#gold flatware
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harperandhudson · 2 months ago
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goldsilversales · 2 years ago
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"Discover top local gold and silver buying spots in 2023! Find trusted buyers for your precious metals. Visit the blog now for valuable insights."
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sellmyjewelry87 · 8 months ago
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pitlanepeach · 1 month ago
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Radio Silence | Chapter Twenty-Six
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, Silverstone 2022 accident
Notes — Do I hear wedding bells......? I am aware, btw, that their wedding song was not actually released yet in 2022. I don’t care. It’s perfect.
Want to be added to the taglist? Let me know! — Peach x
June 2022 
It was nearly 1am in Monaco, and the apartment was dark except for the soft glow of the TV, which had finished playing the movie they’d put on and was now cycling through the Netflix screensaver. Lando was lying upside down on the couch, legs thrown over the backrest, a blanket over his face. Amelia sat cross-legged on the floor, surrounded by a sea of envelopes, glossy samples, test prints, and a very snuggly cat curled around the printer.
They were cat sitting for Max for a few days. Jimmy was hiding somewhere, probably. But Sassy had imprinted on Amelia and wouldn’t leave her side. 
The dining table was lost beneath swatches of card stock, wax seal stamps, and an alarming number of silver and papaya gel pens.
Lando peeked out from under the blanket. “Have I died? Is this the afterlife? Is this hell?”
“Shh,” Amelia said, clutching a save-the-date draft in both hands. “This one’s almost perfect.”
“You said that about the last four.”
“This one feels better.”
“I am literally having to be upside down to stay engaged in this conversation.”
“Sounds like a you problem,” she muttered, flipping the card-stock over and running her fingers along the raised print. “Do you think it’s too formal?”
Lando rolled off the couch dramatically and landed on his knees beside her with a quiet oof. “Let me see.” He took the card and read aloud, in an overly posh British accent: “‘Save the date for the wedding of Amelia Brown and Lando Norris. July 5th, 2022. Surrey, England.’” He looked up. “Shouldn’t we also mention that there’ll be a bouncy castle?”
“There is not going to be a bouncy castle.” She told him. 
“We don’t know that.” 
“We absolutely do.” She glared at him. 
Lando grinned, pleased to have poked the right nerve. “Fine. But I want there to be a chocolate fountain at the reception.”
“You’re twelve years old.” She muttered. 
“I am your fiancé.” He shot back. 
She snorted, and Lando leaned forward, pressing a kiss to the tip of her nose before glancing back down at the card in his hand. “I like this one,” he said sincerely this time. “It’s very you.”
“I designed it to be us.” She sighed. 
“I know. That’s why it’s good.” He looked up, tilting his head. “When do you want to get them sent out?”
“Soon.” She paused. “I wanted to be sure. I wanted you to be sure.”
Lando’s smile softened. He reached over and pulled her into his lap. “Baby, I’m so sure. Never been more sure of anything in my entire life.”
She rolled her eyes, but her smile was gentle, hidden against his shoulder. “Okay,” she murmured. “Let’s send them.”
Lando pulled out his phone and held it up. “I’m going to start a group chat with every driver on the grid. Call it ‘Wedding of the Year.’”
“Lando, do not—”
But it was too late. He was already typing.
And laughing.
And she was completely, undeniably in love with him.
The video call connected with a soft ping, and Amelia barely waited for her mother’s face to load before launching into her current crisis.
“—and I just don’t think the eucalyptus runners will work with the shade of green we’ve picked for the table linens, even if we go with silver flatware, which I’m still not convinced about because it feels cold, and I want something warmer, but gold doesn’t work with the papaya theme, and—”
“Hi, darling,” her mother said, voice gentle and amused. “It’s nice to see your face.”
Amelia blinked. “Sorry. Hi.”
“Are you a bit stressed?” Her mum offered, smiling.
Amelia huffed. “According to Lando? Yes.”
“Well, I don’t think he’s wrong.”
They were both quiet for a moment. Amelia’s mum sat at her kitchen table in England, tea in hand. The late afternoon sun filtered through the windows behind her. On Amelia’s end, the walls were covered in colour swatches, seating charts, spreadsheets open on her laptop. A candle burned on the windowsill — scentless, for her sake.
“I made a new schedule,” Amelia said. “I reordered the to-do list based on dependency flow and deadlines. I think we can shave off six days from what the planner estimated.”
Her mum nodded patiently. “That sounds very efficient.”
“And I found a new calligrapher for the place cards, because the first one had spacing inconsistencies and I couldn’t— I just couldn’t look at it.”
“Of course.”
Amelia didn’t notice the concern in her mother’s eyes until she looked up from her notebook. “What?”
Her mum’s smile didn’t fade. “Nothing. Just… making sure you’re taking care of yourself too.”
“I am,” Amelia said quickly, automatically. Then, after a beat, “This is just… how I take care of things. Planning helps. Lists help.”
“I know.” Her mother’s voice was warm. “I remember the schedule you made for your fifth birthday.”
Amelia smiled faintly. “The magician was late.”
“But you handled it. You always do.”
Silence fell again, this one comfortable.
“I’m not trying to be difficult,” Amelia said quietly, more to the air than anything.
“I know you’re not. You’re trying to make it perfect. Because you love him. And because this is important to you.”
Amelia’s eyes prickled a little. “It is. I don’t want anything to go wrong.”
“And even if something does,” her mum said softly, “you’ll be married to a man who adores you. That’s the part that matters.”
Amelia nodded slowly, eyes dropping to the table. “I don’t mean to be… hard work.”
“You’re not hard work,” her mum said. “You’re you. You’re focused, and you’re thoughtful, and sometimes you hyper-fixate and forget to eat breakfast.”
“I ate lunch.”
“Was it a coffee?”
“...Yes.”
Her mum laughed. “That doesn’t count, honey.”
Amelia leaned back in her chair, a little calmer. “I know.”
“And if you need help, ask.”
“I am asking.”
“I know.” Her mum’s eyes softened. “Now, let’s talk about flatware, shall we?”
The boutique in Monaco was a study in elegance. The air smelled faintly of jasmine and white tea, filtered through softly humming vents above. Soft jazz played through the walls. Everything gleamed — mirrored walls, crystal chandeliers, gold accents on ivory hangers.
Amelia and Pietra looked wildly out of place.
Their matching oversized sweatpants and hoodies, Amelia’s in a washed lavender, Pietra’s in charcoal grey, were rumpled and cozy. Amelia was also wearing a pair of trainers, whereas Pietra had opted for a pair of flip-flops. No makeup, no handbags.
The woman behind the counter clocked them in an instant. Her name tag said Dominique. She was perfectly coiffed, with a tight bun and blood-red lipstick that hadn’t smudged in hours. Her eyes flicked down and back up. Smile professional, but frosty — which only Pietra noticed.
“Bonjour,” she said crisply. “How may I assist you today?”
Amelia stepped forward with a wide smile. “Hi. I called ahead. I’m looking for a wedding dress. I’ve been looking at your website all week, but my magazines say that sizing can be tricky with wedding dresses, so I thought I’d come in and try a few on in person.”
Dominique blinked. “Yes, of course,” she replied.. “We do recommend a fitting with one of our stylists to ensure your silhouette is… appropriately showcased.” Her voice, just barely, trailed off into doubt.
Pietra’s gaze sharpened instantly. She crossed her arms and took a step closer to Amelia, her protective instincts flaring like a sixth sense. “She likes princess cuts. Sleeveless. Soft fabrics only—anything itchy is a no. Think comfort and sparkle, not scratchy couture.”
Dominique offered a tight-lipped smile and gestured vaguely toward a collection toward the left. “We just received the latest gowns from Milan. I’ll begin pulling some pieces.”
But Amelia was already halfway into the racks. The world of high-end bridal fashion had completely absorbed her. The rich fabrics, the layers, the delicate embroidery—it was a sensory feast. 
Until it wasn’t.
Her fingers brushed over a pale blue chiffon and her entire body jolted. She let out a high-pitched, unhappy squeak and yanked her hand back like she'd been burned. “Awful,” she muttered, stepping well away from the offending texture. “Like sandpaper.”
Pietra snorted and shot Dominique a glance that said, ‘Do not laugh, bitch. Don’t even try it.’
Dominique’s lips parted, perhaps to comment, but then closed again. Wisely.
Amelia drifted across the boutique, her gaze landing on a soft ivory gown with delicate pearl beading along the neckline. “Oh. I like this one.”
She pulled it from the rack, fingers brushing the satin bodice, examining the full skirt with genuine curiosity and care.
Pietra followed her across the floor, glancing at the gown. “It’s beautiful. I—” She reached out and felt the hem between two fingers. Her brows drew together slightly. “Maybe not this one, ‘Melia. Feel here.”
Amelia frowned and mirrored her, pressing the lining between her fingertips. “Oh.” She wrinkled her nose. “That’s a bit... sticky.”
Dominique hovered nearby, clearly itching to say something. Eventually, she broke. “That gown is more of a display piece. Very few clients choose to actually wear it for their ceremony.” Her emphasis was subtle but pointed.
Pietra opened her mouth, but Amelia beat her to it. “Oh, that makes sense,” she said cheerfully, still carefully inspecting the neckline. “It’s really beautiful to look at, though. I like how the beadwork isn’t symmetrical. Feels a little bit like a constellation. Not literal, just... deliberate chaos.”
Dominique blinked. She stared. And something shifted. Her fingers twitched slightly as if resisting the urge to take notes. “Would you be interested in our ‘Altair’ line?” she asked, voice softer, less clipped. “We have a few dresses from that collection still in stock. More tactile-friendly, very unique silhouettes.”
Amelia lit up. “Yes, please!”
Pietra raised a brow but said nothing. She was still watching Dominique carefully. Measuring. 
Within minutes, Dominique returned with a handful of dresses draped over her arms, the fabrics a softer mix of silk and organza, more fluid, less rigid. She handed the first gown over with a tentative sort of reverence.
In the dressing room, Amelia giggled, her voice floating through the velvet curtain. “This one feels like clouds. Actual clouds.”
Dominique even smiled. “That one was worn by a princess in Monaco—though we never reveal which.”
Pietra rolled her eyes but grinned. “Of course.”
The next hour passed in a blur of dresses and giggles. Amelia asked a million questions about seam placements, lining, and how much modification they allowed for — she was short, and she’d want to have some kind of double-lining gin certain areas. 
Dominique became quieter and more attentive with each passing minute, her posture loosening, her voice softening.
Amelia, for all her blunt honesty, was unfailingly kind. She wasn’t fussy or entitled. She didn’t throw her wealth around, didn’t boast about her fiancé, didn’t flinch when told something didn’t quite work on her figure. But she was also specific. Clear. Confident in her own language.
Eventually, Dominique excused herself for a moment. When she returned, she offered them champagne and almond biscuits—“here, we will need some energy.”
Pietra side-eyed her, amused. “Changed your mind about us, have you?”
Dominique gave a small, slightly embarrassed smile. “She’s a very discerning bride. We don’t get many who actually know what they want, much less why. It’s… refreshing.”
Amelia stepped out of the dressing room in the sixth dress, barefoot, the satin scarf trailing behind her like a whisper. It had a delicate, modern silhouette with embroidered thread-work along the spine. Strapless. Soft, pleasant fabric that she could brush her hands back and forth over without any kind of unpleasantness. 
Pietra exhaled. “That’s the one.”
Amelia looked at herself in the mirror, tilting her head. “It feels like me,” she said softly. “It’s perfect.” 
— 
It was nearly midnight, but the windows were still open to the balmy night air and the pleasant smell of the sea. Their living room was a comforting mess—seating charts spread out on the coffee table, empty mugs of tea on coasters, a crumpled note with “NO GRAVEL TRAPS ON THE AISLE” scribbled in Amelia’s handwriting.
Lando sat cross-legged on the rug, wearing grey sweatpants and a hoodie that might’ve once been Fewtrell’s. Amelia was curled up on the sofa in an old oversized Red Bull factory t-shirt with a hole at the collar, laptop on her knees.
“So,” she said, tapping the screen, “we’ve got your family on the left side, mine on the right, McLaren crew grouped here so they can escape to the bar easily, and I put the drivers who don’t get on in opposite corners. Mostly for fun.”
Lando leaned forward to peer at the digital seating chart. “You put Fernando next to Toto.”
“Yeah.” She giggled. 
He reached for the paper menu mock-up next to him. “So… food. Thoughts?”
Amelia stretched her legs out and yawned. “I still think barbecue. Like a proper British summer day. Chicken skewers, burgers, hotdogs, ribs, corn, chips, beers in ice buckets. Strawberry shortcake for dessert. Simple. Good.”
Lando tapped the page thoughtfully. “No little towers of food with sauce painted like abstract art?”
“No. We are not having foamed asparagus or edible air. I’m going to be stressed enough, I need safe foods.”
He laughed. “Alright, baby. Barbecue it is.”
“Good. And it makes sense since it’s an outdoor reception. And I’ve sorted out the fairy lights, where I want the paper lanterns. I want long wooden tables with runners and candles and the candles are all going to be lemon scented to help the people who drink or eat too much.” She bit her lip. “I’ll carry some nose plugs in-case all of the smells get overwhelming.” 
“My future wife. So specific.”
“Your future wife. Incredibly autistic,” she returned flatly, flipping a tab on her browser. 
Lando crawled off the rug and onto the sofa beside her. She adjusted her laptop without looking and let him tuck himself under her arm. His curls smelled faintly like his shampoo. It was a mild scent. She liked it. 
“So,” he murmured against her shoulder. “It’s all going to be a bit crazy, isn’t it? Getting married two days after Silverstone?”
Amelia nodded. “Yeah. But it gives you one full day to recover, which I’m sure you’re going to need since you tend to drive like your life depends on it there.”
He gave her a gentle nudge. “You okay with that timing?”
Amelia shrugged. “I think it’s fine. It’ll feel like a season high, no matter what your finishing position says. So, you’ll make it through without crashing, and then two days later, we get married.”
Lando was quiet for a moment, fingers tracing patterns over the blanket. “You make everything sound so easy.”
“That’s because I overthink everything to the point of perfection.”
He laughed into her shoulder, wrapping an arm around her waist. “And you’re sure about the marquee?”
“Yes. Big white tent, strung with lights. It’s British summer. It’ll rain at some point, and I want everyone dry and happy. Also I want it to smell like cut grass and sunscreen and citronella candles.”
Lando exhaled slowly, his voice low. “It’s going to be good, isn’t it?”
“Yes,” she said, her tone certain, her thumb stroking the corner of his hand. 
He leaned in and kissed her jaw. “I love you.”
“I know,” she said, grinning as she reached to close her laptop. “Now go and brush your teeth. And remember to floss. You’ve got a dentist appointment tomorrow morning.”
July 2022
The Red Bull garage buzzed with activity, a constant undercurrent of shouting, laughter, and hydraulic whines. Engineers wove around each other like ants, methodical and focused. The air smelled like hot metal, tire rubber, and gentle anticipation — it was only Thursday. 
Amelia’s clipboard rested loosely against her hip, dog-eared pages bristling with colour-coded sticky tabs and annotated margins. She was reading something intently when Max appeared beside her, a water bottle dangling from his hand.
“You look tan,” he said without preamble, eyes fixed on the front wing being slotted into place across the garage.
Amelia blinked, not looking up. “I had a spray tan. Hated it. Washed it off after an hour, so the colour didn’t develop as much as it should have.”
Max gave a small nod, considering. “It’s subtle, but noticeable. Looks nice.”
She looked up at him. “Thanks, Max.”
He shrugged. They both watched as a mechanic began fitting a sensor onto the nose cone. Behind them, someone called for torque settings.
“You nervous?” Max asked.
“For the race?” She scrunched her nose slightly. “No, Max.”
He cracked a grin. “I meant the wedding.”
Amelia blinked, then her expression softened immediately. Her entire face changed—lighter, brighter. “We’re finalising the reception seating chart tonight. It’s so much fun. It makes me feel so powerful.”
Max chuckled, low and warm. “I’ve never heard someone say that about a seating chart.”
“It’s like a puzzle.” She told him. “It’s strategic warfare. There’s certain people who can’t share a table, and then other people who’d be upset if they weren’t sharing. It’s like herding Jimmy and Sassy around when they just want to sleep.”
“Awful, then,” Max said dryly. “Celeste bought a new dress,” he offered after a beat, half-distracted as he watched an engineer lift one of the rear suspension arms.
“Oh. Cool. Me too,” Amelia said brightly.
Max turned his head to look at her, deadpan. “…You’re the bride.”
Amelia blinked. “So?”
“So of course you bought a dress. You’re not going to show up in a hoodie and pretend it’s avant-garde.” His tone was flat, but he couldn’t hide the smirk tugging at the corner of his mouth.
“I did try on a satin jumpsuit with a cape,” she said, unfazed.
Max stared at her like she was deranged. “Of course you did.”
“It was incredibly itchy,” she admitted, pulling a face. “I couldn’t move my arms properly either. I looked like a Bram Stocker vampire.”
“Sounds like a missed opportunity.” He teased. 
She glanced at him. “I don’t want to look like a vampire at my wedding, Max. That’s why I got a spray tan. Lando offered to take me to St. Tropez for a few days to get some natural colour, but we’ve just been too busy to find the time.” She sighed sadly. 
Max made a soft noise of amusement, shaking his head. “Celeste’s worried about the weather. She said if it rains, her hair’s going to be ruined and it’ll be flat in every photo.”
“Oh. That’s fine,” Amelia said, brushing a strand of hair from her face. “There’s going to be a marquee. One with fairy lights and wood panel flooring. It’s weatherproofed and temperature controlled.”
“She’ll be glad to hear that,” Max said with a little smile. “I think she’s more very excited.” 
Someone across the bay swore in Dutch. A helmet clinked onto a workbench behind them. Amelia glanced at her clipboard again and made a quick note, then looked back up at Max.
“What did you think of the save-the-dates?”
“Very classy,” he said without hesitation. “Celeste put it up on the fridge.”
Amelia lit up. “She did?”
Max nodded. “Yep. Right next to a magnet shaped like a cat. She made me RSVP twice just to be sure.”
Amelia laughed, soft and full-bodied. “That’s good. I was a bit worried that she might not be impressed by the food options. She’s much fancier than me.”
“Nah,” Max waved it off. “She gets it. Barbecue food is safe. Comforting. No truffle foam bullshit.”
Amelia leaned in conspiratorially. “I hired Lando a bouncy castle. Don’t tell him. It’s a surprise.”
Max arched an eyebrow. “He’s going to cry.”
“Happy tears only,” she agreed. 
Max finished his water and tossed the empty bottle into the bin. Then he looked at her with something a little softer in his eyes. “You’re going to be a very cool wife.”
Amelia raised an eyebrow. “What does that mean?”
Max shrugged. “You hired him a bouncy castle, meisje.”
She made a face. “He wanted one. I said no, and he got this sad look on his face.”
“Like I said — good wife.”
She stared at him for a moment, and then smiled, just a little. “Thanks, Max.”
He gave her a casual bump with his shoulder. “Anytime, smarty pants.”
Amelia stood just outside the engineers' station, back to the wall, tapping notes onto her tablet with her thumb while sipping from a bottle of water that had long since lost its chill — she wished Lando was around. He would’ve already switched it out for fresh, iced. 
Her headset was slung around her neck. She was overstimulated but functioning — hyper-focused in that Amelia-way, where adrenaline and structure outweighed the noise.
Zak found her during a set-up lull, and approached with something oddly hesitant in his step. He wasn’t in CEO mode — not in the crisp way he carried himself during sponsor walks or team debriefs. He just looked like her dad.
“Got a minute?” He asked, voice quieter than usual.
She blinked up, adjusted her grip on the tablet, and nodded. “Sure. I’m just waiting on the new diff adjustment numbers.”
Zak nodded once and leaned against the wall beside her. For a second, they just watched. Engines turned over. Radios crackled.
Then, “So, your mom tells me you’re about done with all the planning?”
“More or less,” she replied, flipping the tablet shut. “The reception layout’s finalised, catering’s booked. Lando hired a live band — it’s that one he likes from TikTok.”
“Right,” Zak said. He knew the one. “And… it’s still two days after Silverstone?”
“Yes. Lando is driving us up the morning after the race.” She paused. “We hired private transportation for the guests flying into Heathrow.”
He didn’t say anything for a long moment. She glanced at him sideways. He was fidgeting with the rim of his paper coffee cup, lips pressed together in a line of restrained emotion. Finally, he said, “I was wondering… if you wanted me to walk you down the aisle.”
She blinked. Her brain flicked through five reactions before her mouth caught up. “Oh.”
“You don’t have to say yes,” he added quickly. “Or at all. I know that might feel… too performative for you. And if that’s not what you want—”
“I do want it,” she interrupted, then paused. “But I hadn’t even thought about that. I’m sorry.” 
“That’s okay,” he said. “There’s a lot to think about.”
She looked down, scuffed the toe of her trainer against the concrete. “I haven’t even decided if I want music for the aisle walk yet. It might be too much. Too loud.”
Zak’s voice dropped low. “Have you made other provisions?”
“What type?”
 “Quiet room? Down time? Emergency hoodie and sweatpants?”
She gave a surprised little laugh. “I’m working on that, yeah. Pietra helped me put together a little survival kit. And I’ve already warned the florist; no strong smells. I gave them a list.”
He smiled, but there was still something cautious in his eyes. “Amelia… I want you to really love your wedding day.”
She tilted her head at him curiously.
“You’re brilliant at putting your head down and getting through hard things,” he said. “But this isn’t something to get through. You’re supposed to enjoy it. So just…. Remember that you’re allowed to take breaks. You’re allowed to need silence, or space. It’s your day, nobody else’s. The only person you should be thinking about is yourself, yeah?”
A long pause. Then her voice, quieter, “I want everyone to have a good time.”
Zak exhaled, moved so he was fully facing her. “Bug,” he said — an old nickname, rarely ever used beyond her pre-teen years. “You’re not a burden. You’re my daughter. And you’re marrying someone who knows exactly what you need and loves you for it. This wedding doesn’t have to look like everyone else’s. It just has to feel like you.”
She nodded, once. Then twice more, just to be sure.
“I’d really like it,” she said at last, “if you walked me down the aisle.”
Zak’s smile turned warm and wide. “Then that’s settled.”
There was a call for radio checks across the paddock. Amelia checked her watch.
“I have to get back to Max,” she said, already reaching for her headset. “We’re trialling a new steering calibration.”
Zak stepped back, letting her pass. “Save me a dance,” he called after her.
She turned just long enough to shoot him a look over her shoulder. “Only if they play ‘Sweet Child O’ Mine.’”
He laughed because he knew that she wasn’t joking. “Okay, sweetheart.”
Two Weeks Earlier
The floor of the living room was a minefield of tote bags and half-open Amazon parcels.
Amelia sat cross-legged in the middle of it all, surrounded by boxes of earplugs, tinted glasses, noise-cancelling headphones, a fan shaped like a rabbit, and what appeared to be five different brands of lavender-scented balm. She was in a hoodie four sizes too big, sleeves tucked over her hands, brow furrowed with precise concentration.
Pietra lay sprawled on the sofa above her, holding up a checklist written in Amelia’s neatly printed block capitals.
“Okay,” Pietra said, tapping her pen against her lips. “We’ve got the fidget ring, compression vest, emergency gum, chewing straws, and a travel-size tinted moisturiser because we don’t want you to have stress rashes in the photos because you’re overwhelmed.”
Amelia nodded without looking up, stuffing the vest and a weighted scarf into a small ivory backpack. It had her initials embroidered discreetly on the strap, next to the cursive letting of the word bride. Her mom had given it to her as an early wedding-present. 
“We still need your sunglasses,” Pietra said. “And your mint-spray. Where is the mint-spray?”
“Bathroom cabinet,” Amelia replied. “Behind the cough syrup.”
Pietra hopped up to fetch it.
The evening light poured in warm and golden through the windows. The sea sparkled in the distance. There was an open bottle of wine on the coffee table, Pietra’s glass mostly empty. Amelia’s glass was full — untouched. 
From the bathroom, “Do you want to add tissues to the bag or keep those in your purse?”
“Both,” Amelia called. “In case I cry and then get a nosebleed. You know, logically.”
“Obviously.” Pietra reappeared with the mint-spray and handed it over. She sat back down on the couch, legs curled beneath her, watching as Amelia began methodically tucking things into place — familiar, practiced movements. Like muscle memory. “You doing okay?” Pietra asked, not pushing, not heavy.
Amelia didn’t answer right away. She zipped the backpack closed, patted it once for certainty, and then leaned back against the sofa with a sigh. “I just want to be prepared for all eventualities,” she said quietly.
“You are.”
“But what if it’s too much? All those people. The photos. The weather. What if I need to leave and I can’t, because it’s my wedding?” Her eyes were comically wide.
Pietra slid off the couch to sit next to her, shoulder to shoulder on the floor.
“I’ll be there,” she said. “And I’ll try my best to notice before anyone else does. And I’ll say I need help with my lipstick or something and we’ll sneak away to the quiet room for five minutes and whenever you’re ready we can reappear like nothing even happened.”
Amelia swallowed. “You’re really good at this.”
“I love you,” Pietra replied simply. “And I know you quite well. That helps.”
There was a long pause. Then, “Lando tried to convince me to let him DJ our own wedding.”
Pietra rolled her eyes. “Of course he did.” Then she nudged her. “Although, you have hired him a surprise bouncy castle.”
Amelia made a face. “You weren’t supposed to know about the bouncy castle.”
“I didn’t,” Pietra said cheerfully. “Until now.”
Amelia let herself laugh, quiet and real.
The survival kit sat neatly between them. 
“So,” Pietra said. “You want to rehearse putting the kit together again tomorrow?”
“Yes,” Amelia said instantly. “At the time we’d expect to do it on the day. Just in case.”
Pietra smiled. “Perfect.”
— 
Back To Present
Amelia stood just beside the Red Bull hospitality unit, half in the shade, a bottle of electrolyte water in her hand. She had a new colour system for this weekend — blue for weather conditions, red for setup adjustments, green for wedding reminders.
She was scanning a new data report on her iPad when someone stepped into her periphery.
“Amelia,” came a familiar voice, bright but deliberate.
She looked up, blinking against the glare of the sun. “Hi, Susie.”
Susie Wolff was dressed as sharply as always, white blouse tucked into navy trousers, sunglasses perched on her head. “I’ve been meaning to find you this weekend,” She said. “You’ve been impossible to pin down.”
Amelia tilted her head slightly. “Sorry. I’ve been... everywhere.”
Susie laughed. “That’s the word around here.” There was a brief pause before Susie tucked her hands into her pockets. “Actually, I wanted to talk to you about something — unofficially, for now.”
Amelia adjusted her grip on the iPad, curious. “Go on.”
“You’ve heard about the new series I’m launching next year? The F1 Academy?” Susie asked. “All-women, junior feeder series. The aim is to give young female drivers the platform.”
Amelia nodded slowly. “I read about it. Five teams, three drivers each.”
Susie smiled. “That’s right. We’re doing it properly. Structured development, real brand support. Not just a PR stunt.”
“Is there a technical side you’re looking to build out?” Amelia asked, already moving into that headspace. “Because if it’s a full series, they’ll need engineering support, performance strategists, aero consultants…”
“Exactly,” Susie replied. “And I want the best people. People who actually understand development from the ground up — and people who want to make the system better, not just replicate it.”
Amelia’s eyes narrowed, not in suspicion but focus. “Will the cars be spec-built or adjustable? Because if there’s room for development, I’d want to know the homologation structure. And the tyre compounds—”
Susie held up a hand, laughing lightly. “This is why I wanted to talk to you.”
Amelia flushed slightly. “Sorry. I just… like the details.”
“I know. That’s why you’re good at what you do,” Susie said. “You’re not just talented. You care about doing things the right way.” A quiet pause followed. “I’d like you to consider being part of the technical advisory group. Or even coming onboard in a more embedded role later down the line,” Susie said. “It doesn’t have to happen right away. But when the wedding’s over, and things settle a bit — I’d love to sit down and have a proper conversation with you.”
Amelia blinked. “Okay. Yes. I’d be interested in learning more. A lot more. I’ll want to know about track selection, vehicle specs, budget caps if there are any, team operations, logistics—”
“Send me a list,” Susie grinned. “I’ll send you mine.”
Amelia looked almost shy for a second, then nodded. “It’s nice. Being asked.”
Susie softened. “You’re more than worthy of the ask.”
They stood in companionable silence for a moment, watching a flock of engineers move a tyre rack across the tarmac.
“You’re getting married… next week, right?” Susie added, glancing over.
Amelia perked up instantly. “Yes. Two days after the race. Marquee. Barbecue. Fairy lights.” She sighed. “Bouncy castle.” 
Susie laughed. “Sounds like heaven.”
“It will be,” Amelia said simply, and Susie believed her.
The energy in the air was unmistakable — British flags, cheers echoing through the grandstands, the buzz of engines winding up to full roar. Amelia stood at the back of the Red Bull pit wall, headphones snug over her ears, clipboard clutched loosely to her chest.
The engines screamed through the first straight. Amelia's fingers clenched tight around her golf ball as the pack charged through the opening corners.
And then it happened.
A thundering impact. A wall of smoke. Screeching. Carbon shattering. Zhou’s Alfa flipped violently, spinning out of control and vanishing between the barriers.
From the pit wall, Amelia couldn’t see the full crash — just flashes of sparks and a puff of sand and tyre smoke. But she heard it. Felt it in her chest. The noise had weight to it. Finality. Silence followed, sharp and sudden, broken only by panicked radio static.
“Red flag, red flag, red flag—”
No immediate updates. Nothing from Zhou’s radio. They couldn’t replay the footage yet: the roll, the fence, the skid on the halo. No camera showed the car afterward. 
It was silent. Then it was loud.
Amelia stood frozen. Then she turned. Walked quickly through the back of Max’s garage, slipping past confused engineers, down the narrow hallway of the Red Bull motorhome. The lights were bright and wrong. Someone tried to talk to her — she didn’t process what they said.
She found a utility room, small and quiet, and closed the door.
She sat on the floor, arms wrapped around her knees, breathing shallow. Her fingers twitched. Her chest buzzed. She could still hear the sound of the car skidding, see the halo dragging against the ground. It was all replaying on a loop behind her eyes. She couldn’t stop picturing it — the impossible physics of a car upside down, skidding toward a fence at that speed.
Minutes passed.
And passed.
Nobody came for her. No updates on Zhou’s condition came through her headset.
Nothing.
She pressed her forehead to her knees and tried to focus on the floor. On the cold concrete through her trousers. On anything that was now. But her body wouldn’t settle. Her brain was flying, looping through “what if?” in sharp, screaming bursts.
She didn’t hear the first knock. Or the second.
The third came with a gentle push of the door.
Max.
He stepped inside quietly, closed the door behind him, and crouched. His hands stayed visible. His voice was calm.
“I thought you might be here.”
She didn’t lift her head.
“No news yet,” he said. “But they’ve got people with him.”
Still nothing.
Max sat down slowly, cross-legged on the floor, a few feet away. He didn't touch her. He knew better. He just waited.
A few more minutes passed in silence.
Then the door opened again.
Lando.
He looked rumpled and pale, still in his race suit, balaclava pushed down around his neck. His eyes locked onto her immediately. He crossed the room in three long strides and dropped to his knees in front of her.
“Hey,” he said softly.
She flinched when he touched her arm, but didn’t pull away.
“Can I…?” he asked, and when she gave the barest nod, he wrapped an arm carefully around her shoulders, pulling her close against his chest.
She finally exhaled. A shaky, exhausted sound.
“He hasn’t said anything on the radio,” she whispered.
“I know.”
“I keep seeing it. Over and over.”
“I know, baby.”
Max leaned forward slightly, phone in his hand. “He’s conscious.”
Amelia looked up sharply. “He is?”
Lando glanced at Max’s phone, reading. “Still in the car, but awake. They’re trying to work out how to get him out safely.”
Her eyes flooded. Relief hit her like a brick. “I thought—”
“I know,” Lando said again, holding her tighter. “Me too.”
Her voice cracked. “I didn’t know where to go. I couldn’t—everything was too much.”
“You found a safe space,” Max said. “That’s all that matters.”
The tension finally broke, like a string pulled too tight. She rested her head against Lando’s shoulder and let her breathing slow, her body uncoiling one inch at a time.
“We’re okay,” he said. “He’s okay. And you’re okay.”
“I hate this part,” she murmured.
“I know,” Max said. “We do too.”
They stayed there until her hands stopped shaking. Until the paddock noise calmed. Until the update came through confirming Zhou was being extracted carefully and would be taken to the medical centre — alert, responsive, talking.
Only then did Amelia allow herself to uncurl and nod.
“Okay,” she said. “Okay. I can go back now.”
Lando helped her up gently. Max didn’t say anything — just stood and offered her her clipboard, which he must’ve carried with him.
“Thank you,” she said quietly.
Lando kissed her temple.
The light had shifted by the time Amelia saw him again — Zhou, stepping carefully down the short steps outside the medical centre, surrounded by Alfa staff. His suit had been peeled off hours ago, replaced with team-issue soft-wear, and his gait was still cautious. The bruises were already starting to visibly bloom on his skin.
She didn’t rush to him. Didn’t want to overwhelm him — but she stood nearby, waiting until his eyes found hers. When they did, she offered a small, respectful wave.
He blinked in brief surprise, then shifted course to meet her.
“Hey,” he said first, voice hoarse but clear. “Didn’t expect to see you here.”
“I wanted to,” she said, holding her clipboard tight to her chest. “I just—I was worried.”
He gave her a small, tired smile. “I’m okay. Bit sore. Bit rattled.”
“I’m really glad. That was…” She paused, adjusting her weight from one foot to the other. “That was a bad one.”
He nodded. “Yeah. It felt worse from inside.”
She let out a breath. “I couldn’t find a video feed that showed you after,” she said. “Just the flip, and the gravel. Then nothing. It was…” She trailed off. “Too quiet. Too long. Sorry. I needed to see you for myself, you know?”
Zhou’s expression softened. 
“I hid in a storage room,” she added. 
Zhou raised an eyebrow. “You okay now?”
“I’m fine,” she said. Then corrected, “Better. Now that I have seen you.” There was a pause. “You don’t need to say anything,” she told him. “I just wanted you to know I’m glad you’re still here.”
His smile this time reached his eyes. “Me too.”
Amelia gave a small nod, then looked away. “I won’t keep you. You should go and rest.”
Zhou turned to go, then hesitated. “Hey—Amelia?”
She looked back at him.
“Thanks,” he said, quiet and honest.
She didn’t answer — just nodded once, firmly, and walked back toward the Red Bull garage.
The windows were down, letting in the warm July air that smelled faintly of dry grass and dust. Amelia had kicked off her shoes hours ago, legs tucked up on the passenger seat, sunglasses slipping down her nose. Lando drove with one hand on the wheel and the other resting on her thigh — not possessive, not even really conscious, just there. Like it always was. Like he didn’t need to think about it anymore.
Their wedding playlist played softly through the speakers — a curated collection of songs they’d agonised over for weeks, now serving as the soundtrack to this quiet little interlude between race day chaos and wedding week magic.
“Skip,” Amelia murmured as a twangy country ballad came on. “Too sad.”
Lando tapped the skip button without looking. “Agreed. Save that for the divorce.”
She frowned. “Not funny.”
He smirked, glancing at her. “Kidding.”
“Good.” She said, rolling her eyes. 
He hummed, switching lanes smoothly. A new song started — bright, summery, with the kind of beat you could slow dance to barefoot on the lawn.
Amelia smiled. “This one’s nice.”
Lando glanced sideways. “Reception dance?”
She nodded. “Fairy lights. Warm night. People a little drunk.”
“And us,” he said, squeezing her thigh gently, “a little married.”
She turned to look at him, and he was already smiling.
“I love you,” she said. No preamble, no big swell of emotion. Just a quiet, concrete fact.
He rubbed his thumb against her skin, eyes back on the road but voice soft. “I know, baby. I love you too.”
They drove in silence for a while, letting the song fill the space between them. Outside, the British countryside passed in soft blurs of green and gold.
Amelia reached forward and added a little star emoji to the song title in the playlist. “For the record,” she said. “I think this one’s my favourite.”
“Better than the one we picked for our first dance?” Lando asked, mock scandalised.
“Oh, no. That one’s sacred,” she said quickly. “But this one’s… sunshine.”
He nodded once, firm. “Good. We always need more sunshine.”
They were still holding hands when the song changed again.
The gravel crunched under the tires as Lando pulled the car onto the driveway. Amelia reached for the car door, her fingers slow from the comfortable stillness of the journey, and then turned back to look at him.
“This is real,” she said softly.
Lando just smiled, the tired kind that came after a long weekend. “Yeah. We’re here.”
The cottage wasn’t grand. That was the point. It was warm and tucked into the countryside like it had always been there — white roses climbing the gate, ivy twisting up the stone walls, windows that looked out across soft hills.
Inside, the air was cool and smelled faintly of lavender and old wood. Amelia wandered through slowly, running her fingers along the edges of the kitchen table, the old fireplace, the soft cushions stacked high on the window seat. Lando dropped their bags by the door, kicked off his shoes, and followed after her.
“This okay?” He asked, quietly.
She nodded. “It’s perfect. It’s exactly what I wanted.”
He came up behind her and wrapped his arms around her waist, pressing his chin gently to the top of her head. She leaned back into him, eyes closed, breathing in the quiet.
“We’re getting married,” she said, softly.
“In less than forty-eight hours,” he replied. “I’m going to be your husband.”
She hummed. “You’re going to cry.”
“No, you’re going to cry.”
“I don’t cry,” she whispered, turning in his arms. “Not very often. But I might. When you say ‘I do’.” 
He laughed, forehead against hers. “Yeah. Me too.”
The kettle clicked on in the background. A sheep bleated somewhere in the distance. 
They sat out on the back porch with mugs of tea, wrapped in jumpers and blankets, watching the last bit of sun disappear behind the trees.
Tomorrow, family would start arriving. The cottage would be full of voices and laughter and questions. But for tonight, it was just them. 
“I don’t want to forget this part,” Amelia said, her voice quiet. “The before.”
“You won’t,” Lando promised, turning toward her. “This is the part we’ll tell people about one day.”
She leaned into his shoulder. “Yeah. I hope so.”
The morning drifted in soft and slow.
Amelia lay in bed with the window open. The countryside smelled of warm grass and honeysuckle, the faint sound of birdsong filtering in. Somewhere downstairs, the kettle clicked on, and she could hear someone, probably her mom, padding softly across the kitchen tiles.
They hadn’t unpacked much. They hadn’t needed to. Just slipped off their clothes, curled up under the covers, and slept dreamlessly until sunlight nudged them awake.
Now, she pressed her cheek to his shoulder, warm and freckled under her palm.“You awake?” she whispered.
He hummed. “Not yet.”
She grinned. “Well, we’re getting married in tomorrow.”
That earned her a low groan and an arm wrapped lazily around her waist. “Good. Don’t wanna to live another day without being your husband.”
Downstairs, their parents were getting acquainted over mugs of Earl Grey and slices of toast. Lando’s mum had brought fresh jam. Amelia’s dad was already halfway through a crossword. It was quiet and easy—no wedding talk yet, no to-do lists. Just two families sharing a calm summer morning in a little stone cottage tucked into a sleepy field.
By mid-morning, everyone had wandered outside. The sun was gentle, filtered through clouds, and the garden was filled with the scent of wildflowers and just-cut grass. Folding chairs were scattered across the lawn, and lemonade clinked in glasses. Pietra and Max hadn’t arrived yet, but they soon would.
Best man. 
Maid of honour. 
Amelia and Lando sat together under an old pear tree, her bare feet in his lap, his thumb tracing absentminded circles along her ankle. They were listening to Lando’s dad’s playlist. The music washed over them gently, familiar and warm. 
“Still happy with our first dance song?” Lando asked, eyes closed, tipping his head back to the breeze.
“Of course,” she murmured. “Listened to it almost fifty times to make sure.”
He smiled. “And the reception playlist?”
She nodded, then paused. “Actually… maybe we bump that Arctic Monkeys song to earlier in the night. People will be drunker later, and I don’t want anyone butchering the lyrics.”
Lando laughed, light and free. “Good thinking, baby.”
They spent the early afternoon touring the venue with their parents, pointing out where the fairy lights would go, where the marquee would sit. Amelia’s dad was already asking where the power cables were going to run, and Lando’s mum wanted to know if it might be chilly enough in the evening to need shawls.
“There’ll be blankets,” Amelia promised, thoughtful. “Soft ones. I’ve already washed them with lavender laundry detergent.”
Later, they sprawled in the shade, Amelia with her head in Lando’s lap, her fingers skimming the grass. The light filtered through the trees like dappled gold, and everything smelled like home. Her mum brought out a plate of biscuits. Her dad had made a weak attempt at swatting a bee away from his lemonade and muttered something about never having a day off.
“Do you think it’ll stay like this?” Amelia asked quietly.
Lando looked down at her. “The weather?”
“The feeling.”
He stroked her hair gently, smiling with something steady and private. “Yeah,” he said. “I think it might.”
She let herself close her eyes.
Almost married.
The world was just beginning to wake-up. 
So was Amelia.
She stirred slowly, wrapped in a cocoon of linen and warmth, blinking into the blur of morning. Lando’s hand was already curled over her hip, grounding. She turned her head. His eyes were closed, lashes fanned across his cheek, breath even and deep.
“Lando,” she whispered, not wanting to say it too loud. “It’s today.”
He didn’t open his eyes, just smiled, the kind that made her stomach flip like it was 2018 all over again. “Mmm,” he hummed. “I know. I dreamt it.”
She inhaled softly. “Was it good?”
“Yeah baby,” he murmured, voice still thick with sleep. “Except when Max interrupted the ceremony to ask you about his DRS strategy.”
She hummed. “Sounds like Max.”
Lando tucked a strand of her hair behind her ear. “How are you feeling?” he asked, his thumb tracing gently along her cheekbone.
Amelia considered the question carefully. She could feel the usual thrum of her thoughts beneath the surface — a thousand logistical notes, backup plans, sensory considerations. But none of it felt too heavy. Not today.
“I feel ready,” she said. “Really ready.”
Lando kissed her forehead. “Me too.”
They lay there a little longer, curled into each other as the light grew warmer. Eventually, someone knocked gently at the bedroom door.
“Amelia?” Pietra’s voice, soft but excited. “Time to start glam time, babe.”
Lando groaned dramatically. “Oh no. I’m losing you.”
Amelia smiled and kissed him once, brief and sure, before slipping out from under the duvet. “You’ll get me back in a few hours,” she promised, already halfway to the ensuite.
“I should hope so,” he called after her. “Don’t ghost me at the altar, wifey.”
Two hours later, Pietra was kneeling on the floor beside Amelia, gently fastening a thin silver anklet around her left ankle. Amelia sat in a chair by the window, her robe tied in a precise knot, the lace sleeves brushing her wrists. Her hair was half done—soft waves pinned back with little pearlescent clips—and the morning light painted everything a warm yellow.
“You’re very quiet,” Pietra said gently, adjusting the clasp.
“I’m concentrating,” Amelia murmured. “And I’m… regulating. A lot of people are going to be looking at me soon.”
“You’re doing really well,” Pietra said, sitting back on her heels to look up at her best friend. “And you look… holy shit, Amelia.”
Amelia blinked. “Do I look okay? I haven’t seen it yet.”
“You look like the exact midpoint between goddess and fairy queen,” Pietra said, voice thick. “Honestly.”
That made Amelia smile; a little bashfully, her eyes dropping to her hands in her lap. “I think I thought I’d be scared today,” she admitted softly. “Or overwhelmed. But it’s just… calm.”
Pietra nodded. “Because it’s meant to be.”
Amelia exhaled. “Yeah. Maybe.”
They sat like that for a few more minutes, sunlight warming their skin, the soft sound of distant birds and shuffling feet below. Then Pietra stood and held out her hand.
“Come on,” she said. “Let’s get the dress on. We need to leave in twenty minutes — Max texted me, said everything at the venue is perfect.”
Amelia took her hand without hesitation.
“I’m getting married,” she whispered, almost like she needed to hear it aloud again.
“You really are,” Pietra grinned. 
Zak was pacing in front of the reception marquee, holding the tie he hadn’t yet figured out how to knot. When he saw Amelia approaching, dress flowing, expression soft, he stopped mid-step.
“Hi, Dad.”
Zak stared at her for a second too long. “You look beautiful,” he said thickly.
She smiled, coming to stand in front of him. “Thank you. Do you need help with that?”
He handed her the tie wordlessly. She stepped close and began looping the fabric around his collar. Her fingers were steady. He swallowed once.
“You sure about all this?” he asked, gently. “Really sure?”
Amelia paused. “You mean the wedding?”
“I mean everything,” Zak clarified. “You’re so good at looking after other people. I just want to be sure someone’s making sure you’re okay.”
“I am okay,” she said simply. “I’m in love. And I’m safe.”
He nodded slowly, eyes shining. “I’m really proud of you.”
“I know,” she said.
He blinked hard. “You want me to walk you down there now?”
She made a face at him. “I want to walk beside you. I’ll hold onto your arm.” She lifted her dress to show him her shoes. Flat, no heels, comfortable. “I’m not a trip hazard.”
Zak pursed his lips to hide a smile at her deadpan words before he offered his arm. “Then let’s go do this, honey.”
Mitski’s ‘My Love Mine All Mine’ was the song that was playing, echoing and ethereal. 
The guests were sat beneath the fairy lights and butter yellow bunting. Matching yellow satin drapes sat on every chair, lined the aisle, and decorated Lando’s pocket and neck. 
A yellow tie. A yellow handkerchief. 
When Amelia stepped onto the grass, everything fell silent.
Her dress shimmered faintly with movement, the delicate beading catching the light. The neck train draped behind her. Pietra was waiting at the right of the alter with Max Fewtrell standing opposite her, both beaming.
And at the far end, in front of the white wooden arch draped in green and yellow florals, Lando was already crying.
Not loud, not messy—just tears slipping down his cheeks in silent, reverent awe. Like she was something holy. Like he couldn’t believe she was real.
Amelia didn’t look away from him. Her fingers tightened gently on her dads arm, and then loosened again. 
When she reached him, Lando let out a laugh that broke into a breathless, teary smile. “You came,” he whispered, almost stunned.
“Of course I came,” Amelia whispered back, brushing a tear from his cheek. “You cried.” She smiled. 
“I love you,” he leaned in, forehead against hers.
She got up on her tiptoes, brushed her lips against his in a teasing brush. “I know. Prove it by marrying me.”
Their guests, family and a few friends, most of the drivers who’s been available, were hushed, reverent. Somewhere in the background, a bee buzzed near a flower. Lando’s hands were shaking.
Pietra handed Amelia her bouquet. Her fingers brushed Amelia’s for a moment, grounding her. Max gave Lando a nod from his place at his side, full of quiet reassurance.
The celebrant, a family friend with a calm, steady voice, began to speak, but Amelia barely heard her. Her eyes were fixed on Lando, his on her. Everything else dulled to a blur.
When the moment for vows came, the officiant stepped back slightly.
“Lando?” She prompted.
He took a breath, folded the note he’d brought, and looked at Amelia instead.
“I wrote something down,” he admitted, “but it doesn’t cover it. So I’m just going to say it.”
Amelia’s hands were steady, clasped around her bouquet. Her eyes never left his.
“You are the most brilliant person I’ve ever met,” Lando said. “You make me laugh even when I’m miserable. You know every single version of me, even the ones I don’t like, and you stay. You stay and you care and you see me.” He smiled, a little watery. “I thought that love had to be complicated. Dramatic. Loud. But loving you isn’t like that. It’s quiet and constant and safe. And it makes sense all the time.” 
A few sniffles rippled from the front row. 
“I promise to make space for you,” Lando continued, his voice cracking just slightly. “I promise to honour what you need, even when it’s different from what I need. I promise to soundproof every room if I have to—”
Amelia laughed through her tears.
“—and I promise to never stop choosing you. Not for a day. Not for a second.”
The officiant turned to Amelia. “And you, Amelia?”
She nodded, cleared her throat once, and began. Her voice was quiet, but sure.
“I love you, Lando Norris. You see me in a way that nobody else ever has,” she said. “You never try to fix me, and you always know when to listen. You let me be exactly who I am, even when it’s hard.”
Lando was crying again.
“You love me in a way I didn’t know was possible,” Amelia said. “Not despite the parts of me that are different—but because of them. You’ve never made me feel like I had to be smaller, or easier, or quieter.” She smiled, her hands tight around the bouquet. “I promise to always tell you the truth, even when it’s inconvenient. I promise to make spreadsheets for our holidays and set reminders for the laundry. I promise to protect your peace as fiercely as you protect mine. And I promise to be your home. Always.”
Lando made a small, helpless noise. Max gave his shoulder a hard pat.
The rings were passed forward by Max and Pietra, both watery eyed and sniffly. The metal was matte gold—simple, unflashy, chosen after hours of quiet discussion and Amelia’s very specific pros and cons list.
They slid the bands onto each other’s fingers with shaking hands.
“I now pronounce you husband and wife,” the officiant said warmly. “You may kiss—”
But Lando didn’t wait.
He leaned in and kissed Amelia like it was the only thing in the world that made sense. She kissed him back, anchoring him, grounding him. Their hands remained linked between them.
Applause rose up around them, soft and full of joy.
But Amelia didn’t really hear it.
All of her attention was on him. 
Her Lando. 
Her husband. 
NEXT CHAPTER
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saturnville · 2 months ago
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soon as I get home | David Cliff
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Pairing: David Cliff (The High Note) x Black Fem OC (Sybelle Selene Jackson) Summary: David goes all out for his first anniversary with Sybelle, just for it to get blown in his face. Warnings: Angst WC: 2529 Reference: Loosely based on Soon as I Get Home by Faith Evans AN: Because @youreadthatright asked about David and Sybelle...part 2. I genuinely hope you enjoyed it. Please let me know your thoughts! Remember: likes are appreciated, but reblogs, asks, and comments are encouraged!
Hubby
Dinner will be done at 8. Can’t wait to see you. 
Everything okay?
What happened to our plans? 
Food’s in the oven. 
Oh. Oh. Suddenly, the studio session was unimportant. The lyrics the novice artist sang behind the glass screen were nothing but Charlie Brown’s teacher’s murmurs, unintelligible and ear-blitzing. Her fingers scrambled to pick up her phone. She announced her dismissal in a hushed voice and stumbled toward the door like she had one too many to drink. 
Her thumb hovered over his contact. The phone seemed to ring for eons before he picked up on the last ring. “What’s up, Slim?” Uh-oh. What’s up? Her stomach churned as a part of her grieved the hey, baby, she was so accustomed to hearing whenever he picked up the phone. Usually, she could hear his smile through the phone. Now, radio silence and undeniable tension kept his lips in a tight line. 
She heard it in his voice. The disappointment. The frustration. The sadness. Their anniversary. One year ago, her father walked her down the aisle. Down the aisle with the gold runner that arrived the day of the wedding toward the man she teased for his God-awful palm tree shirt, where their lips connected, her name changed, and their union was sealed under the heavens. 
“Hi,” she grinned, placing her shaking hands in his. She was sure her face would lock in place from the smile that seemed to be permanent. She could hardly make out his features behind the blurred vision, but she saw a string of white and knew he was as ecstatic as she was. 
“Hi, baby,” he whispered. His thumb dabbed away a tear that pedaled down her cheek. “Can’t wait to spend forever with you, Slim.” 
One year of becoming partners—her lifting him when he stumbled, him carrying her when she fell. One year of him being the best husband she had and the only husband she wanted to have. He wouldn’t know that, though. Not by how she forgot. 
She forgot. She forgot their anniversary dinner. All for work. 
At 7:57, he lit the last candle. 
The table had been set with the expensive ass plates and fancy napkins she insisted on purchasing when they began decorating the kitchen. It was for the vibe, she said. To set the mood no matter the occasion. He figured their anniversary was the best time to bring out the sleek, black plates with complimentary flatware and ribbed wine glasses. 
A bottle of wine sat chilled in a bucket, perspiration dripping down the side, waiting to be in the warm embrace of awaiting palms belonging to a young couple celebrating a significant milestone. 
David fidgeted with the centerpiece again, the nerves overpowering his discipline to sit still and wait for her to walk through the door. He inhaled deeply. The kitchen smelled like lavender, vanilla, and the last bit of hope he had left for the evening. 
He pulled his phone out of his pocket, messages still unread.
Hubby
Dinner will be done at 8. Can’t wait to see you. 
Everything okay?
What happened to our plans? 
No answer. 
David stared at the chair across from him. Wow. He lifted slowly, his breath quenched the tiny flame of the candle. Tired hands packed up the dinner that took two hours, five cookbook pages, and more prayers than he could count. The table stayed set. He turned the lights off behind him and sent one text. 
Hubby
Food’s in the oven
Happy anniversary was left unsaid.
“David…” 
Silence. 
Her jaw hinged and unhinged as she struggled to push the words out of her throat. She was a maestro with the pen, yet she was lost for words, and he wasn’t in the mood to sit in silence. So, he muttered, “Enjoy your session,” and hung up. 
She stared at the screen, the dim call-ended notification staring back at her tauntingly. The world around her seemed to blur—not in joy but guilt, in internal agony that had onset by her own hand. 
She didn’t grab her coat. She didn’t announce her exit professionally as she’d typically do. Goosebumps rose on her arms as she ran out into the rainy Friday night, the taps of her heels sliding against the wet concrete. Ensuring her hair stayed dry or her outfit didn’t wrinkle from the downpour was no match for the desire to get home. 
She slid in the driver’s seat, pressed start, and backed out of the studio lot so quickly she clipped the curb. Her phone buzzed in the cupholder. One message. Food’s in the oven. No “I love you.” No Happy Anniversary, Belle! It was her fault. Her eyes welled with tears. 
“Stupid,” she muttered to herself. The stump of her hand collided with the wheel over and over and over. “Stupid.”
Each minute that passed was torture. 
Every traffic light was against her—long red lights with minimal green. 
Every slow driver—a nagging reminder. You’re late. You forgot. You forgot him. 
Her hands wrung the steering wheel like a sopping wet rag. The playlist that played was one they curated together. It was full of love songs, rhythm, and blues their parents listened to during their courting stages. It was all too optimistic. She shut it off. 
Her fingers tapped nervously against the wheel. Line by line, she rehearsed a variety of things she could say: 
“I’m sorry, I love you.”
“I lost track of time, but I’ll make it up to you.”
“We’ve still got a few hours left…”
“I love you more than my job…”
But did she? Did she? If she had, she’d be with him now. 
-
When she entered, their home was eerily quiet. The lights were off, and the dining room had been long abandoned, but remnants of his cologne mixed with the aroma of freshly cut vegetables and her favorite crusted chicken. She turned on the light. 
Just as he said, her plate was in the oven. Wrapped carefully with aluminum foil, just as her grandmother would do when sending her back to school after a weekend home from college. She sniffled. On the counter was a box. Her nail broke the tape seal, and she sighed heavily once the contents were revealed. It was a cake. A tiny baby blue cake with a white “1” in the middle. Nothing more, nothing less. 
Dear God, what had she done?
She didn’t hear him come in. A nearby door creaked as he crossed the threshold into the kitchen of their townhome. He was half dressed—tailored pants with a wife beater so crisp it must’ve been straight out of the package. Sybelle twisted her lips. Maintaining eye contact with him was like looking at the sun for too long—impossible. 
“Didn’t hear you come in,” she said lowly, her index finger circling the edge of the black box that held the cake. 
“Didn’t think you’d be back.” Ouch. It was deserved, but the blow still stung like a uppercut from Mike Tyson. Sybelle’s tongue massaged her front two teeth as she pondered what words would be good enough, but there were none. 
“Did you eat?” He asked, sliding past her. She shook her head. Her foolishness had ruined her appetite. “Sit.” She’d done enough damage for one evening, so rebellion took a backseat for the evening. Sybelle sat awkwardly in the chair as David moved around the kitchen with quiet confidence and frustration he fought hard to disguise as fatigue. She knew him well. His jaw ticked, his hands gripped the fork so hard she thought he’d turn into Bruce Banner and break it in half, and his breaths were heavy and shallow. Yet, he made sure her plate was full of her favorite food items—crusted parmesan chicken seasoned only how he could, a variety of vegetables charred just how she liked, and a hearty scoop of garlic mashed potatoes with a pool of butter in the middle. 
On any other day, her face would’ve been buried in her plate, but now, she balanced a gallop of mashed potatoes on the tip of her fork while the scraping of David’s against his plate filled her ears. Everything was perfect. The food was warm. The plate was fresh. But it tasted like guilt. 
The silence around them was too loud—the fork scraping against the floor, the dishwasher humming behind them, and the chair squealing as David readjusted his posture. He said not a word, and it was agonizing.
She sighed heavily and dropped the fork against her plate, ignoring the potatoes flying on the napkin beside her. “I didn’t forget. I didn’t mean to forget. I know it makes no sense, but…”
He didn’t meet her eyes. He nodded a few times. Whether he was listening or acknowledging she spoke, she didn’t know. She couldn’t identify the emotion. Anger would’ve been easier, but it was heavier. Something that said, you forgot. She continued, “I just kept thinking, ‘One more note, one more line, one more take,’ and I just lost track of time.” 
David released a disgruntled breath and leaned against the chair. She was regretful—evident from her tear-stained cheeks, smeared lipgloss from palming her face, and hoarse voice from crying. “I spent 20 minutes lighting those tiny ass candles. Thought maybe you were parking, maybe you forgot your purse in the car. Your jacket got caught in the door. I kept fidgeting with the centerpiece, which I knew you would think was too much.”
“I’d never tell you that,” she frowned. 
David smiled sadly. “You didn’t have the chance to. I’ve never felt so stupid in my life, Sybelle.”
Sybelle winced like a wounded animal. “David—“
“I know you love your job, Sybelle,” he continued. “You’re chasing your dreams, and I’m proud of you, but damn, can I be one of them?”
If he wanted to pour salt into an open wound, he’d done it, and he’d done it well. Another punch straight to the sternum. Knockout. Her lips parted, but nothing came out. 
David’s hand fell against the table, the clap from his ring against the table resounding for her atmosphere. He stood up, slow and sure, and walked toward the counter. He swooped the cake in his hands and placed it between them. He put a fork before her and peeled back the container lid. 
“Happy anniversary,” he said quietly, ignoring how his eyes welled with tears. 
The words hung in the air like steam off a fresh plate.
Sybelle reached for the cake box, her hands trembling.
Two forks. One table.
And for now, that was enough to start over.
-
Tags: @kirayuki22 @greedyjudge2 @notapradagurl7 @irishmanwhore @honeytoffee @theogbadbitch @jazziejax @kumkaniudaku @nahimjustfeelingit-writes @youreadthatright
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dailyayao · 27 days ago
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[Wei Wuxian] had come as swiftly as the wind, and now he left in the same manner. The guests’ gloom finally dispersed as soon as he disappeared. Those who had sprung to their feet returned to their seats within the banquet hall. All were drenched in cold sweat. Meanwhile, Jin Guangshan sat in the head seat, still in a stupor. Moments later, he suddenly flew into a rage and toppled the small table in front of him with a kick. It rolled down the steps, scattering the gold and silver flatware.
Noticing that he’d lost his composure, Jin Guangyao tried to smooth over the situation. “Fa…”
Before he could finish, Jin Guangshan left the hall in a furious whirl of tossed sleeves. Jin Zixun felt he had lost face by yielding to Wei Wuxian. Consumed by fury and hate, he moved to leave the banquet as well.
“Zixun…” Jin Guangyao hurriedly called after him.
Lost in the throes of anger, Jin Zixun hurled aside the cup of wine he had yet to hand over. It hit Jin Guangyao squarely in his chest, and spilled liquor blossomed over the brilliant Sparks Amidst Snow embroidered on his snow-white robe. Everyone at the banquet was too distracted by the chaos to pay any mind to his embarrassment, and this act of great rudeness went ignored by most.
Lan Xichen was the only exception. “San-di!” he exclaimed.
“It’s fine, it’s fine, it’s fine,” Jin Guangyao said quickly. “Stay seated, er-ge.”
It was inappropriate for Lan Xichen to comment on Jin Zixun’s behavior, so all he could do was hand Jin Guangyao a white handkerchief. “Why don’t you go change clothes?”
Jin Guangyao took the handkerchief and wiped himself down with a wry smile. “But I can’t leave.”
He was the only one at the venue who could clean up this mess, so how could he possibly pull himself away?
- Seven Seas translation, ch. 16, vol. 4, pg. 24-25
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callmebliss · 2 years ago
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The Universe saw fit to grant me a ring today.
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I attempted to make an offering into the gods of The Lost And Found but, because it was so tarnished as to be mostly patchy black, I was told “just keep it”
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But I have some silver flatware at home that I picked up from the thrift when the ferrets were being Fork Dragons^1, and as part of cleaning I researched and tried several methods of cleaning off tarnish. The baking soda paste one is great when I’m in the mental place for a brain-vacuous scrubby stim, but today I went with the I Am Impatient method of lining a bowl with aluminum foil, filling it with hot water, and adding a combo of baking soda and salt and then letting it sit for like half an hour
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I shoulda taken a Before pic, womp womp. Anyway check out my new ring with the amber cabochon that didn’t fracture when I put it in hot water.
^1 separate tale, someone gimme a gold star for not self-derailing
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tl-os · 9 months ago
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I was in the living room reading “Bellefleur” (again), and when I looked up the light had changed. The room was now dark and spot-lit in curious places where lamps had never stood.
Something, someone, somewhere. Was it me?
I got up and walked into the hallway, and instead of my bedroom, I entered the large office where the landlord (he measured everything) kept all of his paperwork strewn around the room in messy piles. And then I walked into the hallway that communicates with the apartment next door. (I like them well enough, but living without a locked door—or any door at all— between us is unnerving. So far, there has never been an issue. Nobody has wandered into our apartment. I would never dare intrude on their privacy.) Any other night I might wind up in what I like to call The Yard Sale Room - full of tables displaying costume jewelry, trinkets, textiles, china and flatware, long rambling letters full of apologies for heinous acts committed lifetimes ago, funereal urns, musical instruments long silent, coffee cans full of buttons, two verdigris deer, champagne flutes, three perfect gold spheres, empty journals, tarnished swords, One Enamel Eye, tin ice cube trays, heaps of dried flowers, lots of small jars filled with a viscous dark liquid, a collection of ceramic redwoods and sycamores, wooden spoons, a diploma, empty decorative boxes, one large stone horse, a disintegrating shopping bag full of sponges, dishwashing liquid, a can of powder cleanser, laundry detergent, fabric softener, dryer sheets, window cleaner, steel wool pads, and scrub brushes (c. 1978?), two pallets of 5 & ½ inch white candles, an entire collection of hagiographies in fine-tooled leather binding, magnifying glasses and mirrors (all broken), one pair child’s (size 3) ballet shoes, never worn, four distinctly different samovars, a pair of arms, envelopes full of receipts, hotel keys, lazy susans holding little jars of bleached herbs and spices long inert, brown paper grocery bags overflowing with prescription pill bottles (not empty), maps, a tiny little spinning wheel constructed from unpainted wood, and shards of glass crusted with some dark, rusty substance.
But no clocks. Not a single clock to tick. Just silence. Alone in the room with the weight of it all.
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leejenowrld · 26 days ago
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Sophie!
“Sohee’s engaged,” you say, rolling your eyes affectionately. “Her fiancé is loaded, he works in finance. They’re doing a Bora Bora wedding next spring, and she’s already asked me if I can help plan the wedding.”
With your excellent taste, I just know you'll have yn planning the most incredible wedding to ever take place on those crystalline sands and surrounded by turquoise waters. So with the ultimate arbiter of taste at the wedding planning helm, the most loyal and capable team to help, and a seemingly unlimited budget to fund this event, could you please share with us the vision for this spring wedding?
What colors and aesthetics do you think the couple adopt for their celebration of love?
Is their love story woven into aspects of their wedding, like showcasing something sentimental through a bit of embroidery on the bride's gown or found in the travel itinerary that includes the couple's favorite spots on the island?
What activities are planned leading up to the big day?
Did Chenle have any say on how tasteful the wedding cake would be? Did Donghyuck remember his flashdrive if he's back on music and video duty? Karina totally designed some stuff for the wedding party, right?
What are these characters gifting the bride and groom? (Also, are the arbiters of tastes impressed?)
Is a certain beloved couple taking notes for their own impending nuptials? (I'm jumping the gun, but again, I'll pop the question myself if I have to)
While I won't have been completely finished with reading by the time I'm sending this, I adore how yn is so surrounded by love in so many ways by so many people. So I have questions for her as well:
How does it feel to help commemorate such a special occasion for someone who was "always first to fix your hair and scold you with love"?
What has watching your sister fall in love taught you about love and relationships?
What has grown and changed in your relationship with her since she first entrusted you with planning her wedding?
How has planning another wedding with the help of your found family helped you grow closer with them? Are there any special memories you made with them that you'll look fondly back on while tossing rocks into waters, treating them as another wish?
Did planning and participating in this wedding help you learn something about yourself or help reconcile something you thought you had long buried or forgotten? Did it reaffirm anything within you or anything regarding your beliefs about love?
All the love and support always 💖💖💖
sohee and her fiancé’s wedding isn’t relevant to the main plot of back to you. it’s not secretly hiding any lore, no twists, no secret cameos, no alternate timelines where she becomes the villain, this wedding is just background noise. that said, the reason i love answering these asks is because they help fill out the world yn lives in. the quiet, tender, side-of-the-frame stuff that gives depth to the center. so here’s a very clear breakdown, answering each question exactly as asked, with care and detail even if the wedding itself is just a glittering detour from the chaos we know and love.
what colors and aesthetics do you think the couple adopt for their celebration of love? the color palette is a refined kind of tropical — not coral or lime, not overtly beachy. they go with glacier grey, brushed gold, white sea foam, and the softest champagne rose. everything about the design is elegant without trying. the floral arrangements aren’t oversized, but they are architectural — mostly orchids, garden roses, monstera leaves in matte white, and tall, spindly dried palms that catch the wind just right. the tables are low and curved like the tide itself. the lighting is warm and votive-heavy. even the flatware is custom — iridescent pearl enamel with gold edges. they forgo a photo booth in favor of a single polaroid camera passed around by guests, and every candid gets pinned to a floating display board with handwritten notes. sohee’s aesthetic isn’t minimal. it’s controlled drama. her dress has no rhinestones, no lace — just a single sheer sleeve, pearl buttons down the spine, and a cathedral-length veil that trails behind her like a ripple in water. her fiancé wears a tailored ivory suit with a pressed grey collar. his tie is undone by the end of the ceremony.
is their love story woven into aspects of their wedding, like showcasing something sentimental through a bit of embroidery on the bride’s gown or found in the travel itinerary that includes the couple’s favorite spots on the island? yes — but subtly. they met three years ago at a financial seminar her best friend dragged her to as a joke. she was wearing a pantsuit. he was the one on stage, giving a dry, brilliant presentation on portfolio diversification. she rolled her eyes the entire time. afterward, they bumped into each other at the bar. he asked her what she thought. she said “you should’ve ended on a joke.” they’ve been circling each other ever since. there’s a tiny seam on the inside of her dress with the embroidered numbers 4.17 — the date of that seminar. the seating chart is designed like a stock market board. the table numbers are ticker codes. instead of a travel itinerary, guests are given sealed envelopes each morning with a clue to that day’s location. all the places are personal — the lagoon where he first kissed her shoulder, the rooftop where she admitted she might not hate finance after all. no one is told what’s coming. even she doesn’t know everything.
(i’m gonna be honest i do doubt the entire friend group will even be invited, the only two invited would be mark and areum but i will answer these as if they were all invited 😭🫶)
what activities are planned leading up to the big day? monday: silk dyeing and parasol painting workshop hosted by karina. she pretends to hate it but brings her own stencils. tuesday: barefoot beach dinner, the kind where tables stretch the length of the shoreline and food is served on banana leaves with gold cutlery. chenle complains about the sand getting into his wine. he is ignored. wednesday: group snorkel. several gopros go missing. donghyuck is blamed but unrepentant. thursday: a champagne-and-charcuterie boat day that turns into a floating gossip session. sohee gets seasick and tells her fiancé “we’re doing land vows next time.” friday: rehearsal dinner with a modern jazz band flown in from seoul. jeno disappears for a half hour and returns with sand in his collar. no one asks. saturday: the wedding.
did chenle have any say on how tasteful the wedding cake would be? did donghyuck remember his flashdrive if he’s back on music and video duty? karina totally designed some stuff for the wedding party, right? chenle absolutely demanded final cake approval. they ended up with three tiers — coconut passionfruit, lemon raspberry, and espresso chocolate. he found the tasting too indulgent and the frosting “overly precious.” he got his way. the cake is sleek, floral-free, and stacked with geometric piping. everyone agrees it’s perfect.
donghyuck did not remember his flashdrive. he showed up with an aux cable and a spotify playlist with a name no one could pronounce. halfway through the dance floor set, the music cut out and switched to a voice note he’d recorded for y/n’s birthday three years ago. he took it as a sign from god and played it again.
karina designed the bridesmaid robes, the cocktail menus, the ring bearer box, and the linen napkins. no one asked her to. she printed “𝐒𝐇𝐄 𝐒𝐀𝐈𝐃 𝐘𝐄𝐒” in metallic foil on each program and then tried to pretend she didn’t cry when sohee opened her robe and saw the stitched initials.
what are these characters gifting the bride and groom? (also, are the arbiters of taste impressed?) jeno gifts a minimalist watch box engraved with soon. sohee says nothing but hugs him for too long. donghyuck gives them a three-part playlist: pre-honeymoon, mid-honeymoon, and too tired to talk but still in love. it’s somehow weirdly moving. karina gives the bride a sketchbook filled with dress designs she never used. the note just says: you’d make them look better anyway. chenle buys them a year-long subscription to a wine club and writes “you’ll need it.” mark performs a short acoustic version of the song they danced to in high school. areum cries in the bathroom. y/n gifts sohee a handwritten letter tucked into a box of five black hair ties and a bottle of the perfume they used to steal from their mother’s closet. the card is blank. the words are in the letter. yes. the arbiters are impressed. chenle 100% gave his stamp of approval.
is a certain beloved couple taking notes for their own impending nuptials? they won’t admit it. but the way she lingers by the sweetheart table with her finger trailing the edge of the centerpiece, and the way he watches her from across the room without blinking, kind of says it all. later, someone finds a napkin with scribbled initials in both their handwriting — not the bride’s. no one brings it up. but she pockets the napkin.
how does it feel to help commemorate such a special occasion for someone who was "always first to fix your hair and scold you with love"? 𝐘/𝐍’𝐒 𝐀𝐍𝐒𝐖𝐄𝐑 — like a full-circle moment i didn’t know i needed. sohee and i used to orbit each other like we were on opposite ends of the same grudge. but she did fix my hair. she did scold me with love. and now she trusts me with the biggest day of her life. it’s not about being the best at planning. it’s about being asked. and i didn’t realize how much that meant until she did.
what has watching your sister fall in love taught you about love and relationships? 𝐘/𝐍’𝐒 𝐀𝐍𝐒𝐖𝐄𝐑 — that love isn’t loud. it’s not always the fire. sometimes it’s the consistent match you strike every morning. sometimes it’s showing up with dinner after a long day and not needing to be thanked. she chose someone who doesn’t overwhelm her. she chose someone who makes her feel calm. and watching that taught me that softness can be sustainable. that love doesn’t have to burn to stay warm.
what has grown and changed in your relationship with her since she first entrusted you with planning her wedding? 𝐘/𝐍’𝐒 𝐀𝐍𝐒𝐖𝐄𝐑 — we’ve become equals. for the first time. she sees me now — not as the mess, not as the wildcard, but as someone who can hold space. and i see her — not as the perfect one, but as a woman who gets scared, who second guesses herself, who needs a sister more than she needs a maid of honor. we learned how to let each other be more than we were as kids.
how has planning another wedding with the help of your found family helped you grow closer with them? are there any special memories you made with them that you'll look fondly back on while tossing rocks into waters, treating them as another wish? 𝐘/𝐍’𝐒 𝐀𝐍𝐒𝐖𝐄𝐑 — yes. so many. chenle holding the bouquet upside down. hyuck learning how to fold the pocket squares on youtube. mark asking if the vows should be printed in cursive or serif. jeno trailing his fingers along my wrist while i write the table assignments. karina sewing a bead back into my heel the night before. these aren’t just moments. they’re keepsakes. i’ll throw every rock i can just to make sure they stay with me.
did planning and participating in this wedding help you learn something about yourself or help reconcile something you thought you had long buried or forgotten? did it reaffirm anything within you or anything regarding your beliefs about love? 𝐘/𝐍’𝐒 𝐀𝐍𝐒𝐖𝐄𝐑 — i used to believe that love had to be messy to be meaningful. that it had to hurt, or shake me, or rip the air from my lungs. but this wedding reminded me that love can be quietly brave. that it can hold steady. that it can be a well-pressed suit, and a veil that catches light, and a man who never stops asking if you’re sure — because he wants to know you’re choosing him. and maybe i do still believe in the kind that ruins you. but now? i think i also believe in the kind that builds you back up.
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bylightofdawn · 2 years ago
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Ahahah I love that Thrawn’s idea of a celebratory evening entails dragging Ar’alani to an art gallery and proceeds to nerd out at her about aliens art and freaking flatware can be a pictographic insight into their culture and society. He’s like an anthropology student on steroids.
Not partying or dancing like she was expecting. Just him letting his nerd flag fly free.
I was a little sketch over these copious amounts of flashbacks but they have all been pure gold thus far so I’m kinda digging them.
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ceramiccity · 1 year ago
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Gold Plated Breakfast Knife Design
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Pure gold. Gold Plated Knife, part of michaelsodeaustudio's Time In breakfast set via othr_ - Elegant gold knife, minimal design, modern flatware, luxury dining accessory, sleek tableware. Follow Ceramic City on Tumblr Source: https://www.pinterest.com/theceramiccity/
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harperandhudson · 19 days ago
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windsroad · 2 years ago
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you know when you see something so unrelatable that it makes you angry
just saw a video that was like "things my husband puts in the dishwasher (that you shouldn't)" and the first thing on the list was GOLD FLATWARE
GOLD FLATWARE?? I DON'T EVEN HAVE A DISHWASHER IN THE FIRST PLACE, BUT GOLD FLATWARE?
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just4funpartyrentals · 8 days ago
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How Linen, Chair Cover, and Tablecloth Rentals Can Elevate Wedding Decor
The perfect wedding arrangement can create the right mood and make a lasting impression. Linen, chair covers, and tablecloth rentals offer a cost-effective, hassle-free way to turn ordinary spaces into extraordinary ones.
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“After a good dinner one can forgive anybody, even one’s own relations.”- Oscar Wilde.
That is the essence of having a meal together at a table set impeccably and doing every bit of justice to a lovely wedding. Weddings are meant to be perfect, but underlying all that perfection is a lot of stress and mistakes that are rectified on time. Things are double-crossed so that nothing seems an eyesore. Everything has to be top-notch, from the aisle runner to the choice of chairs, the wedding arch, flowers, and other decor. Once the ceremony is over, the attention will shift to the dining table, which also needs to have the proper arrangement of dishes, flatware, glasses, and, most importantly, what lies beneath all that glitter. If anyone thinks that linens, chair covers, and tablecloths are not so important, they need to think twice. A small spec of dust, a stain, or a slight rip in the cloth can spell disaster and embarrass the bride and groom. These details may seem small, but they significantly impact the overall aesthetic, helping to create a polished, cohesive, and elevated wedding experience.
The best way to avoid all that disaster is simply by going for chair cover rentals and linen rentals. While the wedding preparations are underway, one can quickly look up linen rentals near me or rent tablecloths and find a place that offers everything within budget. Companies like Just 4 Fun Party Rentals have an excellent inventory of party and event supplies. Maintaining good standards and quality, they are a good choice for linen, chair cover rentals, and tablecloth rentals.
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The Foundation of Style: Tablecloth Rentals
Tablecloths are more than just a protective layer for tables—they serve as the foundation for a wedding theme. Whether it is a rustic outdoor wedding at a vineyard or barn or an extravagant affair, tablecloth rentals must match the theme and decor.
From classic polyester to luxurious fine fabrics, tablecloths provide the canvas on which the rest of the wedding decor is built. Renting tablecloths also saves time and hassle, as professional rental companies like Just 4 Fun Party Rentals typically provide freshly laundered, pressed, ready-to-use linens that match the exact table dimensions. Couples have an extensive choice, from checks to crush, imperial stripes to paisley lace.
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Chair Cover Rentals: Simple Elegance
Chairs are a prominent part of most weddings, and when left uncovered, they can sometimes clash with the design theme. Chairs without any decor look plain and straightforward. Chair cover rentals help maintain a consistent and elegant look throughout the venue, during the ceremony, and at the dining table. Whether one chooses sleek spandex covers for a modern vibe or draped satin for a romantic touch, these chair cover rentals help conceal mismatched or worn-out chairs and instantly upgrade the room’s aesthetic.
Just 4 Fun Party Rentals also offers coordinating sashes and bows, allowing creative customization that reflects the color palette or event theme. For example, one can pair ivory chair covers with gold organza sashes, creating a luxurious, classic wedding feel. In contrast, black covers with bold red Krinkle bows add flair and romantic touch to the wedding event.
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Table Linens: Beyond the Basics
Beyond the standard tablecloth, Just 4 Fun Party Rentals provides additional linen accessories such as table runners, overlays, and napkins. These small additions can make a significant visual impact. A shimmering sequin runner or a lace overlay can instantly elevate a plain table into a focal point of elegance and sophistication.
Coordinating linens, chair covers, and tablecloths complete the look and add a thoughtful touch to each guest’s place setting. These help tie together the entire event design, from centerpieces to lighting.
Renting linens, chair covers, and tablecloths from Just 4 Fun Party Rentals thus not only enhances the visual appeal of the wedding but also simplifies logistics. Buying these items outright can be expensive and time-consuming, especially when considering cleaning, storage, and resale. Rental companies such as Just 4 Fun Party Rentals take care of everything—from delivery and setup to cleaning—allowing the bride and groom to focus on enjoying their special day.
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casabyjosephinejenno · 15 days ago
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Why Scalloped Plates Are the New Must-Have for Table Settings?
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Are you someone who loves throwing dinner parties, or snapping Instagram-worthy brunch photos? Or do you just love making everyday meals a bit more special? If the answer is yes, then it’s time to meet your new obsession: scalloped plates. Now, we know what you are thinking- plates? Really? But hear us out: these aren’t your average dinner dishes. Scalloped plates are the perfect blend of those Pinteresty aesthetics and rustic charm. They are sweeping through kitchens, dining rooms, and interior vogue faster than you can say “pass the Prosecco,” and we are going to tell you why.
Starting Out Strong
So, what exactly are scalloped plates? These plates are gently curved or have wavy edges that mimic the delicate look of flower petals or lace. We would say they are not quite round, not quite square, just perfectly unique. The little designs in scalloped plates can add an instant “wow” factor to your table without screaming for attention. In fact, these dishware act just like a statement necklace, but for your table decor.
They Add Personality to Your Table
Flat, round plates are so out of trend. However, scalloped plates add more of a soft, romantic vibe that can turn even a Tuesday night dinner into an occasion. Whether you are serving avocado toast or coq au vin, food just looks fancier on a scalloped plate. It's like your meal is getting dressed up for a dinner date.
Mix-and-Match Friendly
One of the best things about scalloped plates? They play really well with others. Mix them with vintage florals for a whimsical tea party feel, or pair them with sleek, modern flatware for an unexpected twist. Especially if you have pastel scalloped plates; they scream spring brunch for that fairy tale-like look.
You can even use them as charger plates beneath your everyday dishes for that layered, luxury feel, without splurging a ton on an entirely new set of dinnerware. Now, that’s what versatility sounds like.
Instagram-Ready
In the age of #FoodieGoals and #DinnerInspo, presentation matters more than ever. Scalloped plates make your meals photogenic without even trying. That casual slice of cake? Suddenly, it's bakery-level beautiful. A bowl of pasta? Insta-gold. No matter if you are buying them as a gift, for your cutlery collection, or just to plate food for your guests for that special occasion, scalloped plates are something that everybody would love to their core.
A Nod to Nostalgia
There’s something timeless about scalloped edges. Maybe it’s because they remind us of grandma’s china or a cosy afternoon tea. But modern scalloped plates come in matte finishes, earthy tones, and minimalist designs that feel fresh and current. It’s the best of both worlds- classic and contemporary with a comforting and chic vibe.
Conclusion
So, should you add scalloped plates to your tableware collection? Absolutely! They are pretty but unfussy, yet practical, and they bring a sense of celebration to every meal, even if it’s just cereal and coffee on a Monday morning. Looking for scalloped plates for your table? Checkout the collection at Casa by Josephine Jenno today!
Blog Source: https://casabyjj.com/blogs/styling-tips/why-scalloped-plates-are-the-new-must-have-for-table-settings
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boondirect · 25 days ago
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Stainless Steel Whisk Set, 8", 10", 12" (3 Pieces), Titanium Plated Golden Whisk
Whisk set includes: 1 x 8 "whisk, 1 x 10" whisk, 1 x 12 "whisk.
Rugged and durable: the whisk is made of stainless steel wire, ergonomically designed, and the balanced handle ensures maximum comfort and smooth operation
Healthy material:whisk is made of high-quality stainless steel. It is BPA-free and lead-free. Healthy cooking.
Easy to clean and store: the whisk can be cleaned in the dishwasher. The tail can be easily hung on any hook in the kitchen, easy to store.
Versatile: There are 3 sizes-12 inches, 10 inches and 8 inches. You can try a variety of food mixing, try more fun.
Product Description
Golden Whisk, Kyraton Stainless Steel Whisk 8", 10", 12" 3 Pack, Gold Whisk with Titanium Coating, Suitable for Kitchen, Cooking, Stirring, and Whipping. (3 Packs)
The whisk set includes: 1 x 8" whisk, 1 x 10" whisk, 1 x 12" whisk.
STURDY AND DURABLE: The whisk is made of stainless steel wire, ergonomically designed and the balanced handle ensures maximum comfort and smooth operation
Healthy Material: The whisk is made of high quality stainless steel. It is BPA free and lead free. Healthy Cooking.
EASY TO CLEAN AND STORE: The whisk can be cleaned in the dishwasher. The tail can be easily hung on any hook in the kitchen, easy to store.
Versatile: There are 3 sizes - 12", 10" and 8". You can try a variety of food mixes and have more fun.
Kyraton office and workcell
Kyraton office and workcell
The office building covers an area of 3,000 square meters and includes office, product showroom, product design department, product testing, packaging design, etc.
Kyraton Meeting Room
The meeting room is used for employee meetings, employee training, important meetings, shareholder meetings, and important customer meetings.
Kyraton Office
Staff office space for company sales team, service team, develop team.
Kyraton Warehouse
After the prodcut passes the quality inspection, it is shipped to the warehouse and dispatched by the warehouse. The warehouse covers an area of 20,000 square meters.
Kyraton Tableware
Kyraton Tableware
Kyraton focus on tableware and kitchenware development and design since 1991.
Kyraton Stainless Steel Flatware Set
Your Choice
The whisk is made of stainless steel wire, ergonomically designed, and the balanced handle ensures maximum comfort and smooth operation.
High Quality and Durable Material
The whisk is made of high quality stainless steel. It is BPA free and lead free. Healthy Cooking.
Easy to Store and Clean
The whisk can be cleaned in the dishwasher. The tail can be easily hung on any hook in the kitchen, easy to store.
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