#drawstring jacket
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nother reason why i prefer treat pouch over pocket is that i have very often, multiple times, put treats in my pockets and *usually* emptied said pocket. but then put my trousers in a hamper. or hang my coat over a chair
and theres a little shrimp in my apartment. a little pointy one. shrewd little bastard who shall remain nameless. who thinks the possibility of a fraction of a crumb of a treat is ample payment for chewing through said pocket (or any pocket to ever have held a piece of kibble) from whichever angle most convenient to her
#once chewed her way thriugh three layers of my favourite flannel shirt because there were crumbs in the pocket seam#one time she went straight up through a canvas jacket. clipped through the seams the lining and the drawstring and everything#she will bite though anything for nothing#the treat pouch has survived because its got a big hole on top and she'll turn the lining out and lick it clean#anything that smells like food is free game#this is another think that none of the other dogs have ever done to me#but fuckin sparty
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Day 6 of @dreveel's 500 follower event: subculture(s) you are in or your own personal style
Jfashion: decora, hime, jojifuku 🪽
🧁 💘 🧁 💘 🧁 💘 🧁 💘 🧁
#stim#stimboard#gummy-stimboards#eveel500#fashion#makeup#people#irl people#hands#irl hands#bag#crochet#drawstring#jacket#deer#shoes#ribbon#bow#skirt#blue#pink#white#black#rainbow#hair clips#decora#hime#jfashion#music#lashes
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#wool sweater#sweater#wool#menswear#shetland crewneck#shetlandsweater#shetland#crewneck shetland#shetland sweater#waxed jacket#wool crewneck sweater#crewneck#anorak#drawstring anorak
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I hate taking selfies, and I don't think a selfie could properly encapsulate how much I had on me. So heres a diagram of my Autism Fit(tm) from Saturday con-going
#splatoon#can not emphasize the sheer amount of stuff i had on me.#the feraligatr charm i attached to my jacket by tying a knot in the jacket drawstring and hooking it on that.#the squid charm was attached via the zipper.#'the one benefit of not being in cosplay is that i dont have to worry abt people trying to get my attention!'#<- guy in so much squid merch he repeatedly got stopped by people complimenting the depths of autism he has
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Another field jacket, this time in linen.
#linen field jacket#drake's#drawstring pants#informale#christian kimber#melbourne style#menswear#style#fashion#melbourne
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Wagwear Wagwellies Mojave in Cobolt Blue
He looks like an old light house keeper
#dog#apparel#look man i couldn’t find the rain jacket#i spent like an hour looking#do you know how many different brands have their own yellow rain jacket#BUT MOST OF THEM USE ELASTIC DRAWSTRINGS#i couldn’t find one that had the same buttons AND had string drawstrings
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#ACNE STUDIOS#Straight-Leg Zip-Detailed Leather Drawstring Trousers#$2#250#Quilted Shell Down Jacket#$1#450
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Collecting all the casual outfits of these characters we get before we're off to uniform-land for 40 episodes
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Loose Slim Collarless Casual Vest
Upgrade your casual style with our Loose Slim Collarless Casual Vest. Made for fashion-forward individuals who want to make a statement, this vest is the perfect addition to your wardrobe. Crafted with attention to detail, the loose slim fit ensures a flattering silhouette while providing maximum comfort. The collarless design adds a touch of modernity, making it versatile for casual and semi-formal occasions. Whether dressing up for a night out or running errands, this vest will effortlessly elevate your outfit and keep you looking stylish all day. Refrain from settling for the ordinary. Embrace the extraordinary with our Loose Slim Collarless Casual Vest.

#Embossed Letter Hooded Pullover#Splice Slim Washed Casual Flare Pants#Drawstring Straight Jeans#Leather Vertical Straight Pants#Woven Tweed Suit#Embroidery Sequin Velvet Long Sleeve Shirt#Short Thick Oxford Jacket#Color Contrast Long Sleeved Short Jacket#Vintage print suit coat
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ㅤ DOMESTIC FLUFF ✶ PROMPTS . . .


SCENARIOS . . .
i , sitting on the bathroom counter while their partner gently dries their hair with a towel after a shower, murmuring sleepy compliments
ii , holding the other steady while they stand on tiptoes to reach a high cabinet, hands resting firmly at their waist
iii , fixing their collar or hoodie drawstring before they head out
iv , pressing their cold cheeks against the other’s warm ones and giggling when they flinch from the sudden coolness
v , tugging the other’s oversized hoodie sleeve back into place when it starts slipping over their hand too far
vi , pressing a kiss to their shoulder as they pass by in the kitchen, not even thinking about it, just muscle memory
vii , slipping thick socks onto their partner’s cold feet and pressing a soft kiss to their ankle before pulling the blanket back over them
viii , pulling the other’s hood up over their head before they leave the house together into the cold
ix , one cooking, the other perched nearby on the counter, lazily kicking their feet and stealing ingredients from the cutting board
x , tracing gentle shapes on the other’s back while they lie on top of them
xi , noticing their partner’s hands are cold and immediately sandwiching them between their own without a word
xii , brushing their partner’s eyebrows into place with their thumbs while lying face-to-face in bed, just…because
xiii , sharing headphones in bed, both of them curled under the covers, softly humming along to the same song
xiv , helping them zip up a dress or jacket from behind and pausing to press a kiss to the back of their neck
xv , giving their partner's cheeks the gentlest little squish while brushing crumbs off their face after a snack
© fromdove— All rights reserved. Reposting, translation, or modification of these works is strictly prohibited, regardless of whether credit is given.
∿ . `💭` ㆍ
#⸝⸝.ᐟ⋆fromdove.com .ᐟ#✶⋆.˚ the perversions of quiet girls .ᐟ#﹙ dove's flight log ₊˚⊹ ⸝⸝#imagine your otp#otp prompts#writing prompts#otp writing#prompt list#writeblr#fluff prompts#domestic prompts#domestic fluff#romance prompts#request#x reader#writing tumblr#writers of tumblr#writers on tumblr#ao3 writer#writers and poets#writing#ao3#marvel fanfic#dc fanfiction#fanfiction#fanfic#fanfic writer#writing prompt#fic prompt#prompts
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Fantasy Guide to Regency Fashion


The Regency. The King is mad, the Prince of Wales is lording it up as the de-facto head of state. Napoleon is raging in Europe, Jane Austen is Austen-ning and the Bridgertons are on the prowl, waiting for their glow-up season. But what are they wearing during this period? Now, for this post, I am focusing on the actual Regency period (1811 to 1820). The before and after will come… eventually.
The Regency is a curious sub-era of fashion because it is bracketed between the early Victorian era with its large skirts and large puffy sleeves and the Georgian fashions with the court mantuas. I once read an article that pondered what the Victorians thought of the fashion of their grandmother’s and great-grandmothers during the Regency, wondering if they were scandalised.
Undergarments

The Regency undergarments have much of the same structure of those that came before and after, just with tweaks.
For ladies, the Regency was a time for natural silhouettes, so this meant that the long-structured corsets of the Victorians were a way off and the panniers of the Georgians were forgotten (except at court but we will talk about it later).
Chemise: This goes under everything. This is not up for debate. I am talking to you period drama wardrobe people, yes you, you know who you are. The chemise is like a big linen shirt worn under everything else.
Petticoat: This was a thin skirt worn over the chemise to keep the chemise from sticking to the skirts. These weren’t worn for volume as petticoats were and would be worn.
Corsets: The Corset in the Regency period was much shorter than you would expect but so were bodices. Regency corsets might make you think of modern-day bras since they sometimes spanned from the breasts to the waist rather than the hips.
Stockings and garters: Stockings are like long socks that go up past the knee, usually in muted colours and embroidered. Stockings were held up by garters, which were strips of cloth tied around the leg to keep them in place.
Drawers: Technically most Regency women didn’t wear any underwear, but the Regency period was the beginning of the interest in wearing them. Some women adopted the drawers which were modified versions of the drawers worn by men. Princess Charlotte, Princess of Wales was said to have tried them out which confused a lot of other women. In the later years of the Regency, some women adopted the pantaloons which were like drawers only longer. Drawers were short of linen or cotton shorts, only with a split in the crotch and a drawstring waist.
Gentlemen
Undershirts: Men wore their own kinds of chemises, but these were much shorter and tucked into the drawers. You’re thinking of Colin Firth aren’t you?
Drawers: Like I said, the lady’s versions are adaptations of the men, cotton/linen shorts with a drawstring. But during the Regency, the drawers were adapted to have buttoned flaps.
Corsets: Yes, men also wore corsets. The Prince Regent wore one for his back issues officially but there were rumours of him wearing one to try manage his considerable weight.
Stockings and garters: Stockings are like long socks that go up past the knee, usually in muted colours and embroidered. Stockings were held up by garters, which were strips of cloth tied around the leg to keep them in place.
Gowns and Suits


The Gentlemen
The men of the Regency were just as interested in their fashion as their female counterparts and their predecessors of the Georgian period.
Tailcoat/Jacket: Jackets and tailcoats were tailored, with the tails shaped into a “M” shape. These were made to show the shirt, vest and cravat underneath.
Waist Coat: The Regency waistcoats were vests, usually single-breasted but double-breasted were popular too. The trend in the Regency was high collared vests.
Shirt: Men would have worn shirts over their chemise for warm, only this shirt would be of more substantial fabric and often embroidered.
Cravat: The cravat is like a tie, wrapped around the neck and knotted.
Pants: When not at court, men wore trousers. These were buttoned at the front and usually tailored.
Breeches: Breeches were worn more at court as they were considered old-fashioned.
Pantaloons: These were tight, fitted trousers that were worn with high boots.
Suspenders: Trousers worn with suspenders were originally a working-class trend – as all the best trends are – become popular in the years preceding the Regency.
Inexpressibles: Probably what you’re thinking of when you think of Regency pants. These were extremely tight fitting and have reputation.
Buckskins: These were sort of the equivalent of comfy pants for the men. They were made from deerskin and worn during down time.
Great Coat: The great coat is a long coat worn over the ensemble and could be as fancy or as plain as the gentleman wants.
Shoes: Usually, leather dress shoes and worn to every sort of event except outside where boots might be the best option. Boots were never worn at night.
Ladies
The women of the Regency period were experiencing something new, something more aligned to the Romanticism of the day. Women took inspiration from the Classical world in their fashion. Bodices became shorter, sleeves shorter and silhouettes less structured.
Morning Gowns: These were dresses worn in the morning or during the day time if one was staying at home. It had an empire waist, short sleeves and worn with shawls and bonnets if taking a stroll in the garden. These were usually made of light fabrics such as muslin or poplin
Visiting Gowns: Visting gowns were worn when calling on friends or family. They were made of more substantial fabric like wool, satin or silk and less plain than the morning gown. They would be long sleeved and worn with gloves.
Walking Gowns: Walking gowns are pretty much self-explanatory, worn when walking outside, so that means long sleeves. They were made of thick fabrics such as wool, cotton and velvet and always worn with a bonnet and a spencer or a pelisse and gloves.
Promenade Dresses: These are a fancier gown than walking gowns, usually more decorated and worn both for walking and for riding in a carriage. Worn with a bonnet and gloves. Usually worn when one is taking a quick trip by carriage.
Carriage Dresses: Yes, the Regency not only had one dress for riding in a carriage, they had many. These were very similar to the promenade dress but designed for better comfort. Can be worn with gloves but definitely worn with a bonnet. One might wear this one on long journeys by carriage.
Riding Habits: This was worn by women when they were riding horses. They were usually made of thick cotton, leather of wool depending on the weather. This outfit was comprised of a long coat, riding gloves, high boots for the muck and stirrups and worn with a hat to keep the hair from the lady’s face.
Ball Gowns: Ball gowns were short sleeved, empire waisted and made from silk, satin and usually well decorated depending on the lady’s rank. They were always paired with long gloves. No bonnet worn here. Hair would be arranged under a tiara or an array of flowers or jewels or combs.
Shawl: Was a drape of fabric worn over the upper body against a chill. It may be made from wool or a heavier fabric but if worn to an event, it would be made of lighter fabric.
The Spencer Jacket: The Spencer is a fitted jacket, long sleeved and waist-length jacket worn over a dress when walking.
Pelisse: Is an coat dress which like the Spencer was close fitting but it was much longer.
Cloak/Mantelet: The cloak wasn’t dead yet in the Regency period. Women would have worn them in the evenings when attending balls, parties, the opera and the theatre.
Tucker: The tucker was a piece of fabric tucked into one’s bodice to cover as much as one’s chest and shoulders as possible.
Bonnet: The bonnet was usually a cap with a wide brim, trimmed with fabric flowers or ribbon and held in place by a ribbon tied under the chin.
Slippers: These look like a ballet slipper. They would be made from silk, satin, leather etc.
Boots: These were made of leather, often worn when walking distances in the city and country and usually only reached the ankle.
Pattens: This was a metal lift worn at the bottom of the lady’s shoe to keep her from ruining her shoes in rain or the city’s muddy streets.
When at Court

If you have ever watched Bridgerton, you might see that Queen Charlotte doesn’t wear the same gowns as the rest of the ton. This is actually historically accurate as Queen Charlotte was a traditionalist at heart and distrusted the new fashions, though we have a surviving empire-waisted dress of hers worn in private. When the ton descended on court, especially at the debut, they would not be wearing their short-sleeved, empire gowns. They would be wearing a wide hooped dress with a long train – but the Regency ladies weren’t about to give up on everything modern, they followed Queen Charlotte’s rules but kept the empire waist which lead to a ridiculous looking gown. I mean, look at it.
Bejewelled


The Regency era is a very important era for jewels because *trumpet sounds* it was the dawn of the tiara, or the renaissance of it. The modern idea of tiara came about during this era due to the women taking inspiration from the stephanes worn by the Ancient Greeks and Romans. Tiaras became a staple during this time, giving us some of our most famous and beautiful tiaras we still have today.
#I thought ye would like this one#The regency#fantasy guide to regency fashion#regency fashion#empire waist gown#writing#writeblr#writing resources#writer's problems#writer#writing advice#writing reference#spilled words#writer's life#historical fiction#bridgerton#jane austen#pride and prejudice#writing help#writing inspiration#creative writing
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satoru was a menace. not in the field. not during missions. in bed. specifically between your legs. that was his favorite place to be — maybe his true calling.
you were on your back, scrolling your phone, still in your cozy clothes when he strolled in. his white hair was extra tousled, his blindfold hanging loose, collar crooked. he looked exhausted, but with that sharp, restless energy, the kind that buzzed under his skin when he couldn’t sit still.
you glanced up. “rough day?”
“mm,” he hummed, already tugging off his jacket and kicking his shoes into a lazy pile. then he looked at you like you were made of something divine. “can i eat you out?”
no buildup. no teasing smirk. just that. your eyebrows shot up. “what?”
he was already crawling up the bed like gravity didn’t apply to him, hands sliding under your waistband like it was his life’s mission. “thought about it all day. seriously. got me through the worst meeting with the higher-ups. this is classified-level urgent.”
you let out a stunned laugh, arousal blooming fast. “you’re completely insane.”
“mm-hmm,” he murmured, already peeling your shorts and underwear down in one motion. “and yet, here you are, still letting me do this.”
then his mouth was on you.
warm. precise. relentless. no smug commentary now. no snark. just the quiet, focused hum of his tongue and the little sounds he made into you. like you were the only thing anchoring him to earth.
his hands cradled your thighs, strong fingers keeping you steady like he needed you to stay exactly where you were.
and god, the man was a perfectionist.
slow when it counted, rough when your breath started hitching. he followed every twitch of your body like it was his roadmap. like he wanted to memorize you.
“toru,” you whispered, fingers threading into his soft hair.
he didn’t answer. didn’t pause.
then you noticed. he wasn’t really breathing. his whole body was still, his shoulders taut with focus.
you tugged gently at his hair, concerned.
but he just groaned low against your skin, like your taste was too good to leave behind. his nose pressed in deeper, tongue working faster now.
you tried again. “satoru-”
he pulled back just enough to rasp, “i’m fine. don’t ruin this by making me breathe like some loser.”
and then he was back on you like he hadn’t moved at all.
you whimpered, your thighs trembling. he made a pleased little noise, like he’d just won a bet with himself.
he didn’t stop until your back arched off the mattress, hand clawing at the sheets, your whole body flushed and twitching. even then, he kept going. gentle now, lapping at you like he wasn’t ready to stop savoring you just yet.
finally, you let out a shaky breath and collapsed into the bed.
satoru lifted his head slowly, his mouth gleaming, cheeks flushed pink, blindfold pushed up into his messy hair.
you stared at him. “you’re insane.”
he grinned, wicked and too pretty. “and you taste better than mochi, so i’d say i’m exactly where i’m supposed to be.”
you laughed, breathless.
“round two in ten?” he asked, already tugging at the drawstring of his pants with one hand, eyes never leaving you.
#fanfic#x yn#fanficiton#jjk x reader#jjk smut#jjk#jjk gojo#gojo satoru#jujutsu kaisen#gojo x reader#fem reader
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Radio Silence | Chapter Thirty-Four
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, autistic breakdown on page, racing accidents (Las Vegas 2023), domestic fluff, slight (?) cliffhanger
Notes — Another longggg one! Hope you love it.
2023 (Las Vegas)
It was one of those overcast afternoons where the sky couldn’t decide if it wanted to rain or not. The light through the huge windows was grey and flat, and the air inside the rented house-slash-shoot-location had that odd, sterile warmth that came from too many camera batteries and ring lights and people trying to look casual for content.
The house itself was the kind of place you couldn’t quite imagine anyone actually living in — all clean lines, brushed steel, and exposed concrete. There were too many stairs. Too many echoey corners. And absolutely no soft lighting. It had been chosen for aesthetics, not comfort.
Amelia sat curled in the corner of the oversized leather sofa, knees tucked under her, one hand gripping her iPad, the other fidgeting absently with the drawstring of a hoodie that had somehow ended up in her lap. She hadn’t asked for it. Someone had draped it over her when she sat down, and now it was hers, apparently. That was fine. She liked the weight of it.
Her focus, however, was fixed entirely on her screen. The Vegas GP loomed ahead — a race full of unknowns, simulations stacked high with red flags and conditional parameters that changed every time she blinked. The track was new, the surface barely tested, the layout odd and inconsistent. Every variable gave her brain another reason to loop. And loop. And loop.
She was halfway through calculating braking loads based on preliminary corner speeds when Lando wandered past, all soft socks and too-long limbs, dragging one arm into a puffer jacket he wasn’t really planning to zip. He slowed when he saw her, smile tugging at the corners of his mouth.
“You gonna wear that for a photo?” He asked, nodding at the hoodie.
Amelia didn’t look up. “No.”
He paused in the doorway, leaning against the frame. “You sure? You’d look cute.”
She blinked once, then met his eyes. “I’m not in the mood for cute. I’m calculating brake performance for a track we have literally never raced on before. There are so many variables. I’m stressed.”
Across the room, Max Fewtrell barked a laugh, his voice echoing faintly as he adjusted a light stand. “That’s the most Amelia sentence I’ve ever heard. Like, ever.”
Pietra, seated on the floor nearby in flared jeans and a cloud-soft crewneck, turned toward Amelia with a gentle smile. She had a scrunchie looped around her wrist and two bracelets Amelia had given her after a layover in Japan. “You can do both,” Pietra said warmly. “Be cute and stressed.”
Amelia looked at her, expression softening around the eyes. “Honestly, I just want to stay sat down.”
“Okay,” Pietra said, and leaned sideways to gently press her shoulder against Amelia’s. “Then we’ll sit. Together.”
Amelia didn’t say thank you. But she didn’t move away, either.
Lando reappeared a moment later with a bottle of water in one hand and a small protein bar in the other. He plopped onto the armrest beside her, knees brushing hers. His eyes flicked to the hoodie.
“You know that one’s technically mine.”
“I don’t care,” Amelia said without looking up.
He grinned. “I figured.” He nudged her ankle gently with his socked foot. “Still think it’d look better on you anyway.”
“That’s not difficult,” she replied, tugging the cuff of the hoodie over her hand. Then, after a pause, she added flatly, “That was a joke.”
Max dropped into a nearby chair, flinging one leg over the side with practiced drama. “Just one picture of you, Amelia? Come on, people would love it. Bit of behind-the-scenes. The fans adore when you’re in anything.”
Amelia didn’t even blink. “No thank you.”
Lando snorted into his water bottle. Pietra let out a warm laugh. “Stop bothering her, Max. Lando does enough of that.”
“Oi,” Lando said, mock-affronted. “Leave me out of this.”
“You’re both bothering me,” Amelia replied, perfectly even. “I’m trying to work. I already hate the Vegas track.”
He turned his full attention to her now, brows lifting. “Why? We haven’t even been yet.”
“Because it’s new!” she burst out, sharper than she meant to. The volume bounced off the walls. She winced immediately, ducking her head into her shoulder. Her voice dropped low, controlled. “Because it’s new and we haven’t raced it before and that means no past data to lean on. That means sim work based on theoretical grip levels. That means error margins get wider. And that means I have to prepare twice as hard with half as much certainty.”
There was a pause.
“...Fair enough,” Lando said gently.
“I hate guessing,” she mumbled.
“No one likes guessing,” Pietra offered.
Amelia gave a small nod. “I like control. I like knowing.”
Max opened his mouth like he was about to tease her, then caught the subtle tension in her shoulders and wisely shut it again.
Lando tapped the top of her tablet lightly with one finger. “Well. You’ll figure it out, baby. You always do.”
She glanced up at him. “Because it’s my job.”
“And because you’re brilliant.”
She didn’t respond, but the corner of her mouth ticked upward.
“Are you wearing that to dinner later?” Pietra asked, gesturing to the hoodie.
Amelia looked down at it, then back at her. “Yes. I don’t want to change. I’m comfortable.”
Pietra smiled. “Good. I’ll wear mine too. We’ll match.”
“Accidentally?”
“Deliberately.”
Amelia considered that. “Okay. But only if we sit near the window.”
Pietra beamed. “Done.”
Lando looked between them, then leaned back on his hands. “You’ve replaced me.”
Amelia didn’t even blink. “I only want to kiss you.”
He made a thoughtful face. “Alright. I’ll allow it.”
Max rolled his eyes. “You’re both so weird.”
“I’m autistic,” Amelia said plainly.
“You’re the weird one,” Pietra added to Max.
“Rude,” Max said.
Lando grinned. “You’re still in love with us.”
“Terrible.”
Outside, the sky finally made up its mind — light rain pattering against the windows in slow, scattered streaks.
Inside, Amelia tucked the hoodie tighter around her, legs still folded, checklist still glowing on the iPad in her lap. Her head leaned lightly against Pietra’s shoulder now, and Lando’s hand rested on her shin — grounding, present, always within reach.
They’d survive Vegas. They would.
Amelia exhaled through her nose. “I need a backup plan for the Sector 2 hairpin.”
“You’ll come up with one,” Lando said, completely sure.
And she would.
Because she always did.
—
The sim suite smelled faintly of coffee and carpet glue.
It was making Amelia feel violently ill.
It was well past nine in the evening, and the McLaren Technology Centre was mostly dark — lights dimmed, staff dispersed, and only the low hum of servers and quiet keystrokes from the strategy team still working in the next room. On the main screen, a full layout of the Las Vegas circuit was overlaid with predictive data. Telemetry lines in orange and blue flickered in real time, charting Oscar’s run.
Inside the sim rig, Oscar exhaled sharply and let the steering wheel go slack as the run ended.
“Turn ten still feels off,” he said, voice crackling slightly through the headset. “Rear snaps too easily on downshift. It’s like— I don’t know. It just unloads.”
Amelia stood beside the sim rig, arms crossed tightly over her chest. She didn’t look at Oscar as she replied. She was looking at the data instead. “We’re too aggressive with the engine braking into the apex,” she said. “You’re already on a mid-bite diff setting. I can pull back the torque map slightly — see if we can stabilise it.”
Oscar lifted his visor and blinked into the low lighting. “We tried that earlier though.”
“That was with a higher track temp sim,” one of the strategy engineers chimed in from his desk.
Amelia nodded. “This time we’re modelling it colder. Night session, cooler surface, lower grip. It’s a different profile now.”
Oscar gave her a skeptical look. “You think it’ll make the difference?”
“I don’t know,” she said flatly. “We run tests. And I wait for the results.”
He frowned at her. “You’re stressed.”
“I’m not stressed,” Amelia replied. “I’m tired. And annoyed. This track is stupid.”
The strategist behind her snorted into his water bottle. “That’s the technical term, is it?”
“Yes,” she said, deadpan. “Stupid.”
Oscar raised a hand in surrender. “Okay, okay. No argument from me.”
Amelia stepped forward and typed something into the control console. “I’ll load the next setup with the revised map and a minor front wing tweak. You’ll run sectors two and three only.”
Oscar nodded, settling back into the seat. “Short run. Got it.”
“Not just short,” Amelia added. “Precision. I want minimal steering corrections. No overcommitting. If we’re going to adjust setup for the race, I need to see your clean line.”
Behind her, Lando’s voice chimed in from the doorway, “someone’s feeling bossy tonight.”
Amelia didn’t turn around. “You’re not supposed to be here.”
“I’m just here to observe,” Lando said, stepping in with a smoothie and a faint smirk. “Oscar’s face is funny when he gets told off for oversteering.”
Oscar flipped him off without lifting his head.
Amelia keyed in the updated run. “I don’t care what his face does. I care about what the car does.”
Lando walked over, watching the screen over her shoulder. “What’s the target delta?”
“Half a second gain from his last run if the balance correction holds.”
Lando let out a low whistle. “Ambitious.”
“It’s not,” Amelia replied. “It’s necessary.”
There was a pause.
“You doing okay, baby?” He asked, a bit more gently now.
“I will be fine,” she said. “After Vegas is over and no one asks me to model tyre deg on untested tarmac again.”
Oscar cleared his throat from the rig. “Not to interrupt, but—uh—ready when you are.”
“Go ahead,” Amelia said, refocusing instantly. “Cold tyres, revised torque, short sector two and three run. Confirm.”
“Confirmed,” Oscar replied.
The sim kicked back into life. Virtual Vegas, all garish lights and overblown spectacle, unfurled across the screen. Oscar’s car dove into sector two with smoother transitions, noticeably fewer corrections in the corners.
“Better,” Amelia muttered, half to herself.
Oscar’s voice came through again. “Still doesn’t feel natural, but it’s drivable now.”
“We don’t need natural,” she said. “We need consistency.”
Oscar snorted. “You should get that put on a mug.”
“I did,” Lando added from behind her. Sarcastically. “It’s in our kitchen. Pink ceramic. Very cute.”
Amelia didn’t respond to that. She was too busy watching the data smooth out. Torque delivery flattened. Brake pressure stayed linear. The car made it through turn ten without any hint of snap.
Finally, she let out a breath. “Alright. That’s something we can build on.”
Oscar coasted to a stop in the sim. “You going to sleep tonight?”
“No,” Amelia said plainly. “I’m going to write a full report for Andrea and then run sector modelling for Sunday. Maybe tomorrow I’ll sleep.”
Lando moved closer, brushing his hand against hers lightly. “You’ll sleep. I’ll make sure of it.”
Amelia didn’t argue, but she didn’t confirm either.
Instead, she turned back to the engineers. “We’ll do a full load run tomorrow, weather sim in two parts. I’ll rework the wing config tonight.”
Oscar pulled off his gloves. “Do we ever do anything the easy way?”
“No,” Amelia said simply. “But if we want to win, we’re going to have to do it the hard way.”
Lando smiled at that. “Now that should go on a mug.”
—
The Woking flat was dark except for the glow of Amelia’s laptop screen and the soft blue hue of the night bleeding in through the curtains.
Lando had been asleep for the last hour. Or at least, he’d been pretending to be—chest rising slow and steady under the covers, one arm thrown across the pillow she’d vacated earlier. He hadn’t moved, even when she’d shifted to the desk by the window and started typing furiously with only a desk lamp and the stars for company.
She’d barely noticed how stiff her back had become. Her legs were tucked beneath her again, one sock half-rolled, posture twisted into something unnatural. Her fingers moved with focused speed, mapping Oscar’s sector performance against a projected tyre wear curve.
“Amelia,” Lando said, voice rough from sleep but still gentle. “Baby. Come back to bed.”
She didn’t look up. “I’m almost done.”
“You’ve been almost done for forty minutes.”
“That’s because I keep finding new things to optimise,” she replied, tapping a key with just a little too much force. “The grip model’s still off in sector three. I think the sim is overcompensating for the surface temp. If Oscar brakes, he’s going to overshoot.”
Lando sat up, rubbing a hand over his face. “You know you’re going to fix it all tomorrow anyway, right? It doesn’t all need to happen tonight.”
“It does,” she said immediately. “It does, because it’s unpredictable, and if I don’t account for everything now, I’ll be scrambling when I’m supposed to be thinking clearly. And I hate scrambling.”
He rolled out of bed with a sleepy grunt and crossed the room to her, quiet and barefoot on the plush carpet. When he reached her, he leaned against the edge of the desk, arms folded, watching her for a long moment. Not judging. Just… taking her in.
“You’re spiralling,” he said simply.
“No, I’m working.”
“Amelia.”
That one word, soft and firm and Lando-shaped, made her pause.
She didn’t meet his eyes, but her hands stilled over the keyboard. Her mouth was set in a thin line. Tired. Frustrated.
“I don’t know how to switch it off,” she admitted, barely above a whisper. “Not when I know I haven’t solved the problem.”
“I know,” he said, and gently reached to brush a lock of hair from her cheek. “But right now the problem is that you’re running on fumes, and if you don’t rest, you’re not going to solve anything.”
“But—”
“You’ll still be brilliant in the morning. I promise.”
She swallowed, jaw tense. “I hate how much I care. I hate that it makes me feel—” She clenched one hand into a fist. “Like I’m chasing something I can never quite catch. Because there’s always something else to fix.”
“I know,” Lando said again. “But you’re allowed to rest without fixing everything first. That doesn’t make you less good at your job. It just makes you human, yeah?”
Amelia looked at him finally. Her eyes were glassy, but not tearful. Just full — with pressure, with effort, with the weight of wanting to be the best and feeling like she had to prove it constantly.
He reached down and took her hand in his.
“Come to bed,” he said gently. “I’ll lie awake with you if your brain won’t shut up. We can talk about strategy, or nothing at all. But I want you with me.”
Amelia hesitated. Then closed her laptop with a soft click.
“Okay,” she said, voice a little hollow from the sudden shift in momentum. “Okay, I’ll try.”
Lando squeezed her hand and led her back toward the bed. She climbed in beside him, limbs slow and uncertain, like she wasn’t sure how to be still. He wrapped an arm around her and pressed a kiss to the back of her shoulder.
“You’re allowed to rest,” he whispered. “You’re allowed to exist outside of your job.”
She let out a long, shaky breath. “I know.”
“Say it like you believe it.”
“I’m allowed to rest,” she repeated, curling into him. “Even if I haven’t fixed everything.”
He smiled against her skin. “Good girl.”
Amelia relaxed by inches, not all at once, never that, but her breath began to slow, her hands stopped fidgeting, and the tension in her shoulders faded as his warmth soaked into her.
It was enough.
—
Amelia stirred slowly, the weight of Lando’s arm still draped across her waist, his breathing deep and even behind her.
Her brain came online before her eyes opened. The first thought was always a race.
Telemetry. Overnight sim data. Updated Vegas surface temps. Sector three.
She kept her eyes shut. Just for a moment longer.
Her hand reached, automatically, half-blind, toward the bedside table. She found her phone and lit the screen — brightness low, eyes squinting. There was a new email flagged from McLaren strategy. An attachment from the sim team. A message from Oscar. Just a quick one.
Brake marker change in T11? Feel like it’s off. Can we run it again?
Her thumb hovered over the reply button.
Then a low, sleepy voice rumbled behind her ear. “If you answer that, I’m going to bite you.”
She stilled.
Lando’s voice was rough with sleep, his face still half buried in her hair, but his grip on her waist tightened just slightly — enough to ground her, enough to keep her in the moment.
“I wasn’t going to answer,” she said softly. “I was just checking—”
“You were doing the exact thing we talked about,” he said, not unkindly. “Waking up and not even giving yourself ten minutes to take care of yourself before you start thinking about everyone else.”
She blinked. Her screen dimmed and went black. She let the phone fall gently back onto the bed.
Lando pressed a kiss to her shoulder blade. “Thank you.”
“I really wasn’t going to do anything,” she murmured again, not sure why she was defending it. “I just needed to know what’s going on. So I could stop thinking about it.”
“I get that.” He kissed the back of her neck this time, a little firmer. “But I also know you. One look turns into an hour of work. You don’t know how to stop unless someone physically pins you down.”
She rolled onto her back to look at him. His hair was flattened on one side. His eyes were sleepy but open now, watching her like she was something fragile he was determined not to drop.
“I just don’t want to miss something important,” she said. “Vegas is proving to be a nightmare.”
“We’ll be fine. You’ll be better than fine.”
“You can’t guarantee that.”
“No,” he agreed. “But I can guarantee that if you burn yourself out now, you won’t be able to fix the problems when they actually matter.”
Her lips twisted into something half-smile, half-grimace. “That’s annoying because it’s true.”
“Mm.” He nuzzled her hairline. “I like you when you’re being all smart-pants Amelia,” Lando said, pulling her closer again. “But I like it better when you’re well-rested.”
She sighed and let herself relax, her head falling against his chest. She could feel his heartbeat — steady and calm — the opposite of her usual thrum of anxious energy.
He tapped her hip. “Tell you what. You stay here, in bed, with me for fifteen more minutes. Then I’ll get up and bring you your laptop, your iPad, three highlighters and whatever else you need. Deal?”
She closed her eyes. Thought about saying no. Thought about Vegas. Then she nodded.
“Deal.”
Lando smiled against her temple. “My girl.”
—
Las Vegas
Amelia found herself blinking too fast at the way the skyline shimmered. There was no charm, there was only overstimulation. Neon screamed from every building; engines echoed off concrete; something in the air smelled like fried sugar.
Her stomach turned.
As they moved through the paddock, she turned sharply to her dad, who was walking beside her, and asked, "Can I do a track walk later? I need to see the surface in person. Kerb structure, cambers. The sim doesn’t replicate the actual feel, not at night."
Zak gave her a careful look, then a sigh that told her the answer before he said it. “Honey… I’m sorry. They’re limiting access this weekend. Safety regulations, plus a logistical headache with all the road closures. Sorry, kiddo."
She stopped walking entirely. “What do you mean? That’s ridiculous. My understanding of this track is directly tied to driver performance.”
“I know that,” Zak said, placating. “But it’s out of my hands. FIA’s ruling.”
Amelia blinked. Hard. Her jaw set. Her brain scrambled to make the logic work — and couldn’t. The denial didn’t make sense from a safety standpoint or a performance one, and worse, it was illogical and personal.
She threw both hands out in disbelief. “Are you kidding me right now? What kind of regulatory framework tells the people making car decisions that they can’t assess the track in person?”
Zak ran a hand down his face. “I know. Believe me, I tried. I even—”
“No, this is absurd,” Amelia went on, ignoring the curious glances of passing engineers and team staff. “I’m being told to rely on visual models and telemetry estimates on a track that doesn’t exist on any previous calendar. Dad.”
That word slipped out sharp and unimpressed.
Zak winced. “You’re mad at the wrong person.”
Amelia exhaled through her nose and folded her arms. “I’m mad at everyone.”
Lando, a few steps ahead, doubled back when he realised she wasn’t beside him anymore. “Everything okay?”
“She’s not allowed to walk the track,” Zak supplied.
Lando’s brows rose. “Why not?”
“Ask the FIA,” Amelia muttered, rocking slightly on her heels, clearly overstimulated and trying not to explode about it.
Lando gave a low whistle, stepping up beside her. “That’s proper stupid.”
“Thank you,” Amelia said, voice clipped.
Lando’s hand slid to the small of her back. Just the lightest pressure. She leaned into it instinctively, grounding herself.
“You’ll be fine,” he murmured. “You’ve been simulating this track for two months. You probably know it better than anyone else already.”
Amelia didn’t answer right away. She looked out at the chaos of the strip behind the paddock fencing, then back at the rows of garages, the closed doors, the high fences. She chewed the inside of her cheek.
Zak, softer now, said, “Hey. Don’t give this the power to make you wobble, alright? You’ve got this!”
Her face didn’t soften, but her posture did, just slightly. She nodded, tight and short.
Then, “If Oscar crashes because I misjudge Turn 12 apex grip, I’m going to email the FIA and tell them to eat gravel.”
Lando grinned. “There she is. My beautiful, terrifying wife.”
“I’m serious.”
“I know.” He leaned in to kiss the side of her head and whispered, “Now stop worrying so much.”
—
The media room was lit like a game show. Two stools, a camera crew, a backdrop with the McLaren logo, and a table of whiteboards and markers.
Oscar looked mildly bored. Lando looked amused. Amelia looked like she’s been forced to be there (she had).
A social media coordinator beamed behind the camera. “Okay, welcome to a special edition of 'Who Knows Her Best!' We’ve got our race engineer Amelia here, and joining us are her driver, Oscar Piastri—”
Oscar gave an awkward little wave.
“—and her husband, Lando Norris!”
Lando winked at the camera.
Amelia stared dead ahead. “You have ten minutes. I have things to do.”
“Great! First question—What’s Amelia’s favourite food?”
Lando started writing instantly.
Oscar hesitated. “Does coffee count?”
Amelia frowned. “No. You don’t chew coffee.”
He groaned and scrawled something anyway.
“Alright—reveal!”
Lando flipped his board: Marco’s Italian Marinara Pizza Oscar’s board: …Toast?
Amelia pursed her lips. “Lando’s right.”
Oscar muttered, “She eats toast every morning.”
“I eat it because it's efficient, not because it brings me joy,” she replied.
Next question.
“Okay—what’s Amelia’s biggest pet peeve?”
Oscar didn’t hesitate.
Lando paused and narrowed his eyes. “Only one?”
They flipped.
Oscar: Inefficiency Lando: People breathing loudly near her
Amelia blinked. “Both are right. I can’t put one above the other.”
Lando smirked. “So I get half a point?”
“We didn’t agree on half points.” She huffed.
Oscar stifled a laugh.
The coordinator laughed nervously. “Alright! Final question: What’s her idea of a perfect day off?”
The boys scribbled.
Reveal:
Oscar: A quiet room, iPad fully charged, noise-canceling headphones Lando: No phones. No noise. Me, her, somewhere nobody can find us.
Amelia looked at both answers, then spoke flatly.
“Oscar’s is my ideal race-weekend. Lando’s is correct for a non-race-weekend.”
Lando grinned. “Boom.”
Oscar sighed. “I should’ve said that.”
“You were just guessing.” She shrugged.
The social media manager clapped. “Well! Looks like… Lando wins!"
Amelia stood. “Great. I’m going back to run a qualifying simulation now.”
She left frame without saying goodbye.
Oscar and Lando both laughed as the camera faded to the McLaren logo.
—
The McLaren garage buzzed with the low hum of machinery and murmured radio checks. Engineers moved with purpose, but Amelia sat on the edge of Oscar’s workstation, unusually still, arms folded tightly across her chest.
Oscar was halfway into his race suit, glancing at her between sips from his bottle.
“You’re staring at me,” he said, trying to make it light.
“I’m thinking,” she replied flatly.
He waited. She didn’t elaborate.
A beat passed.
Then, in that clipped, low tone of hers, “Track’s colder than ideal. Grip will suck the first stint. You’ll want to push, but don’t chase the feeling if it’s not there. Let it come to you.”
He nodded, tightening his gloves. “Copy.”
“Stay out of traffic, especially Sector 2. If someone impedes you, don’t get emotional about it. Just report and reset.”
Oscar studied her. “You okay?”
“I’m briefing you.”
“…Right.”
She unfolded her arms slowly, like the motion took effort. Her jaw was tense. The usual snap in her delivery was duller, like she was wading through fog and didn’t want to show it.
“You don’t need to prove anything to anyone today,” she said finally, without meeting his eyes. “Not to me. Not to the paddock. Just get the data. Clean session. That’s the win.”
Oscar hesitated. “You sure you’re alright?”
She finally looked at him. Her expression didn’t shift, but there was something behind her eyes—tired, maybe. Not physically. He couldn’t tell.
“Focus on your job, Oscar.”
A long pause.
“Alright,” he said softly. “Let’s do it, then.”
He turned to leave for the car, but her hand briefly touched his forearm.
It was the first time she’d done that all season.
“You’ve got this,” she said.
And then she was gone; disappearing behind a headset and a screen, shutting the world out with precision.
Oscar didn’t say anything.
But when he climbed into the car and pulled his belts tight, his shoulders were a little squarer. His breathing calmer.
—
The TV feed cut to chaos. Red flag. Marshals sprinted onto the track. Carlos’s Ferrari was being craned away. Oscar hadn’t even managed to leave the garage yet.
Amelia stood at the pit wall, arms crossed, headset still on. She hadn’t blinked in fifteen seconds.
Her dad appeared behind her, phone in hand, expression a blend of irritation and corporate damage control.
“What happened?” He asked.
“Drain cover came loose,” she said flatly. “Sainz drove over it at 320. Floor’s completely destroyed.”
Zak frowned. “Seriously?”
“Yes. The cover wasn’t welded properly. Obvious risk. They didn’t check.”
He looked at the monitor. “Are we running Oscar?”
“No.”
“Why not?”
She turned her head slowly toward him. “Because there’s a hole in the track.”
Zak didn’t respond.
She continued. “Sending a car out now is negligent. I already told Race Control we won’t participate until they give a structural inspection report. I won’t risk Oscar’s chassis because someone forgot a torque wrench.”
Zak sighed. “Okay.”
Behind them, mechanics hovered awkwardly, unsure whether to continue prep or stand down. Amelia tapped her headset.
“FP1 is over,” she said, voice clipped. “Go back to base. Check Lando’s floor and cooling ducts for debris. Full diagnostic.”
Oscar walked up, half-suited, helmet under his arm. “What’s going on?”
She looked at him. “You’re not going out. Drain cover came off. Session’s red-flagged.”
“That’s it?”
“It could’ve killed someone,” she said. “So yes. That’s it.”
He blinked. “Right.”
She turned to walk back toward her workstation.
Zak called after her. “Don’t be angry!”
She stopped. Looked over her shoulder. “I’m not. Anger won’t fix the track.” Then, after a beat, she said, “But I think someone should be fired.”
And she walked off to find her husband.
—
The lights along the Strip hadn’t dimmed, but everything else had gone strangely quiet.
It was well past midnight. The garage, usually crackling with anticipation before a session, felt more like a waiting room. Too many people moving too carefully, voices lowered like something had been interrupted. Amelia stood at the pit wall, headset already pinching slightly against her temple, her fingers motionless over the trackpad. Waiting.
She hadn’t said much in the last hour. Not out of some dramatic mood, she just didn’t feel like filling the air with worthless commentary.
When the green light finally blinked on at the end of the pit lane, there wasn’t relief. Just exasperation.
She keyed her mic, steady. “Box out. Let’s see how everything feels.”
Oscar responded immediately. “Copy.”
The car pulled away, the hum of the engine disappearing into the neon distance. She stared after it a beat too long.
They hadn’t run in FP1. None of the planned setup work mattered anymore, this was just about salvaging time, collecting data.
But now, every drain cover was now a threat. Just another thing to add to her list of concerns.
Amelia’s eyes flicked to the screen, watching Oscar’s telemetry as if she could will the suspension to stay intact through every straight.
Two chairs down, her dad made some offhand joke about this being “the most expensive late-night go-kart session ever,” and she smiled with half her face, but didn’t turn.
The data streamed in. Amelia’s brain parsed it automatically, throttle traces, brake pressures, steering angles, but the usual focus wasn’t clicking the same way tonight. She pressed the mic button. “Feeling okay with the grip?” She asked.
“Better than expected,” Oscar replied. “Still a bit green, but manageable.”
“Copy that. Let’s try Mode 7 next lap.”
A beat passed.
“You alright?”
She blinked. The question had come in over a private channel. Just him. “Yeah,” she said. “Just having to watch everything twice. Sorry if I sound a bit distracted.”
She didn’t add that the neon lights were starting to feel like they were flickering behind her eyes, or that the pressure in her chest hadn’t really gone away since the FP1 red flag. Or that the silence before the sessions had settled into her bones in a way that didn’t feel temporary.
But none of that mattered. Not tonight. He had 90 minutes, and they had to make every single one of them count.
She shuffled on her hair, opened the sector comparison window, and let out a quiet breath. “Let’s go hunting, ducky.”
—
Amelia sat on the edge of a low bench, her headset off, fingers tapping absently on the worn fabric of her skirt. Oscar slid next to her, helmet still under one arm, face flushed from the heat of the track.
“You did well out there,” she told him.
Oscar smiled, the kind that barely touched his eyes. “You sure? It felt like I was half driving with one eye on every drain cover.”
She let out a soft, humourless chuckle. “Yeah, well, that’s what we get for racing on a casino parking lot.”
He glanced at her, watching for the flicker of something beneath her calm. “You okay?”
Her eyes caught his. “I’m fine. Just... processing. You know how it is.”
He nodded slowly. “Yeah. If you need to step back or—”
“No.” She shook her head, almost imperceptibly. “No. I’m fine.”
Oscar leaned back, exhaling through his nose. “Roll on tomorrow, eh?”
“Yeah.” She sighed. “Tomorrow.”
—
Oscar and Lando stood by the side of the track, away from the chatter and TV cameras, sharing a rare moment of quiet.
“She’s different,” Oscar said, voice low, like sharing a secret. “Not in a bad way. Just... more quiet, more serious. Even when she talks, it’s like she’s somewhere else.”
Lando nodded, eyes scanning the pit lane as if he could spot the cause in the distance. “Yeah. Noticed. You think she’s pushing herself too hard?”
Oscar shrugged. “Maybe. I’ll keep an eye on her. Don’t want to be that guy who notices too late.”
“Good call,” Lando said, clapping him on the shoulder. “I’ll try to get it out of her tonight, but I appreciate it.”
Oscar smiled, half relieved. “Anytime, mate.”
—
The lobby’s glare hit Amelia like a punch, each flicker of neon and burst of laughter hammering against the fragile calm she’d been clinging to all weekend. Every unfamiliar voice seemed to multiply, overlapping into a chaotic storm behind her eyes. Her skin prickled, nerves sparking in every inch of her body. She tried to focus on the steady rhythm of her own breath, but it felt shallow, too fast.
The weekend had been a relentless tide of changes — the new track layout, unexpected strategies, the flood of questions from media she barely had energy to endure. Everyone expected her to be sharp, ready, unflappable. But inside, her mind was scrambling to process it all, the sensory overload making everything worse.
She could feel the walls closing in, the pressure building behind her ribcage, tightening like a vice.
Just breathe. But the breath didn’t come easy. Her hands clenched at her sides, fingers trembling.
She tried to steady herself, a practiced smile pressed onto her face for the reception staff, for Lando, for Oscar. But it was too much. Too loud. Too unpredictable.
The floodgate broke.
Her vision blurred, chest tightening until it felt like the air itself was betraying her. She didn’t want to cry. She didn’t want anyone to see this unraveling — but she couldn’t hold it in anymore.
Lando’s voice cut through the haze — soft, patient, familiar.
“Hey, baby. Let’s go over here.”
His touch was a lifeline, grounding her in the chaos. She stumbled toward him, every shaky breath breaking as the raw exhaustion spilled out.
She wanted to explain, to scream ‘this isn’t weakness!’ but the words caught in her throat.
Lando didn’t say a thing. He just reached out, firm and steady, pressing his hand gently but insistently into the small of her back. A solid, grounding pressure that said, I’m here. I’ve got you.
She leaned into it, breath ragged, heart racing, muscles trembling. His warmth was steady beneath her — an anchor.
Her hands found his arms, clinging like an octopus, desperate for the hold that would stop the spinning. She didn’t have the words to ask for help, but the silent understanding in his touch was enough.
Without a word, Lando lifted her effortlessly, as if she weighed nothing at all, cradling her close against his chest.
The noise of the lobby faded into background white noise as he carried her through it, the solid rhythm of his steps matching the slow crawl of her ragged breathing.
They moved past the glare of the lights, past the curious eyes, straight back to the safety of their room — where she could finally just be.
—
The shower ran hot, steam swirling thick and heavy in the small bathroom. Amelia sat on the cold tile floor, knees drawn up, fingers tightening around her stim toy, the familiar texture a welcome relief. The water hammered down, relentless and fierce and perfect.
Behind the fogged glass, Lando crouched, silent and steady. His presence wasn’t words or pressure, just steady warmth, a solid anchor in the swirling storm she couldn’t always control. His hand rested lightly on the tub’s edge, close enough that if she reached out, she’d find him there.
She didn’t say anything. Didn’t need to. His calm, wordless support let her unravel at her own pace, gave her permission to sink low and find the fragments of herself again. The tight coil inside loosened, breath slowing, muscles softening.
When she finally reached out, she wrapped her fingers around his wrist, and exhaled a slow, quiet breath.
—
The room was quiet except for the faint hum of the air conditioning. Amelia lay on her side, knees tucked in, eyes fixed on the ceiling like it might swallow her whole. The bed creaked softly as Lando shifted beside her.
After a long pause, his hand found hers in the dark. “You doing alright, baby?” He asked, voice low but steady.
She hesitated before answering. “No. Not really. Today was... too much. Like everything was spinning, but I was stuck in place.”
Lando squeezed her fingers gently, patient. “You’ve been on edge since we landed.”
A small nod, tight with tension. “Since the plane, yeah. I felt sick the entire flight. And then here—everything just kept coming at me. Noise, people, changes. I thought I could handle it, but it kept building.”
He kept his hand in hers, steady and warm. “Nobody had enjoyed the weekend so far, baby. I promise you, you’re not alone there.”
Amelia finally turned her head to look at him, eyes searching. “I don’t want to sound weak. Or like I’m complaining.”
Lando shook his head, a soft smile breaking through. “You’re the last person that anyone would think was weak.”
Her shoulders relaxed a little, a breath she didn’t realise she’d been holding escaping in a quiet sigh. “I’ve just felt physically sick with nerves since we left England. It’s like the whole weekend’s hanging over me, and I don’t know how to handle it.”
“Hey,” he said gently, fingers fluttering over her cheek and eyelids, “We’ll get through it together. We handle tomorrow, then we handle race day, and then we get to go home.”
She gave a small, wry smile. “I might lose it completely if it wasn’t for you.”
Lando chuckled softly. “Wouldn’t let that happen, would I?”
They stayed like that for a while, fingers entwined, silence wrapping around them like a shield.
“I hate feeling like I’m not in control.”
“I know, baby. And I’m sorry I can’t take that feeling away.”
She blinked back the hint of tears, voice softer now. “Thanks for being here.”
He brushed a loose strand of hair from her face. “Always.”
—
The morning light spilled gently through the curtains, softening the edges of the hotel room. Amelia was curled up in bed, the duvet pulled just below her chin. Lando balanced a tray with two plates of eggs, toast, and steaming coffee, trying not to spill as he settled it on the bedside table.
Oscar sat on the edge of the bed, knees tucked under him, already half-entwined in the quiet comfort of the morning. This wasn’t their first breakfast like this; the three of them, an unspoken little routine born out of long weekends and unpredictable schedules.
Lando grinned as he handed Amelia her coffee. “Here you go. Not too sweet, I promise.”
She gave a small, tired smile, reaching out to take it. “Better than last time.”
Oscar, perched close by, reached for a piece of toast and grinned back at her. “Glad I don’t like coffee. I’m just here for the food.”
Amelia raised an eyebrow, sipping. “You remind me of a stray cat sometimes.”
Oscar laughed, warm and easy. “I weirdly don’t mind that comparison.”
Lando shot Amelia a fond look across the bed.
“So, what’s the plan today?” Oscar asked, munching thoughtfully.
Lando shrugged, “Take it slow. FP3 later and then Quali, obviously, but nothing crazy this morning.”
Amelia leaned back into the pillows, her voice quiet but steady. “I might go and buy some Epsom salts. Write some strategy notes in the bath.”
Oscar nodded, eyes kind. “Sounds relaxing”
She glanced at Lando, who gave her a small, encouraging smile. “Hope so,” she said simply.
Oscar reached out and ruffled Lando’s hair. “Christ, mate. You could do with a haircut.”
Lando scoffed, showing him away. “Fuck off. Says you, mister swoop.”
Amelia pursed her lips and hid her smile behind her mug.
—
The gift shop was a small, cluttered oasis of weirdness and nostalgia tucked inside the hotel lobby. Amelia was scanning the shelves with practiced efficiency, eyes locked on the little jars of bath salts.
Lando and Oscar were already browsing the second aisle.
Lando held up a neon cowboy hat. “Mate, how can you say no to this?”
Oscar was inspecting a glittery, oversized keychain shaped like a slot machine. “It’s got lights and sounds. Look.” He pressed a button and the keychain erupted with flashing colours and a cacophony of jingles. “Jackpot! I’m rich.”
Amelia sighed, pushing her sunglasses up the bridge of her nose. “Guys, don’t start. I just want some bath stuff.”
Oscar grinned, undeterred. “But we’re just doing cultural research.”
Lando plopped the cowboy hat on his head sideways and attempted a drawl. “Y’all ready for the rodeo?”
Amelia gave him a flat look. “Great look, husband.”
Oscar laughed and reached for a novelty plastic cactus, pretending it was a microphone. “Welcome to the Las Vegas Gift Show! I’m your host, Cactus Carl.”
Lando, clearly in his element, grabbed a toy rattlesnake and slithered it along the floor toward Amelia’s feet. “Don’t step on the snake! It’s venomous.”
Amelia stepped back, raising an eyebrow, but a faint smile tugged at the corner of her lips. “Right. Venomous and ridiculous.”
Finally, she found what she was looking for; a small, unassuming jar of lavender bath salts with a label promising relaxation. She grabbed it, turning to the boys.
“Alright, I’m done.”
Lando tilted his hat back and gave her a mock salute. “Yes, ma’am. Mission accomplished.”
Oscar picked up another keychain. “Hey, look at this one! It’s a limited edition.”
Amelia sighed tiredly.
—
Less than an hour later, the hotel bathroom was filled with the soft scent of lavender from the bath salts Amelia had chosen. The water was just the right temperature, warm enough to ease the tension knotted deep in her shoulders but not scalding. She sank down slowly, letting the heat seep in, her fingers tracing the ripples on the surface.
Outside the bathroom door, Lando and Oscar sat cross-legged on the floor, leaning against the wall with laptops balanced on their knees. Their voices were low, careful not to break the fragile calm Amelia was clinging to.
“So, the long straight,” Oscar said quietly. “Telemetry showed some unusual brake pressure spikes on your last run.” He said to Lando.
Lando nodded, flicking through the data. “Yeah, I noticed that too. Maybe the surface temperature was throwing off the balance?”
Amelia sighed, eyes closed. “Probably. Felt off the whole session.” She added, only having to speak a little louder than usual to be heard through the ajar door.
Oscar glanced toward the door. “You want us to try something different for FP3?”
She let her fingers trail in the water, thoughtful. “Maybe adjust front brake bias… just a bit.”
Lando nodded. “I’ll write it down.”
There was a pause, the only sound the gentle dripping from the faucet. Amelia opened her eyes a crack. “Thanks for this.”
Oscar grinned. “You asked for company and telemetry. We deliver.”
Lando chuckled. “Yeah, we’ve got nowhere better to be, baby.”
She let herself smile, a quiet warmth spreading beyond the bathwater. In this little bubble of steam and soft voices, the chaos felt a little less relentless.
—
FP3 was more than just practice—it was a chance to claw back control after yesterday’s chaos, and Amelia was feeling the weight of it.
Oscar was in the car, revving the engine, while her headset buzzed with team chatter. The track was unforgiving today, hotter, more demanding, but Amelia’s eyes stayed locked on the timing screen. She flicked through sector times, braking points, tire temps—all the little details she’d been obsessing over for days.
Her gut still fluttered, nerves stubborn beneath the surface, but she pushed it aside. This wasn’t the place for doubts. She spoke into the comms, “brake bias -0.3 for the next run. Watch rear temps.”
Her radio crackled, Oscar’s voice clipped but focused. “Got it. Feels different already.”
She nodded, even though he couldn’t see it. “Keep the feedback coming.”
A few laps later, she caught a subtle improvement in the data—sector two times shaving off milliseconds. Not perfect, but progress. The day wasn’t going to beat her.
By the end of FP3, the sun was blazing, sweat damp on her brow. Amelia’s mind was a swirl of analysis, but beneath it all was something steadier—quiet confidence, the kind that comes after pushing through the noise.
When Oscar pulled into the pits, she let herself exhale. One step closer.
—
Qualifying came in the blink of an eye and Amelia’s eyes were glued to the screen, every pixel of telemetry, every split second on the sector times drilled into her mind.
Oscar’s car cut through the track, precise and aggressive, pushing the limits. Amelia’s fingers tapped lightly on the desk—not from nerves, but calculation, running through every variable in her head. She caught the slight twitch in the rear suspension, the tiny loss of rear grip in sector two. Adjustments would be needed. Not a disaster, but enough to make a difference.
Will was nearby, watching too, but Amelia barely noticed him.
Oscar crossed the line, a clean lap, but not quite the best. Amelia’s brow furrowed. “Sector three’s where he’s losing time. Let’s tweak the brake bias for the final run.”
Will leaned over, quiet but warm. “You think he’s got it?”
She didn’t look away from the screen. “I don't know. He needs the car to behave like it’s supposed to.”
The final moments stretched taut, then Oscar’s second run flashed up. Faster, cleaner. Still not enough to get out of Q1. Her jaw clenched.
Fuck.
—
[Twitter Feed – #protectamelia]
@/f1fanatic123:
just saw that vid of amelia having a full autistic meltdown in the hotel lobby in vegas last night… why don’t you weirdos shut the hell up and disappear into a hole and leave the fucking girl alone omfg
@/raceengineerlvr:
people spreading that clip with zero context? big yikes. amelia is freaking brilliant and deserves respect. stop the ableism.
@/landosupportr:
if anyone can handle this insane pressure it’s amelia. lando’s lucky af to have her, and honestly? so are we. back off.
@/keepitrealf1: autistic, blunt, iconic. amelia’s meltdown is just her being human—get over your toxic asses.
@/f1momlife: as a parent to a neurodivergent kiddo, this blatant ableism online is disgusting. show some empathy. #protectamelia
@/oscarp443:
oscar’s team isn’t complete without amelia. her meltdown shows how much she cares. toxic ‘fans’ need to check themselves
@/nocapf1:
y’all acting like sharing a meltdown is funny or weak. nahhhhhhhh, that’s ableism 101. have some respect or just stay offline ????
@/disabledandproud:
this is EXACTLY why autistic ppl get unfair hate. stop weaponising someone’s mental health moments for clicks. grow up.
@/f1_truthteller:
seeing the clips blow up and ppl twisting it into jokes? pure ableist nonsense. end of.
—
[Instagram – McLaren Official Story]
Video clip of Amelia working intently in the garage, captioned:
"Focused, fierce, and the backbone of the papaya team."
—
[Reddit – r/formula1]
Post Title:
“Can we talk about the video of Amelia Norris? The backlash is unreal and uncalled for.”
Top comment:
“It’s easy to forget these people are human. Amelia’s dedication is clear, and the meltdown just shows how much she gives. This fandom can be toxic. Let’s be better.”
—
Amelia sat rigid, fingers barely twitching on the edge of the conference table. The room felt too bright, too loud—like a spotlight had been slammed onto her without warning. She watched her dad pace. His voice was steady but tight, every word laced with frustration.
“How did we let this happen? The video should’ve been reported immediately.”
She caught Lando’s fists clenching behind her, his jaw set hard. He wasn’t shouting—he didn’t need to. The anger radiated off him like heat, a shield she wanted to lean into.
Oscar was quieter than usual, but his eyes, sharp and steady, burned with the same quiet fury.
They all thought they were defending her.
But inside Amelia, it felt like a thousand static whispers; people’s opinions buzzing at the edge of her brain, overwhelming and unrelenting. She wasn’t weak. She was tired. The energy it took to smile, to explain, to pretend like none of this was a breach of her life felt like a lead weight pressing down on her chest.
The PR team rambled about damage control and messaging, but Amelia barely heard them. Her thoughts slipped away from the room, spinning cold and sharp.
She looked up, met her dads expectant gaze.
Her voice was flat, stripped of any theatrics. “Yeah, it sucked having it put out there. But I’m not going to make a scene about it. I can handle it.”
They waited, as if that was supposed to be reassuring. She knew what they wanted: a show of vulnerability, maybe some anger.
Instead, she smiled inwardly.
She pulled her phone out, thumb hovering. Then, with a quiet kind of defiance, she pulled up a new tweet.
Autism affects 1 in 36 people. Awareness beats stigma.
Also, I married Lando Norris and you didn’t. Suck it.
[Link to autism awareness resource]
She hit send.
Lando’s laugh was the first sound to break the tension. Her dad let out a short, grudging chuckle. Oscar’s eyes flickered with something like pride.
—
[DTS Outtake Clip]
Will Buxton
“Yeah, so… that clip of Amelia, it really went viral, didn’t it? I’m sure she must have thought her weekend couldn’t get any tougher after that moment. But then Sunday came…”
—
Amelia caught Lando just before he stepped into the car. The hum of the track buzzed behind them, but for a beat, it was just them.
She leaned up on her tiptoes and kissed him. “Good luck. Be safe. Drive fast.”
He smiled, eyes bright with that fierce fire she loved. “Always, baby.”
She turned and headed to the pit wall, heart steady but fierce — ready.
—
The roar of the crowd swallowed the pre-race tension whole as the lights blinked out, one by one. Oscar launched perfectly—an instinct honed from endless hours tracking telemetry and analysing every millisecond. He surged forward, slicing through the tight corners of the Las Vegas street circuit with brutal precision.
Amelia’s eyes locked on the screens, her fingers dancing over the buttons and dials at the pit wall. Every lap was a heartbeat, every split time a breath held. She was the calm centre for Oscar’s storm.
“Sector one clean, good pace,” she told him over the radio, voice even but focused.
“Copy. Tires feeling good,” came Oscar’s crisp reply.
She allowed herself a brief, tiny exhale. This was what she lived for, the rhythm of the race, the flow of strategy, the challenge.
But then, amid the relentless thrum of engines and tires gripping asphalt, the radio sparked. A sudden crackle, then Lando’s voice—strained, quick.
“Car’s sliding—shit—oh fucking—”
The pit wall fell silent except for the crackling radio. Amelia’s chest tightened. The word ‘crash’ hovered unspoken but undeniable in the space between sounds.
Her fingers froze. Her eyes darted to the live feed on the screen; Lando’s McLaren spinning wildly, slamming into the barriers.
Time fractured.
The noise dimmed, the crowd’s roar now a distant wave crashing against the edges of her mind.
“Lando’s out,” the comms guy said quietly beside her. “Full safety car. Medical car dispatched.”
She blinked rapidly, trying to swallow the sudden lump forming in her throat. Breathe. Focus.
She had to focus.
Oscar was still out there, still racing.
She shook her head slightly as if clearing fog. “Oscar, you’re clear. Keep the pace, watch brake temps—”
“I’m ok.” Lando reported, but his voice was tight — like he’d been winded.
Amelia’s voice cracked, and she hated herself for it. Hated how much it betrayed her insides.
Oscar’s voice came steady, but she could hear the surprise, the tension. “Shit. That was Lando?”
“Yeah,” she said before she could stop herself. “He’s… he’s climbing out of the car. He’s okay.”
She stole a glance at the live feed showing Lando being helped out, walking with a medic, shaking his head like he was fine. But she knew—knew the physical toll, the adrenaline masking the pain, the shock that would hit later.
She frantically grabbed for her golf ball — she always kept it beneath the monitors, and squeezed it. Grounding herself.
“Focus on the race, ducky. I’m here. We’ve got this.”
Oscar’s voice softened, “You sure?”
She swallowed hard again. “I’m sure.”
Every lap was a razor’s edge now. Amelia ran through data, strategic calls, tire management; but her mind kept drifting back to that crash, to Lando’s face on the screen, the unspoken “what if.”
The pit lane buzzed, the crew working, the team breathing with her through Oscar’s race, but she was somewhere else too.
She bit back a dry sob and pressed on. “Sector two clean. Let’s push on the next lap. You can get Sainz.”
Oscar’s voice returned with renewed fire. “Copy. Let’s make it count.”
She nodded, though no one could see.
And yet.
There was the ache.
The race carried on, unforgiving.
—
The monitor in front of her flickered with telemetry, lap times, sector splits—Oscar’s heartbeat in digital form. She had to be here. Had to be present.
Her fingers danced a quiet rhythm on the edge of the pit-wall console—a practiced stim to keep the rising panic locked behind a steel door in her mind. The world had already cracked around her today.
“Sector three’s slower by two tenths, watch the tyre temps,” she said, voice clipped, tight. Her gaze never left the screen, even as the chaos inside her threatened to seep out. The noise outside, the shouted team radio chatter, the flashing pit boards, it all blurred into one sharp focus: Oscar.
The world had been unpredictable all weekend. The unexpected video circulating. The judgment from people who didn’t know. Lando spinning out and hitting the wall. But here, in this moment, Amelia was the engineer, the strategist. The calm in the storm.
She clenched the golf ball in her palm, fingers twisting the soft silicone shapes until the ridges bit into her skin just enough to bring her back. The tears she hadn’t let herself shed yet pooled behind her eyes, but she swallowed them down. Not now. Not now.
Her radio crackled to life, “Oscar, focus on exit at turn seven, keep it smooth; tyres need managing.”
And then, after what felt like a lifetime of silence, she sensed him before she saw him. A warmth settling over her. Lando, standing just behind her, his chin resting lightly on her shoulder. No words.
His arms wound around her waist and he squeezed. Tight and warm and perfect.
The sharp edge of panic softened in that quiet pressure. It was like a breath she didn’t know she’d been holding for hours finally escaped. The knot in her chest loosened.
She kept her eyes on the screen, voice steady but softer now, “Push on the next lap, Oscar. You’ve got this.”
The relief didn’t break her focus. Instead, it sharpened it, gave her the strength to keep Oscar moving forward through the pack.
But just for one brief moment, the whole world faded away, leaving just the hum of the race, the steady pulse of the monitor, and the quiet heartbeat pressing against her back.
—
Amelia sat at the small kitchen table, absently stirring her coffee, her mind half on the morning briefing notes she’d reviewed earlier.
She wasn’t in the mood to think much, really. Too many things buzzing in her head—the weekend, the viral video fallout, the constant undercurrent of stress that never quite left her.
Then, for no particular reason, her hand drifted to her phone, and she opened the calendar app. That’s when it hit her.
The date she’d been quietly expecting had come and gone.
No sign.
A slow, quiet realisation settled in her gut. She hadn’t missed a period in years.
She blinked, staring at the screen. No big dramatic wave of panic. No sudden flood of excitement either. Just… a plain, blunt acknowledgment.
Oh.
“Okay,” she muttered to herself quietly, voice flat but certain. “Should probably tell Lando.”
She stood and walked to the living room, pulling out her phone again.
iMessage — 13:03pm
Amelia (Wifey 4 lifey)
My period is 3 weeks late.
--
She slid the phone onto the table, fingers lingering on the edge for a moment. Missing a period wasn’t a crisis, just a mildly inconvenient fact.
She glanced out the window at the bustling street below. Monaco was doing its usual thing, people rushing, cars honking, life barreling forward.
Amelia took another sip of coffee and muttered under her breath, “Well, that’s new.”
Then, with all the casual decisiveness of someone deciding what to have for lunch, she shoved the thought aside and got back to work.
NEXT CHAPTER
#radio silence#formula one x reader#f1 fic#f1 x reader#f1 x ofc#f1 imagine#f1 x female reader#lando fanfic#lando imagine#lando#lando norris#lando x reader#lando norris x female oc#lando norris x you#lando norris x oc#lando norris x y/n#lando norris x reader#ln4 mcl#ln4 smut#ln4 imagine#ln4 fic#ln4 x reader#ln4#op81#formula one imagine#formula one fanfiction#lando x y/n#lando x ofc#lando x you#lando x oc
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Fun game idea: Go to the CPSC recall list, set "Date from" to the first day of your birth month and "Date to" to the last day of your birth month, and see what the most bizarre item was that was recalled during the month you came into existence.
Mine was the petroleum-filled bubble patch t-shirt


Sorry i can't go out tonight i have plans
#Imma start sending some of these images to people with no explanation#“Injuries reported” and it's a picture of two tiny rubber cows#some of these are actually insane#like “Injuries Reported: The drawstring of the boy's jacket can become stuck in a car door and result in the minor being dragged”#DID THEY LIKE DRIVE OFF THE MOMENT THE BOY CLOSED THE DOOR????#there seems to be way more injuries reported in 1999 than today which is... good I guess but...??#I remember finding one that was a wooden Winnie-the-Pooh plate and it was recalled for risk of LEAD POISONING#WHY DID YOU PUT LEAD IN THE WOODEN WINNIE-THE-POOH PLATE#I could gossip about people from the past that I don’t know all day long#cpsc#recall#fun game to play
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A little scrap of inexperienced Simon (my beloved, my baby, I love you) because it stuck to my brain like glue.
Simon, who comes back from deployment, and his anxieties slowly ebb away the moment he sets foot in the house—because there's an extra pair of shoes by the door, an extra set of keys on the shelf.
You're already tucked in by the time he's silently walking in the bedroom, quiet like a mouse, dropping duffle bag and wind jacket on the floor. His clothes follow soon after, and before he even knows it, he's under the bedsheets.
Shower be damned, he'll have plenty of time in the morning.
Naively, he thought sex would be off the table because he is too bloody tired to even concoct the thought—but you look heaven-sent, the first scrap of peace life has given him in ages.
And fuck, you're asleep, but his cock suddenly isn't. He has to get adjusted to that—arousal rearing its head only when you're close enough to smell.
Selfishly, he presses a lingering kiss to your shoulder, hoping it would be enough to gently wake you up—but he should've known better, because you swivel around quicker than his reflexes and elbow him in the face.
Only seconds later, when your ears perk and your eyes peel open, attentive and aware, you recognize the familiar shorn blond hair and the string of curses that leaves his lips, big hands cupping his nose.
Curses and apologies flow down your tongue so anxiously he can't help but drawl a "S'nothin', s'fine," followed by "Been through worse, swear it."
And then you're peppering apologetic kisses all over his cheeks, and he can't help but deflate because, after all, he's had plenty of elbows in his face but not as many lips.
He chuckles, a rough sound that rarely leaves him, and your giggles follow soon after. Until your kisses land on his lips, and he sighs in pure contentment.
It's a slow dance you welcome him home with—tender touches that make his stomach tingle all the way to his scalp. He almost falls asleep, but the feel of your skin on his has his body think otherwise.
Which is why gentle turns urgent, and you comply because, for some reason, you seem to want him as much as he does you.
And then he has you on your back, all wrapped around him, like a bow on a present. Frantically struggles to untie the drawstrings of your sweats, grumbling something about his fingers being too big, to which you reply with a cheeky remark that has his cock twitch in his briefs.
He crashes his mouth onto yours because words aren't his forte, nor are his actions—however, he'd like to try.
But your teeth knock together so hard that Simon feels his skull vibrate. He's disoriented and in pain, and, while not many, he surely doesn't recall any past sexual experiences leaving him this sore before they even began.
As soon as he starts worrying about your well-being, he finds you hysterical, holding your stomach in a laugh that exposes pink-stained teeth. You try and spectacularly fail (several times) to recollect yourself.
He thinks you look beautiful, even if you're struggling to form sentences. But he gathers you don't need words, because you finally pull him down to meet you halfway, and he lands softly this time.
He's cracked your lip, and your tongue tastes of copper, but still you smile. And while once he might have questioned your sanity because you're bleeding and his nose is throbbing, now he sees no wrong in it.
Happiness comes in different boxes, after all. And his own is shaped like you—bleeding lips, hysterics, and all.
#simon ghost riley#simon riley#simon riley x reader#simon ghost riley x reader#ghost x reader#cod#call of duty#cod mw2#I love stupid clumsy sex#I love clumsy simon#like he can't be perfect forever and always#socially awkward blorbo now has girlfriend™️#cod fluff#cod smut#drabble#foxy
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