared.
And then—God help him—she destroyed Charles.
"You think you're owed answers now?" she asked, voice so sharp Lando actually felt it across the table. "After months of ignoring every warning sign? After standing in the same garage with her and looking through her like she wasn’t even real?"
Charles flinched.
Emilie leaned in slightly, not loud, but lethal.
"You want to know why she’s not answering you? Because you only want her when it’s convenient. When it fits your schedule. When it doesn’t mess up the perfect story you tell yourself about your family."
Lando sat back, eyes wide, utterly mesmerized.
He had seen Emilie be sharp before—sarcastic, teasing, merciless with Daniel’s cartoon ties—but this was something else.
This was fierce.
This was loyalty turned into a weapon.
And it was, without a doubt, the moment he realized he was completely screwed.
Because he wasn’t falling for her because she was pretty (although, let’s be honest, that wasn’t exactly hurting). He was falling because of this.
Because of the way she fought.
Because of the way she protected the people she loved like it was breathing.
Because he could see, in every word she threw like knives, how much Belle meant to her.
He had never wanted anything more in his life than to be someone Emilie Abadie fought for like that.
Charles opened his mouth, desperate, and Emilie cut him down again.
"You forgot her birthday," she said, each word a bullet. "And you think a few panicked phone calls are enough to fix that?"
Lando couldn’t even feel sorry for Charles at that point. Not really.
He was too busy being completely, absolutely undone.
"You don't love Belle the way you should," Emilie said, voice low and devastating. "You love the idea of her. The safe, quiet little sister who never asks for anything. Who never demands too much. Who lets you shine without ever threatening your light."
And there it was—the fatal blow.
Charles stood there like he had been hollowed out.
Good, Lando thought savagely.
He didn’t deserve her.
He didn’t deserve Belle’s softness—or Emilie’s fury on her behalf.
Emilie, calm as anything now, lifted her glass again like she hadn’t just torn him to pieces.
"Now," she said, "go back to your table. Apologize to Alexandra. And maybe—if you’re lucky—figure out how to be someone your sister actually wants to let back in."
Charles didn’t even argue.
He just turned and walked away, a shell of himself.
The moment he was gone, the restaurant buzzed back to life like nothing had happened.
And Lando just sat there, staring at Emilie like she’d hung the moon.
Because this was what undid him, completely and without mercy:
Not the beauty. Not the sharp tongue. Not even the way she teased him into laughing at himself.
It was this.
It was the way she loved.
Fierce. Loyal. Uncompromising.
It was the way she stood her ground, sword drawn, in defense of someone who needed it.
It was the way she made it absolutely clear that you didn’t get to hurt people she loved without consequences.
God, he was in trouble.
Emilie caught him staring and arched an eyebrow, setting her wineglass down with practiced grace. "What?"
Lando blinked, scrambled for something to say, something that didn’t sound like I might be in love with you.
"That was," he said, voice a little hoarse, "the most badass thing I’ve ever seen."
A faint, real smile tugged at the corner of her mouth. "He needed to hear it."
"He did," Lando agreed. Then, quieter, "And Belle’s lucky to have you."
Something flickered across Emilie’s face at that—something small and vulnerable and quickly hidden.
She picked up her glass again, studying him over the rim. "Careful, Norris. Say too many nice things and I might start thinking you mean them."
"I do," he said simply.
And this time, she didn’t roll her eyes. Didn’t mock him.
She just held his gaze, steady and assessing, like she was weighing whether he was telling the truth.
Whatever she saw must have satisfied her, because after a long beat, she said lightly, "Good."
She took a sip of her wine. Then, smiling like she hadn't just broken and remade his entire world in under five minutes, she leaned in closer.
"Now," Emilie said, "where were we before the drama?"
Lando couldn’t even remember.
All he could think about was how wildly, desperately he wanted to kiss her.
***
Emilie sat back in her chair, wine glass light between her fingers, and tried to act like her heart wasn’t pounding against her ribs.
Like Lando’s words hadn’t just cracked something wide open inside her.
Belle’s lucky to have you. I mean it.
She didn’t know what she had expected—maybe some teasing, maybe a joke to defuse the moment—but not that.
Not sincerity.
Not him.
She should’ve brushed it off. Should’ve quipped something scathing and easy, should’ve knocked the moment off balance before it could land. But she hadn’t.
Because something about the way Lando looked at her—steady, certain, real—had made her hesitate.
Careful, Abadie, she warned herself. You know better.
Boys said things they didn’t mean. Boys fell in love with ideas, not people. Boys liked her because she was shiny and sharp, not because they saw her.
And yet... Lando hadn’t looked at her like she was shiny.
He’d looked at her like she was something solid.
Like he saw the messy, brutal, fiercely protective parts of her—and didn’t want to flinch away.
It was terrifying.
It was worse than terrifying.
It was hope.
"Now," Emilie said, forcing her voice back into familiar, teasing steadiness as she leaned across the table, "where were we before the drama?"
Lando blinked at her, like he needed a second to remember where he was. It made something traitorous and warm flicker in her chest.
"Uh," he said, a little breathless, "I think I was telling you about the time I accidentally set a microwave on fire?"
Emilie let out a real, surprised laugh. "You did what?"
He grinned—wide and messy and self-deprecating—and just like that, the intensity between them loosened into something lighter. Still charged. Still humming just under the surface. But lighter.
"I was fifteen, okay," Lando said, leaning in, elbows on the table. "And I thought you could microwave foil. Spoiler alert: you cannot."
"Oh my God," Emilie said, actually laughing now. "You’re lucky you didn’t set the whole house on fire."
"Almost did," Lando said proudly. "My mum nearly murdered me."
He told the story with his whole body—hands flying, eyes bright—and Emilie listened, smiling in spite of herself, feeling the last shards of her ice defenses start to melt.
He’s dangerous, she thought distantly. And not for the reasons you’re used to.
He was dangerous because he wasn’t pretending.
Because he didn’t want her to be less. Or smaller. Or easier to love.
He wanted this version of her—the messy, complicated, fierce version—and it felt so new and so scary she almost didn’t know how to hold it.
Halfway through his story about the microwave (and the resulting three-day grounding), Emilie caught herself staring.
Caught herself wondering what it would be like to lean across the table and kiss him.
Idiot, she thought, draining the last of her wine to kill the impulse.
But even as she set the glass down, her hand brushed against his—just lightly, just by accident—and Lando froze.
The air between them tightened again. Not heavy. Not sharp. But electric.
His hand stayed where it was.
Waiting.
Not grabbing. Not pushing. Just waiting.
An invitation.
An if you want to.
Emilie’s chest squeezed so tight she could barely breathe.
She wasn’t used to boys who waited.
She wasn’t used to being wanted without being hunted.
Slowly—so slowly she barely let herself think about it—she turned her palm up and let her fingers brush his.
His hand closed gently over hers, warm and callused and careful.
And Emilie, against every rule she had ever made for herself, didn’t pull away.
***
The night air was cooler than the restaurant had been, crisp against Emilie’s skin as they stepped out into the narrow Monaco street.
 The world felt smaller out here—quieter, sleepier. The kind of night you could almost believe was magic.
Their hands brushed once, then again. And then—without speaking—Lando laced his fingers through hers.
Just like that.
No fuss. No dramatics. No careful maneuvering.
Like he’d been waiting for permission, and now that he had it, he wasn’t letting go.
Emilie let herself be pulled along, hand in his, heart hammering an unfamiliar rhythm against her ribs.
It was terrifying.
It was wonderful.
Neither of them said much as they walked. The occasional motorbike buzzed by; laughter floated out of the bars they passed. But between them—just a quiet hum of something new.
When they reached a corner where the street narrowed and the light hit just right, Lando slowed.
Emilie slowed too, their joined hands swinging slightly between them.
Lando glanced at her out of the corner of his eye.
She caught the look—shy and reckless all at once—and her heart gave a traitorous thud.
"You’re quiet," he said, voice soft, like he was afraid to scare her off.
"Maybe I’m enjoying the peace," Emilie said lightly.
He smiled at that. Real and crooked. The kind of smile that made her want to hand over every sharp piece of herself without a second thought.
"You were incredible tonight," he said, after a moment.
Emilie huffed a laugh, looking away. "I was brutal."
"You were brilliant," Lando corrected. "You were exactly what Belle needed."
The words were so unexpected, so easy and true, that Emilie almost stumbled.
God, stop, she told herself. Stop falling faster.
But it was already too late.
When she looked back at him, Lando was still watching her with that same maddening, open expression. Like he liked her exactly as she was. All fire. All teeth. All soft, bruised, careful heart underneath.
They stopped under a streetlamp without meaning to.
It pooled gold light around them, softening the edges of everything. Making the world feel like it had shrunk to just this. Just them.
Lando’s hand tightened slightly around hers.
"Emilie," he said, and the way he said it—half a question, half a prayer—made something inside her crack open.
She should have said something sharp. She should have laughed it off.
Instead, she just lifted her chin and looked at him.
"Are you going to kiss me, Norris," she asked, voice deceptively cool, "or are you going to keep holding my hand like we’re on a third-grade field trip?"
Lando made a small, strangled noise that might have been a laugh—or a whimper—and then he was stepping closer, so close she could feel the heat of him.
"I’m working up to it," he muttered.
"You’re slow," Emilie said.
"You’re terrifying," Lando shot back, grinning.
And then—finally, finally—he kissed her.
It wasn’t perfect.
It wasn’t smooth or practiced.
It was messy and a little desperate and so real it nearly brought Emilie to her knees.
Lando kissed like he couldn’t believe he was allowed to. Like he wanted to be sure she knew she could push him away at any second—and like he was praying she wouldn’t.
And Emilie—fierce, guarded Emilie—kissed him back with all the reckless, terrifying hope she hadn’t realized she’d been carrying for years.
It was a soft, stumbling collision of mouths and laughter and fingers tightening on jackets—and it was, without a doubt, the most dangerous, precious thing Emilie had ever let herself have.
When they finally pulled apart, Lando rested his forehead lightly against hers, still holding her hand.
"You scare the shit out of me," he whispered, grinning.
"Good," Emilie whispered back.
But when he kissed her again—this time slower, sweeter—she let herself believe, for just one dangerous, dazzling second, that maybe she didn't have to be scary forever.
That maybe someone had finally seen her.
And wanted her anyway.
***
Text Messages: Max Fewtrell & Lando Norris
Lando: Bro. BRO. I’m going to throw up.
Max: ok congrats on what?? nervous breakdown? race win? what are we celebrating
Lando: i kissed her
Max: who
Lando: her
Max: MATE WHO
Lando: EMILIE
Max: WAIT wait wait wait BACK UP u kissed her??? WHAT DO YOU MEAN "I KISSED HER"???
Lando: we had dinner and i didn’t die and then she LET ME HOLD HER HAND and THEN SHE LET ME KISS HER
Max: mate i need a minute
 since WHEN were you even going on dates with her??? this is like finding out ur mate moved to another country and got married without telling u what do u mean you just had dinner casually WHEN WAS THIS PLANNED
Lando: it just happened kind of after i liked her 2019 bikini pic at 2am
Max: what the fuck
Max: YOU DID WHAT
Max: YOU DUMB IDIOT LEGEND
Lando: she slid into my dms after told me i could just ask her out next time instead of stalking her like a creep
Max: i’m crying i’m so proud u’re still an idiot but like a victorious idiot
Lando: i’m literally shaking bro like i kissed her and she kissed me BACK
Max: wtf and she didn’t mace you or slap you??? mate she might actually like you
Lando: i think she might
Lando: i’m gonna marry her
Max: ok buddy let’s aim for a second date first
Lando: i’m so fucked
Max: in the best way
726 notes · View notes
vibeswithdivs · 7 months ago
Text
He’s more patient than he looks
pairing: Max Verstappen x reader
Tumblr media
The hum of conversation filled the Red Bull Racing headquarters as employees bustled about with an energy that was almost infectious. Engineers huddled over laptops, mechanics leaned against tool racks with grease-streaked hands, and the faint smell of coffee lingered in the air. It was a world that thrummed with purpose, speed, and precision—qualities that the newcomer sitting at her desk felt slightly out of sync with.
You can do this, she told herself for the hundredth time that day.
Being a social media manager for one of the most prominent teams in Formula 1 was a dream job. Yet, as she stared at the screen, where a half-finished tweet about race day statistics blinked back at her, that dream felt a lot more like a free-fall. She wasn’t just crafting posts about breakfast specials or gym memberships anymore—she was managing the online presence of an entire racing empire.
And, truthfully, she was floundering.
“Morning!”
The cheerful voice made her jump, and she turned to see her colleague, Sophie, leaning over her cubicle wall with a grin. “How’s the newbie settling in?” Sophie asked, raising an eyebrow.
“Uh… good!” she replied quickly, pasting on a smile that she hoped masked her nerves.
Sophie tilted her head, unconvinced. “You’ve been staring at that screen for an hour, and the only thing you’ve posted today is a retweet from Pirelli. Do you need help?”
“No, I’m just—” She paused, biting her lip. “I don’t even know what half these terms mean. DRS, power unit, undercut… it’s like everyone here is speaking a different language.”
Sophie’s face softened. “It is a different language,” she said with a chuckle. “Give it time. It’s only your first week. You’ll get the hang of it. And if you’re still lost, you’ve got plenty of people to ask.”
“Like who?”
“Like me,” Sophie said with a wink. “Or, if you’re feeling brave, you could ask the drivers. Max and Checo are usually good sports about answering questions.”
“Right,” she said, laughing nervously. “Because it’s totally normal to walk up to Max Verstappen and ask him to explain tire degradation.”
“You’d be surprised,” Sophie replied with a grin. “He’s more patient than he looks.”
She didn’t expect to test Sophie’s theory quite so soon. Later that afternoon, while she was setting up her phone to record a behind-the-scenes video in the garage, she heard a familiar voice behind her.
“Need help?”
She turned, almost dropping her phone when she saw Max Verstappen standing there, dressed in his Red Bull team kit and holding a bottle of water. His blue eyes were bright with curiosity, and his expression was disarmingly friendly.
“Uh… no! I mean, yes. Maybe?” she stammered, fumbling with the tripod. “Sorry, I’m still figuring all this out.”
Max chuckled, setting his water down on a nearby workbench. “Don’t worry about it. What are you trying to do?”
“I’m supposed to get some footage of the engineers prepping your car, but I can’t get the angle right, and—” She broke off, feeling heat rise to her cheeks. “It’s my first week. I’m still getting the hang of everything.”
“You’re doing fine,” Max said, his tone reassuring as he stepped closer. “Here, let me see.”
She handed him the phone, watching as he adjusted the tripod with practiced ease. He crouched slightly, angling the camera until it perfectly captured the scene in the garage.
“Like this?” he asked, stepping back to let her check.
She stared at the screen in amazement. “That’s… perfect. How did you do that so quickly?”
“Years of media obligations,” he said with a shrug. “You pick up a thing or two.”
She smiled, feeling some of her nervousness ebb away. “Thanks, Max.”
“No problem,” he replied, picking up his water bottle. “And if you ever need help with anything else—questions, technical stuff, whatever—just ask. It’s better than guessing.”
Max wasn’t kidding. Over the next few weeks, she found herself turning to him more often than she expected, and he answered every question with surprising patience.
“What’s a DRS zone?” she asked one afternoon during a lunch break.
“It’s where we can open the rear wing to go faster,” Max explained, demonstrating with his hands. “But only in certain areas and under certain conditions. You know, to make overtaking easier.”
“And what’s an undercut?” she asked the next day while filming a promo video in the paddock.
Max smirked. “That’s when you pit earlier than the car ahead of you to get fresher tires and gain track position. But timing is everything. If you mess it up, it doesn’t work.”
“Right,” she said, nodding along even though she still felt a bit lost.
Max seemed to notice her confusion because he added, “It’s like beating someone to the front of the line at a concert by taking a shortcut. Make sense?”
“Ahh,” she said, grinning. “That actually helps.”
With Max’s encouragement, her confidence grew. She started experimenting with different content ideas, from quirky Instagram stories to polished YouTube vlogs. Her colleagues noticed the change, offering praise and feedback that bolstered her even further.
But it was Max’s quiet support that made the biggest difference. He never made her feel stupid for asking questions or stumbling over her words, and his humor often turned stressful moments into something lighter.
One evening, as she sat in the media center editing a race weekend highlight reel, Max walked by and paused to watch over her shoulder.
“Not bad,” he said, nodding at the screen.
“‘Not bad’?” she repeated, turning to him with a mock glare.
He grinned. “Okay, fine. It’s great. But you missed the part where I overtook Checo in Turn 3. That was the best move of the race.”
She rolled her eyes, laughing. “I’ll add it to the blooper reel.”
“Bloopers?” he said, pretending to look offended. “That was pure talent.”
She shook her head, unable to suppress her smile. “You’re impossible, Verstappen.”
“And you’re doing a great job,” he said, his tone softening. “Don’t let anyone tell you otherwise.”
By the time the season reached its midpoint, she felt like she’d finally found her footing. The fast-paced world of Formula 1 no longer felt overwhelming; instead, it felt exhilarating.
One evening, after a particularly successful social media campaign, she found herself standing on the balcony of the team’s hospitality unit, watching the sun set over the paddock. Max joined her a few minutes later, leaning against the railing with a relaxed smile.
“Long day?” he asked.
“Always,” she replied with a chuckle. “But I think I’m getting the hang of it.”
“I’d say you’re more than getting the hang of it,” Max said. “You’ve been killing it lately. Everyone’s noticed.”
She glanced at him, surprised by the sincerity in his voice. “Really?”
“Really,” he said, meeting her gaze. “And in case you haven’t noticed, you’ve made this job your own. You’ve brought something new to the team. It’s good.”
Her chest swelled with gratitude, and she looked down, trying to hide the blush creeping up her cheeks. “Thanks, Max. For everything. I don’t think I would’ve survived my first month without you.”
He chuckled, reaching out to nudge her shoulder playfully. “Anytime. You’re part of the team now, and we take care of our own. Even if you still ask a million questions.”
She laughed, the sound light and genuine. “Get used to it, Verstappen. I’ve got plenty more where those came from.”
Max smirked, his eyes twinkling with amusement. “Bring it on.”
672 notes · View notes
checkeredflagggs · 10 months ago
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Masterlist
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Subject of Interest — fans love carlos’ girlfriend and her unhinged comments and photography hobby
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Adore, Amour, Inamorato — charles’ new girlfriend receives a lot of hate for her seemingly joblessness
Bananas for You — fans are stumped when both charles and logan start soft launching new relationships. the big reveal is even more shocking
Melting Hearts — Ferrari hires a chocolatier to cater for their anniversary celebrations! The chocolate isn’t the only thing to melt
Scream Queen — charles loves his girlfriend so much — and he makes it everyone else’s problem
Share the Spotlight — an unofficial fan account gets a little unhinged until it doesn’t…
Unsolved — when charles admits to listening to unsolved, Ferrari take it upon themselves to play matchmaker
Winner’s Circle — max, charles, and y/n are the stars of redbull, ferrari, and aston martin (and their relationship is the star of the internet)
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Daddy Daughter Date — george takes his daughters out for a daddy/daughters date day
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Your Day — jenson spoils his partner on their birthday
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Finally — lando’s girlfriend finally graduates from college and comes along on for this amazing season
Finally Forever — lando finally gets the girl - forever
Glazed and Confused — when lando fails to make a simple mug, fans direct him towards your YouTube channel
Unexpected Roommate — when moving in with his girlfriend, lando gets confronted with the new side of her pet
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Bananas for You — fans are stumped when both charles and logan start soft launching new relationships. the big reveal is even more shocking
Friendly Banquet — logan gets chosen to host the end of the year dinner and that means the grid meets his partner
Picture Perfect — logan’s girl travels with him as his personal photographer
Pole Position — after a(nother) bad race, logan does as anyone in Vegas does — drinks himself into a couple of bottles, meets the newest stripper in the club, and marries her? …wait what??
Season 2 - Electric Boogaloo — y/n, redbull’s second driver, is back and ready to terrorize the grid! falling in love with her best friend wasn’t in her plans
Sick Day — logan’s sick girlfriend is apparently on death’s door
The Story of Us — logan and you have been keeping a secret from everyone but it might be time for it to come out
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
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Max and his Duckies Rookies Masterlist — A series based on the 2025 season about Max and his newly adopted grid kids and his pregnant girlfriend
To Paint a Picture Masterlist — y/n webber swore was done with formula 1 and race drivers forever. max is determined to change her mind
Three Hearts Left — fans (and friends) are shocked when they find max is married and to who
White Dog Cafe — while daniel forgets plans made with max, max has a meet-cute
Winner’s Circle — max, charles, and y/n are the stars of redbull, ferrari, and aston martin (and their relationship is the star of the internet)
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A Perfect Storm — meet dr. alice “barbie” sargaent, professional storm chaser
Aftermath of a Storm — people are shocked to learn about alice and oscar
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Taken from Me — while traveling with pierre, your childhood pet is put down
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Bad Days — when you have a truly awful day, your driver is there to help
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Fatherhood Looks Good On You
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Chronological Masterlist
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Week of Romance
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What Happens in Vegas…
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kathlare · 7 months ago
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midnight spark
Lando Norris x Amelie Dayman
Summary: As Amelie prepares for a monumental New Year’s Eve performance in Times Square, she takes a moment to connect with Lando, who is halfway across the world.
Wordcount: 2.1 k
Warnings: fluff, smau
full masterlist // request over here!
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December 31st, 2023 - New York City, NY
She ran a hand through her hair, which had been styled into a voluminous wave. Her outfit—a sparkling white dress that shimmered under the soft lights of her apartment—was a showstopper. It clung to her body perfectly, highlighting her curves.
Amelie loved this feeling, the thrill of stepping into a new year with such a monumental performance ahead. But, as she admired herself in the mirror, she couldn’t shake the excitement bubbling inside her for something—rather, someone—else. Lando.
Her phone buzzed on the counter, and when she picked it up, a smile stretched across her face. It was a FaceTime call from him. Her heart skipped a beat.
—Hey, babe,— she answered with a grin, holding the phone up to her face.
—Well, well, look at you,— Lando’s voice came through, slightly muffled at first. When his face appeared on screen, Amelie couldn’t help but laugh at the sight of him. He was lounging on his hotel bed in Bali, his messy curls practically sticking up in every direction. There was a slight glow to his face, and his eyes were a little too bright, giving away the fact that he'd been drinking.
—Happy New Year, Ames!— Lando's smile was infectious, but there was something else behind his expression—a glint that told her he was tipsy. He raised his phone, showing off his surroundings: a dimly lit hotel room, music thumping faintly in the background, and a few people laughing in the distance.
—You’re drunk,— Amelie teased, rolling her eyes as she took in his disheveled appearance.
—You don’t know that,— Lando shot back with a wink, even though his slurred speech gave him away. —Okay, maybe a little. But I’m celebrating, babe. Martin is playing tomorrow, and I’m here with him, so… priorities, right?— His grin was wide, showing the playful side of him that Amelie loved.
She chuckled. —I’m sure you’re having a blast. Meanwhile, I’m getting ready to perform in Times Square.— She turned the camera around, showing him her outfit. —What do you think?—
Lando’s jaw dropped, his eyes widening as he took in her appearance. —Holy shit, Ames. You look... I mean, you're a fucking goddess. Wow.— His voice was full of admiration, but there was also a certain hunger to his words, a subtle intensity that sent a shiver down her spine.
Amelie couldn't help but blush at his compliment, feeling the heat rise to her cheeks. —Thank you,— she replied, trying to hide her flustered reaction. But as always, Lando knew how to make her feel something. —You know, you’re not looking too bad yourself,— she said, returning the flirtation. —I mean, I can’t say I’m not tempted to jump on a plane and meet you right now.—
Lando’s smile turned mischievous. —Oh yeah? Tempted, huh?— His gaze moved slowly up and down her form, making Amelie feel like he was undressing her with his eyes. His voice dropped an octave, and she could tell the alcohol had loosened him up a bit. —You’re killing me, Ames. That dress... damn, it’s got me all hot and bothered. It’s not fair.—
Amelie’s heart raced, but she smirked and leaned in closer to the camera, giving him a better view. —Well, I’m just getting started,— she said, her tone teasing and confident. She knew exactly what she was doing, baiting him. —I’m wearing this for you tonight, Lan. But you can’t have me just yet.—
Lando’s eyes darkened, and he let out a slow breath. —You’re really gonna do this to me, huh?— he muttered, his voice rough with desire. —I’m sitting here in Bali, and all I can think about is you looking like that. Fuck.— He shook his head, clearly trying to regain control. —Stop. I can’t handle this, not right now.—
Amelie’s smirk widened, her heart racing as she watched Lando struggle with his words. She loved the power she had over him, especially when he was tipsy like this. But she wasn’t ready to let him off the hook just yet.
—Oh, come on, Lan, I’m just getting warmed up. Don’t act like you don’t like it,— she teased, turning her body slightly to give him an even better view of her outfit. She could see his eyes track her every movement, and it made her pulse quicken with excitement.
Lando groaned, rubbing his face in frustration. —Babe, you’re killing me. Do you know how much I want to just pull you through this screen?— His voice was low and full of longing. —But I can’t. Fucking hell, this is torture.—
Amelie’s grin softened, a little sympathy slipping through despite her playful teasing. —I’m not trying to torture you, Lan. Just having a little fun. But... maybe you can handle a little more.— She knew exactly how far she could push him, how to make him desperate for her without giving in just yet.
—You’re not playing fair,— Lando muttered, leaning back against his pillow, trying to distance himself from the camera as though it would help control his rising frustration. —You’re in New York, looking like that, and I’m here, drunk, thinking about all the things I’d do to you if I could be there. But no... I can’t.— He sighed, closing his eyes for a moment, but the desire was still there, unmistakable.
Amelie’s heart fluttered at his words, but she knew how to keep the teasing going. She wasn’t ready to give him exactly what he wanted just yet. —Well, you’re not the only one here with some... creative thoughts. But I’m not sure if you're ready to handle me like that after a night of partying, Lan.— She winked at the camera, her voice playful but laced with a hint of challenge.
Lando’s eyes snapped open, and his lips quirked into a small smile, despite his obvious struggle. —You really want to play this game with me, huh?— He chuckled, a little more steadied now, though the intensity was still there. —I’m not exactly sober, but that doesn’t mean I wouldn’t make it worth your while, Ames.—
Her breath hitched at the words. She knew he wasn’t just talking about the physical attraction anymore. There was something deeper behind his gaze. But, as much as she loved this back-and-forth, she also knew that they were on the edge of something more. Something that could happen when they were together in person—no screens, no distractions.
Amelie bit her lip, holding back a smile. —Maybe when we’re together in Bali, I’ll let you show me just how worth it you can be.— She teased, but the weight of her words hung in the air, giving both of them something to look forward to.
Lando’s eyes darkened, his playful expression faltering for a moment. —You better be ready for me, Ames. I’m not playing around when you get here—
The sudden knock at the door interrupted their moment, and Amelie sighed, rolling her eyes. She turned the camera toward the door, showing Alex Wolff standing in the doorway, clearly eager for the night to start. —You’re not gonna believe this, but I’m getting ready to go on stage, and you’re over here distracting me, Lan. This is all your fault,— she muttered, though the hint of a smile was still on her lips.
Alex raised an eyebrow, grinning as he leaned against the doorframe. —Yeah, I bet it’s Lando’s fault. Seems like the two of you have a way of getting each other worked up, huh?— He chuckled, completely unaware of just how much he had interrupted.
Amelie rolled her eyes but couldn’t suppress the laugh. —Shut up, Alex. I’ll be ready in a minute,— she told him, turning back to Lando with a smirk.
—Alright, alright. Go do your thing, Ames,— Lando said, his voice suddenly softer, a hint of affection slipping through despite the tension. —But just so you know, I’m counting down the days until I see you. Bali’s not too far away. And when you get here, you’ll see just how serious I am about making up for tonight, yeah?—
Amelie felt a warmth spread through her chest at his words. They might not have said the big “L” word yet, but everything they shared felt real. Special. And in that moment, it felt like something had clicked between them, something that would grow stronger the closer they got.
—You better keep your word, Lan,— she teased, her eyes softening as she gazed at him. —But for now, I have a show to do. We’ll talk later, alright?—
—You’re gonna crush it, babe. I’ll be waiting to hear all about it. Don’t forget about me when you’re a superstar on that stage, yeah?—
Amelie laughed, her heart swelling at the affection in his voice. —Never. I’ll talk to you soon. Happy New Year, Lan.—
—Happy New Year, Ames. Go break a leg out there. I’ll be cheering for you from here, as always.—
With a final wink, she ended the call, setting her phone down with a soft sigh. Alex raised an eyebrow, clearly eager to tease her more, but Amelie was already focused on the performance ahead. Lando might have been far away, but his words lingered with her, a warm reminder of everything they were building together.
And soon, she’d be with him in Bali—closer than ever.
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liked by landonorris, fan4amelie, and others
amelieupdates: Kicking off 2024 in style! 🎤✨ Amelie lit up the stage tonight at the Times Square Ball in NYC with an unforgettable performance.
View all 698 comments
fan4amelie: SHE SLAYED OMG 🔥✨ no crumbs left, just vibes. → lanamelieshipper: @fan4amelie fr, my queen never misses. Also, did y’all see Lando liked this? 👀 → f1fanatic77: @lanamelieshipper he’s so obvious. Like, bro, we get it, you’re in love. 😭
amelie_is_the_moment: Literally starting 2024 with a BANG. She’s unreal. 😍
fanamelie22: She ATE that stage UP. Literally no crumbs left. 🔥✨ 2024 starting strong! → alexsimp99: @fanamelie22 PERIODT. Like, she understood the assignment and DELIVERED.
f1loves: Not me screaming because Alex was spotted in the crowd! Bestie duties ON POINT. 🥹💙
lando_obsessed: Y’ALL, WHY IS LANDO IN THE LIKES?? 👀👀 → amelieupdatesfan: @lando_obsessed Liking it like a "supportive friend" 🙃, sure, Lan.
notafantho: She’s mid at best. NYE deserved better. 🙄
norrisxamelie: Can 2024 just be the year they finally announce it already? We KNOW, besties. Stop playing us. 👀 → landoarmy: @norrisxamelie Deadass. The "just friends" excuse is so tired at this point. We BEEN knew.
ameliemyqueen: She’s glowing. Idk if it’s love, success, or both, but she’s winning either way. 🌟 → f1fangirl: @ameliemyqueen It’s Lando. We know it’s Lando. 😉
georgeandamelieforever: UGH, she ate this performance! 😍🔥 Amelie just keeps getting better, she’s gonna be a whole legend 💫
amelieisourqueen: We’ve been supporting her since day 1 and look at her now!! Times Square, are you kidding me? GO OFF, QUEEN 👑✨ → alexfan05: @amelieisourqueen facts!! She’s come SO FAR, it’s insane to see. Proud of her always!! 🙌
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amirasainz · 7 months ago
Note
Can we please have more of little alonso? Like when she was born and nando holding her for the first time and the grid are confused where he is?
Or before the grid official meeting her, nanda showing them pictures of her and telling them about something cute she did.
Enjoy reading and send some requests!!!
-xoxo babygirl 💚
The newest dad on the grid
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Fernando stepped into the paddock for the first time in weeks, his signature confident strut unchanged, but there was something different about him—an energy, a spark, a glow even. The break he had taken from the Formula 1 season to welcome his daughter had rejuvenated him in ways no victory lap could. The paddock, buzzing with its usual pre-race fervor, quieted as drivers spotted Fernando.
“Nando!” came a shout from Charles, who jogged over with a huge grin. “Welcome back! How’s... the baby?!” His face lit up like a kid waiting to hear about Christmas morning.
Max, never far from Charles, joined with a smirk. “Yeah, Fernando, how’s fatherhood treating you? You look—different. Happier, even.”
Fernando chuckled, patting both of them on the shoulders. “Ah, much better than any race, I can tell you that. Yn, my little girl, she’s perfect.”
George approached next, Lewis in tow. “Alright, alright, hold on,” George said, adjusting his perfectly tailored shirt. “Are we finally going to see pictures of this famous Yn? Because the way everyone’s been talking, she’s already an icon.”
“Wait, don’t start without me!” Lando called, sprinting over, followed by Oscar, Carlos, and Pierre. The group was forming faster than a DRS train on a straight.
Fernando, laughing at the commotion, pulled out his phone. “Okay, okay, calm down. Let me show you.” He unlocked the screen and turned it toward them. The photo he showed was of a tiny baby swaddled in a soft pink blanket, her big brown eyes staring up at the camera with curiosity and innocence.
“OH MY GOD,” Lando exclaimed, practically squealing. “She’s adorable!”
“Look at those cheeks!” Charles leaned in closer, his face nearly pressed against the screen. “She’s like a tiny angel! I bet you can't stop kissing them.”
“She has your eyes,” Lewis said softly, his warm smile matching the tone of his voice.
Fernando puffed out his chest, clearly basking in the praise. “She does, doesn’t she? And she already loves motorsport. When I hold her and talk about racing, she doesn’t cry. She just listens.”
Max snorted. “Fernando, she’s like two weeks old. She probably just likes your voice.”
“She’s already your biggest fan, mate,” Carlos interjected with a proud grin. “Don’t listen to Max.”
Fernando swiped to another photo. This time, Yn was asleep, her tiny fist wrapped around Fernando’s finger. The group collectively let out a chorus of “Awwww!”
“She’s so small!” Pierre said, his voice unusually soft. “Like, her hand is smaller than your finger! How do you even handle her without being terrified?”
“It’s instinct,” Fernando replied with a shrug, though the softness in his voice betrayed his own awe. “The moment I held her for the first time, everything clicked. She’s everything now.”
As Fernando flipped through more pictures—Yn in a tiny onesie with a Formula 1 logo, Yn sleeping on his chest during a nap—the drivers grew more animated.
“Does she have a favorite team yet?” Lando teased, nudging Carlos.
“Obviously Aston Martin,” Carlos quipped. “She knows where her dad is.”
Fernando raised a finger. “Actually, she smiles the most when I hum the Spanish anthem.”
“Of course she does,” George said with a laugh. “Your baby, your rules.”
“Does she cry a lot?” Oscar asked shyly.
“Only when she’s hungry or tired,” Fernando said proudly. “She’s very calm otherwise. I think she’ll grow up to be very composed, like her father.”
“Yeah, sure,” Max muttered under his breath, earning a playful shove from Lewis.
The group continued to coo over the photos, and even the normally reserved drivers couldn’t resist commenting. Esteban smiled as he observed from a distance but eventually joined in, congratulating Fernando.
“You should bring her to a race one day,” Charles suggested.
“Yeah,” Lando added enthusiastically. “Imagine a tiny Alonso in the paddock, stealing everyone’s hearts.”
Fernando grinned. “Maybe one day. But for now, she’s better off at home with her mamá. She needs to be calm, not surrounded by all this chaos.”
As the drivers dispersed, Fernando was left with a lingering feeling of warmth. The camaraderie of the paddock had always been special, but now, as a father, he felt it even more deeply. Yn wasn’t just his world; she had somehow become part of theirs too.
Later, during the drivers' press conference, a journalist asked Fernando how it felt to be back after his short break.
“It feels amazing,” he said, his smile unshakeable. “But not as amazing as being a father. Yn is my inspiration now. Every lap, every corner—I’m racing for her.”
The other drivers in the room exchanged knowing smiles. Fernando Alonso, the fierce competitor, had softened in the best possible way. Fatherhood suited him, and they were all here for it.
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fandom · 3 months ago
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Ships
Week Ending March 17th, 2025
Jayvik +1 Jayce & Viktor, Arcane
Sonadow +1 Sonic & Shadow, Sonic the Hedgehog
Buddie -2 Evan Buckley & Edmundo Diaz, 9-1-1
Phan +6 Daniel Howell & Phil Lester, YouTubers
Bucktommy +4 Evan Buckley & Tommy Kinard, 9-1-1
Hansry -2 Henry of Skalitz & Hans Capon, Kingdom Come: Deliverance
Caitvi -2 Caitlyn Kiramman & Vi, Arcane
Stobotnik -2 Agent Stone & Dr. Robotnik, Sonic the Hedgehog
Destiel -1 Dean Winchester & Castiel, Supernatural
Pureshadow -3 Pure Vanilla Cookie & Shadow Milk Cookie, Cookie Run
Megop +1 Megatron & Optimus Prime, Transformers
Wolfstar +3 Remus Lupin & Sirius Black, the Harry Potter universe
Landoscar Lando Norris & Oscar Piastri, Formula 1 drivers
Jegulus -3 James Potter & Regulus Black, the Harry Potter universe
Hannigram +4 Hannibal Lecter & Will Graham, Hannibal
Hilson James Wilson & Gregory House, House
Satosugu +3 Gojo Satoru & Geto Suguru, Jujutsu Kaisen
Byler -4 Will Byers & Mike Wheeler, Stranger Things
Sambucky Sam Wilson & Bucky Barnes, the Marvel universe
Farcille Falin Touden & Marcille Donato, Dungeon Meshi
The number in italics indicates how many spots a ship moved up or down from the previous week. Bolded ships weren’t on the list last week.
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