small but deadly
styofa doing anything

Origami Around
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda

No title available
I'd rather be in outer space đ¸
TVSTRANGERTHINGS

PR's Tumblrdome
almost home
Not today Justin

titsay
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
Three Goblin Art
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her

oozey mess
art blog(derogatory)

⣠Chile in a Photography âŁ
sheepfilms
Stranger Things

@theartofmadeline
RMH
seen from Canada

seen from Pakistan
seen from Malaysia
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Italy

seen from Malaysia

seen from Italy
seen from Ireland

seen from Indonesia
seen from Italy
seen from TĂźrkiye

seen from United Kingdom

seen from Japan
seen from United States

seen from TĂźrkiye

seen from France
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
@cosmosfishh
small but deadly
I will lock in tomorrow like nobody has ever locked in before
look what i cooked (literally)
sweet as a 1/4th cup of sugar Some extras below the cut!
Heres them out of the oven
and a digital animation i made first as a guide!
NP: Daniel, G'day! You must be delighted! DR: Very, very delighted yeah, it was ahhh wow, very cool very cool. We had a pretty good morning and we thought all going well, putting everything together, we might have a crack at Q3 today. And we did and then managed to go even better in that and finish up sixth I think, which was uh yeah very very happy with myself and with the team. I think we made some adjustments through the quali and each little step seemed to be beneficial. So yeah, really happy. I'll enjoy this today. NP: How do you explain the huge gap between you and your teammate? DR: Not sure at the moment. I'm not sure if he went off or had any other issues. So I guess we'll see in the debrief now. But for now, it's good for me to be where I am. I'm happy with that. Obviously, it's nicer for the team if we're both up there. But I've got to take this sixth position as it is now and I probably won't stop smiling until I go to bed tonight. NP: You never do. Thanks very much.
Daniel Ricciardo talks to Natalie Pinkham after qualifying P6 for the 2012 Bahrain GP.
In Q1 Ricciardo was over a second faster than teammate Jean Eric Vergne who was eliminated in the first stage of Quali. His final lap in Q3 put him less than half a second off Sebastian Vettel's pole lap - a remarkable achievement for a team that only managed two Q3 appearances that season, both of which were achieved by Daniel. "Ricciardo's performance was quite brilliant â faster than he and the team reckoned was possible and even startling the Red Bull senior team, which took pole position with Vettel. Arguably, it was the qualifying lap of the year and probably the best relative to machinery anyone produced that season." (Edd Straw)
my niche version of "he would not fucking say that" is "he would not fucking carry that baby to term" for mpreg headcanons. sometimes there is power in recognizing that a fictional man WOULD get a mabortion
@cadillacjohnf1 i am so sorry.
Šď¸ijehua on Instagram, please go support op
the summer you turned pretty â đđđ & đđđđ
the story of you, mclarenâs golden boys, and the summer that changes everything.
ęŽ starring: lando norris x mclaren marketing admin!reader x oscar piastri. ęŽ word count: 12.2k. ęŽ includes: romance, humor, friendship. mentions of food, alcohol; profanity. slight time skip (set in 2027), tension tension tensionnn!!!, not really a love triangle, loosely based off the summer i turned pretty where oscar is conrad and lando is jeremiah. ęŽ commentary box: yeah.., yeah. this is a thing, i guess. much thanks to @binisainz and @norrisradio for watching me spiral over this. consider this a warm-up for the challengers au đââď¸ đŚđ˛ đŚđđŹđđđŤđĽđ˘đŹđ
Thereâs something about the air this time around.
You feel it the second you step out of the van, your trainers hitting the gravel with a muted crunch. A breeze ruffles the hem of your McLaren-issued shorts, sticky with sweat from the long drive, and you breathe it in. Salt, pine, heat radiating off the tarmac like a living thing.
Itâs the fourth time youâve made this pilgrimage, the fourth summer youâve found yourself somewhere off-grid with the team. Official cameras conveniently âforgetâ to roll. Every work email is answered with a flip-flopped foot and a cocktail in hand.Â
Life at McLaren never really started until you survived the off-season getaway.Â
Everyone knew it. No one said it out loud.
The rented-out summer home sprawls out in front of you, all whitewashed stone and terracotta roof tiles, perched high above an aquamarine stretch of water so clear it looks Photoshopped. A few bright towels already cling to the poolside chairs; someoneâs left a trail of sandy flip-flops like breadcrumbs. You can hear laughter somewhereâmuffled, distant, a memory you havenât made yet.
The whole place hums under the weight of something not quite visible. A static charge. A warning shot fired low across the bow.
Oscar had won the 2026 World Driversâ Championship, wrestling the 2025 crown from Lando in a way that was almost surgical. No drama, no big public blowout. Just a clean, clinical dethroning that had stunned the paddock stupid.
But it wasnât clean. Not really. Youâd seen the cracks up close. The stiff smiles. The way Landoâs jaw would tick when Oscarâs name got thrown around in meetings. The brittle way Oscar would pretend not to notice.
Now, with both their contracts coming up and the whole world speculating if McLaren could even keep them both, the air buzzes with something volatile. Not anger, exactly. Not yet. Justâ
âYou coming or what?â a voice calls out, snapping you out of your reverie. You turn to see Callum from logistics waving you in, already wearing a sleeveless tee and a grin that promises poor life decisions.
You wave back, laughing under your breath. Whatever. Let the future burn itself down later.
Right now, youâve got one week. One week to drink bad beer by the pool, to dance barefoot to someoneâs crackling Bluetooth speaker, to pretend that youâre just a marketing admin on holiday and not someone who spends their life airbrushing tensions away with pastel graphics and PR spins.
One week before everything changes.
Youâre going to enjoy the hell out of it.
Except you don't even make it to the front steps before they find you.
Landoâs laugh cuts through the air first. Unmistakable, that full kind of sound thatâs always gotten him exactly what he wanted. He strides across the gravel with a beer in hand, sunglasses perched low on his nose. Tan already sunk into his skin like he belongs here more than anywhere else.
Oscar is a step behind him, hands shoved into the pockets of his board shorts, mouth pulled into that familiar half-smile that never quite gives away what heâs thinking. Cool. Untouchable. But not when it comes to you.
Youâve known them both since 2023. Started the same year as Oscar, actually, back when he was still the ânew kidâ and Lando was the anointed heir of McLaren. Watching them now, itâs almost funny how much and how little has changed.
âWell, well, well,â Lando drawls, his gaze raking down the length of you without a shred of shame. âSomeoneâs been hitting the gym.â
You roll your eyes, but the heat crawling up your neck betrays you. Typical. Lando always wielded charm like a blunt weapon. Flirt first, apologize laterâif at all.
âIâll take that as a compliment,â you shoot back, crossing your arms to fend off the fluster you feel prickling your skin.
âYou should.â His grin turns a little wolfish, a little sharper at the edges. Itâs always been like this with Lando. Sharp banter, quick jabs, a constant underlying dare in his words.
Oscar, on the other hand, doesnât say anything. He just glances at you, quick, his gaze flickering over the obvious changes. The toned arms, the tighter shorts, the way you stand a little differently now, more sure of yourself. Itâs the sun youâve caught over the spring, the way your hair is lighter. The confidence, fitting you a little easier now.Â
âIgnore him,â Oscar says finally, voice dry as ever. âHe thinks a compliment a day keeps HR away.â
Lando snickers, entirely unbothered. âNo oneâs filing any complaints.â
âYet,â Oscar adds under his breath, and you catch the twitch of a real smile before he looks away, as if heâs embarrassed to be caught being funny.
The dynamic between them is sharper this year, the edges harder to ignore. Landoâs a little too loud; Oscarâs a little too careful. And you, wellâ
You shoulder your bag higher. Whatever storm is brewing, itâs not here yet.Â
When Lando is pulled away by another group, you find yourself next to Oscar, the two of you naturally falling into step. âHeâs subtle, huh?â you say, nodding toward where Lando is already readying to play a match of beach volleyball.
Oscar snorts. âAs a brick through a window.â
Your laughter comes easier with him. No games, no showmanship. Just the same effortless back-and-forth youâve had since you both joined McLare. Young, new, a little out of your depths. Youâve grown alongside each other in different ways, but the familiarity remains.
âYou look good, by the way,â Oscar says after a beat, almost too casual.
You glance at him, but heâs already looking away. âThanks, Piastri,â you say, nudging his elbow lightly. âBig year for compliments, huh?â
He hums noncommittally, a ghost of a smile pulling at his mouth. His expression doesnât shift, but thereâs something in his eyes. Something that makes you feel seen in a way thatâs infinitely more dangerous than Landoâs brand of unashamed attention.
Voices call your names from across the courtyard. A group from the marketing team waves you over, already laying claim to beach chairs and plotting the eveningâs games.
âDuty calls,â you say with a mock salute.
Oscar lifts a hand in farewell. âSee you.â
The first few hours are a whirlwind of people claiming rooms, of staff trading sunblock and shots and secrets. By the time itâs evening, the beach air is thick with the scent of salt, laughter bouncing between bodies huddled in threadbare hoodies and board shorts. Someone passes a bottle of cheap rum around. Someone else suggests Truth or Dare, and against your better judgment, you let yourself be roped in.
Youâre perched on a faded picnic blanket with a handful of your favorite coworkers. Marketing assistants, junior engineers, a couple of race strategy interns. A makeshift family built over late nights and endless deadlines.
âAlright, you,â Tom from engineering says, pointing at you with a grin. His cheeks are already flushed from the booze. âTruth: which of our two golden boys is more crush-worthy?â
A chorus of oohs rises from the circle. You groan, tossing a handful of sand in Tom's general direction. âWhat are we, twelve?â
âCome on! You have to answer.â
You make a show of rolling your eyes, sighing dramatically as if itâs the most inconvenient question in the world. Still, your heart skips a beat. You know thereâs only ever been one answer.
âOscar,â you say finally, shrugging like it doesn't cost you anything. âItâs always been Oscar.â
The teasing jeers come quick, but you just grin and take a swig from the bottle when itâs passed your way. Itâs easier to laugh it off than to sink into the memories unspooling quietly in your mind.
You think about your first day at McLaren. Youâd both been rookies, wide-eyed and trying not to drown in a sea of expectation. Oscar had been fresh off his earlier championships. This quiet, determined presence in a world built for louder voices. You had locked eyes across the cafeteria once, both awkwardly holding trays of uninspiring food, and heâd given you a small, tentative smile.
It hadnât been fireworks. It hadnât been some earth-shattering moment you could write a novel about. It had been something smaller, quieter. A seed planted in good soil.
Over the years, youâd watched him grow into himself. Sharper on track, still dry-humored and steady off it. Always polite. Always a little reserved. And always, somehow, softer towards you.
You were no fool, though. You never once mistook kindness for something more. You knew what your place was. A marketing admin, barely visible on race weekends unless a driver needed to be somewhere for a shoot. Youâd been content to stay in your lane, to admire him like you admired the sunsets over the paddock, or the roar of the engines on a Sunday afternoon.
Beautiful things. Distant things.
If Oscar was nicer to you than he was to others, you chalked it up to that shared sentiment. You were both once the least important people in the room, both standing on the shaky ground of McLarenâs legacy, and rookies tended to stick together.Â
Someone nudges you, laughing, and you shake yourself out of it, laughing along. The night spins onward, bright and blurry. Tomorrow, youâll wake up with sand in your hair and regret in your bones.
But for now, you pass the bottle to the left, and let the fire warm your skin.
The next morning is slow and heavy, the sun just starting to burn off the early haze. Youâre pulling your hair into a loose ponytail, half-listening to chatter around the shared bathroom when Mia from digital points her toothbrush at you and says, âYou know heâs been checking you out, right?â
âWho?â
Mia rolls her eyes dramatically, toothpaste foam threatening to spill. She jerks her chin toward the open doorway. âNorris.âÂ
Curious and a little dubious, you step out into the hall. Sure enough, there he is, leaning against the kitchen counter, sipping from a mug. His gaze finds yours immediately, unapologetically. When he notices you catching him, his mouth quirks into a slow, confident grin.
âMorning,â he calls.
âMorning,â you reply as casually as you can manage.
He sets down his mug. âFancy a run?â
You hesitate, glancing around for signs of anyone else. Usually, the drivers corral a whole group when they go on these runs. But thereâs no one hovering by the door with sneakers in hand. Itâs just Lando, looking infuriatingly fresh and ready.
âSure,â you say before you can overthink it. He grins, and itâs the same sort of smile he has when heâs standing on the top step of the podium.Â
You lace up your trainers quickly and meet him outside. The air is cooler by the beach, the ocean stretching out endlessly beside you. You jog in an easy rhythm, sand crunching faintly under your feet. Itâs quiet for a while. Just the waves and the distant call of gulls.
âYou look different this summer,â Lando says after a stretch of silence. His voice is low, almost thoughtful.
You laugh breathlessly. âBad different or good different?â
âGood. Very good,â he says with a lopsided smile. âMore... sure of yourself.â
The compliment lands oddly heavy in your chest. âMaybe Iâm just better at pretending now.â
He shoots you a sideways glance, sharp and knowing. âOr maybe youâre better at being who you are.â
The words catch you off-guard, more meaningful than the easy flirtations youâd expected. For a while, neither of you speak. You just run, side by side, until the sun climbs higher and the morning grows warmer.
Itâs always been a little different with Lando. He was the occasional headache of the marketing team, the one that warranted one or two more PR releases than Oscar. Off the track, though, you were always pleasantly surprised at who Lando could be underneath the orange race suit.Â
He was the thoughtful kind, the type to know everybodyâs birthdays and to stop for any kid asking for an autograph. He never minced words, but he was not unkind, either. He just felt everything deeply, whether it was a loss, or a win, or the sentiment of an unassuming summer day.
When you finally loop back toward the house, your skin is sticky with sweat and your mind is spinning. Lando bumps his shoulder lightly against yours as you walk up the porch steps.
âGood run,â he says, like it means something more.
You nod, pretending your heartbeat is only from the exercise.
Inside, the house is waking up properly now. Music playing, laughter bouncing. You disappear into the crowd, feeling Landoâs eyes on your back the whole way, and wondering, not for the last time that day, what the hell just happened.Â
You try not to think of it during the day. You focus on the team exercises, the planning, the downtime. You count down the seconds until your favorite parts of these summers: the bonfires in the evening.Â
Lanterns swing lazily from the wooden beams overhead, casting a dappled light over the courtyard where most of the team has gathered. Itâs bright and loud, and it reminds you of why you continue to stay despite the shitty management and the questionable policies. The people here are good people.Â
Lando shimmers in the center of it all. Heâs a social butterfly, fluttering from interns to old-timers with small talk that makes you feel special for a few, precious moments. What endears you the most is that you know heâs not putting on a show. Lando likes the team, likes the beach and the woodsmoke and the invincibility of these moments away from the public eye.Â
You feel like somethingâs missing, though. You wander off in search of that puzzle piece, and thatâs when you spot him.Â
Oscar, tucked away by the side of the house, half-shielded by the drooping branches of a tree. His hands are shoved into the pockets of his hoodie, his posture hunched as he scrolls through his phone. You smile to yourself.
âHiding, are we?â you call out, keeping your voice light.
Oscar doesnât start. He just glances at you, a wry smile tugging at his mouth. âStrategic retreat.â
You chuckle and wander closer, careful not to intrude too much. âFair. You lasted longer than I thought you would,â you sya.Â
âPeer pressureâs a powerful thing.â
âIâll leave you to it. Just thought Iâd come say âhiâ before you went full hermit.â
Youâre about to wander back off to the beach when Oscar says in an uncharacteristic rush of words, âYou donât have to go.â
You freeze for a beat. When you look over, Oscarâs already looking at youâsteady, earnest, like he actually means it.
âIf you want,â he adds, more casually now. As if heâs giving you an out instead.
Your heart does that stupid thing it always does around him. A warm stutter you can never quite control. You move closer, sitting down a comfortable distance away. Close enough to talk, far enough not to spook the moment.
You donât say much. You donât need to.
The night hums around you and between it all, a quiet little space you carve out with Oscar, just the two of you. You wonder, not for the first time, if he feels it too. The anticipation when the amps turn on. The thick tension.Â
Itâs not something youâre willing to stake your friendship over, so you let the moment pass as many others before it. By the time the two of you are heading back to the throng, youâre only reminded of where you belong in the complex hierarchy of co-worker friendships.Â
The next morning, the sun is high and hot by the time everyone spills out onto the open field just beyond the house. Thereâs a haphazard setup of cones, makeshift goals, and a suspicious number of foam batons.Â
Classic team-building chaos.
Brian from HR claps his hands together. âAlright! Lando, Oscar, you know the drill.â
There's a collective hum of excitement as people start gathering behind them, ready to be picked. You hang back, adjusting the hem of your shorts and shielding your eyes from the sun. Itâs almost a tradition at this point: drivers lead, employees follow, and everyone ends up in some over-competitive version of capture-the-flag or ultimate frisbee.
Lando and Oscar stand a few feet apart, each looking unfairly good in their McLaren-branded athletic gear.
âLadies first,â Lando says with a smirk, tossing a foam baton into the air and catching it with a little spin. âPick whoever you want, mate.â
Oscar just gives him a bemused look. âYouâre only saying that because you want to steal half my picks.â
âItâs called strategy,â Lando replies smoothly, tapping his temple. âThatâs why I'm the smart one.â
Oscar snorts, but then his eyes flick to youâbrief, almost imperceptible if you werenât looking.
You feel it more than you see it: the way the energy subtly shifts. The people around you start elbowing each other, stifling laughs. Thereâs no hiding it now. Youâre not the most athletic, not really the kind of member who brings in the winning shot, but youâre close enough to both drivers for this squirmish to become an annual thing.Â
âIâll takeââ Oscar starts, but Lando cuts in.
âNope. Mine.âÂ
A ripple of amusement runs through the group. Someone whistles. You cross your arms, eyebrows raised in mock affront.
Oscarâs mouth twitches at the corner, betraying the tiniest smile. âThatâs not how this works. You let me pick first.âÂ
âRock, Paper, Scissors for her?â Lando says cheekily, already raising his hand into position.
Iâm right here, youâre tempted to tease, but youâre already red-faced from their attempts to stake claim. Oscar sighs like Lando is the greatest burden on earth. He humors him anyway.
They square up. A few of the engineers start chanting under their breath: âRock, paper, scissors! Rock, paper, scissors!â
They throw once.
Landoâs scissors against Oscarâs rock.
A loud cheer goes up. Lando groans theatrically, dragging his hands down his face.
âFine,â Lando grumbles, shooting you half a smirk. âBut just know, youâre missing out on being on the winning team.â
You laugh, falling into step next to Oscar as the rest of the group starts getting sorted out.
âDonât let him fool you,â you tease under your breath. âYouâre the only reason this team has a chance.â
Oscar flashes you a look. One warm enough to melt every rational thought right out of your sun-drenched head.
âGood,â he murmurs. âWouldn't want to win without you anyway.â
Youâre still brushing sand from your hands as the games kick off, a whole series of activities spread across the beach: tug-of-war, three-legged races, trivia relays. The energy is infectious, easy to get swept into, almost enough to make you forget about the heavy things hanging in the backgroundâthe contracts, the titles, the unspoken rivalries.
Oscar is relentless. Competitive in a way that most people wouldn't expect if they only ever saw his calm interviews. Itâs an open secret, just how intense Oscar could get when it came to things like these.
His team moves like a machine, coordinated and precise, while Landoâs team operates with chaotic enthusiasm, making up for what they lack in organization with sheer willpower and noise.
Youâre laughing as you hurl yourself into a sack for the next race, the sand hot and uneven under your feet. The world tips violently when you stumble, crashing face-first into the beach. Grit fills your mouth, your skin stings.Â
When you push yourself upright, coughing, Oscar is already tossing a snide comment over his shoulder: âMaybe stick to admin work.â
It lands harder than it should.Â
Maybe because itâs him. Maybe because itâs been four years of pretending you didnât really care what Oscar thought of you. The sting rises up quicker than you can shove it down, and it only worsens when you notice Landoâs sharp gaze.
âMate,â Lando snipes, breaking from his own team to glare at Oscar. âBit harsh, donât you think?â
Oscar hesitates, like he realizes it a second too late, but someone calls for the next round and the moment fractures before it can settle into anything more. You paste a smile on your face and dive back into the games like nothing happened.
Like you didnât just realize that no matter how long you stayed at McLaren, some things might always hurt a little more than they should.
The games end in a tangle of cheers and whoops, Oscarâs team carrying their homemade âtrophyââan old beach umbrella someone had scrawled CHAMPIONS across with an orange Sharpie. The sun dips lower, bleeding oranges and reds across the sky, painting everyone in a warm, careless glow. Music drifts the easy beat of a summer song nobody will remember by winter.
Youâre crouched at the edge of it all, nursing a plastic cup of water in a bid to fill the hollow feeling buzzing under your ribs. Oscar is somewhere in the throng, a grin splitting his face. Heâs pulled into photos, hands slung over shoulders, the weight of his careless comment seemingly long gone from his mind.
Youâre fine. You swear you are.Â
Itâs stupid to let it fester, stupid to feel the prickle of tears when youâve fought so hard to be seen as part of this team, not just the girl who sends calendar invites and films content.
You want to believe that Oscar hadnât meant to be cruel, that itâd been adrenaline-fueled trash talk. That the remark wasnât some thought thatâs been on the back of his mind for years now, just waiting for a moment to come to head.Â
God, what does it say about you that youâre the one hurt, and youâre still making excuses for Oscar?Â
Youâre contemplating how soon you can sneak back to the house without making it obvious when Lando drops down beside you, kicking up a puff of sand.
âHey,â he says, voice low, easy. The kind of âheyâ that slips into the cracks you've been trying to mortar over all afternoon.
You smile, but it doesnât reach your eyes. Lando notices. Of course he does.
âYouâre shit at hiding it, you know,â he adds, nudging your elbow with his.
You huff out a laugh, more breath than sound. âIâm fine.â
He doesn't say anything right away. Just picks at a piece of driftwood half-buried in the sand, giving you enough space to either lie again or actually talk.
The silence stretches, not uncomfortable, but patient. The sky darkens a little more. The ocean breathes in and out.
âYou were killing it out there,â Lando offers eventually. âSeriously. Youâve got, like, a mean sack race face.â
A real laugh slips out this time, unguarded, and Lando grins that I-finished-P1 smile again.
âI justâŚâ You dig your toes into the sand. âSometimes it feels like Iâm never going to be⌠yâknow. Actually one of you.â
Lando frowns, properly frowns, like the idea physically pains him. âThatâs bull.âÂ
âTell that to Oscar.â
âOscarâs a dick sometimes. We all are. Doesnât mean we donât see you. Doesnât mean you donât matter.â
Itâs said so simply, so plainly, that for a second you donât know what to do with it.
âYouâre McLaren,â Lando insists, nudging you again. Gentler this time. âAlways have been.â
Your throat burns. You blink hard at the horizon, refusing to cry over something as stupid as a sack race, and a throwaway comment, and Lando Norrisâ sincerity.
Lando stands, brushing the sand from his shorts, and holds out a hand.
âCâmon,â he says. âBonfireâs starting. Iâll get you the good marshmallows.â
You let him pull you to your feet, the weight in your chest easing just a little. Maybe not everything was perfect. Maybe not everyone saw you the way you wanted. But right now, Lando did.
Itâs enough.Â
The bonfire spits and crackles as the night sinks deeper, a hundred tiny embers dancing into the dark. Someoneâs switched the playlist to slower songs, the kind you know all the words to without trying.Â
Lando sticks by you the entire evening.
Making sure you get the first roasted marshmallow. Shoving his hoodie at you when the breeze picks up. Sitting close enough that your knees bump sometimes, casual but intentional. Itâs as if heâs decided that tonight, you are his responsibility, and heâs damn well going to make sure you feel wanted.
You donât care if itâs pity. You let him. You let yourself take all of it, because Oscarâs comment had been a papercut in the thick skin youâd built over the years. Lando soothes it, whether or not heâs aware.Â
Across the fire, Oscar laughs at something one of the mechanics says, but you can feel itâthe way his gaze finds you when he thinks youâre not looking. The way it sticks, hot and restless.
You force yourself to ignore it. Youâre not going to cause a scene. Not here. Not now. Not after everything.
Youâre practically sleepwalking by the time you make it back to your room, the party still humming faintly through the walls. You peel off your clothes and collapse onto the bed in Landoâs hoodie, the scent of fire and salt clinging to your skin.
Youâre just about to drift off when your phone buzzes against the nightstand. Your lockscreenâa photo of the most recent McLaren 1-2 finishâlights up with a text.Â
O. Piastri đĽđ¨ [2:03 AM]: You up?
You stare at it, your heart kicking once, stupid and traitorous. You think about ignoring it.
You donât.
You [2:05 AM]: barely
The typing dots pop up immediately.
Disappear.
Pop up again.
O. Piastri đĽđ¨ [2:06 AM]: About earlierÂ
You bite your lip hard enough to sting.
You [2:07 AM]: itâs fine
Itâs not. You both know it.
Another pause.
O. Piastri đĽđ¨ [2:09 AM]: Itâs not
You sigh into your pillow, the ache behind your eyes starting to burn.
You [2:10 AM]: i donât want to do this over text
The response comes faster this time.
O. Piastri đĽđ¨ [2:10 AM]: Can we talk tomorrow morning?
You hesitate. The safe thing would be to say no. To let it slide, bury it under the sand and sun and pretend none of it mattered.
But youâre tired of pretending.
You [2:11 AM]: yeah. ok.
Oscar doesnât reply after that. Your screen goes dark.Â
You roll onto your side, pulling the hoodie tighter around yourself, and finally, finally let sleep take you under.
The next morning, youâd been half-hoping Oscar would forget the plan from the night beforeâpretend it was just another drunken text with no follow-upâbut no. He texts about getting breakfast for everybody else; you wait on the porch, your hands shoved in Landoâs hoodie as you groggily wonder why the hell you agreed to this.Â
Oscar emerges moments later, cap pulled low, shirt wrinkled, looking like he hates everything about being awake before noon.
âNice hoodie,â he says, deadpan, barely glancing at you as he shoulders past you and heads towards the direction of the nearest bakery.
You snort, following him into the fresh sting of morning air. âSorry, didnât realize there was a dress code for pastry runs.â
âWell, I didnât realize Lando was your stylist now.â
âAnd I didnât realize you cared.â
Oscar cuts a look at you, the edge of his mouth twitching like heâs fighting a smirk or a grimace. It's hard to tell with him sometimes. âI donât,â he says way too fast.
You bump your shoulder against his as you cross the street. âYouâre being weird about this.â
âIâm not being weird,â Oscar mutters, jaw tight. âIâmâŚâ He trails off, kicking a pebble down the sidewalk. âShit, Iâm going about this all wrong.â
You blink at him, mid-step. âAbout what?â
âForget it.â
The bakery is tucked into a corner of the sleepy town, all blue awnings and window boxes bursting with flowers. A little bell jingles when you push the door open, the smell of fresh bread and sugar wrapping around you like a hug.
Oscar heads straight for the counter, scanning the rows of pastries with a frown like heâs plotting a strategy. You trail after him, trying not to feel weirdly self-conscious about the hoodie swallowing your frame.
For some reason, both your claws are out. You point out the doughnuts and Oscar makes some snide comment about cavities. He surveys the croissants and you mumble about his predictability. You feel it, then, what he had said earlier. On going about this all wrong.Â
Youâre convinced the two of you are one sarcastic comment away from a physical altercation when a comment stops you both in your tracks. âYou two remind me of my wife and me,â the elderly baker says cheerfully, wiping his hands on a flour-dusted apron as he rings your orders up.
You almost choke. âOh, weâre notââ
ââNot like that,â Oscar says at the same time, voice a little too sharp.
The baker chuckles, clearly not convinced, and hands over the bags stuffed with pastries. Oscar wordlessly pulls out his wallet, shoving a tip into the jar. Way more than necessary.
You raise an eyebrow as you step outside. âGenerous.â
âGuilt tax,â Oscar mutters.
You open your mouth to poke at thatâbecause honestly, itâs too easyâbut then you catch the look on his face. Not exactly regretful. More like⌠determined. Stubborn. That same look he gets right before a race starts when heâs locked in.
For the first time all morning, you wonder if maybe youâre not the only one trying to pretend things don't matter as much as they do.
The walk back to the beach house is quiet, the smell of warm bread thick between you. Just as the house comes back into view, Oscar clears his throat.
âHey,â he says, his voice lower, realer. âAbout yesterday. The team games.â
You pause.
âI was a dick. Iâm sorry,â he says.Â
You glance over. Oscarâs staring straight ahead, knuckles white on the brown paper bag of doughnuts. The one heâd bitched about but still got.Â
You let a beat pass. Then: âI accept your apology, But,â you add, grinning, âIâm still gonna tease you forever about getting weird over Landoâs hoodie.â
He lets out a groan of pure suffering. âI wasnât being weird.âÂ
âYou know,â you say, voice casual, âif itâs that big a deal, I wouldnât mind wearing one of yours.â
You donât wait for his reaction. You head towards the house, pastries in tow, leaving Oscar spluttering behind you.
Itâs an exhilarating feeling, you realize. You havenât flirted with Oscar the same way you do with Lando, out of fear that you would simply keel over and give up at first sight of the Australianâs blush. But itâs easier than you thought, and nothing amuses you more than the reddened tips of Oscarâs ears when he comes in after you.
After breakfast, you retreat upstairs for some air. You open your door and stop short.
Sitting neatly on your bed is a hoodie. Folded almost too carefully, like he wasnât sure if he should leave it at all.
On top, a scrap of paper, the ink a little smudged:
Keep your word. â o.p.
Just like that, heâs back to having that one-up on you.Â
You hastily pull off Landoâs hoodie and tug on Oscarâs without thinking. The sleeves swallow your hands; the fabric is warm in a recently-got-ironed kind of way, and it smells faintly of soap and sunscreen.
Is it too late to keel over?Â
The pool gleams under the sun, finally coaxed into full operation after a solid day of half the team fighting with buttons and levers. Someoneâs pulled out a portable sound mixer. Someone else has brought out mocktails. The air buzzes with a rare, lazy kind of joy.
Youâre sitting on a deck chair, wrapped up in Oscarâs hoodie, sipping something neon pink through a straw. Honestly, itâs too warm to be in a hoodie, but youâll be damned to not âkeep your wordâ. Besides, the knowing smile that Oscar tries to fight is worth the sweat on your back.Â
One of your co-workers, Chloe, plops down next to you.
âThis is not very hot girl summer of you,â she whines, tugging at Oscarâs hoodie like a child.Â
You wrinkle your nose. âItâs a perfectly fine hoodie, Chlo.âÂ
âYou know what would be even more fine? The bikini sitting at the bottom of your suitcase.âÂ
âDid you rummage throughââÂ
âTomato, tomato. Put on the damn swimsuit you bought specifically for this trip!â Chloe punctuates the threat with a pointed look. The kind that says, Donât make me drag you. You have no doubts sheâd do it, too, so you set down your drink with a groan of dramatic reluctance.Â
âIf I get sunburnt, Iâm blaming you,â you grumble as she cheers and practically shoves you back into the house.Â
In your room, you peel off the hoodie and shorts before swapping them for the bikiniâa simple black two-piece that suddenly feels much more revealing now that you actually have to walk back out in it.Â
The chatter quiets a fraction when you step out. Not dramatically, but enough that you notice. Enough that Landoâs eyebrows climb a little higher than normal. Even Oscarâs head turns, his lips parting slightly in what might be surprise if he wasnât quick enough in hiding it.
âFinally decided to join the rest of us mortals,â Lando crows, tossing a beach ball between his hands. âLooking good, admin.â
You roll your eyes but canât quite fight the smile tugging at your mouth. Before you can even think about easing into the pool like a normal person, Lando and Oscar exchange a look. A look you recognize all too late.
âDonât you dareââ youâre starting, but it doesnât matter.Â
Too late.
Lando goes low, grabbing you by the ankles. Oscar effortlessly hauls you up with strong arms through your middle. Youâre swung around a bit for good measure, and then youâre airborne for half a heartbeat before crashing into the pool with a splash.
The water is warm from the sun, but it still shocks the breath out of you. You surface, sputtering, as Lando and Oscar double over with laughter. Everyone else watches on with the same amusement, knowing the boysâ tendencies for mischief when they were in a particular mood.Â
âYou absolute menaces,â you declare, wiping water from your face. âI think I twisted my ankle, man.â
Oscarâs laughter cuts off instantly. âWait, seriously?â His brow furrows, and before you can blink, heâs crouched at the edge of the pool, leaning down to get a closer look.
âWhich one?â he asks, already reaching to haul you out.
You grab his outstretched hand and yank.
Oscar yelpsâan actual, undignified yelpâas you drag him headfirst into the water beside you.
He resurfaces, blinking water from his lashes, completely betrayed. âYouââ
Youâre already laughing, kicking away from him.Â
âThatâs for the sack race comment!â you crow, paddling backward.
He shakes his head, grinning despite himself. âI thought we were past that,â he calls out, splashing water in your eyes. You retaliate before attempting to dart away.Â
The afternoon blurs into sun-drenched chaos. People drift in and out of the pool, mock battles and splash wars springing up as naturally as breathing. The laughter is loud, the water warm, and for a while, everything feels suspended, easy.
Mid-afternoon, someone shouts âChicken fight!â and it's immediately game on. Chloe clambers onto Oscarâs shoulders without hesitation, while you tread water nearby, laughing at the whole ridiculousness of it.
Before you can react, strong hands wrap around your waist.
âMy turn, love,â Lando announces triumphantly, already hoisting you up onto his shoulders. âYou were on Oscarâs team last time. Youâre mine now.âÂ
You squeal, half from shock, half from trying to stay balanced as Landoâs hands steady you by your thighs. Your heart stumbles a little. His grip is firm, his fingers warm and sure against the hem of your bikini bottoms.Â
You catch Oscar looking at you from below Chloe, his gaze a little too intense for something as stupid as a pool game. Your stomach flips uneasily.
Focus, you tell yourself. This is supposed to be fun.
Itâs fun to have Chloe lunge at you, her giggles bright as she sinks her nails into your sunburnt shoulders. Itâs fun to have Lando moving underneath you, shouting up reassurances like get her and thatâs my girl. Itâs fun to feel Oscar watching your every move, and not because heâs strategizing.Â
You thread your fingers through Landoâs hair as Chloe tries to push you backward. Landoâs hands shift slightly higher on your thighs, nearly underneath your bikini. Maybe by accident, maybe not. You feel the difference immediately. An inch more of skin under his touch, a flash of heat that makes your breath catch.
Youâre still trying to process that when, all of a sudden, Lando jerks underneath you with a loud âOof!â and sinks halfway underwater.
Chloe shrieks in laughter, nearly tumbling off Oscar.
You slide off Landoâs shoulders in the commotion, landing back in the water with a splash. As you surface, you catch a glimpse of Oscar, looking absolutely unapologetic as he pulls back his leg.Â
Lando pops up a moment later. Heâs wheezing, his hands clasped over his swim shorts. âWhat the hell, Osc!â he rasps, the sound punched out of him after being ungraciously kneed in the groin.Â
Oscar shrugs, the corner of his mouth twitching. âSlipped.â
You cough out a laugh, half in disbelief. Chloe floats past you, cackling.
Lando glares at Oscar, but that eventually cracks into a grin. âCâmere, you,â the Brit coos, lunging for his co-driver. Before his head can be shoved down, Oscar throws you a winkâquick, private.
Your cheeks burn hotter than the sun overhead, and you duck underwater before anyone can comment on it.
That dayâs dinner stretches into the warm evening, the long table lined with empty plates, half-drunk glasses of wine, and the low hum of conversation. The sun dips lower, casting everything in a syrupy, forgiving glow. It feels almost perfect, if not for the gnawing restlessness you canât quite name.
For once, neither Lando nor Oscar are by your side.
Lando leans back in his chair, laughing at something one of the engineers says, his fingers curled around a sweating can of soda. Oscar is farther down the table, deep in a serious discussion with one of the strategists, his brow furrowed in that familiar, endearing way.
Youâre free to breathe, to think. Itâs then that the reality of the summer settles in, heavy and unrelenting.
Everyoneâs been talking about it in hushed tones when they think the drivers arenât listening.Â
Will Lando stay with McLaren? After years of loyalty, of being the heart and soul of the team, will he finally walk away for a shot at something different, something better?Â
And OscarâOscar, whoâs no longer just the promising rookie but the reigning World Championâfaces the brutal weight of defending everything heâs fought for. Will he make it? Will he relent, or will he be something greater than what was expected of him?Â
You can feel it thrumming under every casual exchange, every shared joke. The quiet tug-of-war. The clash of futures neither of them are quite ready to admit they want different things from.
And yet, somehow, itâs you who feels pulled taut between them.
Lando catches your eye across the table and winks. Easy, breezy, the same way he always has. He makes it seem as if thereâs nothing complicated about any of this.
Almost immediately after, Oscar glances up from his conversation and smiles at you. Soft and crooked, like youâre the one safe thing in a world thatâs otherwise slipping sideways.
Your chest tightens.
Youâre caught, but you don't even know what in. Caught between loyalty and ambition. Between the comfort of whatâs always been and the thrill, the fear, of what might change. Between two boys who are friends, rivals, teammates and something else youâre not sure you want to name.
You pick at your food, your appetite long gone, and wonder when exactly this summer stopped feeling endless and started feeling like a ticking clock.
The summer heat is clinging to everything. Itâs the kind that demands you do something, anything before youâre swallowed whole.
Plans start to splinter over breakfast.
âSurfâs up,â Oscar says, tossing a board into the back of one of the jeeps. The sun catches in his hair, making him look unfairly effortless. âWhoâs in?â
âOr,â Lando calls out from the kitchen, a trail of crumbs following his words, âwe could do something that doesnât involve dying under a wave. Thereâs a sick hiking trail up the cliffs. Views are unreal.â
Thereâs a beat, and then the divide begins. Some of the team flock toward Oscar, lured by the thrill of the ocean; others gravitate to Lando, drawn to the promise of a rugged adventure.
You stand in the middle, heart hammering a little too hard for something thatâs supposed to be casual. Supposed to be fun.
It feels like a metaphor youâre not ready to face.
âYouâre not coming?â Lando asks, mock-offended, pulling a pout that would be funny if it didnât make something in your chest ache. âGonna miss you,â he adds, lighter, teasing.
Oscar, carrying two boards now, smirks over his shoulder. âGuess sheâs tired of babysitting you, Lan.â
You force a laugh you don't quite feel. âMaybe I just need a break from both of you.â
They both react predictably. Lando clutches his heart in fake agony, Oscar shakes his head with a quiet chuckle. You donât wait for more. You duck back into the house, the coolness of the shaded hallway swallowing you up.
For the first time in days, youâre alone.
You wonder if choosing yourself is just another way of choosing at all.
You spend the afternoon alone, and itâs a kind of peace you didnât realize you needed.
The beach house creaks with the slow, easy rhythm of the ocean breeze. You move from room to room without urgency. Sometimes reading on the porch, sometimes just watching the water glitter beyond the dunes.
By the time the sun starts to slip lower, you hear footsteps, wet and clumsy on the deck. Oscar appears first, his wetsuit peeled down to his waist. Sand dusting his hair and shoulders, water still dripping from his grin.
You laugh despite yourself. âCome here,â you say, the affection leaking into your tone before you can hold it back.
Oscar ambles over, letting you reach up and card your fingers through his messy hair, brushing the sand out with a few playful tugs. His gaze is steady on yours, warm enough that you have to focus on some nondescript point past him to hide the way your face heats.
âHad fun?â you ask for the sake of asking.Â
He raises his shoulders in a shrug, his eyes never leaving your face. âCould have been more fun,â he says simply, his words loaded with implication youâre not about to confront.Â
Oscar opens his mouth to say something elseâ
The door swings open again. Loud. Dramatic.
Lando stumbles in with a theatrical groan, one hand clutching his shin. âOw. Ow. Pretty sure Iâm dying.â
You arch a brow. âYouâre so full of it,â you accuse, dropping your hands from Oscarâs hair.Â
âSeriously,â he insists, dragging himself toward the couch like heâs reenacting the third act of a war movie. âTragic end to a heroic hike.â
You roll your eyes but motion him over anyway, reaching for the first aid kit you know is stashed under the side table. When Lando props his leg up, you find a scrape. Minor. Nothing to justify the Oscar-worthy performance.
Still, you crouch beside him, carefully dabbing at the cut.
âBig baby,â you mutter.
Lando grins, completely unashamed. âWorked, didnât it?â
You look up, catching the cheeky glint in his eye. The very obvious satisfaction of having pulled your attention away from Oscar.
You shake your head, biting back a laugh. âUnbelievable.â
Lando snickers. Oscar, toweling off his hair nearby, watches the exchange with a faint shake of his head. A half-smile tugs at his mouth like he canât even pretend to be annoyed.
You tape a bandage neatly over Landoâs scrape, pretending not to feel the weight of both of their gazes pressing into you from opposite ends of the room.
The bonfire crackles in the pit, casting gold onto every face circled around it. Youâre seated between Oscar and Landoâclose enough that your knees brush both of theirs. It wasnât planned. Just the way the night unfolded. Just the way they looked at you when you arrived, and the way neither of them moved an inch as you lowered yourself into the space between.
Landoâs been chatty all evening, but now his voice takes on a teasing edge.
âSo,â he says, leaning back on his palms. âYou seeing anyone?â
âThatâs direct,â you hum, gaze focused on the sâmore in front of you that wonât cooperate.Â
He grins, eyes glinting in the firelight. âIâm just saying. Youâve been dodging the topic for, what, four summers now?â
Oscar shifts beside you. Just barely.
âYou always seem very invested in my love life,â you comment, though you can already feel your heart picking up.
âIâm invested in you,â Lando says plainly. âThatâs not a crime, is it?â
Oscar lets out a sound that mightâve been a scoff. âBack off, mate.â
The air thins like someoneâs turned off the music. Everything goes on around the three of you, but in this little corner of the bonfire, something blaze and burns in a different way.Â
Lando raises a brow, turning toward Oscar. âWhat? Weâre just talking.â
Oscar doesnât meet his gaze. âYouâre grilling her,â he grunts, shoving his stick into the sand with uncharacteristic force.Â
âIâm curious.â
âYouâre nosy.â
âOkay,â you interject. âLetâs not fight over me like Iâm some prize, yeah?â
Lando leans forward, elbows on his knees now, attention swinging back to you. âWeâre not fighting.â
Oscar speaks without looking. âCouldâve fooled me.â
You look between them. Their faces both angled toward the fire now, lit in shifting amber tones. There it is againâthe live wire of tension crackling between the two of them, beneath Landoâs wicked smirk and Oscarâs bouncing knee.Â
Except itâs not about racing, now, is it?Â
Lando taps your knee, snapping you out of your thoughts. âSo? Are you?â
You chuckle, deflecting. âWouldnât you like to know.â
Oscar huffs beside you. Lando chuckles.
The laughter and music swell again. But nothing really returns to normal.
Itâs an uneasy thought that makes a home in your bones all the way until the next day. The morning sun streams through the sheer curtains, lighting the hallway in a sleepy glow. Your footsteps are slow against the wooden floor as you pad barefoot toward the kitchen, the house quiet save for distant clinks of coffee mugs.
You nearly bump into Oscar rounding the corner. His hairâs a mess, still damp from the shower, and thereâs a barely-there smile tugging at his lips.
âMorning,â he greets. âDidnât think Iâd run into you before the chaos starts.â
You frown, still foggy from sleep. âWhat chaos?â
He blinks, then breaks out into a wider smile. Amused, fond. âYou forgot?â
You stare at him, confused, until it hits you.
The annual sand rail race.
Every summer, tucked into the off-season downtime, itâs the one competition thatâs just for bragging rights. The leaderboard is even scrawled on a whiteboard in the garage, a running tally of victories and sore losers. So far, itâs 2-2. Lando and Oscar locked in their own personal tie.
Oscar watches the realization dawn on your face. âRight,â you murmur. âRace day.â
âMm.â He studies you for a beat. âHey.â
You glance up at him.
âI know youâre not a prize to be won,â he says, voice a little quieter now. âThatâs not what this is.â
You nod slowly, watching him. You donât know where this conversation is going. Youâre not sure if you want to know.Â
âBut, uhmâŚâ He trails off, his gaze flicking down to the walls before finding your eyes again. âI hope youâll be rooting for me.â
The sheer sincerity of it nearly bowls you over. Itâs not a command, not an order. Itâs a wistful invitation, a shy confession made by a man who typically knew how to ask for anything else. But this was not a weekend off or a car upgrade. Hell, it wasnât even anything consequentialânot a date, not anything like that.Â
Just for you to root for him. And yet he asks for it as if itâs something that matters, that makes everything do-or-die, and you wish it didnât affect you as much as it does.Â
You put on a front. You tilt your head, lips tugging up despite the hammering of your heart underneath your ribs. âThat depends.â
âOn?â
âWhether you bring me coffee before the race.â
Oscar scoffs. âBribery. Noted.â
But heâs smiling as he passes you, his shoulder brushing yours. And thereâs coffee waiting for you when you get to the kitchen, poured into the mug that Oscar has repeatedly claimed as his.Â
You sip from it, feeling the weight of the day shift. Something in the air is charged. Not just about the race, but everything teetering around it.
The sand rail track near the house buzzes with energy as the McLaren staff and team trickle in, excitement thrumming in the air. Someone brings a clipboard to track the bets. Within minutes, a frenzy of numbers and names clutters the surface. Playful taunts echo between the team members, each person rooting for either Lando or Oscar with a kind of fervor usually reserved for proper race days.
You slip your own bet into the mix quietly. You don't reveal it when one of the engineers presses you for an answer. You just shake your head and let them assume whatever they want. After all, it feels a little too intimate, too weighted, to share out loud.
When you make your way to the sidelines, Lando catches your eye. His grin is crooked, and he tosses you a flying kiss as he climbs into his sand rail buggy, helmet tucked under his arm. Oscar, a few meters away, adjusts his gloves with practiced ease, the sharp set of his jaw betraying his focus.
The start is as lawless as you would expect from the two of them.
Engines roar to life with a guttural snarl, tires kicking up dry sand as they lurch forward. Lando takes an aggressive line right off the bat, cutting tight against the first corner, his buggy tilting precariously before settling.
Oscar, ever the tactician, plays it smoother. He hangs back just enough to find a cleaner line, aiming for consistency instead of showmanship. His turns are precise, efficient, the kind of calculated risk that usually pays dividends on the track.
But LandoâLando races like the world might end tomorrow.Â
His buggy dances across the sand, skimming close to the edge of control. His reckless daring makes your stomach twist with nerves and awe in equal measure.
Lap after lap, they trade the lead in a blur of flying sand and roaring engines. The track isn't long, but itâs rough and unforgiving, peppered with bumps and hairpin turns.
On the final lap, itâs neck and neck. You can feel the tension in the crowd, everyone leaning forward unconsciously, breath held. Money is on the line, sure, but so is pride. And something else, something youâre not ready to admit.Â
Oscar has the inside line on the last major turn. Lando guns it anyway, swinging wide, almost off-trackâonly to slingshot past in the final straight with a burst of speed that has everyone screaming.
Lando crosses the makeshift finish line a second ahead of Oscar. He throws his arms up in victory even before the sand settles.Â
The cheers are deafening.
You clap along with everyone else, and your heart pounds for reasons that have nothing to do with the race itself.
Later, the house is alive with celebration.Â
The playlist is one of Landoâs favorites, and a cooler filled with drinks appears out of nowhere. Lando is hoisted onto someoneâs shoulders for a victory lap around the deck, soaking in the glory. Everyone is loud, laughing, riding the high of a race that felt more like a championship showdown than a friendly bout.
Oscar is nowhere to be seen.Â
You slip away from the noise, letting the sound of celebration blur into the background. The beach dock stretches out ahead, wooden planks weathered and warm beneath your feet. There, at the edge, Oscar sits with his feet dangling just above the water, his arms braced behind him as he stares out at the horizon.
You wordlessly sit beside him, close but not touching, letting the silence settle for a beat.
âI shouldâve had that,â Oscar mutters, his voice low and rough. He doesn't look at you. Heâs not usually the type to take unkindly to losses; heâs always the type to make some comment about wanting to finish one place higher whenever heâs P2, but he doesnât sulk. He doesnât wallow.Â
He does tonight. You donât know why.Â
âYou almost did,â you offer, and Oscar scoffs.Â
âAlmost doesnât count.â
You pull your legs up, crossing them underneath you. âItâs a bummer,â you concede. âEspecially now that Iâm fifteen dollars down âcause of you.âÂ
That earns a glance. His brows lift, eyes searching your face. âSeriously?â
You nod. âYou asked me to bet on you, didnât you?âÂ
Oscar huffs a laugh, but thereâs something soft behind it. His shoulder brushes yours when he shifts.
His gaze drops briefly to your mouth.
It plays out like a movie scene, like something youâd imagined time and time again as some sort of maladaptive daydream. Youâre frozen, focused on the way Oscar looks underneath the moonlight. How he shifts imperceptibly closer. How he leans in soundlessly, as if he might scare the moment otherwise.Â
Your eyes flutter close.Â
And thenâ
âCANNONBALL!â
Your eyes snap open just in time. Lando sails over both your heads in a blur of tanned limbs and unchecked chaos, crashing into the water with an explosive splash. Saltwater sprays over you and Oscar, dousing the moment in cold.
You yelp, shielding your face too late, and Oscar jerks back, blinking in disbelief.
Lando resurfaces with a triumphant whoop, grinning brightly. âDid I interrupt something?â he calls, treading water with the ease of someone completely unbothered.
Oscar wipes his face with a groan. âGo to hell, man.â
You canât help but laugh, even as your heart is still hammering in your chest.
The momentâs gone, but it lingers in the edges, in the way Oscarâs hand almost finds yours again on the dock, in the way you both glance toward the water and then back at each other, unsure of what comes next. Lando, dripping in seawater and drunk on his earlier victory, pulls everybody in for a swim.
You follow, hopeful it will help you forget.
It doesnât.
The beach house quiets into the low hum of waves and the distant buzz of the crickets outside. Most everyone is asleep or pretending to be. You toss and turn, too wired to drift off, your mind replaying the moment by the dock on a loop: Oscarâs closeness, the soft look in his eyes, the way he leaned in like gravity had decided for the both of you.Â
Until Lando, in all his chaotic timing, had crashed down from the sky like a rogue asteroid.
Eventually, you give up. You throw on a hoodieânot Oscarâs, not Landoâs, just your ownâand pad into the kitchen, the floorboards creaking under your steps. The fridge hums gently in the corner, and you pull out a glass, filling it with water from the tap.
You donât notice Lando until he speaks.
"Canât sleep either?"
Heâs leaning against the counter, shirtless, a half-eaten packet of biscuits in one hand. His hairâs a mess and thereâs a kind of easy, rare quiet around him.
You start, nearly dropping your glass. Squint at Lando through the darkness of the kitchen, you canât help but hiss, âWhy are you just standing there in the dark?â
âI like the dramatic effect.â
âWell, congrats. You scared me.â
He waves a biscuit like a peace offering. âWant one?â
You shake your head, and he shrugs before popping it in his mouth. Thereâs a moment of silence, the kind that teeters between awkward and intimate. Then Lando tilts his head at you, chewing slowly.
âCan you keep a secret?â
Your lips pull into a frown. âWhat kind of secret?â
He pushes off the counter and walks over. He doesnât comment when your eyes flick over to his toned abdomen or his bare shoulders; if anything, the way he leans against the island across you means he wants you to keep looking. âTwo secrets, actually,â he says conspiratorially.Â
You raise your eyebrows, intrigued. In the dark kitchen, you can make out the beginnings of Landoâs toothy smile. He knows he has you hook, line, sinker.Â
He holds up one finger. âFirst, I only just realized this summer that youââ He gestures vaguely in your direction, then clears his throat. âYouâre actually really pretty. Like, ridiculously. And I donât know if thatâs new or if Iâve just been blind.â
âOh, fuck off.âÂ
âIâm serious. Hey, look at me.â His eyes are surprisingly intense as he forces you to hold his gaze, willing it purely through sincerity alone. âYouâre attractive. Iâm not about to deny that fact just because you donât want to hear it.âÂ
Your mouth feels dry. Your palms feel clammy. You suddenly wish youâd just slept off your unease.
âSecond secret,â he continues, tone shifting. Thereâs something much more serious, now. Something consequential. âExcept you canât tell a soul. I mean it.âÂ
âNorris, I swearââÂ
âThereâs an email from another team,â Lando divulges, as casually as he might comment on the weather, âburning a hole in my phone.âÂ
There had been whispers, of course. In the paddock. In the McLaren garage. In the media room. Anywhere and everywhere Lando Norrisâ name existed.Â
Someone reported that it was Red Bull. A strategist ran numbers and alleged it was Mercedes.Â
But there had been no confirmation, no slip-up from the managers or team principals. Negotiations were made behind closed doors. Decisions trickled down after the fact, and rarely were people like you aware before the news was already meant to break.Â
Now, though, you find your stomach twisting as Lando stares at you through the darkness. He suddenly feels much like the sand outside this beach houseâslipping right through your fingers.Â
âAre you leaving?â you manage.Â
He looks at you for a long beat, assessing the question youâve decided to ask, then smiles faintly.
âDunno yet,â he says. âGuess Iâm waiting for something worth staying for.â
The air stills around you. For a moment, the two of you only look at each other, trapped in this summertime snow globe of indecision. The only sounds are the gentle clink of the glass as you set it downâthe weight of it suddenly too heavy for your quivering fingersâand the ocean beyond the walls. The one that has seen you through four years of summers with Lando and Oscar.Â
âWhat does that mean?â you exhale, even though you already have some idea.Â
Lando grins, but it doesnât quite reach his eyes. âYouâre smart,â he says. Not in a taunt, but in a matter-of-fact way. âYouâll figure it out.â
He bites into another biscuit, winks, and walks out of the kitchen, leaving you standing there with the worldâs most damning secret.Â
Youâre in your head for most of the next day.
Landoâs words keep circling back, like a tide you can't fight: Something worth staying for. You wish heâd said it with a little less charm, a little less Lando. But he hadnât. Heâd said it with that easy smile, the one that hides how serious he might be underneath. The one that makes it impossible to tell whether he means any of it or all of it.Â
So now youâre stuck with it. The way he looked at you in the dim kitchen light. The way he popped another biscuit into his mouth like he hadnât just handed you a loaded gun and walked off, not even watching his back to see if youâd shoot him.
Everything feels sideways. Every time you pass him in the hallway, your pulse does something stupid. Every laugh over breakfast, every casual brush of his arm against yours. Itâs like something has shifted. Something that makes your skin buzz.
And Oscar feels it.
You know he does because heâs been trying to catch you alone all day. In the kitchen, during meals, on the walk down to the beach. But you keep dodging, not even consciously. Youâre just not ready to talk about what almost happened. Not while the words worth staying for keep ringing in your ears.
By the time the sun dips low and the smell of dinner wafts through the beach house, Oscar gives up. He stops chasing, stops looking for the right moment.
But he doesnât stop looking at you.
He sits across the room that night, slouched into the cushions, nursing a drink he hasnât touched in half an hour. Thereâs something quiet in his posture, something that reads like retreat. His gaze is soft when it finds yours.
No longer searching, just lingering. Like heâs memorizing you before something ends.
And you? Youâre still stuck, still wondering what Lando saw in you last night that made him say it. Itâs driving you crazy, and you refuse to let it give you any more grief beyond the time youâve already dwelled on it.Â
The tide whispers in and out as you jog along the wet sand, trailing the shape of Landoâs footprints.
You see him before he sees you. His silhouette cutting through the misted sun, hoodie sleeves pushed up to his elbows, curls damp with sweat. Heâs always moved like this, light on his feet, like running is more instinct than effort.
âLando,â you call out, voice too loud in the quiet.
He slows. âMorning,â he greets, brows arching as you fall in beside him, breathless and determined. Itâs the second to the last day of the week-long retreat. A little over 24 hours since Lando entrusted you with the two halves of his heart.Â
You donât stutter. âI canât be the reason you stay.â
That stops him. Full stop, mid-stride. His breath clouds between you. âWhoa. Youâve been stewing on that all this time?âÂ
âI donât want that on me,â you insist. âIf you stay, it has to be for the team. For you. For OscâPiastri.â
Lando blinks. Then, his face breaks out into a knowing grin, curling around your sincerity. Not to snuff it out, but more to let it take hold.Â
âYou really thought I was serious?â he says, half-laughing. âI was mostly joking. Kind of.â
You cross your arms. Lando is deflecting, trying to make it seem less than it really is, but youâre not about to call him out.Â
He runs a hand through his curls, then looks at youâreally looks. The same way Oscar had last night, as if heâs trying to figure out which parts of you he can beg and barter for.Â
âI donât think Iâm done here,â he admits, decides. âI think I can still get a couple more championships with McLaren.âÂ
A relieved sigh escapes you. âOkay, thatâsââÂ
âAnd as for my other secret,â he interrupts, his hands planting on his hips. His tone is lighter, but his words are not any less cutting. âThereâs always gonna be something between you and Osc, huh?âÂ
You freeze.Â
Youâd almost forgotten that. The âsecretâ of Lando realizing youâre attractive, of him seeing you some other way than what youâre accustomed to. You try to stutter out some bullshit excuse, only to realize you had two hoodies to choose from today, and the one youâre wearing is not Landoâs.Â
His words land heavier than his tone suggests, but he doesnât linger. Instead, he flashes a grin and steps back, putting space between you. Just enough to see if youâll pull him back in.
You donât.
âGo ahead. Have your fun with him,â Lando says. Easy, breezy. âBut when I get that WDC, Iâm coming back to collect.â
Heâs gone before you can respond, before you can discern if his words are a threat or a promise. Sand kicks up behind him as he disappears into the dawn. McLarenâs golden boy, setting course for the sun.Â
That night, the energy is heavy and sparklingâlike the last few drops of something good that's about to run out.
The group piles into the living room, a mess of sunburnt faces and half-drunk laughter. Everyone is tangled up in cushions and throw blankets. An empty bottle of vodka spins over the floor, clinking against the hardwood as it points and wobbles. The rules are easy: truth or dare, no take backs, no running away.
Youâre trying not to stare at Oscar.
Youâve spent the better part of the day trying to catch him alone. Every time you moved toward him, he moved away, so you gave up after a while. You couldnât blame him. You hadnât exactly made yourself easy to reach lately, and he had his pride.
The bottle spins again. Spins and spins.
Eventually, it teeters to a stop and points squarely at Oscar.
A whoop goes up from the group. Someone slurs, âTruth or dare, Piastri!â
âTruth,â he answers, tongue already heavy and words just a bit slurred.Â
Someone from accounting leans forward, grinning wickedly. âHave you ever had a crush on someone from McLaren?â
Itâs the sort of drunk, easy question everyone expects to be laughed off. Everyone expects some half-hearted dodge, some teasing deflection.
But Oscar doesnât even blink.
âYeah,â he says simply, his eyes steady.
Laughter ripples through the room. Someone shouts, âWho?!â
And then.Â
And then.Â
Oscarâs gaze finds you across the crowd, unwavering. The whole room feels like it tilts sideways.Â
You forget how to breathe.
He says your name. Youâre tipsy, but youâre fairly sure of it. Your name has always sounded different when Oscar said it.Â
The room goes still for a moment before exploding into hoots and teasing cheers. âMate,â Lando crows at his side, half-drunk and loud, âyouâve noticed the glow-up too, huh? Sheâs different this summer, right?â
Oscar frowns, almost like he doesnât understand the joke. You feel every molecule of air between you stretch thin.
His next words are an absentminded mumble, almost lost to the clamor of activity in the circle.Â
âItâs not just this summer,â he says to no one in particular.Â
You donât know what to do with your hands. With your heart. With the way Oscar is looking at you like you hung the stars.Â
Has he always looked at you like this?Â
Youâre not sure who moves first. The bottle spins again. More shots get passed around. This is the part of the summer youâd been waiting for.Â
Knowing something has shifted. Knowing nothing is ever going to feel quite the same again.
Oscar groans the moment he sits down at breakfast, squinting at his plate like itâs personally offended him. You offer him an Aspirin and a sympathetic grin.Â
âRough night?âÂ
He scowls half-heartedly as he rubs at his temples. âWho even brought out the tequila?â
âThat would be you,â you inform him brightly, plucking a piece of toast from his plate.
You fall into a companionable silence as the rest of the team trickles in, blurry-eyed and sun-kissed from too much fun. Packing starts soon. The last full day hangs heavy, sweet with goodbyes not yet said.
Later, as you help Oscar load his things into the boot of his car, the air between you shifts. Enough to make you slow down. You fold up a beach towel, glancing at him from the corner of your eye.
Youâre both dragging your feet through the sand, both trying to extend this moment before youâre thrown back into the whirlwind of race weekends and media obligations.Â
âHey, uh,â he starts tentatively, âabout last night. The game. I didnât mean to be disrespectful.â
You blink, confused. âDisrespectful?âÂ
âYeah.â He tongues the inside of his cheek, looking younger than youâve ever seen him. âYou know, since you and Lando areâyou know.âÂ
No, you donât know. Youâre not sure where the wrong impression mightâve landed, but you figure itâs somewhere between the day you spent ignoring Oscar and your lackluster reaction to his drunken admission.Â
âWeâre not,â you say, your words tripping over each other in their haste. âLando and Iâweâre not.âÂ
Oscar lifts a brow. âReally?âÂ
âReally,â you confirm, heart stammering now. You look down at your feet, breathe in the oceanside one last time, and you make a choice.
âI, um. Iâve liked you for a while, actually,â you manage. âI just didnât think you felt the same. And I donât expect anything now, I meanâpeople say things when theyâre drunk, andââÂ
Oscar Piastri wants it on record: gravity has nothing to do with him kissing you. The choice is all his. His desperation, his yearning, his urge to quiet the doubts that threaten to bubble out of you.Â
Itâs a quick thing. Over before you can properly respond. His cheeks are red as he pulls back; it has nothing to do with the sun.Â
Thereâs something serious in his gaze. Something soft. âI was drunk, but that doesnât mean I didnât mean it,â he says, eyes still fixed on your lips. âIâve thought you were beautiful since the day I met you at MTC.âÂ
You open your mouth, but all that escapes is a quiet, stunned breath.
âAnd, fuck, okay,â he exhales nervously, âI think I want more than just summers with you.âÂ
You donât overthink it. You lean in, hands curling into the front of his shirt. âOkay,â you whisper, and then youâre pulling him in to kiss him again, for longer, for more.
This time, he doesnât pull away.
The house is half-empty by the time you're saying your see you laters, the air thick with that bittersweet ache that always clings to the end of something golden. People are hugging, snapping last-minute selfies, pretending theyâre not already thinking about inboxes and deadlines.Â
Youâre not pretending. Not today.
Youâre watching Oscar load the last of the bags into his car, quiet and sure, the way he always moves when he thinks no oneâs paying attention. Thereâs something unmistakable in the way he glances at you, like this week didnât just change the rhythm of your summer but the shape of something much bigger.
You think about the other summers, the ones you thought were just fun and fleeting. You remember tequila shots Oscar took so you didnât have to, the quiet way he always offered you the window seat on the flight home.Â
That first summer, when he set down his hoodie on the sand so you wouldnât have to sit on it, and youâd laughed and called him a grandma.Â
You hadnât seen it then. Or maybe you had, but you were too afraid to believe it.
Lando swings by with a backpack slung over his shoulder, squinting at the two of you with that trademark mischief. His eyes flick from you to Oscar, back again. He doesnât say anything; he doesnât have to. Just smirks knowingly and claps Oscar on the shoulder.
You grin, wide and wordless, and toss Lando a little wave as he heads for his own ride. Thank you, it says. For not making it weird. For always knowing.
Lando waves back at you. Itâs strategic, too. His phone is in his hand, the screen angled towards you. You catch the glimpse of his Mail app being open. How thereâs nothing unread in it, how he makes his own choice at the same time that you do.Â
Your attention is drawn back to Oscar when he clears his throat. âYou, uh, still need a ride?â he asks with feigned calmness.Â
You lift a brow, biting back a giddy grin. âYouâre going the complete opposite direction.â
âRoads are roads,â he says, like itâs that simple.
And, somehow, it is.
You slide into the passenger seat, folding your legs up as Oscar starts the engine. The breeze curls in through the open windows. It smells like salt, and sun, and something you never want to forget.
The road curves away from the coast, and still, summer clings to your skin, sinking into your bones. For the first time in a long time, you donât dread whatâs on the other side of it.
Oscar glances at you as you stick one hand out the window, letting the breeze slip between your fingers. You hadnât noticed it then, but you do now. How he looks at you, how he saves smiles for you.Â
How roads are roads, and all of yours have led to him. â
the summer you turned pretty â đđđ & đđđđ
the story of you, mclarenâs golden boys, and the summer that changes everything.
ęŽ starring: lando norris x mclaren marketing admin!reader x oscar piastri. ęŽ word count: 12.2k. ęŽ includes: romance, humor, friendship. mentions of food, alcohol; profanity. slight time skip (set in 2027), tension tension tensionnn!!!, not really a love triangle, loosely based off the summer i turned pretty where oscar is conrad and lando is jeremiah. ęŽ commentary box: yeah.., yeah. this is a thing, i guess. much thanks to @binisainz and @norrisradio for watching me spiral over this. consider this a warm-up for the challengers au đââď¸ đŚđ˛ đŚđđŹđđđŤđĽđ˘đŹđ
Thereâs something about the air this time around.
You feel it the second you step out of the van, your trainers hitting the gravel with a muted crunch. A breeze ruffles the hem of your McLaren-issued shorts, sticky with sweat from the long drive, and you breathe it in. Salt, pine, heat radiating off the tarmac like a living thing.
Itâs the fourth time youâve made this pilgrimage, the fourth summer youâve found yourself somewhere off-grid with the team. Official cameras conveniently âforgetâ to roll. Every work email is answered with a flip-flopped foot and a cocktail in hand.Â
Life at McLaren never really started until you survived the off-season getaway.Â
Everyone knew it. No one said it out loud.
The rented-out summer home sprawls out in front of you, all whitewashed stone and terracotta roof tiles, perched high above an aquamarine stretch of water so clear it looks Photoshopped. A few bright towels already cling to the poolside chairs; someoneâs left a trail of sandy flip-flops like breadcrumbs. You can hear laughter somewhereâmuffled, distant, a memory you havenât made yet.
The whole place hums under the weight of something not quite visible. A static charge. A warning shot fired low across the bow.
Oscar had won the 2026 World Driversâ Championship, wrestling the 2025 crown from Lando in a way that was almost surgical. No drama, no big public blowout. Just a clean, clinical dethroning that had stunned the paddock stupid.
But it wasnât clean. Not really. Youâd seen the cracks up close. The stiff smiles. The way Landoâs jaw would tick when Oscarâs name got thrown around in meetings. The brittle way Oscar would pretend not to notice.
Now, with both their contracts coming up and the whole world speculating if McLaren could even keep them both, the air buzzes with something volatile. Not anger, exactly. Not yet. Justâ
âYou coming or what?â a voice calls out, snapping you out of your reverie. You turn to see Callum from logistics waving you in, already wearing a sleeveless tee and a grin that promises poor life decisions.
You wave back, laughing under your breath. Whatever. Let the future burn itself down later.
Right now, youâve got one week. One week to drink bad beer by the pool, to dance barefoot to someoneâs crackling Bluetooth speaker, to pretend that youâre just a marketing admin on holiday and not someone who spends their life airbrushing tensions away with pastel graphics and PR spins.
One week before everything changes.
Youâre going to enjoy the hell out of it.
Except you don't even make it to the front steps before they find you.
Landoâs laugh cuts through the air first. Unmistakable, that full kind of sound thatâs always gotten him exactly what he wanted. He strides across the gravel with a beer in hand, sunglasses perched low on his nose. Tan already sunk into his skin like he belongs here more than anywhere else.
Oscar is a step behind him, hands shoved into the pockets of his board shorts, mouth pulled into that familiar half-smile that never quite gives away what heâs thinking. Cool. Untouchable. But not when it comes to you.
Youâve known them both since 2023. Started the same year as Oscar, actually, back when he was still the ânew kidâ and Lando was the anointed heir of McLaren. Watching them now, itâs almost funny how much and how little has changed.
âWell, well, well,â Lando drawls, his gaze raking down the length of you without a shred of shame. âSomeoneâs been hitting the gym.â
You roll your eyes, but the heat crawling up your neck betrays you. Typical. Lando always wielded charm like a blunt weapon. Flirt first, apologize laterâif at all.
âIâll take that as a compliment,â you shoot back, crossing your arms to fend off the fluster you feel prickling your skin.
âYou should.â His grin turns a little wolfish, a little sharper at the edges. Itâs always been like this with Lando. Sharp banter, quick jabs, a constant underlying dare in his words.
Oscar, on the other hand, doesnât say anything. He just glances at you, quick, his gaze flickering over the obvious changes. The toned arms, the tighter shorts, the way you stand a little differently now, more sure of yourself. Itâs the sun youâve caught over the spring, the way your hair is lighter. The confidence, fitting you a little easier now.Â
âIgnore him,â Oscar says finally, voice dry as ever. âHe thinks a compliment a day keeps HR away.â
Lando snickers, entirely unbothered. âNo oneâs filing any complaints.â
âYet,â Oscar adds under his breath, and you catch the twitch of a real smile before he looks away, as if heâs embarrassed to be caught being funny.
The dynamic between them is sharper this year, the edges harder to ignore. Landoâs a little too loud; Oscarâs a little too careful. And you, wellâ
You shoulder your bag higher. Whatever storm is brewing, itâs not here yet.Â
When Lando is pulled away by another group, you find yourself next to Oscar, the two of you naturally falling into step. âHeâs subtle, huh?â you say, nodding toward where Lando is already readying to play a match of beach volleyball.
Oscar snorts. âAs a brick through a window.â
Your laughter comes easier with him. No games, no showmanship. Just the same effortless back-and-forth youâve had since you both joined McLare. Young, new, a little out of your depths. Youâve grown alongside each other in different ways, but the familiarity remains.
âYou look good, by the way,â Oscar says after a beat, almost too casual.
You glance at him, but heâs already looking away. âThanks, Piastri,â you say, nudging his elbow lightly. âBig year for compliments, huh?â
He hums noncommittally, a ghost of a smile pulling at his mouth. His expression doesnât shift, but thereâs something in his eyes. Something that makes you feel seen in a way thatâs infinitely more dangerous than Landoâs brand of unashamed attention.
Voices call your names from across the courtyard. A group from the marketing team waves you over, already laying claim to beach chairs and plotting the eveningâs games.
âDuty calls,â you say with a mock salute.
Oscar lifts a hand in farewell. âSee you.â
The first few hours are a whirlwind of people claiming rooms, of staff trading sunblock and shots and secrets. By the time itâs evening, the beach air is thick with the scent of salt, laughter bouncing between bodies huddled in threadbare hoodies and board shorts. Someone passes a bottle of cheap rum around. Someone else suggests Truth or Dare, and against your better judgment, you let yourself be roped in.
Youâre perched on a faded picnic blanket with a handful of your favorite coworkers. Marketing assistants, junior engineers, a couple of race strategy interns. A makeshift family built over late nights and endless deadlines.
âAlright, you,â Tom from engineering says, pointing at you with a grin. His cheeks are already flushed from the booze. âTruth: which of our two golden boys is more crush-worthy?â
A chorus of oohs rises from the circle. You groan, tossing a handful of sand in Tom's general direction. âWhat are we, twelve?â
âCome on! You have to answer.â
You make a show of rolling your eyes, sighing dramatically as if itâs the most inconvenient question in the world. Still, your heart skips a beat. You know thereâs only ever been one answer.
âOscar,â you say finally, shrugging like it doesn't cost you anything. âItâs always been Oscar.â
The teasing jeers come quick, but you just grin and take a swig from the bottle when itâs passed your way. Itâs easier to laugh it off than to sink into the memories unspooling quietly in your mind.
You think about your first day at McLaren. Youâd both been rookies, wide-eyed and trying not to drown in a sea of expectation. Oscar had been fresh off his earlier championships. This quiet, determined presence in a world built for louder voices. You had locked eyes across the cafeteria once, both awkwardly holding trays of uninspiring food, and heâd given you a small, tentative smile.
It hadnât been fireworks. It hadnât been some earth-shattering moment you could write a novel about. It had been something smaller, quieter. A seed planted in good soil.
Over the years, youâd watched him grow into himself. Sharper on track, still dry-humored and steady off it. Always polite. Always a little reserved. And always, somehow, softer towards you.
You were no fool, though. You never once mistook kindness for something more. You knew what your place was. A marketing admin, barely visible on race weekends unless a driver needed to be somewhere for a shoot. Youâd been content to stay in your lane, to admire him like you admired the sunsets over the paddock, or the roar of the engines on a Sunday afternoon.
Beautiful things. Distant things.
If Oscar was nicer to you than he was to others, you chalked it up to that shared sentiment. You were both once the least important people in the room, both standing on the shaky ground of McLarenâs legacy, and rookies tended to stick together.Â
Someone nudges you, laughing, and you shake yourself out of it, laughing along. The night spins onward, bright and blurry. Tomorrow, youâll wake up with sand in your hair and regret in your bones.
But for now, you pass the bottle to the left, and let the fire warm your skin.
The next morning is slow and heavy, the sun just starting to burn off the early haze. Youâre pulling your hair into a loose ponytail, half-listening to chatter around the shared bathroom when Mia from digital points her toothbrush at you and says, âYou know heâs been checking you out, right?â
âWho?â
Mia rolls her eyes dramatically, toothpaste foam threatening to spill. She jerks her chin toward the open doorway. âNorris.âÂ
Curious and a little dubious, you step out into the hall. Sure enough, there he is, leaning against the kitchen counter, sipping from a mug. His gaze finds yours immediately, unapologetically. When he notices you catching him, his mouth quirks into a slow, confident grin.
âMorning,â he calls.
âMorning,â you reply as casually as you can manage.
He sets down his mug. âFancy a run?â
You hesitate, glancing around for signs of anyone else. Usually, the drivers corral a whole group when they go on these runs. But thereâs no one hovering by the door with sneakers in hand. Itâs just Lando, looking infuriatingly fresh and ready.
âSure,â you say before you can overthink it. He grins, and itâs the same sort of smile he has when heâs standing on the top step of the podium.Â
You lace up your trainers quickly and meet him outside. The air is cooler by the beach, the ocean stretching out endlessly beside you. You jog in an easy rhythm, sand crunching faintly under your feet. Itâs quiet for a while. Just the waves and the distant call of gulls.
âYou look different this summer,â Lando says after a stretch of silence. His voice is low, almost thoughtful.
You laugh breathlessly. âBad different or good different?â
âGood. Very good,â he says with a lopsided smile. âMore... sure of yourself.â
The compliment lands oddly heavy in your chest. âMaybe Iâm just better at pretending now.â
He shoots you a sideways glance, sharp and knowing. âOr maybe youâre better at being who you are.â
The words catch you off-guard, more meaningful than the easy flirtations youâd expected. For a while, neither of you speak. You just run, side by side, until the sun climbs higher and the morning grows warmer.
Itâs always been a little different with Lando. He was the occasional headache of the marketing team, the one that warranted one or two more PR releases than Oscar. Off the track, though, you were always pleasantly surprised at who Lando could be underneath the orange race suit.Â
He was the thoughtful kind, the type to know everybodyâs birthdays and to stop for any kid asking for an autograph. He never minced words, but he was not unkind, either. He just felt everything deeply, whether it was a loss, or a win, or the sentiment of an unassuming summer day.
When you finally loop back toward the house, your skin is sticky with sweat and your mind is spinning. Lando bumps his shoulder lightly against yours as you walk up the porch steps.
âGood run,â he says, like it means something more.
You nod, pretending your heartbeat is only from the exercise.
Inside, the house is waking up properly now. Music playing, laughter bouncing. You disappear into the crowd, feeling Landoâs eyes on your back the whole way, and wondering, not for the last time that day, what the hell just happened.Â
You try not to think of it during the day. You focus on the team exercises, the planning, the downtime. You count down the seconds until your favorite parts of these summers: the bonfires in the evening.Â
Lanterns swing lazily from the wooden beams overhead, casting a dappled light over the courtyard where most of the team has gathered. Itâs bright and loud, and it reminds you of why you continue to stay despite the shitty management and the questionable policies. The people here are good people.Â
Lando shimmers in the center of it all. Heâs a social butterfly, fluttering from interns to old-timers with small talk that makes you feel special for a few, precious moments. What endears you the most is that you know heâs not putting on a show. Lando likes the team, likes the beach and the woodsmoke and the invincibility of these moments away from the public eye.Â
You feel like somethingâs missing, though. You wander off in search of that puzzle piece, and thatâs when you spot him.Â
Oscar, tucked away by the side of the house, half-shielded by the drooping branches of a tree. His hands are shoved into the pockets of his hoodie, his posture hunched as he scrolls through his phone. You smile to yourself.
âHiding, are we?â you call out, keeping your voice light.
Oscar doesnât start. He just glances at you, a wry smile tugging at his mouth. âStrategic retreat.â
You chuckle and wander closer, careful not to intrude too much. âFair. You lasted longer than I thought you would,â you sya.Â
âPeer pressureâs a powerful thing.â
âIâll leave you to it. Just thought Iâd come say âhiâ before you went full hermit.â
Youâre about to wander back off to the beach when Oscar says in an uncharacteristic rush of words, âYou donât have to go.â
You freeze for a beat. When you look over, Oscarâs already looking at youâsteady, earnest, like he actually means it.
âIf you want,â he adds, more casually now. As if heâs giving you an out instead.
Your heart does that stupid thing it always does around him. A warm stutter you can never quite control. You move closer, sitting down a comfortable distance away. Close enough to talk, far enough not to spook the moment.
You donât say much. You donât need to.
The night hums around you and between it all, a quiet little space you carve out with Oscar, just the two of you. You wonder, not for the first time, if he feels it too. The anticipation when the amps turn on. The thick tension.Â
Itâs not something youâre willing to stake your friendship over, so you let the moment pass as many others before it. By the time the two of you are heading back to the throng, youâre only reminded of where you belong in the complex hierarchy of co-worker friendships.Â
The next morning, the sun is high and hot by the time everyone spills out onto the open field just beyond the house. Thereâs a haphazard setup of cones, makeshift goals, and a suspicious number of foam batons.Â
Classic team-building chaos.
Brian from HR claps his hands together. âAlright! Lando, Oscar, you know the drill.â
There's a collective hum of excitement as people start gathering behind them, ready to be picked. You hang back, adjusting the hem of your shorts and shielding your eyes from the sun. Itâs almost a tradition at this point: drivers lead, employees follow, and everyone ends up in some over-competitive version of capture-the-flag or ultimate frisbee.
Lando and Oscar stand a few feet apart, each looking unfairly good in their McLaren-branded athletic gear.
âLadies first,â Lando says with a smirk, tossing a foam baton into the air and catching it with a little spin. âPick whoever you want, mate.â
Oscar just gives him a bemused look. âYouâre only saying that because you want to steal half my picks.â
âItâs called strategy,â Lando replies smoothly, tapping his temple. âThatâs why I'm the smart one.â
Oscar snorts, but then his eyes flick to youâbrief, almost imperceptible if you werenât looking.
You feel it more than you see it: the way the energy subtly shifts. The people around you start elbowing each other, stifling laughs. Thereâs no hiding it now. Youâre not the most athletic, not really the kind of member who brings in the winning shot, but youâre close enough to both drivers for this squirmish to become an annual thing.Â
âIâll takeââ Oscar starts, but Lando cuts in.
âNope. Mine.âÂ
A ripple of amusement runs through the group. Someone whistles. You cross your arms, eyebrows raised in mock affront.
Oscarâs mouth twitches at the corner, betraying the tiniest smile. âThatâs not how this works. You let me pick first.âÂ
âRock, Paper, Scissors for her?â Lando says cheekily, already raising his hand into position.
Iâm right here, youâre tempted to tease, but youâre already red-faced from their attempts to stake claim. Oscar sighs like Lando is the greatest burden on earth. He humors him anyway.
They square up. A few of the engineers start chanting under their breath: âRock, paper, scissors! Rock, paper, scissors!â
They throw once.
Landoâs scissors against Oscarâs rock.
A loud cheer goes up. Lando groans theatrically, dragging his hands down his face.
âFine,â Lando grumbles, shooting you half a smirk. âBut just know, youâre missing out on being on the winning team.â
You laugh, falling into step next to Oscar as the rest of the group starts getting sorted out.
âDonât let him fool you,â you tease under your breath. âYouâre the only reason this team has a chance.â
Oscar flashes you a look. One warm enough to melt every rational thought right out of your sun-drenched head.
âGood,â he murmurs. âWouldn't want to win without you anyway.â
Youâre still brushing sand from your hands as the games kick off, a whole series of activities spread across the beach: tug-of-war, three-legged races, trivia relays. The energy is infectious, easy to get swept into, almost enough to make you forget about the heavy things hanging in the backgroundâthe contracts, the titles, the unspoken rivalries.
Oscar is relentless. Competitive in a way that most people wouldn't expect if they only ever saw his calm interviews. Itâs an open secret, just how intense Oscar could get when it came to things like these.
His team moves like a machine, coordinated and precise, while Landoâs team operates with chaotic enthusiasm, making up for what they lack in organization with sheer willpower and noise.
Youâre laughing as you hurl yourself into a sack for the next race, the sand hot and uneven under your feet. The world tips violently when you stumble, crashing face-first into the beach. Grit fills your mouth, your skin stings.Â
When you push yourself upright, coughing, Oscar is already tossing a snide comment over his shoulder: âMaybe stick to admin work.â
It lands harder than it should.Â
Maybe because itâs him. Maybe because itâs been four years of pretending you didnât really care what Oscar thought of you. The sting rises up quicker than you can shove it down, and it only worsens when you notice Landoâs sharp gaze.
âMate,â Lando snipes, breaking from his own team to glare at Oscar. âBit harsh, donât you think?â
Oscar hesitates, like he realizes it a second too late, but someone calls for the next round and the moment fractures before it can settle into anything more. You paste a smile on your face and dive back into the games like nothing happened.
Like you didnât just realize that no matter how long you stayed at McLaren, some things might always hurt a little more than they should.
The games end in a tangle of cheers and whoops, Oscarâs team carrying their homemade âtrophyââan old beach umbrella someone had scrawled CHAMPIONS across with an orange Sharpie. The sun dips lower, bleeding oranges and reds across the sky, painting everyone in a warm, careless glow. Music drifts the easy beat of a summer song nobody will remember by winter.
Youâre crouched at the edge of it all, nursing a plastic cup of water in a bid to fill the hollow feeling buzzing under your ribs. Oscar is somewhere in the throng, a grin splitting his face. Heâs pulled into photos, hands slung over shoulders, the weight of his careless comment seemingly long gone from his mind.
Youâre fine. You swear you are.Â
Itâs stupid to let it fester, stupid to feel the prickle of tears when youâve fought so hard to be seen as part of this team, not just the girl who sends calendar invites and films content.
You want to believe that Oscar hadnât meant to be cruel, that itâd been adrenaline-fueled trash talk. That the remark wasnât some thought thatâs been on the back of his mind for years now, just waiting for a moment to come to head.Â
God, what does it say about you that youâre the one hurt, and youâre still making excuses for Oscar?Â
Youâre contemplating how soon you can sneak back to the house without making it obvious when Lando drops down beside you, kicking up a puff of sand.
âHey,â he says, voice low, easy. The kind of âheyâ that slips into the cracks you've been trying to mortar over all afternoon.
You smile, but it doesnât reach your eyes. Lando notices. Of course he does.
âYouâre shit at hiding it, you know,â he adds, nudging your elbow with his.
You huff out a laugh, more breath than sound. âIâm fine.â
He doesn't say anything right away. Just picks at a piece of driftwood half-buried in the sand, giving you enough space to either lie again or actually talk.
The silence stretches, not uncomfortable, but patient. The sky darkens a little more. The ocean breathes in and out.
âYou were killing it out there,â Lando offers eventually. âSeriously. Youâve got, like, a mean sack race face.â
A real laugh slips out this time, unguarded, and Lando grins that I-finished-P1 smile again.
âI justâŚâ You dig your toes into the sand. âSometimes it feels like Iâm never going to be⌠yâknow. Actually one of you.â
Lando frowns, properly frowns, like the idea physically pains him. âThatâs bull.âÂ
âTell that to Oscar.â
âOscarâs a dick sometimes. We all are. Doesnât mean we donât see you. Doesnât mean you donât matter.â
Itâs said so simply, so plainly, that for a second you donât know what to do with it.
âYouâre McLaren,â Lando insists, nudging you again. Gentler this time. âAlways have been.â
Your throat burns. You blink hard at the horizon, refusing to cry over something as stupid as a sack race, and a throwaway comment, and Lando Norrisâ sincerity.
Lando stands, brushing the sand from his shorts, and holds out a hand.
âCâmon,â he says. âBonfireâs starting. Iâll get you the good marshmallows.â
You let him pull you to your feet, the weight in your chest easing just a little. Maybe not everything was perfect. Maybe not everyone saw you the way you wanted. But right now, Lando did.
Itâs enough.Â
The bonfire spits and crackles as the night sinks deeper, a hundred tiny embers dancing into the dark. Someoneâs switched the playlist to slower songs, the kind you know all the words to without trying.Â
Lando sticks by you the entire evening.
Making sure you get the first roasted marshmallow. Shoving his hoodie at you when the breeze picks up. Sitting close enough that your knees bump sometimes, casual but intentional. Itâs as if heâs decided that tonight, you are his responsibility, and heâs damn well going to make sure you feel wanted.
You donât care if itâs pity. You let him. You let yourself take all of it, because Oscarâs comment had been a papercut in the thick skin youâd built over the years. Lando soothes it, whether or not heâs aware.Â
Across the fire, Oscar laughs at something one of the mechanics says, but you can feel itâthe way his gaze finds you when he thinks youâre not looking. The way it sticks, hot and restless.
You force yourself to ignore it. Youâre not going to cause a scene. Not here. Not now. Not after everything.
Youâre practically sleepwalking by the time you make it back to your room, the party still humming faintly through the walls. You peel off your clothes and collapse onto the bed in Landoâs hoodie, the scent of fire and salt clinging to your skin.
Youâre just about to drift off when your phone buzzes against the nightstand. Your lockscreenâa photo of the most recent McLaren 1-2 finishâlights up with a text.Â
O. Piastri đĽđ¨ [2:03 AM]: You up?
You stare at it, your heart kicking once, stupid and traitorous. You think about ignoring it.
You donât.
You [2:05 AM]: barely
The typing dots pop up immediately.
Disappear.
Pop up again.
O. Piastri đĽđ¨ [2:06 AM]: About earlierÂ
You bite your lip hard enough to sting.
You [2:07 AM]: itâs fine
Itâs not. You both know it.
Another pause.
O. Piastri đĽđ¨ [2:09 AM]: Itâs not
You sigh into your pillow, the ache behind your eyes starting to burn.
You [2:10 AM]: i donât want to do this over text
The response comes faster this time.
O. Piastri đĽđ¨ [2:10 AM]: Can we talk tomorrow morning?
You hesitate. The safe thing would be to say no. To let it slide, bury it under the sand and sun and pretend none of it mattered.
But youâre tired of pretending.
You [2:11 AM]: yeah. ok.
Oscar doesnât reply after that. Your screen goes dark.Â
You roll onto your side, pulling the hoodie tighter around yourself, and finally, finally let sleep take you under.
The next morning, youâd been half-hoping Oscar would forget the plan from the night beforeâpretend it was just another drunken text with no follow-upâbut no. He texts about getting breakfast for everybody else; you wait on the porch, your hands shoved in Landoâs hoodie as you groggily wonder why the hell you agreed to this.Â
Oscar emerges moments later, cap pulled low, shirt wrinkled, looking like he hates everything about being awake before noon.
âNice hoodie,â he says, deadpan, barely glancing at you as he shoulders past you and heads towards the direction of the nearest bakery.
You snort, following him into the fresh sting of morning air. âSorry, didnât realize there was a dress code for pastry runs.â
âWell, I didnât realize Lando was your stylist now.â
âAnd I didnât realize you cared.â
Oscar cuts a look at you, the edge of his mouth twitching like heâs fighting a smirk or a grimace. It's hard to tell with him sometimes. âI donât,â he says way too fast.
You bump your shoulder against his as you cross the street. âYouâre being weird about this.â
âIâm not being weird,â Oscar mutters, jaw tight. âIâmâŚâ He trails off, kicking a pebble down the sidewalk. âShit, Iâm going about this all wrong.â
You blink at him, mid-step. âAbout what?â
âForget it.â
The bakery is tucked into a corner of the sleepy town, all blue awnings and window boxes bursting with flowers. A little bell jingles when you push the door open, the smell of fresh bread and sugar wrapping around you like a hug.
Oscar heads straight for the counter, scanning the rows of pastries with a frown like heâs plotting a strategy. You trail after him, trying not to feel weirdly self-conscious about the hoodie swallowing your frame.
For some reason, both your claws are out. You point out the doughnuts and Oscar makes some snide comment about cavities. He surveys the croissants and you mumble about his predictability. You feel it, then, what he had said earlier. On going about this all wrong.Â
Youâre convinced the two of you are one sarcastic comment away from a physical altercation when a comment stops you both in your tracks. âYou two remind me of my wife and me,â the elderly baker says cheerfully, wiping his hands on a flour-dusted apron as he rings your orders up.
You almost choke. âOh, weâre notââ
ââNot like that,â Oscar says at the same time, voice a little too sharp.
The baker chuckles, clearly not convinced, and hands over the bags stuffed with pastries. Oscar wordlessly pulls out his wallet, shoving a tip into the jar. Way more than necessary.
You raise an eyebrow as you step outside. âGenerous.â
âGuilt tax,â Oscar mutters.
You open your mouth to poke at thatâbecause honestly, itâs too easyâbut then you catch the look on his face. Not exactly regretful. More like⌠determined. Stubborn. That same look he gets right before a race starts when heâs locked in.
For the first time all morning, you wonder if maybe youâre not the only one trying to pretend things don't matter as much as they do.
The walk back to the beach house is quiet, the smell of warm bread thick between you. Just as the house comes back into view, Oscar clears his throat.
âHey,â he says, his voice lower, realer. âAbout yesterday. The team games.â
You pause.
âI was a dick. Iâm sorry,â he says.Â
You glance over. Oscarâs staring straight ahead, knuckles white on the brown paper bag of doughnuts. The one heâd bitched about but still got.Â
You let a beat pass. Then: âI accept your apology, But,â you add, grinning, âIâm still gonna tease you forever about getting weird over Landoâs hoodie.â
He lets out a groan of pure suffering. âI wasnât being weird.âÂ
âYou know,â you say, voice casual, âif itâs that big a deal, I wouldnât mind wearing one of yours.â
You donât wait for his reaction. You head towards the house, pastries in tow, leaving Oscar spluttering behind you.
Itâs an exhilarating feeling, you realize. You havenât flirted with Oscar the same way you do with Lando, out of fear that you would simply keel over and give up at first sight of the Australianâs blush. But itâs easier than you thought, and nothing amuses you more than the reddened tips of Oscarâs ears when he comes in after you.
After breakfast, you retreat upstairs for some air. You open your door and stop short.
Sitting neatly on your bed is a hoodie. Folded almost too carefully, like he wasnât sure if he should leave it at all.
On top, a scrap of paper, the ink a little smudged:
Keep your word. â o.p.
Just like that, heâs back to having that one-up on you.Â
You hastily pull off Landoâs hoodie and tug on Oscarâs without thinking. The sleeves swallow your hands; the fabric is warm in a recently-got-ironed kind of way, and it smells faintly of soap and sunscreen.
Is it too late to keel over?Â
The pool gleams under the sun, finally coaxed into full operation after a solid day of half the team fighting with buttons and levers. Someoneâs pulled out a portable sound mixer. Someone else has brought out mocktails. The air buzzes with a rare, lazy kind of joy.
Youâre sitting on a deck chair, wrapped up in Oscarâs hoodie, sipping something neon pink through a straw. Honestly, itâs too warm to be in a hoodie, but youâll be damned to not âkeep your wordâ. Besides, the knowing smile that Oscar tries to fight is worth the sweat on your back.Â
One of your co-workers, Chloe, plops down next to you.
âThis is not very hot girl summer of you,â she whines, tugging at Oscarâs hoodie like a child.Â
You wrinkle your nose. âItâs a perfectly fine hoodie, Chlo.âÂ
âYou know what would be even more fine? The bikini sitting at the bottom of your suitcase.âÂ
âDid you rummage throughââÂ
âTomato, tomato. Put on the damn swimsuit you bought specifically for this trip!â Chloe punctuates the threat with a pointed look. The kind that says, Donât make me drag you. You have no doubts sheâd do it, too, so you set down your drink with a groan of dramatic reluctance.Â
âIf I get sunburnt, Iâm blaming you,â you grumble as she cheers and practically shoves you back into the house.Â
In your room, you peel off the hoodie and shorts before swapping them for the bikiniâa simple black two-piece that suddenly feels much more revealing now that you actually have to walk back out in it.Â
The chatter quiets a fraction when you step out. Not dramatically, but enough that you notice. Enough that Landoâs eyebrows climb a little higher than normal. Even Oscarâs head turns, his lips parting slightly in what might be surprise if he wasnât quick enough in hiding it.
âFinally decided to join the rest of us mortals,â Lando crows, tossing a beach ball between his hands. âLooking good, admin.â
You roll your eyes but canât quite fight the smile tugging at your mouth. Before you can even think about easing into the pool like a normal person, Lando and Oscar exchange a look. A look you recognize all too late.
âDonât you dareââ youâre starting, but it doesnât matter.Â
Too late.
Lando goes low, grabbing you by the ankles. Oscar effortlessly hauls you up with strong arms through your middle. Youâre swung around a bit for good measure, and then youâre airborne for half a heartbeat before crashing into the pool with a splash.
The water is warm from the sun, but it still shocks the breath out of you. You surface, sputtering, as Lando and Oscar double over with laughter. Everyone else watches on with the same amusement, knowing the boysâ tendencies for mischief when they were in a particular mood.Â
âYou absolute menaces,â you declare, wiping water from your face. âI think I twisted my ankle, man.â
Oscarâs laughter cuts off instantly. âWait, seriously?â His brow furrows, and before you can blink, heâs crouched at the edge of the pool, leaning down to get a closer look.
âWhich one?â he asks, already reaching to haul you out.
You grab his outstretched hand and yank.
Oscar yelpsâan actual, undignified yelpâas you drag him headfirst into the water beside you.
He resurfaces, blinking water from his lashes, completely betrayed. âYouââ
Youâre already laughing, kicking away from him.Â
âThatâs for the sack race comment!â you crow, paddling backward.
He shakes his head, grinning despite himself. âI thought we were past that,â he calls out, splashing water in your eyes. You retaliate before attempting to dart away.Â
The afternoon blurs into sun-drenched chaos. People drift in and out of the pool, mock battles and splash wars springing up as naturally as breathing. The laughter is loud, the water warm, and for a while, everything feels suspended, easy.
Mid-afternoon, someone shouts âChicken fight!â and it's immediately game on. Chloe clambers onto Oscarâs shoulders without hesitation, while you tread water nearby, laughing at the whole ridiculousness of it.
Before you can react, strong hands wrap around your waist.
âMy turn, love,â Lando announces triumphantly, already hoisting you up onto his shoulders. âYou were on Oscarâs team last time. Youâre mine now.âÂ
You squeal, half from shock, half from trying to stay balanced as Landoâs hands steady you by your thighs. Your heart stumbles a little. His grip is firm, his fingers warm and sure against the hem of your bikini bottoms.Â
You catch Oscar looking at you from below Chloe, his gaze a little too intense for something as stupid as a pool game. Your stomach flips uneasily.
Focus, you tell yourself. This is supposed to be fun.
Itâs fun to have Chloe lunge at you, her giggles bright as she sinks her nails into your sunburnt shoulders. Itâs fun to have Lando moving underneath you, shouting up reassurances like get her and thatâs my girl. Itâs fun to feel Oscar watching your every move, and not because heâs strategizing.Â
You thread your fingers through Landoâs hair as Chloe tries to push you backward. Landoâs hands shift slightly higher on your thighs, nearly underneath your bikini. Maybe by accident, maybe not. You feel the difference immediately. An inch more of skin under his touch, a flash of heat that makes your breath catch.
Youâre still trying to process that when, all of a sudden, Lando jerks underneath you with a loud âOof!â and sinks halfway underwater.
Chloe shrieks in laughter, nearly tumbling off Oscar.
You slide off Landoâs shoulders in the commotion, landing back in the water with a splash. As you surface, you catch a glimpse of Oscar, looking absolutely unapologetic as he pulls back his leg.Â
Lando pops up a moment later. Heâs wheezing, his hands clasped over his swim shorts. âWhat the hell, Osc!â he rasps, the sound punched out of him after being ungraciously kneed in the groin.Â
Oscar shrugs, the corner of his mouth twitching. âSlipped.â
You cough out a laugh, half in disbelief. Chloe floats past you, cackling.
Lando glares at Oscar, but that eventually cracks into a grin. âCâmere, you,â the Brit coos, lunging for his co-driver. Before his head can be shoved down, Oscar throws you a winkâquick, private.
Your cheeks burn hotter than the sun overhead, and you duck underwater before anyone can comment on it.
That dayâs dinner stretches into the warm evening, the long table lined with empty plates, half-drunk glasses of wine, and the low hum of conversation. The sun dips lower, casting everything in a syrupy, forgiving glow. It feels almost perfect, if not for the gnawing restlessness you canât quite name.
For once, neither Lando nor Oscar are by your side.
Lando leans back in his chair, laughing at something one of the engineers says, his fingers curled around a sweating can of soda. Oscar is farther down the table, deep in a serious discussion with one of the strategists, his brow furrowed in that familiar, endearing way.
Youâre free to breathe, to think. Itâs then that the reality of the summer settles in, heavy and unrelenting.
Everyoneâs been talking about it in hushed tones when they think the drivers arenât listening.Â
Will Lando stay with McLaren? After years of loyalty, of being the heart and soul of the team, will he finally walk away for a shot at something different, something better?Â
And OscarâOscar, whoâs no longer just the promising rookie but the reigning World Championâfaces the brutal weight of defending everything heâs fought for. Will he make it? Will he relent, or will he be something greater than what was expected of him?Â
You can feel it thrumming under every casual exchange, every shared joke. The quiet tug-of-war. The clash of futures neither of them are quite ready to admit they want different things from.
And yet, somehow, itâs you who feels pulled taut between them.
Lando catches your eye across the table and winks. Easy, breezy, the same way he always has. He makes it seem as if thereâs nothing complicated about any of this.
Almost immediately after, Oscar glances up from his conversation and smiles at you. Soft and crooked, like youâre the one safe thing in a world thatâs otherwise slipping sideways.
Your chest tightens.
Youâre caught, but you don't even know what in. Caught between loyalty and ambition. Between the comfort of whatâs always been and the thrill, the fear, of what might change. Between two boys who are friends, rivals, teammates and something else youâre not sure you want to name.
You pick at your food, your appetite long gone, and wonder when exactly this summer stopped feeling endless and started feeling like a ticking clock.
The summer heat is clinging to everything. Itâs the kind that demands you do something, anything before youâre swallowed whole.
Plans start to splinter over breakfast.
âSurfâs up,â Oscar says, tossing a board into the back of one of the jeeps. The sun catches in his hair, making him look unfairly effortless. âWhoâs in?â
âOr,â Lando calls out from the kitchen, a trail of crumbs following his words, âwe could do something that doesnât involve dying under a wave. Thereâs a sick hiking trail up the cliffs. Views are unreal.â
Thereâs a beat, and then the divide begins. Some of the team flock toward Oscar, lured by the thrill of the ocean; others gravitate to Lando, drawn to the promise of a rugged adventure.
You stand in the middle, heart hammering a little too hard for something thatâs supposed to be casual. Supposed to be fun.
It feels like a metaphor youâre not ready to face.
âYouâre not coming?â Lando asks, mock-offended, pulling a pout that would be funny if it didnât make something in your chest ache. âGonna miss you,â he adds, lighter, teasing.
Oscar, carrying two boards now, smirks over his shoulder. âGuess sheâs tired of babysitting you, Lan.â
You force a laugh you don't quite feel. âMaybe I just need a break from both of you.â
They both react predictably. Lando clutches his heart in fake agony, Oscar shakes his head with a quiet chuckle. You donât wait for more. You duck back into the house, the coolness of the shaded hallway swallowing you up.
For the first time in days, youâre alone.
You wonder if choosing yourself is just another way of choosing at all.
You spend the afternoon alone, and itâs a kind of peace you didnât realize you needed.
The beach house creaks with the slow, easy rhythm of the ocean breeze. You move from room to room without urgency. Sometimes reading on the porch, sometimes just watching the water glitter beyond the dunes.
By the time the sun starts to slip lower, you hear footsteps, wet and clumsy on the deck. Oscar appears first, his wetsuit peeled down to his waist. Sand dusting his hair and shoulders, water still dripping from his grin.
You laugh despite yourself. âCome here,â you say, the affection leaking into your tone before you can hold it back.
Oscar ambles over, letting you reach up and card your fingers through his messy hair, brushing the sand out with a few playful tugs. His gaze is steady on yours, warm enough that you have to focus on some nondescript point past him to hide the way your face heats.
âHad fun?â you ask for the sake of asking.Â
He raises his shoulders in a shrug, his eyes never leaving your face. âCould have been more fun,â he says simply, his words loaded with implication youâre not about to confront.Â
Oscar opens his mouth to say something elseâ
The door swings open again. Loud. Dramatic.
Lando stumbles in with a theatrical groan, one hand clutching his shin. âOw. Ow. Pretty sure Iâm dying.â
You arch a brow. âYouâre so full of it,â you accuse, dropping your hands from Oscarâs hair.Â
âSeriously,â he insists, dragging himself toward the couch like heâs reenacting the third act of a war movie. âTragic end to a heroic hike.â
You roll your eyes but motion him over anyway, reaching for the first aid kit you know is stashed under the side table. When Lando props his leg up, you find a scrape. Minor. Nothing to justify the Oscar-worthy performance.
Still, you crouch beside him, carefully dabbing at the cut.
âBig baby,â you mutter.
Lando grins, completely unashamed. âWorked, didnât it?â
You look up, catching the cheeky glint in his eye. The very obvious satisfaction of having pulled your attention away from Oscar.
You shake your head, biting back a laugh. âUnbelievable.â
Lando snickers. Oscar, toweling off his hair nearby, watches the exchange with a faint shake of his head. A half-smile tugs at his mouth like he canât even pretend to be annoyed.
You tape a bandage neatly over Landoâs scrape, pretending not to feel the weight of both of their gazes pressing into you from opposite ends of the room.
The bonfire crackles in the pit, casting gold onto every face circled around it. Youâre seated between Oscar and Landoâclose enough that your knees brush both of theirs. It wasnât planned. Just the way the night unfolded. Just the way they looked at you when you arrived, and the way neither of them moved an inch as you lowered yourself into the space between.
Landoâs been chatty all evening, but now his voice takes on a teasing edge.
âSo,â he says, leaning back on his palms. âYou seeing anyone?â
âThatâs direct,â you hum, gaze focused on the sâmore in front of you that wonât cooperate.Â
He grins, eyes glinting in the firelight. âIâm just saying. Youâve been dodging the topic for, what, four summers now?â
Oscar shifts beside you. Just barely.
âYou always seem very invested in my love life,â you comment, though you can already feel your heart picking up.
âIâm invested in you,â Lando says plainly. âThatâs not a crime, is it?â
Oscar lets out a sound that mightâve been a scoff. âBack off, mate.â
The air thins like someoneâs turned off the music. Everything goes on around the three of you, but in this little corner of the bonfire, something blaze and burns in a different way.Â
Lando raises a brow, turning toward Oscar. âWhat? Weâre just talking.â
Oscar doesnât meet his gaze. âYouâre grilling her,â he grunts, shoving his stick into the sand with uncharacteristic force.Â
âIâm curious.â
âYouâre nosy.â
âOkay,â you interject. âLetâs not fight over me like Iâm some prize, yeah?â
Lando leans forward, elbows on his knees now, attention swinging back to you. âWeâre not fighting.â
Oscar speaks without looking. âCouldâve fooled me.â
You look between them. Their faces both angled toward the fire now, lit in shifting amber tones. There it is againâthe live wire of tension crackling between the two of them, beneath Landoâs wicked smirk and Oscarâs bouncing knee.Â
Except itâs not about racing, now, is it?Â
Lando taps your knee, snapping you out of your thoughts. âSo? Are you?â
You chuckle, deflecting. âWouldnât you like to know.â
Oscar huffs beside you. Lando chuckles.
The laughter and music swell again. But nothing really returns to normal.
Itâs an uneasy thought that makes a home in your bones all the way until the next day. The morning sun streams through the sheer curtains, lighting the hallway in a sleepy glow. Your footsteps are slow against the wooden floor as you pad barefoot toward the kitchen, the house quiet save for distant clinks of coffee mugs.
You nearly bump into Oscar rounding the corner. His hairâs a mess, still damp from the shower, and thereâs a barely-there smile tugging at his lips.
âMorning,â he greets. âDidnât think Iâd run into you before the chaos starts.â
You frown, still foggy from sleep. âWhat chaos?â
He blinks, then breaks out into a wider smile. Amused, fond. âYou forgot?â
You stare at him, confused, until it hits you.
The annual sand rail race.
Every summer, tucked into the off-season downtime, itâs the one competition thatâs just for bragging rights. The leaderboard is even scrawled on a whiteboard in the garage, a running tally of victories and sore losers. So far, itâs 2-2. Lando and Oscar locked in their own personal tie.
Oscar watches the realization dawn on your face. âRight,â you murmur. âRace day.â
âMm.â He studies you for a beat. âHey.â
You glance up at him.
âI know youâre not a prize to be won,â he says, voice a little quieter now. âThatâs not what this is.â
You nod slowly, watching him. You donât know where this conversation is going. Youâre not sure if you want to know.Â
âBut, uhmâŚâ He trails off, his gaze flicking down to the walls before finding your eyes again. âI hope youâll be rooting for me.â
The sheer sincerity of it nearly bowls you over. Itâs not a command, not an order. Itâs a wistful invitation, a shy confession made by a man who typically knew how to ask for anything else. But this was not a weekend off or a car upgrade. Hell, it wasnât even anything consequentialânot a date, not anything like that.Â
Just for you to root for him. And yet he asks for it as if itâs something that matters, that makes everything do-or-die, and you wish it didnât affect you as much as it does.Â
You put on a front. You tilt your head, lips tugging up despite the hammering of your heart underneath your ribs. âThat depends.â
âOn?â
âWhether you bring me coffee before the race.â
Oscar scoffs. âBribery. Noted.â
But heâs smiling as he passes you, his shoulder brushing yours. And thereâs coffee waiting for you when you get to the kitchen, poured into the mug that Oscar has repeatedly claimed as his.Â
You sip from it, feeling the weight of the day shift. Something in the air is charged. Not just about the race, but everything teetering around it.
The sand rail track near the house buzzes with energy as the McLaren staff and team trickle in, excitement thrumming in the air. Someone brings a clipboard to track the bets. Within minutes, a frenzy of numbers and names clutters the surface. Playful taunts echo between the team members, each person rooting for either Lando or Oscar with a kind of fervor usually reserved for proper race days.
You slip your own bet into the mix quietly. You don't reveal it when one of the engineers presses you for an answer. You just shake your head and let them assume whatever they want. After all, it feels a little too intimate, too weighted, to share out loud.
When you make your way to the sidelines, Lando catches your eye. His grin is crooked, and he tosses you a flying kiss as he climbs into his sand rail buggy, helmet tucked under his arm. Oscar, a few meters away, adjusts his gloves with practiced ease, the sharp set of his jaw betraying his focus.
The start is as lawless as you would expect from the two of them.
Engines roar to life with a guttural snarl, tires kicking up dry sand as they lurch forward. Lando takes an aggressive line right off the bat, cutting tight against the first corner, his buggy tilting precariously before settling.
Oscar, ever the tactician, plays it smoother. He hangs back just enough to find a cleaner line, aiming for consistency instead of showmanship. His turns are precise, efficient, the kind of calculated risk that usually pays dividends on the track.
But LandoâLando races like the world might end tomorrow.Â
His buggy dances across the sand, skimming close to the edge of control. His reckless daring makes your stomach twist with nerves and awe in equal measure.
Lap after lap, they trade the lead in a blur of flying sand and roaring engines. The track isn't long, but itâs rough and unforgiving, peppered with bumps and hairpin turns.
On the final lap, itâs neck and neck. You can feel the tension in the crowd, everyone leaning forward unconsciously, breath held. Money is on the line, sure, but so is pride. And something else, something youâre not ready to admit.Â
Oscar has the inside line on the last major turn. Lando guns it anyway, swinging wide, almost off-trackâonly to slingshot past in the final straight with a burst of speed that has everyone screaming.
Lando crosses the makeshift finish line a second ahead of Oscar. He throws his arms up in victory even before the sand settles.Â
The cheers are deafening.
You clap along with everyone else, and your heart pounds for reasons that have nothing to do with the race itself.
Later, the house is alive with celebration.Â
The playlist is one of Landoâs favorites, and a cooler filled with drinks appears out of nowhere. Lando is hoisted onto someoneâs shoulders for a victory lap around the deck, soaking in the glory. Everyone is loud, laughing, riding the high of a race that felt more like a championship showdown than a friendly bout.
Oscar is nowhere to be seen.Â
You slip away from the noise, letting the sound of celebration blur into the background. The beach dock stretches out ahead, wooden planks weathered and warm beneath your feet. There, at the edge, Oscar sits with his feet dangling just above the water, his arms braced behind him as he stares out at the horizon.
You wordlessly sit beside him, close but not touching, letting the silence settle for a beat.
âI shouldâve had that,â Oscar mutters, his voice low and rough. He doesn't look at you. Heâs not usually the type to take unkindly to losses; heâs always the type to make some comment about wanting to finish one place higher whenever heâs P2, but he doesnât sulk. He doesnât wallow.Â
He does tonight. You donât know why.Â
âYou almost did,â you offer, and Oscar scoffs.Â
âAlmost doesnât count.â
You pull your legs up, crossing them underneath you. âItâs a bummer,â you concede. âEspecially now that Iâm fifteen dollars down âcause of you.âÂ
That earns a glance. His brows lift, eyes searching your face. âSeriously?â
You nod. âYou asked me to bet on you, didnât you?âÂ
Oscar huffs a laugh, but thereâs something soft behind it. His shoulder brushes yours when he shifts.
His gaze drops briefly to your mouth.
It plays out like a movie scene, like something youâd imagined time and time again as some sort of maladaptive daydream. Youâre frozen, focused on the way Oscar looks underneath the moonlight. How he shifts imperceptibly closer. How he leans in soundlessly, as if he might scare the moment otherwise.Â
Your eyes flutter close.Â
And thenâ
âCANNONBALL!â
Your eyes snap open just in time. Lando sails over both your heads in a blur of tanned limbs and unchecked chaos, crashing into the water with an explosive splash. Saltwater sprays over you and Oscar, dousing the moment in cold.
You yelp, shielding your face too late, and Oscar jerks back, blinking in disbelief.
Lando resurfaces with a triumphant whoop, grinning brightly. âDid I interrupt something?â he calls, treading water with the ease of someone completely unbothered.
Oscar wipes his face with a groan. âGo to hell, man.â
You canât help but laugh, even as your heart is still hammering in your chest.
The momentâs gone, but it lingers in the edges, in the way Oscarâs hand almost finds yours again on the dock, in the way you both glance toward the water and then back at each other, unsure of what comes next. Lando, dripping in seawater and drunk on his earlier victory, pulls everybody in for a swim.
You follow, hopeful it will help you forget.
It doesnât.
The beach house quiets into the low hum of waves and the distant buzz of the crickets outside. Most everyone is asleep or pretending to be. You toss and turn, too wired to drift off, your mind replaying the moment by the dock on a loop: Oscarâs closeness, the soft look in his eyes, the way he leaned in like gravity had decided for the both of you.Â
Until Lando, in all his chaotic timing, had crashed down from the sky like a rogue asteroid.
Eventually, you give up. You throw on a hoodieânot Oscarâs, not Landoâs, just your ownâand pad into the kitchen, the floorboards creaking under your steps. The fridge hums gently in the corner, and you pull out a glass, filling it with water from the tap.
You donât notice Lando until he speaks.
"Canât sleep either?"
Heâs leaning against the counter, shirtless, a half-eaten packet of biscuits in one hand. His hairâs a mess and thereâs a kind of easy, rare quiet around him.
You start, nearly dropping your glass. Squint at Lando through the darkness of the kitchen, you canât help but hiss, âWhy are you just standing there in the dark?â
âI like the dramatic effect.â
âWell, congrats. You scared me.â
He waves a biscuit like a peace offering. âWant one?â
You shake your head, and he shrugs before popping it in his mouth. Thereâs a moment of silence, the kind that teeters between awkward and intimate. Then Lando tilts his head at you, chewing slowly.
âCan you keep a secret?â
Your lips pull into a frown. âWhat kind of secret?â
He pushes off the counter and walks over. He doesnât comment when your eyes flick over to his toned abdomen or his bare shoulders; if anything, the way he leans against the island across you means he wants you to keep looking. âTwo secrets, actually,â he says conspiratorially.Â
You raise your eyebrows, intrigued. In the dark kitchen, you can make out the beginnings of Landoâs toothy smile. He knows he has you hook, line, sinker.Â
He holds up one finger. âFirst, I only just realized this summer that youââ He gestures vaguely in your direction, then clears his throat. âYouâre actually really pretty. Like, ridiculously. And I donât know if thatâs new or if Iâve just been blind.â
âOh, fuck off.âÂ
âIâm serious. Hey, look at me.â His eyes are surprisingly intense as he forces you to hold his gaze, willing it purely through sincerity alone. âYouâre attractive. Iâm not about to deny that fact just because you donât want to hear it.âÂ
Your mouth feels dry. Your palms feel clammy. You suddenly wish youâd just slept off your unease.
âSecond secret,â he continues, tone shifting. Thereâs something much more serious, now. Something consequential. âExcept you canât tell a soul. I mean it.âÂ
âNorris, I swearââÂ
âThereâs an email from another team,â Lando divulges, as casually as he might comment on the weather, âburning a hole in my phone.âÂ
There had been whispers, of course. In the paddock. In the McLaren garage. In the media room. Anywhere and everywhere Lando Norrisâ name existed.Â
Someone reported that it was Red Bull. A strategist ran numbers and alleged it was Mercedes.Â
But there had been no confirmation, no slip-up from the managers or team principals. Negotiations were made behind closed doors. Decisions trickled down after the fact, and rarely were people like you aware before the news was already meant to break.Â
Now, though, you find your stomach twisting as Lando stares at you through the darkness. He suddenly feels much like the sand outside this beach houseâslipping right through your fingers.Â
âAre you leaving?â you manage.Â
He looks at you for a long beat, assessing the question youâve decided to ask, then smiles faintly.
âDunno yet,â he says. âGuess Iâm waiting for something worth staying for.â
The air stills around you. For a moment, the two of you only look at each other, trapped in this summertime snow globe of indecision. The only sounds are the gentle clink of the glass as you set it downâthe weight of it suddenly too heavy for your quivering fingersâand the ocean beyond the walls. The one that has seen you through four years of summers with Lando and Oscar.Â
âWhat does that mean?â you exhale, even though you already have some idea.Â
Lando grins, but it doesnât quite reach his eyes. âYouâre smart,â he says. Not in a taunt, but in a matter-of-fact way. âYouâll figure it out.â
He bites into another biscuit, winks, and walks out of the kitchen, leaving you standing there with the worldâs most damning secret.Â
Youâre in your head for most of the next day.
Landoâs words keep circling back, like a tide you can't fight: Something worth staying for. You wish heâd said it with a little less charm, a little less Lando. But he hadnât. Heâd said it with that easy smile, the one that hides how serious he might be underneath. The one that makes it impossible to tell whether he means any of it or all of it.Â
So now youâre stuck with it. The way he looked at you in the dim kitchen light. The way he popped another biscuit into his mouth like he hadnât just handed you a loaded gun and walked off, not even watching his back to see if youâd shoot him.
Everything feels sideways. Every time you pass him in the hallway, your pulse does something stupid. Every laugh over breakfast, every casual brush of his arm against yours. Itâs like something has shifted. Something that makes your skin buzz.
And Oscar feels it.
You know he does because heâs been trying to catch you alone all day. In the kitchen, during meals, on the walk down to the beach. But you keep dodging, not even consciously. Youâre just not ready to talk about what almost happened. Not while the words worth staying for keep ringing in your ears.
By the time the sun dips low and the smell of dinner wafts through the beach house, Oscar gives up. He stops chasing, stops looking for the right moment.
But he doesnât stop looking at you.
He sits across the room that night, slouched into the cushions, nursing a drink he hasnât touched in half an hour. Thereâs something quiet in his posture, something that reads like retreat. His gaze is soft when it finds yours.
No longer searching, just lingering. Like heâs memorizing you before something ends.
And you? Youâre still stuck, still wondering what Lando saw in you last night that made him say it. Itâs driving you crazy, and you refuse to let it give you any more grief beyond the time youâve already dwelled on it.Â
The tide whispers in and out as you jog along the wet sand, trailing the shape of Landoâs footprints.
You see him before he sees you. His silhouette cutting through the misted sun, hoodie sleeves pushed up to his elbows, curls damp with sweat. Heâs always moved like this, light on his feet, like running is more instinct than effort.
âLando,â you call out, voice too loud in the quiet.
He slows. âMorning,â he greets, brows arching as you fall in beside him, breathless and determined. Itâs the second to the last day of the week-long retreat. A little over 24 hours since Lando entrusted you with the two halves of his heart.Â
You donât stutter. âI canât be the reason you stay.â
That stops him. Full stop, mid-stride. His breath clouds between you. âWhoa. Youâve been stewing on that all this time?âÂ
âI donât want that on me,â you insist. âIf you stay, it has to be for the team. For you. For OscâPiastri.â
Lando blinks. Then, his face breaks out into a knowing grin, curling around your sincerity. Not to snuff it out, but more to let it take hold.Â
âYou really thought I was serious?â he says, half-laughing. âI was mostly joking. Kind of.â
You cross your arms. Lando is deflecting, trying to make it seem less than it really is, but youâre not about to call him out.Â
He runs a hand through his curls, then looks at youâreally looks. The same way Oscar had last night, as if heâs trying to figure out which parts of you he can beg and barter for.Â
âI donât think Iâm done here,â he admits, decides. âI think I can still get a couple more championships with McLaren.âÂ
A relieved sigh escapes you. âOkay, thatâsââÂ
âAnd as for my other secret,â he interrupts, his hands planting on his hips. His tone is lighter, but his words are not any less cutting. âThereâs always gonna be something between you and Osc, huh?âÂ
You freeze.Â
Youâd almost forgotten that. The âsecretâ of Lando realizing youâre attractive, of him seeing you some other way than what youâre accustomed to. You try to stutter out some bullshit excuse, only to realize you had two hoodies to choose from today, and the one youâre wearing is not Landoâs.Â
His words land heavier than his tone suggests, but he doesnât linger. Instead, he flashes a grin and steps back, putting space between you. Just enough to see if youâll pull him back in.
You donât.
âGo ahead. Have your fun with him,â Lando says. Easy, breezy. âBut when I get that WDC, Iâm coming back to collect.â
Heâs gone before you can respond, before you can discern if his words are a threat or a promise. Sand kicks up behind him as he disappears into the dawn. McLarenâs golden boy, setting course for the sun.Â
That night, the energy is heavy and sparklingâlike the last few drops of something good that's about to run out.
The group piles into the living room, a mess of sunburnt faces and half-drunk laughter. Everyone is tangled up in cushions and throw blankets. An empty bottle of vodka spins over the floor, clinking against the hardwood as it points and wobbles. The rules are easy: truth or dare, no take backs, no running away.
Youâre trying not to stare at Oscar.
Youâve spent the better part of the day trying to catch him alone. Every time you moved toward him, he moved away, so you gave up after a while. You couldnât blame him. You hadnât exactly made yourself easy to reach lately, and he had his pride.
The bottle spins again. Spins and spins.
Eventually, it teeters to a stop and points squarely at Oscar.
A whoop goes up from the group. Someone slurs, âTruth or dare, Piastri!â
âTruth,â he answers, tongue already heavy and words just a bit slurred.Â
Someone from accounting leans forward, grinning wickedly. âHave you ever had a crush on someone from McLaren?â
Itâs the sort of drunk, easy question everyone expects to be laughed off. Everyone expects some half-hearted dodge, some teasing deflection.
But Oscar doesnât even blink.
âYeah,â he says simply, his eyes steady.
Laughter ripples through the room. Someone shouts, âWho?!â
And then.Â
And then.Â
Oscarâs gaze finds you across the crowd, unwavering. The whole room feels like it tilts sideways.Â
You forget how to breathe.
He says your name. Youâre tipsy, but youâre fairly sure of it. Your name has always sounded different when Oscar said it.Â
The room goes still for a moment before exploding into hoots and teasing cheers. âMate,â Lando crows at his side, half-drunk and loud, âyouâve noticed the glow-up too, huh? Sheâs different this summer, right?â
Oscar frowns, almost like he doesnât understand the joke. You feel every molecule of air between you stretch thin.
His next words are an absentminded mumble, almost lost to the clamor of activity in the circle.Â
âItâs not just this summer,â he says to no one in particular.Â
You donât know what to do with your hands. With your heart. With the way Oscar is looking at you like you hung the stars.Â
Has he always looked at you like this?Â
Youâre not sure who moves first. The bottle spins again. More shots get passed around. This is the part of the summer youâd been waiting for.Â
Knowing something has shifted. Knowing nothing is ever going to feel quite the same again.
Oscar groans the moment he sits down at breakfast, squinting at his plate like itâs personally offended him. You offer him an Aspirin and a sympathetic grin.Â
âRough night?âÂ
He scowls half-heartedly as he rubs at his temples. âWho even brought out the tequila?â
âThat would be you,â you inform him brightly, plucking a piece of toast from his plate.
You fall into a companionable silence as the rest of the team trickles in, blurry-eyed and sun-kissed from too much fun. Packing starts soon. The last full day hangs heavy, sweet with goodbyes not yet said.
Later, as you help Oscar load his things into the boot of his car, the air between you shifts. Enough to make you slow down. You fold up a beach towel, glancing at him from the corner of your eye.
Youâre both dragging your feet through the sand, both trying to extend this moment before youâre thrown back into the whirlwind of race weekends and media obligations.Â
âHey, uh,â he starts tentatively, âabout last night. The game. I didnât mean to be disrespectful.â
You blink, confused. âDisrespectful?âÂ
âYeah.â He tongues the inside of his cheek, looking younger than youâve ever seen him. âYou know, since you and Lando areâyou know.âÂ
No, you donât know. Youâre not sure where the wrong impression mightâve landed, but you figure itâs somewhere between the day you spent ignoring Oscar and your lackluster reaction to his drunken admission.Â
âWeâre not,â you say, your words tripping over each other in their haste. âLando and Iâweâre not.âÂ
Oscar lifts a brow. âReally?âÂ
âReally,â you confirm, heart stammering now. You look down at your feet, breathe in the oceanside one last time, and you make a choice.
âI, um. Iâve liked you for a while, actually,â you manage. âI just didnât think you felt the same. And I donât expect anything now, I meanâpeople say things when theyâre drunk, andââÂ
Oscar Piastri wants it on record: gravity has nothing to do with him kissing you. The choice is all his. His desperation, his yearning, his urge to quiet the doubts that threaten to bubble out of you.Â
Itâs a quick thing. Over before you can properly respond. His cheeks are red as he pulls back; it has nothing to do with the sun.Â
Thereâs something serious in his gaze. Something soft. âI was drunk, but that doesnât mean I didnât mean it,â he says, eyes still fixed on your lips. âIâve thought you were beautiful since the day I met you at MTC.âÂ
You open your mouth, but all that escapes is a quiet, stunned breath.
âAnd, fuck, okay,â he exhales nervously, âI think I want more than just summers with you.âÂ
You donât overthink it. You lean in, hands curling into the front of his shirt. âOkay,â you whisper, and then youâre pulling him in to kiss him again, for longer, for more.
This time, he doesnât pull away.
The house is half-empty by the time you're saying your see you laters, the air thick with that bittersweet ache that always clings to the end of something golden. People are hugging, snapping last-minute selfies, pretending theyâre not already thinking about inboxes and deadlines.Â
Youâre not pretending. Not today.
Youâre watching Oscar load the last of the bags into his car, quiet and sure, the way he always moves when he thinks no oneâs paying attention. Thereâs something unmistakable in the way he glances at you, like this week didnât just change the rhythm of your summer but the shape of something much bigger.
You think about the other summers, the ones you thought were just fun and fleeting. You remember tequila shots Oscar took so you didnât have to, the quiet way he always offered you the window seat on the flight home.Â
That first summer, when he set down his hoodie on the sand so you wouldnât have to sit on it, and youâd laughed and called him a grandma.Â
You hadnât seen it then. Or maybe you had, but you were too afraid to believe it.
Lando swings by with a backpack slung over his shoulder, squinting at the two of you with that trademark mischief. His eyes flick from you to Oscar, back again. He doesnât say anything; he doesnât have to. Just smirks knowingly and claps Oscar on the shoulder.
You grin, wide and wordless, and toss Lando a little wave as he heads for his own ride. Thank you, it says. For not making it weird. For always knowing.
Lando waves back at you. Itâs strategic, too. His phone is in his hand, the screen angled towards you. You catch the glimpse of his Mail app being open. How thereâs nothing unread in it, how he makes his own choice at the same time that you do.Â
Your attention is drawn back to Oscar when he clears his throat. âYou, uh, still need a ride?â he asks with feigned calmness.Â
You lift a brow, biting back a giddy grin. âYouâre going the complete opposite direction.â
âRoads are roads,â he says, like itâs that simple.
And, somehow, it is.
You slide into the passenger seat, folding your legs up as Oscar starts the engine. The breeze curls in through the open windows. It smells like salt, and sun, and something you never want to forget.
The road curves away from the coast, and still, summer clings to your skin, sinking into your bones. For the first time in a long time, you donât dread whatâs on the other side of it.
Oscar glances at you as you stick one hand out the window, letting the breeze slip between your fingers. You hadnât noticed it then, but you do now. How he looks at you, how he saves smiles for you.Â
How roads are roads, and all of yours have led to him. â
I drew the grid!!!!
Blank template here by the amazing @crudeoildistillation
(help)
no wondering why daniel had to deny over and over that they were not in a relationship
blaming RBR marketing department
#81


