#Note 8 Review
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i finished my el paso, elsewhere playthroughs-

people should talk about it more, im fucking obsessed LOL
#ghostie fandom rants#im like#wow#cuz i already loved i am your beast so i knew el paso was gonna be good#but i saw a lotta shitty? reviews#and i think those people lack fun /hj#i will write a proper steam review later but atm#8/10 game so many notes but not the words to describe#a game about a vampire ex has never been so sad#el paso elsewhere#strange scaffold
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Embodiment of stoicism
#me reviewing the comic thing I doodled last night between writing Aquarius notes#it couldn't even be canon anyway bro chill. lol#Scoot standin in for me like a champ bc I don't have a sona. thanks homie#Scoot: *takes his money and leaves* >8'C That was so scary wtf#kit the fennec#kitsunami#someplace au#noncanon silliness
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In my honey era
#yeah sure slap some honey on those instant ramen why not#trying some honey toast with pepper too i heard thats an interesting combo#i can already see it I will not survive uni if this is the standard i set for myself#i don't even like honey i think it's a bit too sweet#the combs are great though but you know this honey on toasted bread thing i can get used to this is actually pretty good#would be interesting to see how thus would wprk ob actual bread abd nit the tiadt stuff#toast stuff*#but overall genuinely 8/10 nithing special but very enjoyable nonetheless#the pepper didn't do that much except making me want to caugh but i think it's the ratio of it all#because tastewise they should work together there were some good notes there#look at me being a little food reviewer all fancy as if I don't frink like three cups of earl grey a day and practically live off of chicken#my carnivorous behind could never be a vegetarian#and my milkloving front could never be vegan I think I'm everything that movements tries to avoid
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Samsung Book NP550XDA KH2BR: Desempenho e Elegância em um Notebook Completo
https://tecparatodos.com/samsung-book-np550xda-kh2br/
#note book samsung i5#samsung book i5#notebook samsung book intel core i5 8gb 256gb ssd#np550xda kh2br#notebook samsung i5 8gb ssd 256gb#samsung book np550xda kf2br#notebook samsung 8 gb#samsung core i5#notebook samsung book i5#samsung i5 8gb 256gb ssd#samsung book np550xda kh2br#samsung book i5 8gb ssd#review samsung book np550xda kh2br#review samsung book np550xda kf2br#samsung book#notebook samsung book#notebook samsung#top das ofertas
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.
#bro i really freaking hate gifted kid burnout#like i was seriously ruined#i just got an 8/10 on a quiz in my drivers ed class#a quiz that doesn’t matter#a quiz we will review tomorrow#there’s no repercussions for wrong answers and i’ll be able to take note of the right answers for the final#but i feel like such a failure#jesus christ#like actually dread in my stomach#i am a failure for missing two questions#that’s not normal??#and i’ve had this mentality since i was like 5??
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I've been slowly trying smoothie shops at my local mall (and in general around my area) and today I was out for an extra long time for reasons outside of my control, so I tried two different places. Neither were the best, but one was of my own doing (I picked out the fruit myself, I just didn't think about what would happen for a specific fruit when Smoothie'd) and the other was hilariously not of my own doing.
The first one, I picked pineapple (and strawberry and mango). It tasted really, really good. Pineapple is not, however, the best for smoothies. it has hard bits you can't always get rid of. The seeds are very much not meant for the blender. Fully my own choices though, and not the place I got it from. (unlike this other place, that had what I can only guess were bits of plastic?? in my smoothie?? that was supposed to be juice?? but it has really good crepes)
The second one was Orange Julius. I wanted to see how it'd compare to Actual Real Fruit, without the cushion of time. So I got a strawberry watermelon smoothie, with some extra protein, for funsies.
It tasted EXACTLY like bubblegum medicine. How. How do you fuck up a smoothie that badly?? I was burping bubblegum flavor for an hour afterward. I'm just glad I got a small, because I hate bubblegum. I managed to drink half of it before giving up (that's good money and you can't just. return a smoothie.)
I'm just gonna have to get the stuff to make smoothies myself. That way I won't have to suffer with smoothies that aren't what I want.
#unprofessional food reviews#i did find a nice juice place though#they have actual juice and not 'juice' that's really a smoothie#sadly i can't ask them to make exactly what i want#but it's all fresh juice. their juicer is on the front counter and you get to watch them juice everything to order#it's great 8/10. one notes: let me have the forbidden strawberry kiwi pineapple juice. i will give a 5$ tip. pls.#ramblings
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I think the most important thing Latin club has taught me is how to study
#seriously I never learned how to study as a kid i either remembered it or I didn’t#and then everyone else just knew how and I didn’t and the classic way never worked#through Latin club I’ve learned going over my notes doesn’t work#but going through problems solving them seeing what I get right and wrong tremendously helps#turns out review packets in algebra II are a lifesaver because I forgot how to do half of that shit#although a part of it I just didn’t get at first and don’t plan on getting it when it comes to the test#I need at least an 8 I think to pass the semester I think i can get a couple of questions wrong#madurday night live
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soap who's got a little crush in the intel office
Soap, who isn't processing a word out of your mouth as you explain the complicated geometrics of this base, how normal detonations wouldn't would because of something longwinded and boring but goddamn if you didn't have the cutest face he'd seen in a while.
Soap, who sheepishly had to walk his distracted ass back to your office to ask if you could please jus' explain it one more time, i wasnae payin' any attention last time, muttering an excuse about a migraine. You didn't say anything about the demolitions expert being distracted at a demolitions debrief, welcoming him in with an eye roll.
Soap, who'd get distracted every meeting going forward if you could pull him into your office, sit so close he could smell your shampoo, and explain to him patiently the objective and geography and the coordinates and hell, you could explain year 8 geometry and he'd hang on every word. Your office was nice, cool and cozy. He didn't like group debriefs; he needed to stand up and pace or fidget with his velcro vest, or ask too many questions than Price thought appropriate.
But you used better explanations, sat through his often stuttered questions, and let him play with the pencil holder on your desk while you spoke.
Ghost had taken to finding him there in moments of downtime, listening doe-eyed to you murmur about a mission that didn't even belong to them. He snorted. Soap darted to his feet, stumbling over the rug.
"I...I was..." he gestured vaguely, neck purpling with embarrassment. You swiveled in your chair, grinning.
"Hi, Lieutenant," you greeted Simon, waving pleasantly. "Johnny just wanted some alone time."
Soap gaped at you because that's how you decided to phrase that?? In front of his LT?
Not even addressing the elephant in Simon's mind - Johnny. You called him Johnny.
"Price needs ya," Ghost said gruffly, disappearing down the hall.
Your cackling echoed in Soap's ears as he followed grumpily. "Sweet boy," you murmured, going back to your notes.
It was another late night of Soap's pestering. Please, bonnie, jus' need ye to explain tha' again, my ears, ye ken, all screwy from the bombs n' shite. You raised your eyebrows, surprised that, again, a detonations expert needed review on C4 placement for a relatively low-stakes assignment.
He was sitting too close again, knee brushing yours. The low lamplight shone in his dilated eyes, baby blues wide with adoration. The overt affection in his gaze made your cheeks burn a bit, until you noticed the circles growing beneath them. Soap was exhausted; the lines of his stout shoulders sagging into your cushy armchair.
"Johnny," you said when he asked another frantically inane question. He clamped his mouth shut at your tone, hands yanking on the pockets of his pants. You chose your words carefully.
"Are you sleeping?"
He blinked. "Eh? I'm- what sorta question- Yeah. Course," he blustered, puffing up a bit.
Your chin tilted. "Y'sure?"
Johnny nodded, but you saw the falter in his gaze. The bags were prominent now. Deep purple beneath his dark lashes.
"Why don't you head off to bed," you said quietly. "It's late. You've got early rollout tomorrow." You handed him a manila folder of notes to review and a tired smile. He stood quietly, head heavy with a sorrow you hadn't seen before.
You didn't see him for a while after that. It made you a lot more productive without the nagging or constant whassat? whassat? whassat? aimed at every piece of intel you had spread on your desk. But the armchair looked lonely, and you missed his cheeky teasing.
A knock startled you from your pondering. Eyes flicking to the clock - 1:00 - you frowned, opening the door a sliver.
A mountain of grime and sweat pulled you into a hug, muffling your surprised squawk.
"Johnny?"
He sluggishly dragged you into your office, finally releasing you when the door was shut. You struggled to regain your footing. Head reeling, you scaned him for injury. But...he was in pajamas?
"What..."
"Went...running," he said hoarsely. You nodded slowly, piecing apart the lie. Barefoot, dirty hems. Night terrors, probably, coupled with an unlocked door. It made your heart ache.
"Sit...sit down, Soap," you whispered, coaxing him by the shoulder. A meaty hand clapped over yours and were alarmed by the intensity in his bloodshot eyes. Too crystal to be drunk but too crazed to be...here.
"Sit, Johnny," you said, firmer. He sank shakily, keeping his eyes on yours.
"Nay...nay, nay, I can explain, I jus'...had a question a-about tha last thingie you were...you were..." he trailed off, seeing the pity in your face. "Don' look a' me like that," he muttered.
A moment as your hand shifted down his arm, fingers still laced with his. A gentle motion, petting the gooseflesh rippling over his musculature.
"You wanna hear somethin' funny?"
His eyes shot to yours, pleading. Johnny scooted closer, almost falling into your lap. A reminiscent smile flitted over your face as you continued to stroke him.
"A few recruits, while you were gone, got ahold of one of those mop buckets. Big yellow one. Well," you cleared your throat, muffling a giggle. "Well, one of the pipes burst upstairs, and the whole hallway flooded. So one of them got the great idea to make a slip'n'slide..."
You giggled at your retelling, quietly imitating the characters in your little tale. Johnny had edged closer, head inches from your chest. Not pausing your whispering, you pulled him to you. He draped over you, absolutely massive over your tiny desk chair.
It was unbelievably uncomfortable. Your legs were numb in two seconds.
The story was over, but Soap squeezed your waist the moment you had the thought of moving. "Grabbin' a pencil," you soothed, patting his sweaty head. His heart was pattering slower now, breaths coming easier.
"Can...can ye explain it again?" His forearms tightened a bit, relaxing when you stroked his hair.
You grinned. "Yeah, Johnny. Sure I can."
not as good as i wanted it but it was cute in my head.
pt 2 ish
#john soap mactavish#cod#call of duty#141#drabble#x reader#cute#fluff#soap x reader#call of duty soap
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there are long chunks of great leaps forward by we are the union that feel like one song despite being a number more like three, i think. such a thing i would describe as an interesting variation on the punk format. i’m not sure it works very well. like other than some specific tones of brass intruding every once in a while, there’s not much ska sound in here, leaving just a long series of rock guitar at a high energy, or at a low energy that just makes it feel even more like a drag. maybe i shouldn’t have listened to it all in one sitting. like, i need to give this album credit where credit is due, the brass is a nice inclusion, and there are a very fair number of interesting uses of vox (wish there were vocal harmonies but i can’t always get what i want). these bits just feel drowned out in a large sea of samey, unimpressive guitar and drumming for high vox. if you enjoy that then, by all means, check this out, otherwise man are there better ska-punk albums out there.
#music review#]archived reviews#[originally written 12/8/23]#]archived tags:#of note is that i understood not a lot of the lyrics#the main exception being five out of five kids who kill love slayer which happens to be my favorite song from the album#man did this album ever need more variety in the vox like the interesting bits were just. few & far between#pop punk[#ska punk[
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Welcome!
I'm going to update this list as I post more. So make sure to check periodically!
Anon Office Hours: Wed 12:30pm - Friday 6:30pm. (EST)
I DELETE ASKS THAT DO NOT CAPITALIZE THE IDENTITY OF "BLACK" ☺️
"Your posts are too long"- Teacher's Note
Feedback Rules
FAQs!
Please take the time to review the one relevant to your questions! They are long- some longer than others- but they likely have a link contained within that can better guide your research!
📝Syllabus📝
Lesson 1: "White Man Painted Black"?
Lesson 1.5: "Hair for Thought"- how visualizing affects your writing
Lesson 2: “That One Hairstyle? RETIRE IT!” Black Hair is an Art (pt.1)
Lesson 2.1: Addendum to Hair pt 1
Lesson 2: "It Takes HOW LONG?" Black Hair is an Art (pt.2)
Application! Examples of Protective Hair Coverings
Application! Ice's Lazy Loc Wash Routine
Application! How to: Simplified Braid
Application! Daisy E's Simplified Hair Drawing
Lesson 3: "Defying the Default"- Skin Tones and the Presence of Black Characters
Application! What are Black fans looking for in Commissions?
Lesson 4: "Do Black People Blush?" Bringing brown complexions to life
Application! Humanæ- Resource for Skin Palettes!
Lesson 5: "The Same Place As the Music" Lighting & Color
Lesson 6: "Let's Have A Talk, First" Stereotypes, pt 1
Lesson 6: “Why’s she so rude?” (She’s Not)- Stereotypes, pt 2
Lesson 6: "Is He the Threat (Or Are You?)"- Stereotypes, pt 3
Application! How to Spot a Stereotype: An Example
Lesson 7: "That's the Black one!"- Imagery and "Black-Coded" Characters
Lesson 8: “Across cultures, darker people suffer most. Why?” Multiethnic and Multicultural Blackness
Lesson 9: “Romance Will Not Solve Racism”- Interracial/Biracial/Blended Black and White Relationships and Families
Lesson 10: “The Ambiguously Brown Character™”- The Attachment to Eurocentric Beauty Standards
Lesson 11: “No, That’s Not ‘How Color Works’.” - Whitewashing
Lesson 12: “The bulging eyes and the twisted mouth” - Violence, Violent Imagery & Black Horror
Lesson 13: “It’s Giving” AAVE, and the Denied Yet Undeniable Impact of Black Culture
Lesson 14: “On Human Dignity.” Blackness, Gender & Sexuality
Lesson 15: How To Guide Your Research
#creatingblackcharacters#black art#black characters#character design#black artists#black writers#black culture#black character design
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PAY THE PRICE — smau
after getting evicted out of your old place, you're left with no other choice but to look for a cheaper alternative. which is how you end up becoming neighbours with lee haechan, who has a passion for music and disturbing whatever peace and quiet there is.
or in which you found yourself a very nice apartment, the only issue? your neighbour is your friend's somewhat ex-situationship who won't stop playing his guitar at 2 am in the night.
neighbour!haechan x fem!reader
genre ; enemies to lovers, angst, fluff, probably slow burn, humour, neighbours au.
extras ; haechan is kinda an asshole | boy next door + likes everyone but you trope-ish | profanity and death jokes because they’re silly! | probably romantic tension | some mark x reader here and there | renjun and jaemin having their own e2bffs moment | probably inaccurate depiction of how someone would get evicted pls don’t shoot me 😅
notes ; i love haechan i love haechan i love haechan i love haechan i love haechan i love haechan i love haechan i love haechan <333 idk i got nothing better to do now so i’ll just start this because i know i won’t be posting any of the other long fic wips any time soon 😭
PLAYLIST ; She , Tyler The Creator — For The Night , Chloe Bailey — IDK WHAT TO TELL YOU , Bktherula — Surprise , Chloe Bailey — I Wanna Be down , Brandy — Suite Life , FLO — Is It A Crime? , No Guidnce — Round&Round , NCT U .
STATUS ; completed! (18.02.25)
profiles (1) profiles (2)
intro
1 ) jaehyun’s trophy wife
2 ) free cookies (not really)
3 ) midnight disturbance
4 ) attempted murder?
5 ) THIS IS FAMILY
6 ) haechan’s second identity
7 ) kiss buddies and useless complaints
8 ) critically acclaimed idgaf veteran
9 ) founders keepers..?
10 ) yangyang’s new interest (y/n)
11 ) a late welcome party
12 ) invest in a cage jaemin
13 ) cat fight (REAL)
14 ) the cure to a lack of sleep = cup pong
15 ) who said quiet guys can’t be freaky?
16 ) you got a girlfriend?
17 ) i DO have a girlfriend
18 ) this is life, i love life..
19 ) nah. they fucking.
20 ) let’s play apex?
21 ) whole house mad
22 ) drunken regrets
23 ) he’s got to be fucking with me..
24 ) a sincere apology letter (kinda)
25 ) are we cool or not?
26 ) we’re good (for real)
27 ) a personal guitar lesson
28 ) LIVE TWEETING YNHAE MOMENTS
29 ) a moment of vulnerability
30 ) friendly q&a between friends
31 ) that’s strange.. that’s weird..
32 ) solution to job loss = family guy (???)
33 ) what has jaehyun done for society?
34 ) ynhae bonding activity hours
35 ) an unwanted double date with yangyang
36 ) an overwhelming realisation
37 ) the universe can kill itself
38 ) a “what are we” conversation
39 ) i got that hair too, kinda
40 ) reviewing haechan’s tweet and new issues
41 ) diagnosed with the crush disease
42 ) putting your satisfaction first
43 ) some girl talk with mark.. this diva..
44 ) girls day gone WRONG
45 ) homies before hoemies
46 ) #BringBackGenderNorms2024
47 ) no one but us
48 ) the words of the DEVIL
49 ) remove the fake from life
50 ) y/n and jaemin would’ve loved this
51 ) you’re a queen and he’s just.. there
52 ) we are sooooo fixing this
53 ) spiritual connection attempts
54 ) satanic mind manipulation
55 ) cucklord
56 ) when you kinda gaf
57 ) when you been thuggin it out for so long
58 ) a second try
59 ) be careful who you call OOMF
60 ) the paid price
BONUS:
TBA . . .
TAGLIST is closed
#haechan smau#nct smau#nct dream smau#nct 127 smau#haechan imagines#nct imagines#nct 127 imagines#nct dream imagines#haechan x reader#nct x reader#nct 127 x reader#nct dream x reader#haechan texts#nct texts#nct dream texts#haechan fluff#nct fluff#nct 127 fluff#nct dream fluff#nct dream social media au#haechan social media au#nct social media au#haechan scenarios#nct scenarios#nct 127 scenarios#nct dream scenarios#haechan x you#nct x you#nct dream x you
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Notebook Samsung Book np550xda kh2br é BOM? Vale a Pena Comprá-lo? Review
https://tecparatodos.com/samsung-book-np550xda-kh2br/
#note book samsung i5#samsung book i5#notebook samsung book intel core i5 8gb 256gb ssd#np550xda kh2br#notebook samsung i5 8gb ssd 256gb#samsung book np550xda kf2br#notebook samsung 8 gb#samsung core i5#notebook samsung book i5#samsung i5 8gb 256gb ssd#samsung book np550xda kh2br#samsung book i5 11 geração#samsung book i5 8gb ssd#samsung book np550xda kh2br é bom#samsung book np550xda kh2br vale a pena#review samsung book np550xda kh2br#samsung book np550xda kf2br é bom#samsung book np550xda kf2br vale a pena#review samsung book np550xda kf2br
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becoming a better student ₊˚⊹♡


Prepare for your classes ˚୨୧⋆。˚ ⋆
Wake up on time. We don't want to be stressed first thing in the morning, right?
Eat breakfast. So you will be able to better focus in class.
Assigned reading and homework. Make sure you are prepared for your classes!! :)
Review your notes. Going through some of your flashcards before class is really helpful.
Check your bag and charge your devices. Ensure you have everything you need: Books, homework, chargers, pens, water...


In Class ˚୨୧⋆。˚ ⋆
Listen and pay attention. You can save yourself a lot of trouble by simply paying attention, trust me.
Take notes. My favourite note-taking method is the Cornell method; I can make a separate post on that!! <3
"Quick notes." If you struggle with note-taking, try taking quick and messy notes. You can clean them up once you get home!!
Engage. If you have any questions or don't understand something, make sure to ask!! Most teachers really appreciate students who speak up. :)
No distractions. Turn off your phone, no chatting, you'll be glad...


After class ˚୨୧⋆。˚ ⋆
Finish your assignments as soon as you can. Go home, put on a cosy outfit, have a snack, and get working!! <3
Prepare flash cards. A great way of reviewing your notes, too... :)
Update your Study schedule. Write down any assignment and due dates, reading you must do, upcoming tests, etc...
Clean up your notes. Review them, highlight the important parts, and maybe even make them look cute!! :)
Don't avoid topics/Subjects you dislike. I know it is tempting, but you can't avoid them forever, so you might as well get them done


Structure and routine ˚୨୧⋆。˚ ⋆
Goals and Priorities. Keep them realistic and manageable.
Time management. Having a set schedule makes studying less overwhelming; it takes some discipline but is so worth it!! <3
Develop a routine. Figure out what works best for you; I prefer studying in the morning or at night.
No "zero days". Even if you can only do a bit, do it!! NO. ZERO. DAYS.
Remember your goals. Dreams will keep you motivated; remind yourself of what you're working for!! <3


Self-care and balance ˚୨୧⋆。˚ ⋆
Don't forget about your hobbies. You need to do things that make you happy, so make time for those things!!
Maintain a balanced diet. I know chocolates and junk are tempting, especially when you are busy studying all day, but you're not doing yourself any favours.
Sleep. Sleep. Sleep. 8 Hours. Non-negotiable.
Exercise regularly. Even if it's just a walk, put on some headphones, listen to music, and give yourself a break. <3
Care for your social life. Reach out to your friends, make plans, and keep in touch; a good work-life balance is critical!!


Romanticising ˚୨୧⋆。˚ ⋆
Study dates. Meet up with your friends at a cosy cafe, discuss your work, and have some fun!! Studying doesn't have to be all serious all the time ;)
Silly Pinterest boards. Visualising your goals will help you find motivation!!
Music to set the mood. I have a bunch of playlists on my Spotify that might help!! <3
Cosy sweater and candles. The cosy Rory Gilmore vibes haha...
Getting a coffee before class. A little treat before things get serious... Simple pleasures, you know? :)
Babes, The hiatus is OVER, and I'm finally back!! I got a lot of asks on studying, burnout, and school in general, so I thought, why not start off with a little student guide?? I Hope October has been kind to you, and school hasn't been too overwhelming (though I know it, unfortunately, has been for many of you), and I'm glad to finally be back!! <33
As always, Please feel free to add your own suggestions and tips in the comments!!
✩‧₊*:・love ya ・:*₊‧✩
#malusokay#girl blogger#it girl#pink blog#dream girl#that girl#coquette#aesthetic#pink pilates princess#pinterest#just girly things#girlblogging#study blog#studyblr#study aesthetic#studyspo#rory gilmore#elle woods#study motivation#student life#study notes#aesthetic notes#light academia#soft academia#coquettecore#manifestation#loa blog#self improvement#spotify#dark academia
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𝙶𝚛𝚎𝚊𝚜𝚎𝚍-𝚂𝚝𝚊𝚒𝚗𝚎𝚍 𝙿𝚛𝚘𝚖𝚒𝚜𝚎𝚜 | 𝙻𝙽𝟺
𝗽𝗮𝗶𝗿𝗶𝗻𝗴: lando norris x fem!reader
𝘀𝘂𝗺𝗺𝗮𝗿𝘆: the one where she's the only mechanic who truly understands his car, and he's the only driver who truly sees her
𝗺𝘂𝘀𝗶𝗰: formula - labrinth
𝘄𝗮𝗿𝗻𝗶𝗻𝗴𝘀: none!

.・。.・゜✭・.・✫・゜・。. .・。.・゜✭・.・✫・゜・
The McLaren pit was a flurry of motion, a carefully choreographed chaos of engineers, mechanics, and pit crew members working in perfect harmony. The air reeked of oil and rubber, the sound of impact wrenches and radio traffic blending into the background cacophony that had long ago faded into background noise for you.
But in the noise, in the dozens of people who collaborated to make McLaren's car able to fight at the front, your attention was always on one person.
Lando Norris.
Not because he was the star driver. Not because his face was plastered on billboards or millions of supporters chanted his name every race weekend.
But because he was yours. Though neither of you ever said it out loud.
You'd been with McLaren's team for three years, rising from junior mechanic to become one of the lead engineers on Lando's vehicle. You knew that car inside and out like the back of your hand—every shudder, every subtle imbalance in the suspension, every adjustment that would make it hum through the corners just the way he liked it.
And Lando knew that too.
That's why, when something did not feel right, he relied on you to fix it.
.・。.・゜✭・.・✫・゜・。. .・。.・゜✭・.・✫・゜・
Thursday – Media Day
The weekend was yet to start, but the paddock was already buzzing. Fans swirled around the entrance, cameras snapped as drivers came in, and reporters filled the media pen, waiting to get their soundbites.
You were concealed in the garage, reviewing the setup notes, your hands already smudged with grease despite the fact that it was early in the day.
You felt his presence before you saw him.
Lando had always possessed this energy—a presence that filled a room even when he had nothing to say. He strode into the garage in his McLaren polo, sunglasses perched on his head, and an effortless smirk on his lips.
"Look busy," he teased, resting against the workbench beside you.
"Unlike some people, I actually do work," you shot back, not looking up as you double-checked the tire pressures.
He clutched his chest in feigned indignation. "Excuse me, I do work extremely hard."
You finally looked at him, an eyebrow lifted. "Oh yeah? Sitting through media commitments and signing posters is exhausting, huh?"
"It's brutal," he theatrically sighed. "You wouldn't understand."
You rolled your eyes, but a little smile was playing on your lips. This was how it always was with Lando—teasing, banter, effortless back-and-forths that had started the moment you'd met.
But something was off today.
You noticed it in the way he lingered a moment longer. The way his fingers drummed against the table, a restless energy building in him.
"You good?" you asked, head tilting.
He hesitated.
It was only for a moment, but you caught it.
And then, in a flash, the smirk was back. "Always."
You didn't believe he meant it. But you let it go—for the moment.
.・。.・゜✭・.・✫・゜・。. .・。.・゜✭・.・✫・゜・
Friday – Free Practice
Something was off with the car.
You knew it before Lando even said anything over the radio.
You watched the telemetry, how the speed traces weren't lining up properly, how he was losing time in the high-speed corners. Then his voice crackled over the comms.
"Yeah, something doesn't feel right. Rear's not stable through Turns 8 and 10."
You exchanged a glance with another of the engineers as you grabbed your tablet and walked towards the garage door. You were waiting there by the time Lando pulled in and climbed out of the car.
He ripped off his helmet, running a hand through his sweaty curls, and scanned the room looking for you immediately.
"Talk to me," you called out over the noise of the garage.
"Feels like the rear's stepping out more than usual. Can't get the rotation I need."
You nodded, already running through possible causes in your head. "Okay, let's check the suspension setup. Could be a balance issue."
Lando didn't argue. He never did with you.
Because he knew you'd get it right.
.・。.・゜✭・.・✫・゜・。. .・。.・゜✭・.・✫・゜・
Saturday – Qualifying
Tension was palpable in the air.
This was what it had all been building toward. The entire garage was locked in, eyes fixed on the timing screens, heart rates rising with each lap.
Lando was on fire.
You were on the pit wall, headset on, fists gripped on your tablet as he stitched the track together immaculately. His sector times were improving. If he could keep this up, he'd be in the fight for pole.
Then—
"!"
His voice came over the radio as the car nipped at the exit of Turn 14.
Your heart missed a beat.
The McLaren wobbled, taking the slide, but it had lost him time. He crossed the line—P4.
Good, but not good enough.
You ripped off your headset, exhaling sharply. He could've been on the front row. That mistake had cost him.
As he climbed out of the car, his jaw was tight, annoyance clear in the way he tore off his gloves. But as soon as his eyes locked with yours, some of that tension eased.
You didn't say anything immediately. You just kept looking at him, unspoken comprehension between you.
Then, finally—
"We'll get them tomorrow," you whispered.
His shoulders relaxed. He nodded. "Yeah. We will."
.・。.・゜✭・.・✫・゜・。. .・。.・゜✭・.・✫・゜・
Sunday – Race Day
The Monaco Grand Prix was ruthless.
Year after year, it was chaos. Crashes, strategy gambles, pit stop drama—it was never an easy race.
And today was no different.
You were on the pit wall, gripping the rail as Lando fought lap after lap, hanging onto P3 for dear life. His tires were going. The Ferrari behind him was closing in. Your heart was in your mouth each time he came through the tunnel.
Five laps to go.
Three.
Final lap.
He took the line—P3. Podium.
The garage erupted. Cheers, hugs, high-fives. But you barely heard any of them since you were already heading towards parc fermé.
By the time Lando emerged from the car, champagne still dripping from his suit, his eyes were only looking for one person.
You.
And once he saw you, he didn't waste any time.
Helmet off, curls wet with sweat, race suit undone at the top—he didn't care about the cameras, the thousands of people watching. He just walked right up to you and pulled you into his arms.
It was quick, barely a second, but the way he held on to you—his forehead against yours, his breathing rough with adrenaline—you knew.
"Thank you," he whispered, voice rough.
"For what?" you whispered in return.
He pulled back slightly, only enough to be able to look at you properly. His hand was still at your waist, fingers drawing along the fabric of your team uniform.
"For believing in me," he said simply.
Your heart missed a beat.
And in a moment, it did not matter that you were before the world. That the cameras were capturing this moment. That there were rules governing how close a driver and a mechanic could be.
Because this?
This was yours.
And nothing—not even Formula 1—could ever take that away.
.・。.・゜✭・.・✫・゜・。. .・。.・゜✭・.・✫・゜・
masterlist
#f1 imagine#lando norris#lando norris fanfic#lando norris fluff#lando norris imagine#lando norris x reader#f1 fanfic#f1 x reader#formula 1#formula one#mclaren#mclaren f1#ln4#lando norris x you#f1 x you#ln4 imagine#ln4 x reader#ln4 fic#ln4 mcl#lando norris fic#wroetolando
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Tips for building immersive plots
1. Start with your core idea
• Every plot begins with a spark—a question, a concept, or a character. Build from that seed.
• How? Ask, "What excites me about this story?" and focus your energy there.
• Example: A story about a magical curse could explore themes of redemption or betrayal.
2. Brainstorm freely
• Don’t start by thinking about structure. Instead, write down every idea you have—plot points, character traits, world details—without judgment.
• How? Use mind maps, lists, or “what if” questions to expand your ideas.
• Example: “What if two rival kingdoms were forced to unite to stop a shared enemy?”
3. Map out key events
• Divide your plot into beginning, middle, and end, and identify major turning points. These events should shape the character’s journey.
• How? Use the three-act structure, or simply think in terms of setup, confrontation, and resolution.
• Example:
Beginning: A thief steals a sacred artifact.
Middle: The artifact begins to curse them, forcing them to seek help.
End: They must choose between keeping the artifact’s power or destroying it.
4. Plan with cause and effect
• Immersive plots follow logical progression. Ask yourself: “What happens because of this event?” for every key moment.
• How? Make sure each event impacts the characters or world.
• Example: A hero saves a village → the village leader reveals a secret about the hero’s past → this drives the hero to confront their estranged parent.
5. Flesh out your subplots
• Subplots add depth and make your world feel real. Tie them to the main plot for maximum impact.
• How? Use subplots to explore secondary characters, add emotional stakes, or introduce twists.
• Example: While on a mission to defeat a villain, the hero struggles to repair their broken friendship with their ally.
6. use story beats to stay organized
• Break your story into smaller moments: inciting incident, midpoint twist, climax, resolution.
• How? Write one sentence for each beat to outline the flow of your story.
• Example:
Inciting incident: A cursed item bonds to the protagonist.
Midpoint: They discover the curse is tied to a powerful enemy.
Climax: They must sacrifice their freedom to destroy the curse.
7. Think of immersive twists
• Twists keep readers engaged and make your story unforgettable. They should feel earned, not random.
• How? Ask, "What would surprise the reader but make sense in hindsight?"
• Example: The mentor helping the hero turns out to have caused the conflict in the first place.
8. Build emotional stakes
• Plot isn’t just about events—it’s about how those events affect your characters. The stakes should feel deeply personal.
• How? Tie the plot to your protagonist’s fears, desires, and growth.
• Example: A hero who’s afraid of failure is forced to lead a mission where the cost of failure is catastrophic.
9. Create a planning routine
• Writing immersive plots takes time and refinement. Set aside regular sessions to brainstorm, refine, and test your ideas.
• How? Use tools like storyboarding, sticky notes, or apps like Scrivener to organize your ideas.
• Example: Start each session by reviewing your previous notes, then tackle one section of your plot.
10. Test your plot
• Once you’ve mapped out your story, summarize it to see if it holds together. Does each event flow logically? Are the stakes clear?
• How? Share your outline with a friend or writer’s group for feedback.
• Example: “A reluctant hero must destroy a magical artifact to save their world, but doing so will cost them their memories.”
Follow for more!
#writeblr#writer stuff#writers on tumblr#writerscommunity#writing#novel writing#tips#writing tips#creative writing#writers and poets
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Radio Silence | Chapter Thirty-Seven
Lando Norris x Amelia Brown (OFC)
Series Masterlist
Summary — Order is everything. Her habits aren’t quirks, they’re survival techniques. And only three people in the world have permission to touch her: Mom, Dad, Fernando.
Then Lando Norris happens.
One moment. One line crossed. No going back.
Warnings — Autistic!OFC, McLaren almost making a generational fumble, pregnancy, strong language, implied sexism in motorsport
Notes — Missed you all so much! Enjoy this longggg chap <3
From: Susie Wolff <[email protected]>
To: Amelia Norris <[email protected]>
Date: January 2, 2024 – 09:17 AM
Attachments: F1A_AdvisoryBoardOverview.pdf
Amelia,
I’ll get straight to it, as I know you don’t love preamble.
I think now is the time to formally invite you to join F1 Academy as a technical advisor and consulting board member, effective from the start of the 2025 season. Your experience, both practical and personal, is precisely what this program needs.
This role would involve quarterly strategic reviews, input on technical education frameworks, mentoring touch-points, and representation at select events — all designed to build a tangible technical pipeline.
I, of course, understand that this role would have to work-around your prior F1 commitments.
Let me know your thoughts. If you’d like to speak in person.
Warmly, Susie
From: Amelia Norris <[email protected]>
To: Susie Wolff <[email protected]>
Date: January 2, 2024 – 12:04 PM
Hi Susie,
First: thank you.
Second: I’ve read the overview twice already (I annotated the PDF, sorry in advance). It’s smart. Practical. Grounded. That’s rare in programs like this. You’re doing it right.
Third: Yes, I’m in. Fully.
I’ll carve out the time. If we’re serious about keeping girls in the sport, and I am, then this is the most productive way I can help. I’d also like to propose a technical “shadow program” for the engineering side — similar to what the Driver Academy does. We can talk more about it when you have time.
Appreciate the offer. And the trust.
Best, Amelia
From: Susie Wolff <[email protected]>
To: Amelia Norris <[email protected]>
Date: January 2, 2024 – 1:30 PM
Amelia,
That’s the best “yes” I’ve received in months. And I’ll happily take annotated PDFs if they come with your brain attached.
Let’s lock in a short meeting before we fly out next month. I’d love to dig into the shadow program idea — it’s aligned with something I’ve been building out with the FIA technical department. Timing might be perfect.
(Also, your idea about reinforcing retention through non-driver career tracks? Spot on. We’ll need that thinking on the board.)
Thrilled to have you with us.
Susie
From: Amelia Norris <[email protected]>
To: Susie Wolff <[email protected]>
Date: January 2, 2024 – 2:18 PM
Let’s do Thursday morning — Monaco? I’ll bring revised notes and a framework draft for the shadow pipeline.
A.
From: Susie Wolff <[email protected]>
To: Amelia Norris <[email protected]>
Date: January 2, 2024 – 3:04 PM
Thursday it is. I’ll send you the address of a lovely little restaurant on the harbour.
Looking forward to what we’ll build together. The sport’s lucky to have you.
Warmly, Susie
—
It was 8:12 a.m. and the kitchen smelled like toast, fresh coffee, and the faintest lingering whiff of washing up liquid — and Amelia's nausea was only made even worse when Lando toasted the wrong kind of bread.
“Why is there no oat milk?” Amelia said flatly, standing in front of the open fridge and glaring into it.
Lando, half-asleep and shirtless in his McLaren joggers, yawned into his coffee. “What do you mean ‘why is there no oat milk’? You finished it yesterday.”
She didn’t turn around. “No, I finished the backup oat milk yesterday. The good one ran out two days ago. You said you were going to pick some up.”
“I did! They didn’t have your usual so I just got almond instead.”
Amelia shut the fridge and pivoted slowly, expression blank. “That’s not the same.”
Lando blinked. “It’s... kind of the same.”
“I can’t froth almond milk, Lando.” She told him.
“You can’t even drink coffee right now, baby.” He tried.
She stared at him. “Every morning, I drink a decaf latte with oat milk, and you know that, but you’re trying to act stupid so I can’t be mad at you.”
Lando set his mug down very slowly. “Okay. Okay. Let’s breathe through this.”
Amelia pointed at him. “You’re lucky I’m too tired to start throwing things at you.”
“I feel very lucky,” he said, smiling despite himself as he crossed the kitchen and kissed her on the cheek. “I’ll go get your silly oat milk after breakfast.”
“My oat milk is not silly. It is gentle and stable and doesn’t split under pressure. Unlike some things.”
“Oh wow,” he muttered, grabbing the butter. “We’re speaking in metaphors now, are we?”
She sat at the table, still glaring at his toast. “You bought the one with sesame seeds. You know I can’t do the texture right now.”
Lando stared at her. “You didn’t tell me that.”
“I didn’t think I had to! You should just know! You’ve watched me do complex simulations while dry-heaving at the smell of overripe bananas. Sesame seeds are in the same category.”
Lando looked down at his toast, then back up at her. “Okay. So we’re adding a sesame embargo. Got it.”
She let out a sharp sigh, then scrubbed her hands down her face. “I’m sorry. I’m not mad at you. I’m just—”
“Gestating a human?”
She nodded. “It’s so much. Like. All the time.”
Lando softened immediately. He took his plate, dumped his toast in the bin, and set a banana-free, sesame-free bowl of oatmeal in front of her. “Here,” he said. “Neutral foods only. Plain and safe. Like... Switzerland.”
She blinked at the bowl. “This has potential.” She poked the spoon. “You made this with the almond milk?”
“No. Water.” He said. She sighed with relief. He smiled, leaned down, and kissed her forehead. “You have my word that I will never again confuse almond milk with oat milk ever again.”
Amelia muttered into her oatmeal. “You’ve lost food shopping rights.”
He grinned. “I’ll earn them back. Watch me.”
She ate in silence for a minute, then reached for his hand under the table, fingers curling around his.
He squeezed gently. “Better?”
“I still want my oat milk latte.”
“I’ll run down to the shop and get your oat milk.”
“And a bottle of caramel syrup.”
“Of course, baby.”
—
The café on Rue Grimaldi was just beginning to hum with the late-morning crowd when Lando ducked in, hoodie pulled up and sunglasses still on, despite being indoors. He made a beeline for the counter — three cartons of oat milk secured in a small paper bag under one arm, coffee on his mind — only to stop short when someone clapped a hand on his shoulder.
“Hey, mate,” came the familiar voice, warm and unmistakably Monegasque.
Lando turned to find Charles, dressed casually in a t-shirt and sunglasses pushed up into his hair, holding a takeaway espresso and looking smug about catching him off-guard.
“Shit. Sorry. Hey,” Lando grinned, adjusting the paper bag before offering a quick one-armed hug. “Didn’t know you came here.”
“You know that I live only three buildings away,” Charles said, amused. “You’re out early for once.”
“Amelia sent me to get oat milk,” Lando told him. “Life-or-death situation. I’m on a mission.”
Charles laughed, gesturing to the barista for another coffee. “How is she?”
“She’s good,” Lando said, instantly softening. He leaned against the counter and rubbed the back of his neck, eyes going distant for a moment. “Actually... she’s kind of amazing.”
Charles raised a brow, sipping his espresso.
“I mean, I always knew she was brilliant, but now with the pregnancy, she’s like... this whole new version of herself. Still very Amelia. Like, intense and sarcastic and kind of terrifying. But also just... soft sometimes. Like, in ways I’ve never seen. And she lets me see it.”
Charles’s face melted into a smile. “You’re in love.”
Lando snorted. “Well yeah. We’re married, remember?”
“But this is different. You sound like... you’re seeing her again for the first time.”
Lando paused. “Yeah. I think I am.” There was a beat of quiet between them as the barista handed over his coffee. He took it with a small nod of thanks, then glanced at Charles. “Think I’ve managed to fall in love with her all over again, you know?”
Charles blinked, visibly touched. “Mate.”
“I know,” he said, grinning awkwardly and taking a sip of his drink. “I’m being all sentimental and shit. Don’t tell Carlos, he wouldn’t let me live it down.”
Charles laughed. “I won’t. But Amelia might appreciate hearing it.”
“She knows,” Lando said quietly, then added, “But yeah. I think it’s good to keep reminding her.”
They stepped outside together, the warm Monaco sun washing over them.
“You’ll be a good dad,” Charles said eventually, nudging his shoulder.
Lando scoffed. “God, I hope so.”
“You will,” Charles repeated with certainty. “I’m sure of it, brother.”
They parted ways at the corner; Charles off to his sim session, Lando heading home, oat milk secure. And for the rest of the day, his smile didn’t quite leave his face.
—
The sun was low, bleeding orange across the horizon and painting long shadows down the winding streets of Monaco. The forest-green supercar purred beneath them like a living thing, gliding effortlessly through the city’s golden-hour glow. The streets shimmered with reflected light, windows catching fire as they passed, the sea winking silver to their right.
Lando’s hands rested easy on the wheel — one perched casually at ten o’clock, the other drifting occasionally over to Amelia’s thigh. The car, already easily recognisable in a city full of fast cars, was still impossible to ignore when he was driving it. Monaco might be saturated with wealth and speed, but Lando Norris in a sleek green supercar turned heads.
Especially when he was wearing that hoodie.
The white Playboy logo, stretched across the back of a black hoodie, had become something of an internet legend. Worn in interviews, airport photos, Twitch streams — it was a piece of lore now. And tonight, with the hood pulled halfway up and his curls just visible underneath, he looked more like a teenager sneaking out after curfew than a world-class F1 driver. But it didn’t matter.
Everyone still knew exactly who he was.
Amelia sat in the passenger seat, the window cracked open slightly, letting the wind tug loose strands of her hair. Her head rested against the seat-back, eyes closed, soaking in the smooth hum of the engine and the scent of salt in the air. After a day full of logistics and troubleshooting — packing, chasing suppliers, managing Oscar’s sim data issue, redoing schedules for Bahrain testing — this was the first moment she’d had to simply breathe.
“This is nice,” she said softly, voice barely carrying above the low purr of the car.
Lando glanced at her and smiled. “Told you it would help. You needed to de-stress.”
“And you needed to stop pacing around the apartment like a caged animal.”
“Fair,” he said with a shrug. “But I pace elegantly, don’t I?”
She cracked one eye open, amused. “You pace like a man trying to calculate the optimal lap around the kitchen island.”
They wound up the coast slowly, not in any rush, Lando deliberately choosing the scenic roads, detouring through the quieter corners of the city. Monaco rolled out around them like a movie set — warm light, quiet glamour, the soft hush of money that didn’t need to announce itself. But eventually, as the streetlights began to flicker on and the sea turned indigo, he turned off toward the familiar façade of the Casino de Monte-Carlo, its gold-lit entrance grand and welcoming.
Amelia blinked as he pulled up to the valet. “We’re eating here?”
“Yeah,” Lando said easily, already unbuckling. “Come on.”
Before she could protest, he was out of the car and jogging around the front, hood still up. She rolled her eyes, but her lips tugged into a smile.
“You’re ridiculous.”
“I’m a good husband,” he corrected, pulling open the door.
Phones were already up. Across the street, a handful of passersby had clocked him immediately, cameras out, the sound of whispers and low murmurs rising like static.
She stepped out into the warm evening air, and he offered his hand — palm up, open, steady.
She took it. “You know this is going to be everywhere tomorrow.”
He shrugged, brushing a curl off her forehead. “Let them look.”
And they did.
By midnight, the photos had already gone viral.
One showed Lando — hoodie on, one hand tucked into his pocket, the other casually holding open the car door with a soft grin. Another showed Amelia stepping out of the passenger seat, hand lightly resting on her stomach in a way she hadn’t even noticed at the time. Her dress fluttered slightly around her legs in the breeze, and her smile was half-laugh, turned back toward Lando like he’d just said something that made her forget that the rest of the world existed.
The captions rolled in fast.
“lando norris taking his wife out for a quiet dinner before sakhir testing”
“is she touching her stomach???? IS SHE PREGNANT?????????”
“that bump is bumping i fear…”
“i swear if they announce they’re having a baby i’m throwing myself in the sea”
“seeing the hoodie again has awakened something in me…”
“her HAND is on her STOMACH and he’s wearing the PLAYBOY hoodie i’m going to PASS OUT”
Inside, the Casino’s main dining room was quiet and dignified — white linen tablecloths, the hum of polite conversation, low light glittering off the crystal chandeliers. They were led to a booth near the back — a soft, curved corner table with views of the harbour, tucked just far enough away from the main room to feel like a secret.
It was their table.
Amelia leaned across the polished surface and tilted her phone toward him. “I’m being tagged in a million things.”
He squinted at the screen. “That’s a lot of caps lock.”
She scrolled. “Someone says that if I have a baby I should name it after Daniel Ricciardo.”
He smirked, sipping from his water. “Hilarious idea.”
“They’re very invested.”
“They like you.”
“They like you. I’m a side character.”
“You’re my favourite character,” he said easily, and something in her eyes softened.
Bread and olive oil arrived, without needing to be ordered, and Amelia absently dipped a piece, still half-scrolling.
She looked up again, a small crease between her brows. “Do you think I make it obvious that I’m pregnant?”
Lando shrugged. “Maybe. You look happy.”
She frowned. “I wasn’t expecting people to notice this fast.”
He reached over and gently wiped a smear of oil from her mouth with his thumb. “You’ve got a glow. And It’s not your fault people are obsessed with you.”
“I think it might be your fault, actually.”
He smiled again, soft and private. “Yeah. Maybe.”
Their food arrived. Lemony pasta for her, grilled steak salad for him. She picked at her plate for a while, quiet. Then, finally, she set her fork down and said, “It’s going to be different soon, isn’t it?”
He looked up. “What is?”
“This. Life. Dinners. Feeling like we still get to be just… us.”
Lando didn’t rush to answer. He leaned back a little, watching her — her face, her hands, the quiet vulnerability creeping in at the edges. “Maybe,” he said eventually. “But different doesn’t have to be bad.”
She nodded slowly. Bit her lip. “You’re going to get such an ego when the fangirls start calling you a DILF.”
He grinned. “Won’t be a lie.”
“Oh, please.”
“I’m just saying." He said. She rolled her eyes at him and he huffed out a laugh. "If our kid has your attitude, I’m going to need divine patience.”
She stopped mid-bite. Blinked. “Oh.”
Lando tilted his head. “What?”
“What if…” she hesitated. “What if they are like me?”
He sat forward, instantly alert. “Baby—”
“I mean it,” she said, voice cracking just slightly. “What if they’re too smart, or too intense, or too weird, and they don’t fit in anywhere? What if they’re… different, and it’s hard, and people expect them to be like you, but they’re not?”
Lando reached for her hand. Held it steady. “Then they’ll be lucky.”
She looked at him, startled.
“I mean it,” he said, voice soft. “If they’re like you, they’ll be brilliant. Strong. Honest. The world doesn’t make it easy on people like that, but you’ll show them how to do it anyway.”
Her mouth trembled.
He leaned in. “I didn’t fall in love with you despite those things, Amelia. I fell in love with you because of them.”
A tear slipped down her cheek. She wiped it away quickly, muttering, “Now I’m crying into my pasta.”
“Adds flavour,” Lando said.
“You’re the worst.”
“I love you.”
She smiled through it, eyes still glassy. “You’re going to be a really good dad.”
He tilted his head. “Yeah?”
“Not strict,” she said, teasing. “But good.”
Lando grinned. “I can’t even tell you no. How am I supposed to say it to a miniature you?”
She laughed, soft and real, and somewhere between the candlelight and the quiet clatter of cutlery, everything settled.
It was different now — but maybe, just maybe, it was... better.
—
The apartment was quiet when they got back. Amelia slipped off her shoes in the hallway, sighed, and leaned briefly against the wall as Lando locked up behind them.
She trailed behind him, fingers tracing the edge of the marble countertop in the kitchen. Her body was tired, heavy in a way it hadn’t been before pregnancy; like her muscles were constantly working overtime to keep up with the quiet, miraculous thing happening beneath her skin.
She stood at the sink, sipping a glass of water slowly, letting the silence settle.
Lando reappeared a few moments later with the familiar glass bottle in his hand. It was half-used now — the bump oil she’d started applying a week ago. Some natural blend that smelled faintly of neroli and sweet almond, promising hydration and elasticity and comfort.
But more than that, it had become a ritual. A pause. A grounding point at the end of the day when everything else felt like it was moving too fast.
He held it up. “You want the honours, or shall I?”
Amelia stared at him. “Your hands are warmer.”
Lando grinned. “You just like being pampered.”
“Who doesn’t?”
They migrated to the bedroom, the soft white light of the bedside lamps casting everything in a low, golden haze. She pulled her dress off and tossed it gently over the chair, leaving her in a bralette and cotton shorts. The curve of her stomach was still so subtle — just a hint of bloating that she never usually suffered with, a visible whisper of the life growing inside her.
She lay back against the pillows, propped slightly up, and Lando sat cross-legged beside her, the bottle uncapped, hands already slick with oil.
He started slow, careful, hands gentle as he spread the oil over her skin, fingers smoothing in slow, deliberate circles. He was quiet while he worked, but it wasn’t a heavy silence. It was reverent. Focused. Loving.
“You’re getting good at this,” she murmured, eyes slipping closed.
“I practice on watermelons when you’re not home.”
She huffed a soft laugh.
His thumbs moved lower. “I’m absolutely obsessed with you.” He mumbled against the skin of her hip.
“I know.” Her voice was sleepy now. She reached out, hand brushing against his cheek.
He leaned into her touch, then pressed a kiss low against her stomach, just beneath his hands. “Hi, baby-bunch-of-cells,” he whispered, lips brushing warm against her skin. Her lips twitched. “You’ve got the coolest mum in the world, you know that?”
Amelia blinked hard. “Stop making me cry,” she muttered, voice cracking.
“I’m not doing anything,” he said, smug and soft.
She smacked his arm lightly, and he caught her hand, twined their fingers together, and settled down beside her, cheek resting gently against the swell of her belly.
They lay there like that for a while — the room quiet, the scent of the oil soft in the air, his palm warm and open against her skin.
Eventually, Amelia got up to change into a sleep-shirt, all bleary eyed as she wandered back into Lando’s waiting arms.
“You okay?” Lando murmured into her hair, thumb brushing over the bare skin of her hip where her sleep shirt had ridden up as she wriggled her way under the covers.
“Mmhm,” she hummed. “Just tired.”
He didn’t answer right away, just let the silence stretch, the rhythm of their breaths syncing. Her hand was pressed to her belly again — not dramatically, not even consciously. It was just where it always landed now.
And Lando noticed.
“Tell me more,” he said quietly.
She lifted her head. “More?”
“About what you’ve learned. About... all of it.” He tilted his chin toward her stomach. “I know you’ve been reading non-stop. I want to know.”
She blinked, a little surprised. “Really?”
“Yeah. All of it.”
Amelia yawned, then launched in; quieter now, but no less enthusiastic. “Okay, so the placenta doesn’t fully take over hormone production until about ten weeks, which means all the weird mood swings and the nausea and the exhaustion are mostly just the hCG hormone hijacking my system.”
“That’s the one doubling every couple of days?”
“Exactly. I read this one article that called it ‘a hormonal rollercoaster without a seatbelt,’ and it’s one of the only metaphors that I’ve every genuinely understood.”
Lando chuckled softly, fingers drawing slow, idle shapes along her back.
“And apparently,” she continued, “the nausea’s not about throwing up. It’s like this constant, cloying, edge-of-sick feeling that never fully goes away unless I’m horizontal, full of carbs, or momentarily distracted by you being sweet.”
He kissed her temple. “I’ll do my best to be a cure.”
“You’re good at it.”
They lay there quietly for a beat.
“I can’t eat sushi,” she said suddenly. “Or swordfish. Or soft cheese. Or deli-meats. Or sprouts.”
“Brussels sprouts?”
“Alfalfa sprouts.”
“Oh. Honestly that feels like a win.”
“I also can’t take long hot baths or sit in saunas. No ibuprofen.”
“That one seems unfair.”
“Right?” She sighed. “And then there’s this thing called round ligament pain, which apparently is just surprise stabs in the pelvis because your uterus is growing too fast and the ligaments are mad about it.”
He winced. “Sounds... ouchie.”
“Everything about pregnancy is ‘ouchie’. It’s just all been politely marketed.”
Lando let out a low laugh, his chest shaking beneath her. “Baby.”
“I’m serious.”
He turned onto his side, bringing them face to face, his hand splaying wide across her lower stomach like a gentle shield. His thumb brushed slowly just below her navel.
“You’re really doing it,” he said quietly.
“Doing what?”
“This.” His voice softened. “Making a whole human. Half you, half me.”
Her throat tightened. She blinked hard, fighting the familiar sting behind her eyes. “I don’t feel like I’m doing anything most of the time.”
“You’re doing everything,” he said. “Even when you’re just laying here talking about ligament stabs.”
A tear slipped down her cheek. She wiped it quickly with the edge of the duvet and muttered, “Now I’m crying in bed.”
Lando smiled. “Well, there goes the dry side of the pillow.”
“You’re the worst.”
“I love you.”
When she finally fell asleep, it was with his hand still resting over her belly and a vow stitched into the silence of their bedroom.
—
The cabin lights were dimmed to a sleepy gold, the hum of the engines a constant low white noise in the background. Lando had kicked his shoes off an hour ago and was now curled sideways in his seat, legs stretched across the aisle to rest against Amelia’s footrest, a battered hoodie bunched around his shoulders like a blanket.
Amelia had her noise-canceling headphones looped around her neck, but wasn’t using them. Her head rested against the window, fingers lazily tracing patterns on thigh through the soft cotton of her leggings.
Her seat was reclined, her feet tucked up beside her, a half-finished crossword open on the tray table. She wasn’t filling in the answers anymore — just twirling the pen between her fingers, eyes glassy with that deep-travel fatigue that always hit halfway through long-haul flights.
Lando cracked one eye open and looked at her. “You asleep?”
“Nope,” she said, voice soft. “Just thinking.”
“About the car?”
“About the twelve hours I’ll spend at the track tomorrow.” She rubbed her temple. “Oscar’s nervous. The aero team still hasn’t patched the instability in the rear. And I’m definitely going to throw up in the hospitality bathroom at least once before 10 a.m.”
Lando yawned, unbothered. “Sounds like a normal Thursday.”
Amelia kicked lightly at his shin. “You’re not helping.”
“I’m not trying to. I’m trying to distract you.”
She glanced at him, skeptical.
He sat up slightly, stretching across the console between them to brush a piece of hair out of her face. “Want me to list all the things I think you’re going to smash tomorrow?”
“No.”
He grinned. “Tough. You’re gonna boss Oscar’s testing schedule. You’re going to yell at one engineer and make them better for it. You’re going to make that car faster in a week than some teams do in three months. And you’re going to throw up very discreetly, like the absolute professional you are.”
She snorted, biting back a smile. “Helpful.”
“I try.”
Amelia tilted her head against the headrest and murmured, “Love you.”
Lando reached for her hand under the shared armrest and laced their fingers together, thumb brushing slow circles against her skin.
They sat like that for a while, not talking, not needing to, the lights dim, the flight steady, and the love endless.
—
The paddock wasn’t quite awake yet.
The early morning desert sun cast everything in long gold shadows, and the garages buzzed with that low, electric anticipation that only came with testing. Engineers murmured over telemetry, coffee steamed in paper cups, and the distinct scent of warm asphalt clung to everything.
Amelia sat on the wide concrete step outside the hospitality unit, a bottle of water between her hands and her sunglasses pushed up into her hair. She didn’t look pregnant yet, not unless you were looking, but she felt it anyway — in the way her shirt tugged tighter around the middle, in the constant low hum of her body doing something without asking her permission.
She didn’t look up when Celeste dropped down beside her with two iced coffees in hand.
“Stolen from Red Bull catering,” Celeste said brightly, offering one. “I’m not above crimes, and they all love you too much to snitch. Yours is decaf, obviously.”
Amelia took it without a word. “Thank you.”
They sat in silence for a while, the sun hot on their skin.
Eventually, Celeste nudged her knee. “You good?”
Amelia hesitated. Then. slowly, like peeling something back, “I’m not... bad. But I’m not good.”
Celeste looked at her, eyebrows lifted, but didn’t interrupt.
“It’s just…” Amelia gestured vaguely at her stomach, then let her hand fall again. “Everything’s changing and I didn’t give it permission to.”
Celeste blinked, caught off guard by the honesty. “Yeah?”
“I know that’s sort of the point of pregnancy,” Amelia said, eyes still fixed on the horizon. “But my body doesn’t feel like mine right now. And not just the physical stuff. My routines are off. My sleep feels weird. I don’t like food I used to like, and I suddenly love things I used to hate. And I can’t regulate my temperature or my moods and none of my bras fit and—” She stopped. Swallowed. “I just... I feel hijacked. And it’s really hard not to spiral about it.”
There was a beat. “That makes perfect sense,” Celeste said, voice low and steady. “You’re used to having a say in everything. Your clothes. Your space. Your schedule. Your comfort. Your body. And now all those things are changing at once, without warning.”
Amelia nodded, quick and tight, eyes stinging. “And the worst part is — I want the baby. I love the baby. But I feel like I’m being dragged behind my own life, and I keep thinking... ‘If I’m already this overwhelmed, how the hell am I supposed to do the next seven months?’”
Cleste didn’t offer clichés. She didn’t say “you’re strong” or “you’ll be fine.”
Instead, she reached out and gently touched Amelia’s forearm. “Okay. So let’s start with what isn’t changing today. What do you still have control over?”
Amelia sniffled and looked down at her shoes. “My spreadsheets.”
Celeste smiled. “Great. What else?”
“My noise-canceling ear defenders. My sleep playlist.”
“There you go. Small things are still yours.”
Amelia let out a shaky breath. “I keep telling myself that it’s just sensory overload. That I’ve handled worse. That it’ll pass.”
“But even if it doesn’t,” Celeste said gently, “you’ll adapt. You always have. And if it helps at all, I think what you’re feeling is incredibly valid — and not remotely selfish.”
“I feel selfish.”
“You’re not. You’re neurodivergent, pregnant, and also a woman working in the highest level of motorsport. If you weren’t feeling overwhelmed, I’d be worried.”
Amelia huffed out a laugh, surprised. “That’s... actually helpful.”
Celeste bumped their shoulders together. “You’re allowed to love the baby and hate what pregnancy does to your routine. Both things can be true. You don’t have to be one or the other.”
For the first time all morning, Amelia’s posture eased slightly.
“Do you wanna come hide in the RedBull motorhome for a bit?” Celeste offered. “I think I saw one of the catering guys stash the good pastries behind the juice bar.”
“I shouldn’t abandon my team on day one,” Amelia said, already standing.
Celeste rolled her eyes. “It’s lunch time. I think you’re allowed a croissant.”
—
The sun was beginning to sink behind the Bahraini paddock, casting long gold stripes through the motorhome windows. Most of the team was trickling into the hospitality area for water, air-con, and a brief moment of respite.
Amelia was halfway through a half-melted protein bar and hunched over her laptop, squinting at a CFD report that felt like it was written in Elvish. Her brain had long since checked out. She barely noticed the door open until a familiar voice cut across the quiet.
“Well, if it isn’t the boss herself.”
She looked up — and grinned, the kind of grin that cracked her whole face open with genuine affection.
Oscar stood in the doorway, sun-browned from a week back home in Melbourne, hair a little longer, hoodie sleeves pushed up his forearms. He looked… relaxed. And irritatingly cheerful.
“You’re late,” she said, standing up and crossing the room in three long strides before throwing her arms around him in a hug that knocked the breath out of him.
“Jesus,” he wheezed, but hugged her back without hesitation, forehead dropping against her shoulder. “Missed you too, I guess.”
“Shut up,” she said into his hoodie. “You were gone for seven days. That’s the longest we haven’t spoken in two years. It was disorienting.”
He laughed, pulling back just enough to look at her. “You look like you haven’t slept.”
“I haven’t,” she said flatly. “They changed the diffuser without me.”
Oscar winced. “I heard. Sorry. Want me to key somebody’s car?”
“No, I can’t have you being charged with a crime this close to the first race of the season,” she sighed. “But thank you anyway.”
They sank into the cushy booth under the window, Amelia tucking her legs up beside her and watching as he peeled open a protein bar of his own.
“Home okay?” She asked.
Oscar nodded. “Yeah. Mum made me a list of things to bring back that I forgot entirely. My sister says hi. Oh — and Dad said ‘congrats on the rugrat’.”
Amelia snorted. “He did not.”
Oscar shrugged, his lips twitching. “He did.”
She laughed, leaning her head back against the booth. “I missed you.”
“Yeah, yeah. I’m very loveable. Anything explode while I was gone?”
“Just my patience. And there was a very minor fire in the CFD department.”
Oscar winced. “Anyone hurt?”
“No. Just some bruised egos.” She sighed. They sat in companionable silence for a while. Outside, the sound of reporters and tool carts echoed through the alleyways. Inside, it was calm. Steady. After a moment, Amelia nudged him with her knee. “It’s good you went home. Family time is important for optimal motivation.”
“I know.” He said. He was smiling at her.
“Did you bring me back a souvenir?” She asked.
Oscar grinned. “Check my backpack.”
She leaned over, unzipped the top pocket; and let out a delighted noise at the sight of a tiny stuffed koala wearing aviators.
“His name is Downforce,” Oscar said proudly.
Amelia held it up and stared at it. “I’m putting him on the dash of the simulator.”
“Please do.”
And just like that — they were back. Her with her sharp edges, him with his dry sarcasm, and something between them that felt like a shared backbone. Stronger for the distance. Ready for whatever testing, and the season ahead, threw at them next.
—
The desert heat hadn't even peaked yet and Amelia was already sweating.
Engineers in crisp polos darted between garages with clipboards and headsets; pit crew rolled tires across the hot concrete; camera crews hovered at the edges, hungry for glimpses of shiny new bodywork or strained facial expressions.
Amelia stood just inside the garage, arms crossed tight over her chest, her clipboard clutched in one hand like a weapon. Her sunglasses were perched high on her nose, more for the glare of her own frustration than the sun. In front of her, the MCL38-AN, her car, in every way that mattered, sat on its stands, monitors blinking with diagnostic readings. And she hated what she saw.
It wasn’t bad, technically. Nothing catastrophic. But it was wrong.
The wrong wing configuration. The wrong ride height assumptions. The rear diffuser changes she’d flagged three weeks ago had been pushed through without her sign-off — a democratic decision made by the broader engineering committee while she was out for the afternoon with a migraine. The moment she’d seen the telemetry from Oscar’s first handful of laps, she’d known that’d cost them at least two-tenths on the straights.
And now? It was too late to fix it.
“Still gathering data,” one of the aero leads said beside her, hopeful. Too hopeful.
Amelia didn’t look at him. “You’re gathering confirmation bias. You want the data to tell you it was worth it.”
He blinked. “We can’t reverse the updates before the first race.”
“I know,” she said tightly. “I’m not asking you to. I’m telling you that they shouldn’t have been implemented in the first place.”
He took a step back.
Oscar pulled back into the garage just then, visor up, sweat beading at his temples. He popped the wheel off and offered her a sheepish smile. “Feels like I’m dragging a parachute on the straights.”
Amelia didn’t smile. “You basically are.”
Oscar winced. “Well, that’s nice.”
She handed the clipboard off to a mechanic without a word and turned on her heel, storming down the garage tunnel toward the back paddock.
Lando caught up with her a minute later, jog-walking like he knew better than to grab her arm when she was in this mood. “Hey. Hey—baby.”
“I’m fine.”
“You don’t look fine.”
She spun to face him. “They changed my car, Lando. They changed my car without consulting me, and now it’s dragging down the straights like a brick with wings. And everyone’s acting like it’s going to be okay because they modelled it that way.”
His expression softened. “You told them that diffuser adjustment was a mistake.”
“I told them ten times.”
“You also told me you’d be polite and calm in front of the media,” he teased gently.
“I lied.”
He stepped closer, bumping his shoulder lightly against hers. “We’ll fix it.”
“No,” she said, throat tight. “We’ll mitigate it. We’ll bandage the decision they made without me. But it’ll still be wrong, Lando.”
Lando didn’t argue. He knew her well enough not to.
Instead, he stood beside her quietly, both of them staring out at the line of cars rumbling through pit lane in the rising heat.
After a long moment, Amelia let out a breath. “I hate when I’m right.”
“I don’t,” Lando said. “That’s why I married you. It’s helpful to always have the smartest one in the room on my side.”
She didn’t smile, not quite, but the fury softened at the edges, just enough.
—
The room was too bright. Too cold. The kind of sterile that made every emotion feel like a liability.
Amelia stood at the end of the table, spine ramrod straight, her hands braced on the glass surface like it was the only thing keeping her tethered to the floor. Zak sat near the head, arms folded tightly across his chest. Andrea was beside him, flipping aimlessly through the printed test data, though his eyes never left her.
She didn’t wait for an invitation. She didn’t sit.
“This isn’t working out.”
Zak blinked. “Amelia—”
“No. Don’t try to explain it to me.” Her voice was even, but it cracked with a sharpness that made Andrea stiffen. “I’ve been quiet about the changes. I’ve followed the chain of command. I’ve backed off. I’ve trusted the process. But I’m telling you now: the car is wrong.”
Andrea opened his mouth, but she didn’t let him speak.
“I don’t care what the wind tunnel says,” she continued, tone clipped and fast, like she had too much to say and not enough runway. “I don’t care how many simulations you run with this configuration — the car is fundamentally slower through mid-to-high speed corners and we are losing straight-line efficiency. I flagged this four months ago when the adaptions were suggestion, and I was ignored.”
Zak exhaled slowly. “We made collective decisions, Amelia. You were—”
“No,” she said, and it wasn’t loud, but it hit. “Decisions were made, yes. But I wasn’t listened to. There’s a difference.”
Andrea’s voice was quiet but firm. “The engineering team felt—”
“The engineering team,” she cut in, “is brilliant. I have never questioned their intelligence. But they are second-guessing me — consistently — because I’m who I am. And don’t you dare try to tell me that’s not part of it.”
Zak’s expression tightened, and for a second, he looked like her father again — not the CEO, not the face of McLaren, just a man caught between protectiveness and policy. But he said nothing.
Amelia leaned forward, tone even sharper now. “You gave me my title. Chief Technical Director. You paraded me in front of press as the future of McLaren. But when it mattered, when it came down to actual performance philosophy, you let them override me. You didn’t back me.”
There was a long, taut silence.
Her hands curled into fists against the glass.
“I am telling you now,” she said clearly, eyes burning but voice terrifyingly calm, “You have until Miami to revert the floor spec, the rear suspension setup, and the aero surfaces back to my configuration. You have until Miami to stop pretending that compromising on half a dozen micro-decisions makes a faster car. It doesn’t. And I won’t let my work, my life’s work, be slowly watered down until it’s just another near-miss.”
Andrea looked at her, slow and wary. “You’re saying you’ll quit.”
She didn’t flinch. “I’m saying I’ll walk.”
Zak looked like she’d punched him. “Honey—”
“No,” she said. “I’m not bluffing. I’ve given everything to this car. I built the MCL38-AN from the ground up. It is mine. And I’m watching it get torn apart by people who didn’t have the vision and don’t have the stakes I do.”
Her voice caught, just for a second; not from tears, but from fury held too long in her chest.
“I am not normal. I’m autistic,” she said bluntly, like she was listing part numbers. “I have spent my life learning how to make people take me seriously. I have sat in rooms where grown men laughed at me. I have had to make everything perfect just to be considered competent. So when I say that the car is broken, that your changes are wrong, it is not emotion. It is not ego. It is fact.”
She let that hang in the air.
Zak looked stunned. Andrea finally glanced down at the table.
Amelia straightened, pulling her hands from the glass. “Miami. That’s your deadline. Fix it, or I walk. And don’t think for a second that I won’t be taking both of my drivers with me.”
She turned before they could answer, too wired to hear excuses, too angry to be placated.
The door clicked shut behind her.
And somewhere down the hall, someone exhaled like they’d been holding their breath the entire time.
—
SkySportsF1 — An Interview with Amelia Norris
Naomi Schiff smiled at the camera as the red light blinked on. “Welcome back to Sky Sports F1. I’m joined now by McLaren’s Chief Technical Director, Oscar Piastri’s race engineer, and — of course — Lando Norris’ better half, Amelia Norris.”
Amelia, seated beside her in her team polo and her aviators hooked neatly into her collar, gave a small nod. “That’s a long title.”
Naomi laughed. “It’s earned. You’ve got more job descriptions than most team principals.”
Amelia tilted her head. “Efficient, not overcommitted.”
Naomi grinned. “Noted. Let’s start with something beyond car development — I know, shocking. F1 Academy is heading into its second year. More races on the main calendar. More visibility. How does it feel to see that kind of progress?”
Amelia’s expression shifted. Still composed, but with the slightest hint of warmth. “It feels... structural. Like we’re finally reinforcing the foundation instead of just repainting the surface.”
Naomi raised a brow, impressed. “That’s a good way to put it.”
“I don’t do metaphors often,” Amelia said dryly. “But that one felt accurate.”
Naomi leaned in slightly, tone softening. “You’ve spoken before, pretty openly, about how difficult it was to be taken seriously in motorsport. As a woman. As someone neurodivergent. What does this shift toward real support for women in the sport mean to you, personally?”
Amelia paused, more out of precision than hesitation. “It means I don’t have to keep hoping someone else fixes it. I can actually contribute. Visibility isn’t enough. It has to come with access. Tools. Pathways. F1 Academy’s starting to offer that.”
Naomi nodded, clearly moved. “And — not to blow up your spot, but — there are rumours that you’ll be working more closely with them in 2025?”
Amelia gave her a dry look. “Did Lando tell you that?”
Naomi smiled innocently. “I have many sources. All of them chatty.”
A breath, then Amelia gave a small, firm nod. “Yes. I’ll be joining the F1 Academy as a consultant next year. I’ll be working with Susie Wolff to develop a clearer technical development route for girls who want to work behind the scenes; not just drivers, but engineers, analysts, strategists. The full picture.”
Naomi’s eyes lit up. “That’s amazing.”
“It’s overdue,” Amelia said plainly. “You can’t call it a pipeline if it only works for certain people. And I know there are girls watching now who love this sport but don’t dream of being the one in the car. I’m doing this for them. Or someone like me, fifteen years ago.”
Naomi nodded. “And I assume McLaren’s more than happy for this to happen?”
Amelia shrugged. “Can I be honest? I haven’t even asked. It won’t affect my workload, and it certainly won’t affect my ability to do my job.”
Naomi laughed. “So you’re not going to slow down anytime soon?”
Amelia shook her head. “Statistically unlikely.”
Naomi turned slightly to the camera. “Well, there you have it. Amelia Norris — technical director, race engineer, soon-to-be F1 Academy consultant, and managing to make the rest of us look lazy.”
Amelia leaned toward the mic. “If anyone catches me napping in the background of any kind of weekend coverage, keep it quiet.”
Naomi laughed again, but there was a twinkle in her eye as she added, teasing, “One last question, off the record — and this is very important. Have you tried ginger nut biscuits?”
Amelia blinked. “I don’t really like cinnamon.”
Naomi tilted her head. “They’re not made with cinnamon.”
Another blink. Amelia was processing.
Naomi just winked. “Woman to woman.”
There was a beat of silence, then Amelia deadpanned, “That’s a reach.”
But her hand twitched toward her stomach, just slightly, as Naomi stood to wrap the segment.
“Thanks for joining us, Amelia,” Naomi said with a smile. “We’ll be keeping an eye on you — and your napping schedule.”
“Please don’t,” Amelia muttered as she removed her mic.
Off-camera, Naomi gave her a wink again. “You’re glowing, by the way.”
Amelia looked at her, unreadable. “That’s just my moisturiser.”
Naomi grinned slyly. “Sure it is.”
—
The desert heat shimmered off the tarmac in visible waves.
Oscar’s McLaren skimmed past the pit wall with that clean, calibrated roar, and Amelia tracked the car’s movement without flinching, her eyes hidden behind reflective sunglasses.
“Box this lap,” she said calmly into the headset.
“Copy, boxing,” came Oscar’s voice, easy and even, like it always was. There was something reassuring about his tone; not casual, but not strained either. Balanced. Controlled.
Andrea leaned over her shoulder, pointing to the small uptick in temps on the left rear. “He’s pushing.”
Amelia didn’t look up. “Yeah. That was the instruction.”
Oscar pulled into the box, the car gliding to a stop just as the garage crew surged into motion — tire blankets off, engineers at the ready. Amelia stood, tugging her headset off and walking to the front of the garage.
Oscar cracked his visor. “That middle sector’s still a bit off.”
“Because you’re braking into 10 a touch early,” she said, handing him a bottle of water. “You’re playing it safe.”
“I like keeping the car in one piece.”
“You’re not going to bin it.”
Oscar arched a brow. “You say that with such confidence.”
“I built the balance map. I know what it can take.”
He took a sip of water and gave her a knowing look. “You’ve been a bit grumpy today.”
Amelia crossed her arms. “Because I feel like I’m being ignored and I don’t like it.”
Oscar smirked. “You sound like Lando.”
“I married Lando,” she muttered.
Oscar exhaled a quiet laugh and climbed out of the car. “Alright. Back in ten?”
“Back in seven,” Amelia corrected, already turning toward the data wall.
As he walked past her, he added, “You missed me, didn’t you?”
“I missed clean telemetry,” she replied without looking up.
But her mouth twitched.
Oscar tugged off his gloves. “I’ll take it.”
She didn’t say anything, but when he sat back down in the debrief chair, she handed him the revised turn-in model she’d finished before lunch — already annotated, already highlighted, already calibrated to his feedback.
He looked down at it, then back at her. “You ate lunch, right?”
“I did,” Amelia said flatly, taking her seat at the pit wall again.
Over comms, the crew confirmed readiness.
Oscar nodded to her. “Let’s go again.”
“Push lap. Use the whole track. Let it breathe in 12.”
“Copy.”
—
The moonlight caught Amelia’s cheekbones when she leaned her head against the headrest, her arms folded tight across her chest.
Oscar was on her left, earbuds in but not playing anything. Lando sat on her right, one leg folded beneath him, picking at the label on a water bottle.
The car was quiet in that post-testing way; all of them wrung out, smelling faintly of heat and rubber, the air-conditioning humming low.
Amelia finally broke the silence.
“I gave them a deadline,” she said.
Lando glanced over. “Who?”
“My dad. Andrea.” She didn’t look up. “I told them they have until Miami to either revert the car back to my spec and implement the rest of the changes — or I walk.”
Oscar blinked. Slowly pulled his earbuds out. “You what?”
“I’m not doing this,” Amelia said, voice cool and measured. “I refuse to accept excuses and be forced to sit back and watch the car become less than what it could be.”
Lando didn’t speak. He just reached over, his hand warm where it closed around her wrist, grounding.
Oscar leaned forward slightly, elbows on his knees. “You said that to their faces?”
“In Zak’s office. Door open. With Andrea across the desk. I told them straight — they’ve got until Miami to course-correct, or I’m done.”
Lando’s jaw flexed, but he stayed quiet.
Amelia kept her eyes fixed out the window. “They know it’s true. They’re letting politics win over performance. And if they don’t fix it, I’m not going to sit there and let them ruin our chance of a championship to preserve some internal power structure. I’m tired of pretending the problem is something else.”
Oscar shifted. “You think they’ll actually listen?”
“I think they’ll think about the gap they’ll have to fill if they lose me mid-development. They’ll run the numbers.”
Lando exhaled through his nose. “You shouldn’t have to threaten to leave just to get them to listen to you.”
“I know,” she said. Quiet. Blunt. “But they weren’t going to do it otherwise. I’ve tried calm. I’ve tried patient. I’ve tried proving them wrong. They still my decisions be overridden. So now they get consequences.”
Lando rubbed a hand down his face. “I’ll back you. Whatever happens.”
Oscar nodded. “Same.”
Amelia finally looked at them. “You’re both under contract.”
“And you’re the reason we were podium-capable last year,” Lando said. “If they don’t see that, they’re idiots.”
Amelia didn’t smile. But the line of her shoulders softened just a little.
Oscar leaned his head back against the headrest. “Miami’s in, what — two months?”
“Eight weeks,” she said.
“So... no pressure.”
Amelia snorted. “You’re driving the car, ducky. Pressure’s on you.”
That earned a tired chuckle from the Aussie.
Lando leaned into her shoulder gently, head tipping against hers. “Whatever happens, we’ve got your back, okay?”
Amelia closed her eyes for a moment, just long enough to breathe it in. “I know.”
NEXT CHAPTER
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