#real driving simulation
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DX2 Formula – Summer Retro
Three dimensional scene for today based on videogame F1 Grand Prix 2 for computer system PC MS DOS. Three dimensional graphics for DOS. It is always cool! Real dynamical scene. Excellent racing game for serious virtual racers. Beautiful graphics and dynamical process. Real simulation. All of these for MS DOS!
And this is my three dimensional scene based one. Formula 1. Asphalt. Summer. Speed cars are moving by asphalt. Summer weather – it is best time for racing games. Good asphalt. Trees are growing all around!
I remember how I sit at the country house and was doing really nothing and half of the day I watched Formula 1. Weather was fine at the street.
Three dimensional race game style of MS DOS 486 or PC WINDOWS 95. Full retro! It is stretched textures, take a look! It is my goal for today! And if to make such a game – then it will be more arcade. Something like Sega Saturn Sega Rally! But Formula 1. It can be cool, even, to make it with C to write a program. But this is only a three dimensional render pictures.
Dima Link is making retro videogames, apps, a little of music, write stories, and some retro more.
WEBSITE: http://www.dimalink.tv-games.ru/home_eng.html ITCHIO: https://dimalink.itch.io/ GAMEJOLT: https://gamejolt.com/@DimaLink/games
TUMBLR: https://dimalink.tumblr.com/ BLOGGER: https://dimalinkeng.blogspot.com/ MASTODON: https://mastodon.social/@DimaLink
#blender#3d graphics#3dfx#3d render#3d scene#ms dos#windows 95#retro game#486dx2#racing#asphalt#summer#low poly#arcade#sega saturn#sega rally#f1 grand prix 2#formula 1#videogames 90s#speed#overdrive#real driving simulation#circle#sunny day#fast#test drive#need for speed#3d game
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MY FAMILY

#fred vesti#andrea kimi antonelli#george russell#fred escaping the simulator to drive in the real thing#fred actually means so much to me#i should talk about him more#picture taken from twt user mmxrie63#why is he wearing jean pants in the bahrain heat#that’s like the worst type of material to wear in the heat#i say as someone who wears jeans during the summer
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for a period of about two weeks, the only thing I would do in my free time would be listen to Sean Paul opens a MFing carnival on loop while playing cargo drive 3D truck simulator on a shitty Chromebook and I think that changed me as a person
#Soup speaks#renard#cargo drive#3D truck simulator#Chromebook#browser games#halley labs#music#is it still a shitpost if it’s just something I actually did in real life#Having adhd is like an irl shitpost sometimes
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THE STRANGERS INSTRUMENT IS VOCALS!!!!!!!!!!!! THE ONLY ACTIVELY ANTAGONISTIC PEOPLE IN THE GAME AND THE MOST HUMAN POSSIBLE INSTRUMENT THE LITERAL HUMAN VOICE!!!!!!! THEY ONLY WANT TO GO HOME!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! FUCK!!!!!!
#pers#the fact they are the most human and the most real kills me . it fucking KILLS me.#the sheer tragedy of the stranger makes me feel like ripping a door off its hinges#and then the fact its VOCALS????#the one part in the simulation where theyre going to the dance. theyre singing.#the one who you can just watch watching videos of home.#all they want is to go back. it drives me up the walls.#also i just saw that in the gamefiles theyre called ghostbirds and im gonna lose it. AUHG#outer wilds
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it's wild how the sephiroth obsessed portion of my brain gets activated so easily
#for real have been thinking about final fantasy nonstop today.......#i DREAMED about it last night#nothing exciting like the graphic gay sex simulator of the peace walker remake from my dreams#it was like. cloud driving and listening to the radio for three hours. nobody else was even there#lofi midgar beats type shit
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excited to announce i am now the proud owner of my late grandfather's car, which is nearly as old as i am, and when my uncle brought it over he was like. the trunk doesn't open, the key half-works, there's a specific trick you have to do with the clutch and accelerator, the radio doesn't work, there's a specific trick to fueling her, one of the tyres is leaking and she's potentially overdue for an inspection, good luck :)
#i was most horrified to find the reverse gear is where i'm used to seeing sixth gear#that could potentially cause some horrible problems!! i made that mistake in a driving simulator and do not want to repeat it in a real car
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Assetto Corsa EVO si Rinnova! Ecco l'Aggiornamento 0.2
youtube
🚗 Assetto Corsa EVO si aggiorna! In questo video ti mostro le novità introdotte con l'aggiornamento 0.2 rilasciato in data 07 maggio 2025: nuove auto, 2 circuiti e tanto altro!
📥 Hai già provato l’aggiornamento? Fammi sapere nei commenti cosa ne pensi!
🔔 Iscriviti al canale per non perderti i prossimi aggiornamenti su Assetto Corsa EVO.
🖥️ Gaming PC Specs:
✅ Fanatec Gran turismo dd pro wheel base 8nm
✅ Fanatec Clubsport steering wheel formula v2.5X
✅ Fanatec CSL Steering Wheel P1 V2
✅ Fanatec Clubsport pedals v3
✅ Thrustmaster TH8A Shifter
✅ Nextlevelracing Wheel stand 2.0
✅ AKRacing Nitro Gaming Chair
✅ AOC CU34G2X/BK Monitors
🖥️ Gaming PC Specs:
✅ AMD Ryzen 7 5800X3D
✅ NVIDIA RTX 4070 TI Super
✅ Gigabyte X470 Aorus Ultra Gaming
✅ Corsair 32GB 2998MHz
✅ Lexar NM790 1x1TB NVMe SSD
✅ Kingston A400 2x1TB SSD
✅ THERMALTAKE VIEW 71 Case
🎥 Stuff I Use to Make My Videos:
✅ Monitor Asus ProArt PA329CV
✅ Shure SM7B Microphone
✅ Elgato Facecam mk1
✅ Elgato Facecam mk2
✅ Elgato Stream Deck Mini
✅ Elgato Wave XLR
✅ Elgato Key Light
✅ AVerMedia Live Gamer MINI
✅ Beyerdynamic DT 770 PRO
✅ Logitech G PRO TKL
✅ Logitech G502 HERO
✅ Sony ZV-E10
✅ Samyang AF35mm f/1.4 II Sony FE
🖥️ Software:
Blackmagic Design DaVinci Resolve 19 Studio
📸 Seguimi su Instagram:
https://www.instagram.com/gianlucamolteni.14/
#Youtube#Assetto Corsa EVO#Assetto Corsa#Assetto Corsa update#Assetto Corsa EVO 2025#Assetto Corsa EVO update#Assetto Corsa EVO nuovo aggiornamento#Assetto Corsa patch 7 maggio 2025#simracing#sim racing#simulatori di guida#videogiochi auto#real driving simulator#racing sim#Assetto Corsa news#Assetto Corsa gameplay#sim racing italiano#Assetto Corsa EVO ITA#Assetto Corsa EVO gameplay italiano#gianluca molteni
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A Next-Level Car Simulation Open World Game
Wheel Wizards offers a unique and unforgettable driving experience that stands out in the world of car simulator games.
Download Now - https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.threeplusgames.wheelwizards&hl=en_IN&pli=1
#racing#drifting#online#simulation#open world#car parking game#car driving simulator#city#realistic#gaming#real racing#car driving 3d#car racing
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Get ready to experience the thrill of driving like never before in this immersive 3D car simulation game. Designed for players who love the combination of precision driving and open-world exploration, this game offers a perfect blend of challenge, realism, and freedom. Whether you're a fan of sleek sports cars, rugged off-road vehicles, or classic sedans, you'll have the opportunity to choose from a wide range of detailed and fully customizable vehicles that suit your style and driving preferences.
Once you pick your favorite car, the adventure begins. Start by mastering the art of parking through a series of increasingly difficult levels that test your skills, patience, and control. These parking challenges aren’t just about squeezing into tight spots—they involve complex maneuvers, obstacles, and time-based objectives that push you to the limit. From multi-story parking lots to narrow alleys and busy city streets, each level is carefully crafted to simulate real-life driving scenarios with stunning accuracy.
But the excitement doesn’t stop there. Step beyond the parking missions and dive into a sprawling open-world city where the possibilities are endless. Cruise through urban landscapes filled with traffic, pedestrians, and realistic weather effects. Explore every corner of the city—from bustling downtown areas to quiet suburban roads and scenic highways. Discover hidden paths, perform stunts, or simply enjoy a relaxing drive as day turns into night and the city transforms around you.
What sets this car simulation game apart is its breathtaking 3D graphics and attention to detail. Every car model is built with lifelike precision, featuring realistic interiors, functioning dashboards, and dynamic physics that respond to every acceleration, brake, and turn. The environments are just as impressive, with high-resolution textures, realistic lighting, and ambient sounds that make you feel like you're truly behind the wheel.
In addition to driving and parking, the game includes a range of customization options. Modify your vehicle's appearance with new paint jobs, rims, spoilers, and decals. Upgrade performance by tuning the engine, improving brakes, and adjusting handling to match your driving style. Whether you prefer a powerful sports car that hugs the road or a comfortable cruiser for long rides, you have complete control over how your car looks and feels.
With intuitive controls, multiple camera angles, and a user-friendly interface, this game is accessible to both beginners and experienced players. Whether you're playing to relax, improve your driving skills, or compete with others, this car simulator offers hours of entertainment and a truly engaging experience.
So buckle up, start your engine, and hit the road. Whether you’re testing your precision in parking missions or roaming freely through the open city, this 3D car simulation game delivers an unforgettable driving adventure right from your Android device.
#food truck#truck simulator#drive#best car driving game#car parking game#car driving simulator#real racing#racing#car simulator#drifting
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Miami Taxi Mods in GTA: Stunning HD Gameplay!
#youtube#gta v#gta 5 mods#taxi cars#miami style#real life mods#gta modding#modded gameplay#gaming community#gta taxis#taxi simulation#miami vibes#gamer life#gta pc mods#custom mods#open world gaming#miami taxis#gaming setup#pc gaming#ultra realism#virtual miami#gta roleplay#driving simulation#taxi gameplay#taxi life#modding culture#miami realism#taxi driver gaming#hyper real mods#gta city life
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sonic the hedgehog tumblr dashboard simulator
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💠 extremegayr Follow
got held up in traffic today cause some noob couldnt drive the fucking loop-de-loop. lmfao fucking coward
15 notes

🎛 420zone Follow
ok but robotnik's kind of a dilf tho
🌫 wispgender Follow
he's literally a war criminal can we NOT do this tumblr
🎛 420zone Follow

📰 its-no-use Follow
@wispgender dont u literally simp for nominatus like who is one to talk
🌫 wispgender Follow
NOMINATUS ISN'T REAL????
🛜 viralsensation-destructorofworlds Follow
that you know of
🌫 wispgender Follow
what
10,672 notes

🔷 sonicinthewild
43,834 notes

☣️ lineinthesand Follow
saw sonic the hedgehog irl once. he showed up at my village, released 30 feral pickys in the town hall, paid the ice cream vendor roughly a thousand rings for a single chili dog, told me not to waste my life worrying about the little things, and then caused a fucking tornado
🧿 spiralhillspindash Follow
ok and??? you're not special
☣️ lineinthesand Follow
THIS WAS A PERSONAL POST GO AWAAAAY
173 notes

🌠 chaoinspace2electricboogaloo
sucks that sticks the badger hates all technology you know she would do NUMBERS on here
568 notes

☸️ r0u3e Follow
being an islander be like "are those the kind of eggsplosions i should worry about or the kind of eggsplosions that are gonna repair our crops, fix the economy, and bring my dead grandma back to life"
🌁 eggpawnkindathicctho Follow
being a continenter be like "oh great what primordial diety has risen from the grave to block traffic and fight a 15yo today"
🥭 chao-official
being a chao be like "chao chao chao chao chao"
🌁 eggpawnkindathicctho Follow
you said it my mans
579,056 notes

🏵 sprinkles-the-chao Follow
hold on if sonic the hedgehog is jewish then how is he santa claus
🤖 e123-omegaverse Follow
dont question him
85,628 notes

☣️ sparkygoboom Follow
hey guys real question are human/mobian relationships problematic
💠 extremegayr Follow
op is about to start the anthro church schism of the fifteenth year all over again
🛞 mobotropolis Follow
ok but in all seriousness did your mom never teach you that part of history
🎢 marxiobros Follow
someone doesn't know about the united federations public school system
🛞 mobotropolis Follow
what the fuck is a public school
⏭️ drowningmusic Follow

⚄ paradoxprism Follow
are we gonna talk about op's chaos radiation fetish
💠 extremegayr Follow
OP'S WHAT NOW
🏞 mobiancrossing Follow
ok but am i the only one who thinks that the public school system would be a good idea if handled right? like i know it's traditional to learn from your parents and then experience the world on our own from the ages of 7-13 but like combining all our knowledge and learning together doesnt seem like a bad idea
☠️ fabian-vane-number-1-hater Follow
bitch that's what the internet is for
🌅 s0leanna-apple-barrell
yeah where else am i gonna learn to make infinite chaos emeralds
❇️ freesurge Follow
"infinite chaos emeralds" that's called the phantom ruby
🏳️🌈 rainbowwispforgayrights Follow
everybody on this site has brain damage
❇️ freesurge Follow
yeah. from the radiation
603,573 notes

🐸 froggysfriend
caught this today
🏝 digginginthegroundfortubers
if anything happens to this blog i genuinely hope eggman blows us all up as punishment
950,420 notes

🐊 teamchaotixofficial
Hey guys! Sorry to do this again but rent's a little tight this month :( If we've ever solved a case for you guys or made you guys smile, please consider sending a ko-fi our way! we just need a few rings to get through the month <3
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🖼 give-the-koco-a-gun Follow
do we ever talk about that time the sky turned blood-red and shadow the hedgehog's demon dad descended from on high to murder us all and we only barely survived
❤️🔥 songoose4evr Follow
shadow fixed it it's fine
🎮 n0cturnity
yeah that was like twelve apocalypses ago move on
🎆 robotniksbignaturals Follow
kinda wanted to bang black doom tbh
🖼 give-the-koco-a-gun Follow
THE DEVIL???? FROM THE BIBLE????
🎆 robotniksbignaturals Follow
yeah. move over gayboy i'm boutta be shadow's new dad
856,301 notes

🗑️ berrybarry
starting a conspiracy that time hasnt moved since 2006
🗑️ berrybarry
why the fuck was i shadowbanned after posting this
8 notes

🤡 clownfinite Follow
tfw you finally save up enough rings for ice cream and you go outside and get hit by swatbot pieces and the rings just go fuckin everywhere
587 notes

🔷 sonicinthewild
34,452 notes

🌌 h-o-l-o-l-y-n-x
so did y'all see that genesis wave or was it just me
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🆙 planetsgiantcrack Follow
the virgin tweeter "if you use a bad word in the same tweet as the word 'cream' you get obliterated off the site" vs this chad site of "i want to put knuckles back in a microwave"
💟 presidentyaoi Follow
BACK????
69,849 notes

⬜️ chao-and-wisps-4-ever-so-cute-2 Follow
ok posting my first fanart to this site pls be nice! <3
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🌔 emeraldfwuitgummy Follow
why does tails look like he's always about to say "it fucken WIMDY"
🦊 miles-prower-official
Hello, @emeraldfwuitgummy!
I actually quote that image on a constant basis! Sonic thinks it's hilarious every time. He's quite the fan of memes, and it's nice to get a laugh out of him!
Formally,
Dr. Miles "Tails" Prower, PHD
🌔 emeraldfwuitgummy Follow
SO WAS ANYONE GOING TO TELL ME THAT TAILS WAS ON THIS FUCKING SITE OR--
🏅 iwishhumanswerereal Follow
do. do you not know he created tailblr. dude it's in the name lmao
🌔 emeraldfwuitgummy Follow
he
WHAT
🍭 milfwisp Follow
didn't eggman invent this site???
🪫 veganswatbot
THE EGG ABANDONED SCRAMBLR IN ITS TIME OF NEED AND THE FOX RAISED US FROM THE ASHES. YOU WILL NOT DISRESPECT HIM
🦊 miles-prower-official
Hello, @milfwisp and @veganswatbot!
Very good question! This site was Eggman's until I ate his bones. Thank you for engaging! :D
Formally,
Dr. Miles "Tails" Prower, PHD
🌔 emeraldfwuitgummy Follow
YOU
WHAT
🌭 sonicsays
what's not clicking
#long post /#sonic the hedgehog#sonicverse#sth#sonicedit#mine#unreality /#unreality#long post#<< trying different tags here cause ppl are telling me the first attempt wasnt working
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"Scientists in Singapore have broken a long-standing limitation on the ability to generate electricity from flowing water, suggesting that another elemental force of nature could be leveraged for renewable electricity: rain.
With the simplest and smallest scale test setup, the team could power around 12 LED lightbulbs with simulated rain droplets flowing through a tube, but at scale, their method could generate meaningful amounts that could rival rooftop solar arrays.
Singapore experiences significant rainfall throughout the year, averaging 101 inches (2581 millimeters) of precipitation annually. The idea of generating electricity from such falling water is attractive, but the method has long been constrained by a principle called the Debye Length.
Nevertheless, the concept is possible because of a simple physical principle that charged entities on the surface of materials get nudged when they rub together—as true for water droplets as it is for a balloon rubbed against the hair on one’s head.
While this is true, the power values thus generated have been negligible, and electricity from flowing water has been limited to the driving of turbines in hydropower plants.
However, in a study published in the journal ACS Central Science, a team of physicists has found a way to break through the constraints of water’s Debye Length, and generate power from simulated rain.
“Water that falls through a vertical tube generates a substantial amount of electricity by using a specific pattern of water flow: plug flow,” says Siowling Soh, author of the study. “This plug flow pattern could allow rain energy to be harvested for generating clean and renewable electricity.”
The authors write in their study that in existing tests of the power production from water flows, pumps are always used to drive liquid through the small channels. But the pumps require so much energy to run that outputs are limited to miniscule amounts.
Instead, their setup to harness this plug flow pattern was scandalously simple. No moving parts or mechanisms of any kind were required. A simple plastic tube just 2 millimeters in diameter; a large plastic bottle; a small metallic needle. Water coming out of the bottle ran along the needle and bumped into the top section of the tube that had been cut in half, interrupting the water flow and allowing pockets of air to slide down the tube along with the water.
The air was the key to breaking through the limits set by the Debye Length, and key to the feasibility of electricity generation from water. Wires placed at the top of the tube and in the cup harvested the electricity.
The total generation rate of greater than 10% resulted in about 100 watts per square meter of tube. For context, a 100-watt solar panel can power an appliance as large as a blender or ceiling fan, charge a laptop, provide for several light bulbs, or even a Wi-Fi router.
Because the droplet speeds tested were much slower than rain, the researchers suggest that the real thing would provide even more than their tests, which were of course on a microscale."
-via Good News Network, April 30, 2025
#singapore#asia#rain#renewable energy#renewables#clean energy#electricity#science and technology#solarpunk#good news#hope
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Rolling, Rolling, Red Bull
Max Verstappen x Fem!Reader
Summary… When the Drive to Survive crew shows up to film a behind-the-scenes look at Max Verstappen’s life off track, Y/N is less than thrilled to be in the spotlight. But between sarcastic interviews, soft domestic moments, and a now-viral deleted scene involving a jar of pesto, the world gets a glimpse of a Max they’ve never seen before. Boyfriend-coded. Cat-dad certified. And very, very soft for her.
A/N: I hope you guys enjoy! I’ve been kinda M.I.A. & irregular on my posting but I have been out of town for the last two week so I’ve been writing on my phone and it has been a little difficult.
I hope you guys enjoy this story and feel free to donate on my Ko-Fi, maybe that way I can buy a better computer and write more consistently for you guys.
like, comment, reblog, enjoy (:
⋆。゚☁︎。⋆。 ゚☾ ゚。⋆ ⋆。゚☁︎。⋆。 ゚☾ ゚。⋆
Y/N was halfway through brushing her teeth when Max knocked on the bathroom door.
“They’re here,” he said, muffled through the wood. “The Drive to Survive guys.”
She spat into the sink. “Tell them to come back never.”
Max laughed, leaning against the doorframe in joggers and a Red Bull hoodie, his hair still wet from the shower. “You said yes last night.”
“I was half-asleep and you bribed me with stroopwafels.”
He pushed the door open and gave her the most annoyingly charming grin. “And yet, here we are.”
⸻
The Netflix crew had set up in their living room, pretending the chaos of wires and camera angles was “low-key.” Max greeted them like old friends, casual and cool, while Y/N hovered awkwardly behind a kitchen stool, holding her coffee like a shield.
“Just pretend we’re not here,” the producer said, adjusting his headset.
“Impossible,” she muttered.
Max, ever the calm in the storm, slipped a hand around her waist. “You’ll be fine. Just be yourself.”
“That is the problem.”
⸻
They followed the couple through a normal day: breakfast on the balcony, Max fiddling with a simulator, Y/N curled up reading a book while their cats tried to chew on a mic cord.
But then they asked for a sit-down interview.
“Can you two just talk about what it’s like being in a relationship during the season?” the director asked, arranging pillows behind Y/N like this was a cozy podcast and not her personal nightmare.
Max shrugged. “It’s good. We don’t really fight.”
Y/N snorted. “You say that because you don’t consider ignoring my texts for six hours a fight.”
“I was driving,” he said, deadpan.
“You were on the simulator.”
“Same thing.”
The crew laughed. Max smiled sideways at her.
Then the director leaned in. “Y/N, how do you handle the pressure of being with someone constantly in the spotlight?”
She hesitated. Not because she didn’t know, but because she hadn’t expected the question to feel so… real.
“I don’t try to handle it,” she said slowly. “I just try to remind him that there’s a world outside of racing. That he’s more than just Max Verstappen the driver.”
Max’s expression softened—one of those rare looks he saved just for her, all warm gaze and relaxed jawline.
“And she’s the only one who gets away with calling me out when I start acting like a robot,” he added, voice lower now.
There was a pause.
“Wow,” the sound guy whispered.
“Keep rolling,” the director whispered back.
⸻
Later, when they were reviewing footage in the trailer, someone asked if they could get a shot of Max hugging Y/N.
“We have the paddock stuff, the Monaco stuff—but we need something soft to end on.”
Max found her sitting on the edge of the Red Bull hospitality couch, phone in hand.
He didn’t say anything. Just walked up, pulled her into his chest, and kissed the top of her head. Cameras or not.
“You’re doing great,” he said.
“You owe me ten stroopwafels and a massage.”
“I’ll give you twelve.”
The camera rolled as she smiled against his hoodie, arms tightening around his waist.
And later, when the season aired, fans clipped that moment. Over and over.
“Who knew Max Verstappen could be soft?”
“Protect this woman at all costs.”
“Relationship goals.”
But to Max, it was just Tuesday.
_______
Deleted Scene
Y/N stood barefoot in the kitchen, struggling with a stubborn jar of pesto. The label peeled at the edge, and the lid refused to budge despite two dish towels and her full body weight.
“Max!” she called, mildly annoyed. “Can you come here?”
Off-camera, you hear footsteps. Then Max appears in the kitchen doorway, looking suspicious. “What did I do?”
“Nothing. Just open this before I yeet it into the sea.”
He walks over, takes the jar, and opens it effortlessly with one twist.
She stares. “Are you serious?”
He grins, proud. “You loosened it.”
“Uh-huh.”
Without missing a beat, he dips a finger into the pesto and sticks it in his mouth.
“Max!” she gasps, swatting him with a tea towel. “That’s for dinner!”
He shrugs. “Taste test.”
A Netflix producer can be heard laughing behind the camera.
“Can we actually keep rolling?” another asks. “This is gold.”
Y/N turns, catching the crew still filming, and mock-glares at the camera.
“I’m going to need hazard pay.”
Max wraps an arm around her waist and plants a pesto-flavored kiss on her cheek.
“No one would believe how domestic you are,” Y/N mutters, smirking.
“Good. Let them think I’m scary.”
⸻
But don’t worry. The pesto jar ended up on eBay “signed by Max,” with a sticky note that read:
“She loosened it.” – M.V.
All proceeds went to cat shelters. Because Max demanded it.
⸻
FAN REACTIONS TO DELETED SCENE
Twitter/X:
@paddockbabie:
MAX OPENED A JAR AND A NATION FELL IN LOVE
#driveToSurvive #maxverstappen #domesticking
@softf1updates:
the way he dipped his finger into the pesto and then kissed her with zero shame?? I’m on the floor.
literally who gave him permission to be this boyfriend-coded
@f1spicypage:
“you loosened it.”
OH OKAY MAX VERSTAPPEN KING OF HUMBLE DOMESTICITY
⸻
Tumblr:
f1blurbs:
It’s not about the pesto.
It’s about her calling him like a husband.
It’s about him walking in like “what did I do?” like he knows he exists to be summoned.
It’s about the quiet love.
It’s about the damn jar.
I’m crying.
netflix-please:
Reblog if you too would risk it all to have Max Verstappen open a jar for you and call it “loosened by you.”
⸻
TikTok Comments (under the leaked scene with 4.8M views):
@formulalover44:
the way she’s like “MAX” and he just comes?? we love an obedient man
@jamgirlie:
petition to release ALL deleted scenes or i riot
@pestoprincess:
me @ my boyfriend: “why can’t you be more like max verstappen opening pesto jars and donating to cat shelters?”
⸻
Instagram Stories:
@f1gossipgrid:
MAX & Y/N: PESTO-GATE
This leaked deleted scene is the best PR Netflix never meant to drop.
Rumors say Red Bull marketing is already printing “You loosened it” merch.
We’ll take 5.
⸻
And yes—someone already made pesto-themed merch on Etsy with:
“You loosened it – M.V.” in sleek Helvetica on tote bags, mugs, and aprons.
⸻
the end.
#f1#f1 fanfic#f1 imagine#f1 x reader#max verstappen x reader#max verstappen fic#max verstappen imagine#max verstappen fluff#max verstappen x you#max verstappen fanfic#max x reader#domestic max#reader x max#max verstappen#max verstappen x wife!reader#max x drive to survive#dts#max vertsappen fic#max x gp#max verstappen x girlfriend!reader#boyfriend!max verstappen
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If the world is a simulation, maybe dreams are when someone writes a fanfic about you.
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Farmhand
Oscar Piastri x Clarkson's Farmer!Reader
summary: Oscar has his visit to the Clarkson Farm and meets a certain animal-centred farm hand (a/n: this is a tiny touch self indulgent as i am obsessed with Clarkson's farm 24/7)
Masterlist / TipJar
ynusername
liked by kalebcooper, jeremyclarkson and 4,209 others
ynusername Season 4 of Clarkson Farm filming underway. Ready to have cameras in my face while I muck out and feed baby animals for the next few months.
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user horse queen
lisahogan come join me in the farm shop
ynusername thats aruguably more camera time no thank you
user came for Jeremy Clarkson, stayed for YN
user her content is amazing
user looking forward to clarkson farm season 4!
oscarpiastri
liked by jeremyclarkson, kalebcooper, ynusername and 885,256 others
oscarpiastri I don't think I will be farming again anytime soon
view all 3,255 comments
user did you see the video of him struggling to reverse the tractor?
user I saw Kaleb and a girl die of laughter in the background user whos the girl? user she works on the farm, she is really funny in the show
mclaren not such a good driver ?
oscarpiastri a tractor is not an f1 car
kalebcooper had a great time mate! you are more then welcome to try again
oscarpiastri I dont feel like humilating myself infront of people again user I really hope it makes the show
ynusername
liked kalebcooper, jeremyclarkson, oscarpiastri, and 5,803 others
ynusername week of my furry babies
view all 187 comments
user oml so cute!
user what does she do on the farm
user she’s a dog trainer, specifically hunting dogs. she also raises and trains horses user she’s diddly squats animal whisperer
lisahogan I love heart cow, shes my baby
ynusername your next farm baby, one of many!
user did you see her making fun of oscar, the f1 driver?
clarksonsfarm
liked by ynusername, jeremeyclarkson, oscarpiastri, and 53,532 others
clarksonsfarm Filming life back on the farm ready for the next series! Somehow health and safety signed off on a team of camera crew joining farm hand YN on a hack...
Stick around to see how it went
view all 4,220 comments
user I need this footage now
user I cannot wait for this season, I bet there will be more YN screen time
liked by oscarpiastri
ynusername Twas a great time, no accidents, no issues with birds, perfect...
user OMG tell us what happened ynusername ;) kalebcooper Happy I was not there ynusername It was fun!
oscarpiastri
liked by mclaren, landonorris, ynusername, and 659,098 others
oscarpiastri Back in my type of vehicle. I can drive this.
view all 20,987 comments
user clarkson farm reference!
user P3 Qualifying!
ynusername Good luck
liked by oscarpiastri user OMG Its her! user who? user Watch Clarksons's farm on amazon user Jeremy clarkson..? user YUP
landonorris still so jealous you got to drive a tractor
landonorris I asked, no one will let me oscarpiastri aww poor you user i cannot imagine lando driving a tractor mclaren you are too much of a liability for us to let you do that landonorris But you LET OSCAR?! user hes 1 sec away from downloading a tractor simulator
ynusername
liked by oscarpiastri, kalebcooper, lisahogan, and 6,735 others
ynusername Order of preference, horses>dogs>racecars>cows>sheep>people
view all 429 comments
user why are people so low...
ynusername because animals are less likely to be sassier than me, which is how i like it user thats honestly so real
lisahogan that order is respectable, but race cars?
ynusername your parter is JEREMY CLARKSON? lisahogan true
user No that reaction to F1 is my resting face while watching
oscarpiastri dogs win
ynusername you need to meet more horses user CROSSOVER?!?!
oscarpiastri
liked by ynusername, landonorris, kalebcooper, and 725,266 others
oscarpiastri Got told I needed to meet more horses by a dog trainer
view all 6,362 comments
user is he just living at clarksons farm
user his second home
ynusername I train, raise, and breed horses too silly
oscarpiastri but you are still a dog trainer ynusername hunting dogs user YN calling Oscar 'silly' is the highlight of my life
user is that his girlfriend
user no she works on the farm he is visiting, Jeremy Clarkson's farm user he could be visiting her at his farm because he is dating her user he definitely likes her though
mclaren horses on the track next?
user admin is a genius user barrel racing, jumping user put all f1 drivers on ponies, and get them to race
landonorris you are a walking insurance risk. Tractors, horses, yet i can do nothing @ McLaren play fair
mclaren we'll get you a Shetland pony landonorris'll take it
mclaren
liked by oscarpiastri, ynusername, landonorris and 892,535 others
mclaren Race day and entertaining a special guest, happy to get them out of farming gear
@ ynusername
view all 24,532 comments
user God oscars hands are hot
ynusername whats wrong with my farm gear
user yn hurting at admins comments mclaren farm clothes are stil nice, but our merch is better ynusername thank you for it all !!
user Clarkson farm crossover to the next level
user Oscar is going to end up living on a farm no way is YN giving up her horses and dogs
user who said anything about them living together? are they even dating? user sure looks like it
oscarpiastri Definitely sticking with cars over horses
ynusername I'll try again and again landonorris can I? ynusername Sorry I'm not allowed to let you landonorris @ mclaren this is unfair!!
ynusername
liked by lisahogan, oscarpiastri, landonorris, and 7,350 others
ynusername Had to absolute pleasure of riding the first horse I bred, raised, and sold. Love you peanut butter xx FT my baby and my pupper
view all 578 comments
user shes taken, damn
user I love that fact the first chance she had to name a horse she called it peanut butter
ynusername he looks just like it !! user she must have done a good job, that's a fancy ass stable
user I bet thats Oscar piastri
user oh yeah 1000%
oscarpiastri such beautiful animals
ynusername my children oscarpiastri such beautiful children ynusername yay user he is down bad
lisahogan we missed you these two weeks, but happy you had a good time
lisahogan give oscar our love user DID SHE JUST
oscarpiastri
liked by ynusername, landonorris, jeremyclarkson and 987,567 others
oscarpiastri You can take my love out of the farm but you can't take the farm out of my love
view all 12,674 comments
user CONFIRMATION HES TAKEN
user she is stunning
user ITS YN, omg she got so lucky
user imagine if Oscar did not go to the farm
user faTEE!!
ynusername I am never leaving the farm
oscarpiastri done. ynusername done what... oscarpiastri sold my apartment in Monaco. ynusername I what. Huh, we should talk about this no oscarpiastri I'll learn to stand the farm smell for you ynusername ITS NOT A BAD SMELL
mclaren Cuties
user mother hen mclaren user mastermind
landonorris he can date the farm girl and driver tractors and ride horses and I can't get on a horse?
mclaren one time pass landonorris @ ynusername LETS GO HORSERIDING ynusername YESSS user this feels like an odd interaction oscarpiastri their entire relationship is an odd interation
#social media au#social au#f1#formula one#formula 1#f1 x reader#f1 imagine#oscar piastri#oscar piastri x reader#oscar piastri x you#oscar piastri smau#oscar piastri imagine#oscar piastri oneshot#oscar piastri fluff#smau#formula 1 imagine#formula 1 fanfic#formula 1 x reader#formula 1 fic#f1 2024#clarksons farm
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Radio Silence | Chapter Forty
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, pregnancy, strong language, slight smut, a bit of general anxiety.
Notes — Welcome to Miami!!!!!
2024 (Miami—Imola)
The McLaren garage was quiet in that early-morning lull before the chaos. Screens still black. Tyres covered. Mechanics nursing coffees and stretching into the day. Amelia stood just inside the halo of overhead lights, hands on her hips, watching her car, her car, come alive in pieces.
The floor gleamed with fresh resin. The side-pods were lean, smooth, seamless in their curvature. The front wing was finally the right spec; the airflow data had confirmed it. The new floor geometry played nicer with the updated rear suspension. The whole package, finally cohesive.
It had taken months of pushing. Quiet conversations. Brutal ones. Drawings on the back of napkins, pacing in her kitchen at 2am. And it was all here now, carbon and copper and logic made real.
She didn’t say anything at first. Just circled the car slowly, one hand brushing against the wing mirror, the leading edge of the nose, the curve of the intake. Reverent, almost.
Tom stood a few feet back, sipping from a thermal mug. He was always nearby at the moment; watching and learning. “Looks different,” he said.
Amelia nodded. “This is the car I designed from the beginning. No compromises. No shortcuts.” She crouched beside the floor, fingers tracing the sculpted undercut, the exact shape she’d fought for. “We’ve been patch-working upgrades onto old foundations. But this; this is a clean slate. It’s mine. Finally.”
“So it’s ready?” He asked.
She looked up at him, eyes sharp. “Yeah. It’s ready to win.”
Lando ducked into the garage then, still in joggers and a hoodie, yawning around a protein bar. He caught her eye, then stopped mid-step. “Holy shit.”
Amelia nodded.
He stepped closer, hands in his pockets. Studied the car with wide eyes, taking in every minor adjustment, every small change that’d somehow made the entire car look different. Meaner.
“It looks fast.” He breathed.
“It is.”
He turned toward her, something quiet in his expression. “You happy?”
Amelia didn’t blink. “I’m relieved. Now it’ll do exactly what I designed it to do.”
Oscar wandered in a moment later, eyebrows lifting when he saw the chassis. “Oh shit, this the final spec?”
“The one I promised you both,” Amelia muttered.
Oscar grinned, circling the nose. “Looks like a weapon.”
Amelia hummed. “That’s because it is. All the patchwork’s gone. This weekend, you’ll both be driving the car I built for you from the ground up.”
Tom, now beside her, tapped his pen against his notebook. “You going to name it?”
Amelia looked at him like he’d grown two heads. “It already has a name — and that name has my initials in it anyway. Why would I give it another name?”
Oscar shrugged. “I name my chassis something new every weekend.”
“That’s because you’re weird.” She told him.
But later, when they were running race simulations and Lando had slipped out for media, she sat alone beside Oscar’s car, one hand resting lightly on the side-pod. Just for a second. And under her breath, too soft for anyone to hear: “Don’t let me down.”
Because it was all here now; her vision, her work, her legacy in motion.
And in Miami, for the first time all year, she was finally going to see her car on track.
—
Even in Miami, the F1 Academy paddock felt smaller. Tighter-knit. Less spectacle, more steel. It reminded Amelia of the early days she’d watched on flickering TV screens—before race suits were tailored, before engineers had agents. When she’d been three feet tall and already knew more about car setup than most of the men working on them.
She walked beside Susie, the low hum of tyre warmers and generators buzzing faintly underfoot. The air smelled like brake dust and fuel. It smelled like home.
“You don’t get much spare time,” Susie said, glancing down at the curve of Amelia’s bump beneath her papaya hoodie. “So thanks for making this one count.”
“I wouldn’t miss it,” Amelia said, eyes scanning the compact garages. “These girls are the future of motorsport.”
A mechanic rolled a jack across their path. A knot of young drivers stood nearby, still in their fireproofs, talking fast, voices tight with nerves.
Susie called one over. “Chloe. Come here a sec.”
Chloe Chambers jogged over, ponytail bouncing, already grinning like she knew exactly who Amelia was.
“Amelia Norris,” Susie said, pride softening her voice. “Meet Chloe. One of our brightest. She’s been dying to pick your brain.”
Chloe stuck out a hand, eyes wide. “I’ve watched every onboard from Oscar since you started working with him. And you basically built this year’s McLaren, right?”
Amelia glanced at the hand, winced, then gave a small shrug. “Built it. Argued over it. Cried about it once or twice. So—yes.”
Chloe lit up, dropped her hand like she didn’t even register the rejection. “I want to do what you do. I mean—I want to drive first. But also understand the car. Maybe even design one. Someday.”
Amelia's smile tugged sideways, something more serious behind it. “Then don’t let anyone tell you to choose. You don’t have to.”
A few more girls wandered over—Doriane, Abbi, Maya. One asked if it was true she’d rewritten part of the ride height algorithm in the middle of the night, thanks to pregnancy nausea.
“It’s true,” she said dryly. “Wouldn’t recommend it. I couldn’t stand the smell of carbon fibre for three days.”
They laughed, young, high, unfiltered, and something eased in her chest. She didn’t feel like a figurehead here. Not a myth. Just one of them. Older, yes. Blunter, definitely. But still part of it.
“Do you still get nervous?” One asked. “Being Oscar’s engineer?”
“No,” Amelia said. “But sometimes, I get… quiet before an upgrade. Or a tough strategy call. But I trust the hours I put in. That’s how you survive in this job—you trust the work, then you trust yourself.”
They asked for a photo. She said yes.
Afterwards, stepping back into the heat and light, Amelia felt something shift beneath her ribs. Not the baby. Something else.
“These girls,” she murmured. “They’re so—”
“Ready,” Susie finished. “They just need someone to show them what’s possible.”
Amelia looked down at her belly. The baby kicked once, low and firm. She wondered—would her daughter want this one day? The speed. The noise. The risk.
Would she want her to?
She didn’t know.
But she knew this: she wanted the door to be open. And she wanted it to stay that way.
“Well,” Amelia said, eyes back on the track. “Let’s make sure the road stays clear.”
Susie nodded, a quiet kind of promise in her voice. “That’s exactly why we’re here.”
—
The room was dark.
Not pitch-black—just enough light from the closed blinds to trace the edges of things. A spare media suite deep in the team hospitality unit, soundproofed from the bustle outside. Cold air whispered from the vents overhead.
Amelia sat curled up on the floor, back against the wall, knees drawn to her chest. Her hoodie sleeves were pulled down over her hands. In her lap, she twisted the stim toy between her fingers: click, roll, flip, snap. Again. Again. Again.
Her morning had unravelled in that invisible way it sometimes did. Nothing catastrophic—just too many voices, too many schedule changes, someone touching her shoulder without warning. The wrong texture on the cutlery at breakfast. The wrong smell in the paddock. She’d swallowed it all down with a brittle smile until she couldn’t anymore. Now the inside of her head felt raw and overlit, and only silence helped.
Click. Roll. Flip. Snap.
The door opened.
Soft, slow. No bright light flooding in. Just a narrow slice of hallway glow and a silhouette. Lando.
He didn’t say anything. He just stepped inside, closed the door again behind him. Let the dark settle. He moved quietly, then sat beside her, legs stretched out, shoulder to shoulder with hers.
A beat later, the door creaked again. Oscar this time.
She didn’t look up, but she knew him by the shape of his walk, the subtle way he moved like he was trying not to wake a sleeping cat. He settled on her other side, crossed-legged, just close enough to touch but not quite.
Nobody spoke.
Amelia kept clicking. Rolling. Flipping. Snapping.
And slowly, her breathing evened out.
Lando reached over and gently brushed his fingers across the back of her hand. She didn’t flinch. Didn’t pull away. She let him. Then let her head tilt sideways until it rested lightly on his shoulder.
Oscar stayed quiet, respectful in that way he always was with her—like he got it, even if he didn’t always understand. He just existed beside her, like a grounding point.
The toy made a soft clack as she turned it over again, her fingers finding the rhythm she liked best. The baby shifted inside her, low and firm. She exhaled slowly.
They weren’t talking. They weren’t asking her what she needed. They just were. Present. Patient. Steady.
It hit her, then, with quiet force: how deeply she was loved. Just… for being.
She blinked hard. One tear, maybe two. Nothing dramatic. Just the kind that came when the pressure released, even just a little.
Click. Roll. Flip. Snap.
Lando rested a hand on her hip, tracing soft circles on the red, itchy stretch marks. Oscar leaned his head against the wall, eyes closed, humming something tuneless under his breath.
Amelia let the dark hold all three of them.
And she knew that soon, she’d feel okay again.
—
Amelia had gone out for air.
That was the plan, anyway—just ten quiet minutes away from the structured chaos of media day. No cameras, no questions. Just walking, hoodie on, head down, hands in her pockets.
But somewhere along the paddock hospitality row, she saw them—six or seven VIP fans lingering near the McLaren garage, lanyards bright, eyes wide, trying not to look starstruck and failing. Most of them were young women. One had a notebook. Another had made her own earrings out of mini DRS wings. A third was nervously adjusting the hem of her papaya windbreaker.
They saw her before she could disappear.
“Hi—sorry—Amelia?”
She could’ve smiled and nodded and kept walking. Instead, she stopped. “Yes,” she said. “Hello. You’re not supposed to be standing there. You’ll block the tyre trolleys.”
One of them blurted, “You’re, like… kind of our hero.”
Amelia blinked at them. “Why?”
Which made them all laugh awkwardly.
“I mean,” the DRS earring girl said, “you built the car. Everyone knows it. You’re the reason we’re consistently getting podiums again.”
“That’s not entirely true,” Amelia said bluntly. “But thank you.”
The girl with the notebook held it out. “Could I maybe ask you a few questions? Just for fun?”
Amelia glanced around. There was a patch of artificial turf by the hospitality tents where a drinks cooler sat forgotten. No cameras. No execs. No schedule.
“Fine,” she said. “But I want to sit down. And I want something to eat.”
Fifteen minutes later, Amelia was cross-legged on a grassy patch, a fizzy drink in one hand and a half-eaten granola bar in the other, surrounded by a semicircle of fascinated girls. Someone had scrounged up crisps and trail mix from a hospitality unit. It was, essentially, a picnic.
She’d taken a napkin and a pen and was now drawing vortex flows and side-pod shapes in clean, confident lines, explaining how turbulent air off the front wing could be used as a tool, not just a nuisance.
“People always think air is the enemy,” she said. “It’s not. It’s a language. And if you understand what it’s saying, the car will behave for you.”
Someone gasped. Someone else scribbled furiously. One girl offered Amelia a gummy bear, which she accepted without breaking eye contact from the diagram.
“Do you… want your daughter to be an engineer too?” One asked, softly.
Amelia paused. “I want her to believe that she can be anything she wants to be.”
That was when Lando found her.
He was coming from an interview and nearly missed the scene entirely. Then he spotted her—Amelia, sitting in the middle of the grass like a camp counsellor or a pre-school teacher, surrounded by fans who all looked like they were in total and utter awe of her.
Oscar arrived seconds later. “Is this… what’s going on?”
“I think it’s a cult,” Lando whispered. “My wife has created a cult and she is their leader.”
One of the girls spotted them and nudged the others. The whole circle turned.
“Oh. Hi,” Amelia said, gesturing vaguely to them. “They asked me about ground effect. I got carried away.”
Lando sat down beside her without a word. Oscar followed, grabbing a crisp from the communal bowl like this was all perfectly normal.
“We’re learning,” Oscar said solemnly. “Let’s not interrupt the professor, Lando.”
One of the girls burst into laughter. Amelia handed her the napkin diagram and grinned.
And there, in the middle of a media day she’d meant to escape, Amelia Norris held court not to journalists or executives; but to the next generation. Bright-eyed. Hungry to learn. Eager to belong.
—
Later, Lando slipped an arm around Amelia’s shoulders.
“So,” he said, voice light but steady, “when our daughter’s old enough, do we risk teaching her about vortex generators and having her build a wind tunnel in our bathroom?”
Amelia rolled her eyes, resting her head against his chest. “Who knows? She might put us all out of a job.”
He laughed softly. “She’ll definitely get your brains.”
“And your stubbornness.” She gave him a sidelong look. “And adrenaline addiction.”
“Great combo.”
They walked slowly back toward the garage.
“Can I ask you something?”
“Anything.”
“If she wanted to race,” Amelia started, her hand moving instinctively to her hip, “would you want that for her?”
Lando scrunched his nose, bit his lip. “God. Uh…” He paused, searching her eyes. “I’d be worried. Not happy about it, but if it’s what she wanted, I’d make it happen.”
She studied him. “You’d make it happen even if it made you unhappy?”
“Worried,” he corrected gently. “Worried sick, probably. I’ve crashed, seen the worst of it. You know how dangerous this sport is. Would you be okay with it?”
She shrugged. “I’d tell her the risks, the stats. Karting? Sure. But racing professionally… I don’t know.” She hesitated, voice quieter. “I don’t know.”
Lando cupped her cheek. “It’s okay not to know yet.”
“I don’t know,” she repeated, staring into his eyes as panic fluttered beneath her skin. “Why don’t I know? I should.”
He pulled her close, voice low. “It doesn’t work like that, baby. I’m sorry.”
She sniffled, clutching his shirt. “Parenting is already hard and she isn’t even born yet.”
“Yeah,” Lando agreed, with a shaky kind of inhale. “Yeah.”
—
Amelia sat on the couch in their hotel room, fiddling with her stim toy, brow furrowed. The past few weeks had been… confusing. She knew about pregnancy hormones, but this sudden surge in her sex drive? That was new and confusing territory.
Lando entered the room, carrying a glass of water. He caught her eye and smiled, but there was a flicker of something (nervousness?) in his gaze.
“You okay?” He asked, voice a bit higher than usual.
Amelia bit her lip. “Can I ask you something?”
He nodded quickly, almost too quickly.
“Is it… normal to suddenly want sex all the time? Like, nonstop?” Her voice was blunt but uncertain. ‘I’m nervous to look it up in-case weird stuff comes up.”
Lando’s face flushed, and he scratched the back of his neck, looking anywhere but at her. “Uh, yeah. Totally normal. Second trimester… hormones and all that.” He cleared his throat. “Not that I’m complaining.”
Amelia blinked, surprised by his sudden heat.
Lando shifted closer, cheeks still pink. “I mean, it’s… well, you’re pretty irresistible right now.”
She raised an eyebrow. “Irresistible?”
He swallowed hard. “Yeah. So, uh… we can make you feel better, if you want?”
Before she could respond, he leaned in, brushing his lips lightly against hers. The kiss was soft but full of promise, and Amelia’s heart sped up in that familiar way; equal parts surprise and warmth.
When they parted, Lando grinned sheepishly. “You want to?”
Amelia stared at him. “Yeah. Now. And then again a few more times. And tomorrow morning before we go to the track.”
He stared at her for a beat before he smiled wide, sharp little fangs and all.
—
Amelia lay awake.
Her head rested on Lando’s chest, his hand soft against the curve of her belly. His breathing was slow, steady, familiar. She could feel the faint shift of it under her cheek.
She stared at the ceiling, fingers tracing idle circles over the sheets.
She hadn’t expected to want him like that. Not with this body — not now, not so much. And yet…
Flashes of the night flickered across her mind like bright sparks.
Lando’s laugh, half-muffled against her neck.
His voice, rough, whispering, “You sure? You’re sure?”
The way he’d kissed the inside of her wrist every time.
Her hoodie halfway off, clumsily caught around her elbows.
The sound she made when he touched her lower back — sharp, surprised.
His thumb brushing gently over her bump, reverent. “Hi, baby,” he’d whispered, “Your mum’s kind of a goddess.”
She blushed in the dark just thinking about it.
But what stuck with her most wasn’t the heat — it was how seen she felt. How known. How safe.
She’d spent most of her life learning to translate herself for the world. She thought that’s what relationships would always have to be — filtering, explaining, shrinking things down.
But with Lando, she had never once had to do that.
He read the pauses in her voice like she would read telemetry. Felt her silences without trying to explain. Met her confusion with patience, not pity. Anticipated the needs she hadn’t even decoded herself yet.
She tilted her head, studying him in the quiet.
She hadn’t just fallen in love with him all those year ago.
She’d grown into love with him — steady, real, elemental.
And somehow, impossibly, he kept giving her more reasons to love him even more.
She pressed a kiss to his chest, so soft he didn’t stir.
Then closed her eyes, finally ready to sleep.
—
The bathroom lights were aggressively bright for how little sleep Amelia had gotten.
She was perched on the closed toilet lid, sleep-shirt inside out, bump resting on her thighs, and a toothbrush in her mouth. Her phone leaned against a half-used roll of toilet paper on the counter, and Pietra’s face filled the screen, already smirking.
“You look like you’ve been run over,” Pietra said with wide eyes.
Amelia spat into the sink. “I had sex for four hours straight last night.”
Pietra choked on her iced coffee. “Good morning, mami.”
Amelia shrugged like she was reporting on tyre deg. “Hormones.”
“Second trimester hitting like DRS on the main straight, huh?”
She nodded seriously. “It’s physiological. There’s blood flow redistribution and heightened sensitivity in—”
“Stop,” Pietra laughed. “You can’t do the engineering breakdown of your sex life.”
Amelia grinned, a little proud. “I definitely can. Do you want to see my graphs?”
“No graphs.Please. No vibes. How’s Lando coping?”
“Hydrated. Exhausted. Still asleep,” she said, brushing through her tangled hair. “He kept making these noises like he couldn’t believe what was happening.”
Pietra chuckled. “Yeah, he’s down bad for you, my girl.”
“I know,” Amelia said. “He, like, kept kissing my wrist.”
“Amelia. Please.”
“No, like he held it and did it twice.”
There was a pause.
Pietra blinked slowly. “That’s so sweet.”
“He made me feel like myself again.” She flushed.
Pietra was quiet, her smile gentler now. “Because you are.”
Amelia nodded once. “He’s also half-worried that our daughter might invent a bathtub wind tunnel.”
“Oh God,” Pietra said, grinning again. “That little girl is going to make him go grey. I hope she cuts up her dolls and builds a diffuser from their severed limbs.”
“She won’t have dolls.” Amelia said dryly. “She’ll have CFD software.” Even though her tone was flat, the twitch of her lips betrayed her joke.
Pietra laughed. Amelia finished tying her hair into a low, slightly messy ponytail. A streak of sunlight cut through the window, warming the tiles beneath her feet.
“I should go,” she said. “Track walk in forty-five minutes.”
“Tell Lando I said ‘well done’.”
Amelia rolled her eyes. “No. That’s weird.”
“You love me anyway!”
Amelia ended the call and stared at herself in the mirror for a second.
Messy. Flushed. A little wild-looking.
Entirely herself.
And deeply, deeply loved.
—
The heat shimmered off the asphalt in waves, the whole paddock buzzing with anticipation. Miami was loud, chaotic, full of pastel shirts and bass-heavy DJ sets; but the McLaren garage felt like a storm waiting to break.
Amelia had one hand on Oscar’s halo as he settled into the car. Focused. Calm. Starting fourth on the grid. It was a good starting position, but they both knew it wasn’t going to be an easy climb through the field — if they even managed to keep their position into turn one.
“Conditions are fine. Brakes might take a while to come in. Let the tyres come to you.”
Oscar looked up at her, half-grinning under his visor. “And if I don’t?”
“I’ll scream at you over the radio for being annoying and not listening to me.”
He laughed. “As usual.”
She patted the car once, stepped back, and moved to her tiny little thrown-together desk just as Lando passed her on his way to climb into his car. His hand grabbed her back. Their eyes met. He gave her a look; small, private, thrilling. The kind of look that said: I think today is the day.
She nodded once. Just once.
She’d believed in him for years now — since before Sochi, since before he’d even been given the full-time McLaren seat.
He was capable of incredible things.
—
The first 20 laps were a blur of strategy juggling and telemetry surges. Amelia was locked into Oscar’s race; managing his energy deployment, traffic, undercut threats.
He was driving sharp. But something wasn’t sticking.
A slow pit stop on Lap 32 killed their momentum. They dropped back into traffic. She clenched her jaw, recalculated in seconds, called Plan C.
“Ducky, don’t lose steam. We’re still in this for good points. Head down.”
“Copy,” he said, clipped. Frustrated, but fighting.
But further up the field, Lando was flying.
And then there was the safety car.
Chaos. All improper preparation and garages rushing.
And then Lando exited the pits. And he hadn’t just made up a few positions — he’d taken the lead.
The garage erupted. Amelia nearly stood up from her station. She felt it before the numbers confirmed it — Lando was about to win his first Grand Prix.
She could barely breathe.
—
Oscar crossed the line P6. Solid points. Not what they hoped for, but not failure.
But Lando…
Lando held off Max for the last five laps like his life depended on it. No mistakes. Just pure, blistering pace and nerves of steel.
And then—
“Lando Norris. That’s P1. You are a Formula One race winner!”
Will’s words cracked through the comms.
The garage exploded.
Amelia didn’t move.
She sat frozen, one hand over her mouth, the other gripping the edge of the console like it would float her back to earth.
He’d done it.
Finally.
No more self-doubt. No more what-ifs.
Lando won.
Her husband, who stayed up with her until 3am looking at ride height data; had won.
And he did it in the car she built for him.
"We did it, Will. Amelia — baby, we did it. We did it!" He said over the radio.
The first race it was fully her spec — and sure, they’d gotten ‘lucky’ with the safety-car, but luck was insubstantial. His pace said it all.
He’d won. And he’d won by a mile.
—
The moment she found him in Parc Ferme, still helmeted, still breathless, still shocked, she ran.
Not far; just to the holding area, where only a few people were allowed. But she was McLaren’s lead engineer. She was also his wife.
She had every right.
He turned and saw her and the helmet came off in one swoop.
His face was flushed, eyes red-rimmed, disbelieving.
She launched into his arms and he caught her without hesitation, arms around her waist, face buried in her shoulder.
“I can’t believe it,” he whispered. “I won. I fucking won, baby.”
“I can believe it,” she said, steady and breathless. “I knew it was coming. How long have I told you that this would happen for you? You’ve been driving like a winner all year, Lando.”
He kissed her, fast, messy, barely containing the wild joy in him. “Tell me you saw the move on Max.”
“I saw it. It was amazing.”
He laughed against her neck, giddy and stunned and vibrating with relief. “I did it, Amelia.”
“You did.” She leaned into him, eyes pricking with tears. “I am so, so proud of you. So proud.”
—
They went to a few parties. Smaller ones. Danced together — Lando being celebrated in exactly the way he deserved.
He hadn’t been all to keen on the idea of his visibly pregnancy wife going into the Miami nightclub, but she’d insisted they go. Even just for a little while.
Oscar and Lando stayed close — like bodyguards. Max was no better, hovering, constantly bringing her water. It was sweet. It was nice to still be involved in the celebrations.
His trophy sat on their hotel room table.
Lando was in the shower, singing Queen, completely off-key.
Amelia sat on the bed in one of his t-shirts, one hand on her belly, the other tracing the MCL38-AN etched into the side of the silver.
Their daughter kicked.
She smiled. “Your dad,” she whispered, “is a Formula One race winner.”
—
They touched down just before dawn, Heathrow still hushed in early morning fog. Amelia’s body ached with the kind of deep exhaustion that only adrenaline can leave behind; but her hand never left Lando’s.
He’d won. That wasn’t going to stop echoing in her head any time soon.
By the time they got to his parents’ house, the sky had cracked open with gentle rain. The front door opened before they even rang the doorbell.
His mum pulled him into a tight hug, burying her face in his chest. His dad hovered behind, proud and misty-eyed in the quiet way he always was. There were champagne flutes already out in the kitchen, a cake someone had clearly stayed up late decorating — “P1, Finally!” scrawled in sugar icing.
But what caught Amelia off guard was how his mum hugged her too.
Carefully, because of the bump. But tightly. Fully. Without hesitation.
“We were watching,” she said, her voice warm in Amelia’s ear. “I’ve never screamed so loud in my life. He wouldn’t have gotten here without you, you know?”
Amelia blinked. Didn’t know what to say to that. Just squeezed her hand and nodded.
—
Later, in the quiet of Lando’s childhood bedroom, Amelia lay curled into his side beneath soft, over-washed sheets. The walls were still plastered with old racing posters, a few crooked photos of karting days — a little shrine to where it all began.
The trophy was on the dresser.
Not a glass cabinet, not a pedestal. Just… sitting there. Like it belonged next to a lava lamp and a stack of F1 magazines from 2009.
Amelia snorted at the sight of it. “You really just plonked it there?”
“It’s weird, right?” Lando said, his voice drowsy. “Feels like it should be… more. But also not. I don’t know.”
“It’s exactly right,” she said. “It belongs where you started.”
He looked over at her. Tucked a strand of hair behind her ear. “You okay?”
She nodded. Then, after a moment, “It’s strange. Everyone talks about how hard it is to get here. To win. To be part of something like this. But nobody tells you how hard it is to… stop. To come down from it. To believe that it’s real.”
He didn’t answer right away. Just pulled her closer, hand on her belly. “She’s gonna know,” he said softly. “Our daughter. She’s going to grow up knowing this is possible. Because she’ll have you. And she’ll have me too.”
“You,” Amelia said firmly, “are going to be her favourite person.”
He flushed, kissed her shoulder. “You’re both my favourite.”
—
Breakfast was a chaotic, sweet mess. His younger cousins had come by with orange balloons and mini trophies made of Lego. His grandmother insisted on touching Amelia’s belly and declared, in full authority, that the baby would be born with racing boots on already.
Someone pulled out a bottle of something sparkling, and Lando looked like he might cry for the tenth time in 48 hours.
Amelia stepped outside with her tea, just for a moment. The garden smelled like damp grass and daffodils.
Lando came out after her, wrapping his arms around her from behind, nose pressed into her neck.
“We really did it,” he murmured.
“You did.”
“No,” he said. “We.”
She leaned back into him, eyes fluttering shut.
For once, she didn’t argue.
—
The highly sought after private clinic was tucked behind a row of converted barns; all soft wood beams and white walls, the kind of place that smelled faintly of lavender and sterilised plastic. Quiet. Private. No waiting rooms. No fluorescent lights.
It had taken Amelia weeks to agree to in-person visits. Not because she didn’t trust the care, but because the idea of new faces, new spaces, new sounds — it made her skin hum in the wrong way.
But this midwife, Fiona, had been patient. Kind. Spoken to her over the phone like Amelia wasn’t strange or fragile or complicated. Just… herself. And today, for the first time, they were meeting in real life.
Amelia sat in the softly-lit consultation room, sleeves pulled over her knuckles, while Lando leaned back in the chair beside her, fingers loosely linked with hers.
The door opened, and Fiona stepped in; mid-forties maybe, silver at her temples, Doc Martens under a midi skirt. Exuding a calm energy.
“Hello, Amelia,” she said with a small smile. “It’s good to finally meet you properly.”
Amelia blinked at her. “You don’t sound as tall as you do on the phone.”
Fiona laughed, delighted. “That’s a first. Most people say I sound shorter.”
Lando grinned. “She’s very good at spatial audio. It’s… sort of freaky.”
Amelia elbowed him lightly. “It’s not freaky. It’s useful.”
“I know, baby,” he said, kissing her hair.
Fiona sat, not rushing. Just matching the room to Amelia’s pace.
“Shall we talk through everything slowly?” She offered. “We’ll do the checkup, listen to baby’s heartbeat if you’re feeling up for it — and then talk about next steps. I’ve got your notes printed exactly how you like them. Font size 13, double spaced.”
That surprised a smile out of Amelia. “You remembered.”
“Of course I did.”
—
Fiona talked her through every step before touching her. Let Amelia guide where the Doppler went. Gave her control.
The heartbeat came through — fast and steady and perfect.
Lando stared at the screen like it was made of gold.
“There she is,” he murmured. “There’s our girl.”
Amelia stared at the graph. “Still sounds like a horse galloping.”
“Strong horse,” Fiona said. “Very healthy.”
They spent another fifteen minutes going over nutrition changes, sleeping positions, birth plans. Fiona never pushed. Never filled silence with filler words. Just waited.
“You’re very good at this,” Amelia said finally. “I don’t like many people.”
Fiona smiled gently. “That means a lot. Thank you.”
—
They stepped back out into the quiet spring air, a softness between them.
Lando opened the car door for her, waiting until she was settled before getting in himself. He looked over at her, one hand finding hers on the armrest.
“I like her,” he said.
“I don’t hate her,” Amelia replied, which was even better.
“You did so well,” he added softly. “I’m really proud of you.”
She glanced at him. “Why?”
“Because I know how much it costs you to do things that feel uncertain,” he said. “And you still showed up for her. For our daughter.”
Amelia’s eyes prickled, caught off guard by the depth in his voice.
“She deserves someone better than me, sometimes,” she whispered.
“No,” he said firmly. “She’s getting someone more brilliant, more brave, more herself than anyone could hope for.”
She kissed him. “Okay. Take me to get some chicken, please?”
—
The kitchen was full of soft light and the smell of roast chicken and rosemary potatoes. There were too many voices, too many overlapping stories, the occasional clink of cutlery — but somehow, it didn’t overwhelm Amelia the way it usually did. Maybe it was the dimmer switch Lando had installed last year. Maybe it was the way he kept checking in with her from across the room. Or maybe… maybe it was just the peace that came from knowing her daughter was still tucked safe inside her, heartbeat strong.
Dinner was warm.
They passed around the scan print-outs — Lando sliding them carefully across the table. His mum teared up a little at the clearest one, where the outline of a tiny face and curled fingers was visible.
“She’s so beautiful already,” Cisca whispered.
“She looks like an angry shrimp,” Amelia said flatly, which made Adam chuckle into his wine.
“An angry shrimp with a big Norris head,” Lando added.
“Oi,” Adam said. “Watch it.”
“She’s got Amelia’s precision, though,” Lando added, turning the scan toward his dad. “Perfect symmetry in the profile. Look at that jawline. Look.”
“She’s 38 centimetres long, Lando,” Amelia said, eyebrows raised. “She’s still just a smudge.”
He shrugged, grinning. “Let me have this.”
—
Cisca topped up everyone’s water and gently set her glass down. “Have you two thought much about… the birth yet? Or after? What it’ll look like, who you want with you, where?”
Amelia nodded immediately, already sliding her phone from the edge of her placemat. “Yes. I’ve got it all planned.”
She pulled up a bullet-pointed note, clean and colour-coded. “I’ll be labouring at home for as long as is medically safe, with Fiona monitoring. Then transferring to the birth centre — the one with the adjustable light panels and hydrotherapy. I’ve selected a playlist that aligns with optimal relaxation frequencies, and Lando will be coached on pressure-point guidance in case I don’t want verbal input. We’ll have backup bags packed and pre-positioned in the car by Week 37.”
The table went still for a moment. Not unkind. Just… a bit awed.
“And after?” Adam asked gently.
“Fiona will do at-home checks. I’ll be off work technically, but I’ll still be supporting Oscar’s data remotely if we’re out of hospital. I’m going to stay with my mum in Woking. Sleep will be rotational in the first two weeks depending on Lando’s schedule, but my mum had already agreed to step in. Breastfeeding is Plan A, bottle Plan B. I have a spreadsheet.”
There was a quiet pause.
Then Cisca reached over the table, her hand warm as it closed gently over Amelia’s. “That all sounds wonderful, my darling. But, and this is only a but, if it doesn’t go exactly the way you’ve planned, don’t panic,” she said. Her voice was soft but certain. “Sometimes babies decide to do things their own way.”
Amelia didn’t flinch from the contact — rare for her. She just looked at Cisca’s hand, and then at her face. “I know that,” she said, a little stiffly. “Logically.”
“But knowing it logically isn’t the same as feeling okay when it happens,” Cisca said gently.
Amelia looked down at the scan photo in front of her. Then quietly, almost like a confession, “I want to do it right. I want her to feel safe from the second she arrives.”
“She will,” Lando said, reaching for her hand under the table. “Because she’ll have you.”
—
The door was already open before they even made it up the path.
“There she is!” Zak’s voice boomed from the hallway as Amelia climbed out of the car, Lando trailing behind with his hand protectively on the small of her back.
Tracey appeared right behind him, dish towel still slung over her shoulder. “Let her breathe, Zak, Jesus.”
Amelia barely had time to blink before she was enveloped in one of her mother’s trademark, over-long hugs — all vanilla perfume and chaotic warmth.
“I can’t believe how much she’s grown,” Tracey murmured, hands sliding down to press lightly at Amelia’s bump. “My granddaughter’s in there, that’s crazy.”
“She’s the size a watermelon,” Amelia said, dry. “A big watermelon. But still.”
Lando grinned. “Not for long. She’s growing every day.”
Zak clapped a hand on his son-in-law’s shoulder. “Still wrapping my head around the fact that you’re gonna be a dad, son.”
“Same,” Lando replied with a breathy laugh.
—
The Browns’ home was bigger than you might expect, but still carried the energy of a family who talked over each other and left laundry on stair banisters. The TV was on in the background playing a re-run of some F1 docuseries, and Zak had already pulled out a bottle of strawberry alcohol-free wine.
“No, Dad,” Amelia said, waving him off. “No bubbles. I’ll get heartburn.”
“I’ve got ginger beer!” Tracey called from the kitchen. “And saltines!”
Amelia drifted toward the fireplace, fingers brushing over old framed photos. There was one of her as a little girl with a screwdriver in one hand. Another of Zak holding her on his shoulders at the Silverstone track.
She stared at that one for a beat too long.
“You okay, kiddo?” Zak asked gently, appearing beside her.
She didn’t look up. “Yeah. Just remembering.”
“You’d sit on the garage floor with the brake calipers,” Zak said, fond. “You used to name them.”
“They needed names. They had personalities.”
“You said one was ‘grumpy and over-torqued.’ You were five.”
She let out a tiny laugh.
—
Dinner was loud. American-style pot roast, mashed potatoes, green beans drowning in butter. Tracey refilled everyone’s drinks every ten minutes. Zak told old stories about testing sessions Amelia had half-forgotten.
Later, Amelia found a quiet spot in her childhood bedroom, lights dimmed, the duvet still vaguely smelling of fabric softener. Lando leaned against the doorframe, watching her brush her fingers over an old model car she’d built with Zak when she was nine.
“You okay, baby?” He asked.
She nodded. “Yeah. I’m nervous to be staying here again, after having the baby. I wish we could just… have her in Monaco and disappear for a few months.” She frowned. “We didn’t plan our timing very well, did we? You’ll be mid-season, and Oscar won’t have me there, and—“
Lando crossed to her and wrapped his arms around her from behind, resting his chin on her shoulder.“Hey. Hey, calm down, baby. I think that you’re exactly where you’re supposed to be,” he murmured. “You’ll want your mum, yeah? She’ll be able to help you adjust without being overbearing.”
She hummed against his chest, her hands closing around his shirt. “What if you’re not here when it happens?”
He was quiet for a beat. “I’ll come home as soon as possible, baby. I promise.”
“I don’t want you to miss a single session.” She said, hotly. “But I want you with me all the time and I can’t have both, can I?”
“No, baby. I’m sorry.”
“It’s fine.” He murmured. “It’s fine, baby.”
—
Amelia stood at the edge of the test platform, squinting at the flow viz spread across the prototype floor. She wasn’t officially here to work, just visiting. Just dropping in. Just… checking the numbers. Seeing the model. Touching the damn tunnel wall like it could somehow speak to her.
“It’s still bleeding airflow here,” she muttered to herself, pointing at the front of the floor, just under the bargeboard curve. “Boundary layer’s detaching early.”
“Still better than Ferrari’s design,” someone mumbled behind her.
“Low bar,” she shot back.
She didn’t look up. Her fingers danced automatically across the control screen. Toggling split channel overlays, flipping between computational fluid dynamics layers. She could feel her heartbeat syncing with the faint thrum of the tunnel, her mind slotting into gear like it always had.
Until she felt someone step beside her, too quietly for a regular engineer.
“Amelia,” Oscar said softly, hands in his hoodie pockets. “Hey.”
She blinked, her brain still five seconds behind in aero-language.
He glanced at the setup, then at her bump, then back to her face. “Did you… sleep at all last night?” He asked.
“I took a nap on Lando’s thigh for twenty-three minutes in the car,” she said.
Oscar huffed. “Very normal. Very healthy.”
She turned back to the airflow sim. “This isn’t right. The adjustment from the Miami spec — it’s throwing off drag balance on the mid-straight.”
“Amelia.”
She didn’t answer this time. Just kept muttering corrections under her breath, lips moving like she was translating a language no one else could see.
Oscar stepped closer, then placed one hand gently on her wrist — not to stop her, just to connect.“You’ve been here for hours. You can come back to this later,” he said.
“I don’t know how to be here without doing something.”
“I know,” Oscar said. “But we’re not racing this week. And you’re allowed to just… exist in this space without trying to fix every tiny issue that you see.”
Amelia looked at him. Her mouth opened, then shut again. He didn’t push. Just stood with her in the quiet hum of the room, solid and calm.
Eventually, she whispered, “My brain’s too loud when I stop.”
“Then let me help you turn the volume down,” Oscar said simply. “C’mon. Let’s go sit by the lake for a bit.”
—
They ended up outside with two mugs of ginger tea that Oscar had somehow convinced catering to let them take out of the dining hall. Amelia sat with her feet up on the bench edge, dress stretched over her bump, breathing slower now.
She watched the fountain spray in silence for a few minutes before saying, “Thanks.”
“For the tea?”
“For not treating me like I’m fragile,” she said. “But also not treating me like I’m a machine.”
Oscar smiled sideways. “You’re a human. A terrifyingly brilliant, data-possessed human. But still.”
She let out a tired laugh and leaned her head briefly on his shoulder. “Don’t tell Lando I had a moment.”
“Alright,” he said. “It’ll stay between us and the ducks.”
She smiled. “My ducky and my ducks — conspiring together. Cute.”
He rolled his eyes.
—
The morning sun hit the Emilia-Romagna pit lane with a sharpness that reminded Amelia of why she loved racing. Clean, brutal light cutting through the lingering coolness of dawn.
She stood just inside the garage, eyes scanning telemetry streams on her iPad, but her mind elsewhere. This was her second-to-last race before maternity leave. A strange mix of accomplishment and anticipation knotted inside her.
Lando caught her eye across the garage, giving a small thumbs-up. She returned the gesture with a faint smile.
Oscar approached, carrying his helmet. “Ready?” He asked.
“Of course I am.”
—
During a quiet moment before qualifying, Amelia slipped out from behind the pit wall to find Lando.
He reached for her hand, squeezing it lightly. “You okay?”
She nodded. “I’m okay. Just… thinking about how this is all starting to feel a bit too much like a goodbye for my liking.”
He brushed a stray strand of hair behind her ear. “We’ll hold the fort. You’ll be back before you know it. You don’t need to worry.”
Her eyes softened. “I know. But it feels… weird.”
He held her. Kissed her. “You’ll be fine, baby.”
—
The race was intense. Strategy calls fired rapidly, tyres switching, gaps closing. Amelia’s voice came calm and precise over the radio, guiding Oscar through every corner, every lap.
When the checkered flag finally waved, Oscar finished fourth — solid, but just off the podium. Amelia exhaled, a complex wave of pride and bittersweet acceptance washing over her.
Lando’s race had been even more intense; a nail-biting late charge from Lando, a nail-bitingly close finish between him and Max.
They’d take second.
But she could see it. Hear it.
Her husband had enjoyed winning. And he was hungry for more.
—
Back in the garage, the team gathered around the screens replaying Lando’s brilliant win at Miami — a reminder of the highs to come. Amelia let herself smile, feeling the warmth of the team around her.
Lando slipped an arm around her waist. “Only one more weekend to go,” he murmured.
She leaned into him. “Yeah.”
Tom gave them a nervous smile. “I feel ready to take the reins. Do you think I’m ready?”
“As ready as you could possibly be.” Amelia told him.
Oscar laughed a bit. “I feel like I’m being passed between my divorced parents.”
Amelia rolled her eyes at him. “You’re ridiculous, ducky.”
NEXT CHAPTER
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