welcome aboard!
☆ get to know me ☆
star (she/her), 21+
i'm new to tumblr, solely here to share my creations. also new to publishing my fics out. i still have a lot to learn.
let's create a safe space for us all ♡
☆ masterlist ☆
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taylor price
NASA
Peter Solarz
Misplaced Lens Cap
Sade Olutola
Today's Document
Monterey Bay Aquarium
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
No title available
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year

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Stranger Things
Sweet Seals For You, Always
Game of Thrones Daily
trying on a metaphor
todays bird
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"

@theartofmadeline
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
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@lettersfromstar
welcome aboard!
☆ get to know me ☆
star (she/her), 21+
i'm new to tumblr, solely here to share my creations. also new to publishing my fics out. i still have a lot to learn.
let's create a safe space for us all ♡
☆ masterlist ☆
☆ writing style ☆
✶ 0 AI
✶ minimal proofread (you might see some word swap over time, but it won't affect the main storyline)
✶ english is not my first language
✶ i will research as much as i can before writing, but please don't hesitate to reach out if i wrote something far wrong
✶ still have to figure out how to tag my fics
✶ upload mostly on the weekend!
☆ request ☆
not open yet. i'm currently focusing on finishing my projects and gaining confidence in my writings first.
☆ i will write ☆
✶ mostly reader x f1/f2/fe drivers fics
✶ gladly improve upon constructive input
✶ mostly fluff/angst but i'd like to learn the rest
✶ engage with any drama
☆ i will not ... ☆
✶ engage with hate speech and things that are worser than that
i hope you enjoy your time here!
xoxo,
star.
sorry for being inactive but happy 100 followers! (now it's 102) 🥺. thank you for your support through every likes, comments, reblogs, and follows! it really motivates me to keep going. i did not think i could reach the achievement just in 1 month after starting this blog. thank you, thank you, thank you 🩷.
i have 1 requested fic and my oscar series coming up this weekend. for this achievement, i will try to take 1-2 requests from you guys. feel free to tell me which driver and/or trope/prompt you would love to see from me 🫶.
xoxo,
star.
Fall, Fall
pairing: oscar piastri x reader
blurb: three times you try to convince yourself you don't have a crush on oscar piastri, four times you proved wrong.
contains: fluff, high school romance, british f4 oscar, idk what else to add please suggest!
word count: 2.5k
© 2026 sonarfinder
Oscar Piastri is surprisingly composed for a 15-year-old boy.
That makes him stand out from his chaotic peers besides his tall figure, Aussie accent, and extraordinary physics score. You find that those things will make him a great camaraderie to endure three years of boarding high school. His cute face is a bonus, since you won't admit that out loud.
He appears to find you're a good friend too since the first chemistry project in Year 10.
Both of you sat next to each other accidentally that day. You're running late because Mrs. Anderson extended her history class, which left a 5-minute gap, and that resulted in the only vacant seat in chemistry class being right next to Oscar Piastri. He still catches his breath as you sit, you presume he runs from his previous class too.
His eyes widened when he heard a rustle beside him. He didn't expect someone—especially a girl— to sit next to him. Oscar made a pact with Logan Sargeant to be his teammate in chemistry last night, but he didn't have the heart to push you away. It's okay, he will convey his apology to Logan later. Oscar looks around and finds his friend sitting three tables away. Logan was deep in conversation with a girl in a twintail beside him. He lifts his head and thumbs up when he sees Oscar.
Whatever that means.
Boarding school is the smallest form of society. Everyone knows a fact or two about each other even if they never talked. It was three weeks since you first saw him and you already know Oscar does kart races. He probably heard you're a mathlete somewhere. But you two never talked, didn't have any friends in common either. That usually makes introductions a little bit awkward. You were glad Oscar extended his hand first.
"Hi, I'm Oscar Piastri."
"Oh—I'm Y/N." You pressed your palm against his and shook his hand.
The corners of his lips lift. "Are mathletes good at chemistry too?"
That earned a chuckle from you. "We do try. The result depends."
One more fact about Oscar Piastri you learned that day is that your first impression remained correct; he will be a great camaraderie to endure three years of boarding high school. He rarely talks, but is a good teammate to form a chemistry experiment report. You're already grateful for that.
"You finally talked to a boy! See? Not all of them are annoying." Your roommate clapped her hands. She waited her whole life for this moment.
You shrugged your shoulders. "It's Oscar Piastri. He rarely talks and stays calm. Of course, I won't be annoyed by his presence."
"Maybe nerd boy is your type?"
You don't know why, but that makes your cheeks burn. This is exactly the time when people in your batch start dating. Everyone makes a fuss and tells stories about how good it is. Crush, boyfriend, hug, kiss, date ... Everyone talked about it. Every girl has their crush. You never thought of Oscar Piastri that way, but your roommate's words get into your head. Oscar Piastri is the only boy who doesn't annoy you. Is that counted as type?
"No—no. He's not!" You shook your head wildly. "We're just... friends. We just talked today, Grace!"
Your roommate, Grace, poked your cheeks. "And my socks are neon green. Admit it, you like him. You're as red as a tomato!"
This is ridiculous. You're used to think in a logical way. Mathematically. Everything has a reason. To like someone on the first day of talking? Doesn't make sense. But why can't your cheeks comprehend and embarrassingly blush every time Grace mentions Oscar's name?
Days after that, you tried to prove Grace wrong. You don't have a crush on Oscar Piastri.
Starting from staring at his face while doing chemistry and didn't feel anything.
Which, if you think again, was a bad idea.
Oscar scratches the back of his neck when he feels your eyes on him. "Is there something on my face?"
"Oh." See? Your cheeks blushed again. "No—nothing—I was just—just trying to find the formula."
"On my face?"
He turns his head to face you. Wow. You never see him this close. He smells like chocolate and citrus. You just realized he has gorgeous brown eyes under those eyebrows, moles scattered across his face, a fine nose, and lips ... his lips smiling wide, as if they almost burst into a laugh.
You cough, try to neutralize your tone. "What can I say? Inspirational."
He chuckled, the noise ringing in your ears. "I'm flattered. Did I remind you of John Dalton? Marie Curie?"
"Oh—stop it!" You turn away, about to stand up, finding some fresh air outside. His hand catches your wrist fast. His thumb brushes your pulse. The warmth from his palm spreads on your arm. He's the first boy to hold your wrist. It feels weird. Weirdly good. His hand is warm and soft.
"Stay, would you? We're almost done. It's okay, stare at my face if that helps you."
You pursed your lips as you found his cheeks turned red too.
Turns out it's hard to stare at Oscar Piastri's face and not feel anything.
"Proving You Don't Have a Crush on Oscar Piastri" Project Part 1: Failed.
That fuels you further to prove you don't have a crush on Oscar Piastri. He's a good lad. That's why he's nice to you. Probably nice to everyone. You can't fall for him just because he's nice and smells good and cute and funny and ... the list goes on.
You think harder. It's almost Year 11 now, you need to study for GCSE and you can't do that if this still bothers your mind. Do you have any other way? Something with more impact? Such as ... watching him do crickets with a flat face? Yes. That could work. You can bring Grace along too. She would stop teasing you after this.
"You will see for yourself, Grace. I don't have a crush on him." You walk with confidence.
Grace squiggles her eyebrows. "Are you sure? Boys in cricket outfits are equivalent to boys in basketball outfits. Sporty. If he does karting, he's also fit, doesn't he?"
Your step falters. You never considered that part. All you thought was that you didn't understand cricket, so you would just focus on the game rules or score rather than the players—
Okay, you can see why this is the worst idea to prove you didn't have any feelings for Oscar Piastri.
The Aussie boy stands distinctively tall, proper, and fit among his friends in all-white cricket attire. His brown hair follows the breeze, leaving it slightly messy when the wind stills. His cheeks are pink under the sun. Oh, you just realized your school has a custom-made emblem attached to the sweater on the stomach. Nice strips. The cable knit is high quality, and it spreads nicely on his shoulder. It has a white shirt underneath too, see the collar? Oh, Oscar has moles on his collarbone.
"Do you realize you're basically ogling at him?" Grace is laughing beside you.
"I—I'm not!" You cough, turning your head away. "I pay attention to the uniform details."
"Everyone wears the same uniform, why only focus on a certain Aussie karting boy?"
You can't answer her.
"Proving You Don't Have a Crush on Oscar Piastri" Project Part 2: Failed.
Oscar Piastri didn't have a particular friend group. His weekend is busy with racing, after all. He's close with Logan, both of them do racing, but that boy is madly in love with Beatrice, the twintail girl from chemistry class. So he is usually seen alone, sometimes with trophies or a folded racing suit on his arms. On top of that, he is still a good pupil. Oscar often asked you about things he needed to catch up on. You started hanging out with him at the study lounge, with or without chemistry paperwork. He stays long after the team report is submitted, focusing on his other work. You didn't mind since he stayed silent, the only sound coming out was from his keyboard.
Then comes another Tuesday when you don't have any chemistry work to do with him, he just slips beside you. Oscar opens his laptop and does his things.
You didn't lose your hope. There must be another way to prove that you don't have a crush on Oscar Piastri. Perhaps you can ask him to explain the infamous Einstein's theory of relativity? Ask for his help with physics? That's neutral. That will add useful information to your brain and maybe by then you can see he's just a boy.
You cleared your throat as you pushed a piece of physics question towards him. "Can you help me? I'm struggling with the 5th question."
"Well, let's see your answer sheet." His hand reaches the paper on your hand, accidentally brushes.
It's supposed to mean nothing. Just hand brushes. Totally civil.
But every inch of your skin that is briefly in contact with him leaves a weird tingle.
Weird. And warm. And you feel like you're about to lose your mind.
Oscar looked at your answer sheet. He circles a number with the back of his pen. "You did every step right, but converted this wrong. It should be in joules..."
His voice does something weird to you. It is low and calm, whispering in the usually quiet study lounge. Your stomach churned, the sensation is close to when you're anxious. He leans toward your ear as he continues to explain, but you couldn't care less. Not when he's this close.
"Is that clear?"
You blink your eyes, retreat to create a distance. "Yeah," you whisper. "Thank you."
Your palm pressed to your stomach. Your fingers cradle, squeezing the skin as if that would help to get rid of the butterflies. Spoiler alert: it doesn't. You move uncomfortably on the sofa. That catches Oscar's eye. He observed the way you move away, awkwardly switching your legs, facing forward and sideways. The Aussie guy leans to whisper again, but you fall back until your spine hits the side of the sofa. He cornered, his body hovering above you.
"May I?"
Is this it? Your first kiss?
Your head moves to make the smallest nod.
Your mouth falls open when he drapes his grey jacket over your thighs and lifts your calves to stretch over his thighs. His palm is warm on your ankle, his thumb pressed slightly to massage.
"My sisters do that too when they walk or sit for a long time," Oscar says in a clinical tone. Like it's normal. "I hope this helps."
Yes. Very helpful, Oscar.
Very, very, helpful.
Now you realize not only he's attractive, he's also very nice too.
"Proving You Don't Have a Crush on Oscar Piastri" Project Part 3: Failed (Miserably!).
You finally admit it.
You have a crush on Oscar Piastri.
A little bit. Not that much. Tiny. Tiny crush.
A tiny crush on your friend won't hurt, right?
"Hey, so how does this equation work?" He nudged your arm.
You look at the brighter side. Studying with your crush is motivating. You help each other a lot. Your grade is increasing significantly and he never missed any schoolwork now.
You explained the equation to him. His eyes followed your neat handwriting, nodding along.
"Great. Thanks." He scrabbles on his answer sheet.
Oscar stopped his hand. "Anyway," he lifted his head. "I can't do chem this weekend. I started British Formula 4."
You have no idea what it is or how it works, but you assume it's racing too. You will look that up after this. A smile rises to your face. "It's okay. We can do it on Thursday or Monday. Congratulations, by the way."
A shade of pink crept up his cheeks. "I—I just started."
"Still, congratulations." You nod. "You worked hard for this. Good luck with your race."
You don't have any idea how Formula 4 works. You rarely watch F1 anyway. Yet here you are, skimming information about it. Cross upon his karting blog. Looking for livestreams on YouTube. Body buried under the blanket, you watch the boy in red 81 car, trying to understand. You smiled when you saw Oscar step onto the podium two times that weekend.
It's almost midnight when you tiptoe to the pantry, in a need of emergency hot chocolate. You let the room dark so the security guards won't find you. The buzzing dispenser and soft rattled spoon knocked against a mug is your company. Your heart leaped out of your mouth as you heard the pantry door click.
"Hey."
You can recognize that voice everywhere. That's Oscar.
"Why are you here? Can't sleep?" He continues, the rustling sound from a drink packet fills the room.
Your fingers clutched to the mug. "Yeah, kinda. You just came back from the race?"
"A few hours ago. I need to finish an English essay for Monday."
The coffee smell goes straight to your nose. You put your mug in the sink.
"C—Congratulations, by the way. You step onto the podium." You were hesitating if you worded that wrong.
"You watch me?" His eyes glimmer in the dark.
"There's this livestream—" Your words cut off when you feel his hand reach your waist, pulling you close. His figure swallows your tiny body. Warm. He's so warm and comfortable. Oscar's thumb rubs your back, his other palm pushes your waist closer. Your whole body buzzes, helplessly clinging to his arms. You're afraid he can feel how hard your heart beats.
Oscar Piastri is the first boy outside of the family to hug you. Now you understand why those girls make a big deal out of this crush thing. It's... Great. Comfortable. You wish to keep his hug at all times.
"Thank you." His breathy voice whispers.
"You—You're welcome."
Fine, you finally admit you're in love with Oscar Piastri.
⋆。𖦹 ˚ 𓇼 ˚。⋆
A/N: Thank you for reading my first ever F1 fics in this blog! I actually have a plan to write the sequel. Does anyone want to be tagged?
would you ever write for other drivers?
luv ur work btw xx
thank youu, that's very sweet of you! <3
and the answer is yesss i would! i have few names in mind, actually. do you wish to see any specific driver for me to write? let me know, i might have something brew for them :p
First Strike — OP81
Pairing: Oscar Piastri x Fem!Reader
Length: 1k
Snippet: This is bizarre. But then again, which part of you and Oscar ever make sense? None.
Part 7 of 'Let It Left' series
You didn't say straight yes.
But a smile still appears on Oscar's face when you say, "we can try."
That's enough. That's one big step to start.
⊹₊⟡⋆
However, changes, big or small, would always feel strange at first.
You almost run away from the pantry the moment you see Oscar there.
Making coffee in the morning like every other normal person around the world.
Then you remembered you talked with him in Miami. Two days have passed since then.
His face lights up when he sees you. "Morning."
"Morning." You approached the coffee machine.
Both of you stand in silence. You decided to watch the coffee drips. It was always like this with him. Silence. The familiar feeling slowly seeps into your body, recognizing something that used to be what you love.
"Oscar." You call him.
"Hmm?"
"Can you move? The coffee has stopped dripping already."
His eyes leave your face, turning his vision forward. A pink flush appears on his cheek. "Oh—oh, yeah. Sorry, I didn't realize that."
He grabs his cup and stops at the entryway before walking somewhere. "Have a goo—good day." He stutters.
You chuckle after he leaves, but rethink that scene again.
It's getting real. Are you ready for this?
⊹₊⟡⋆
You used to believe breaks between races meant the staff got to rest.
NO. WRONG. VERY WRONG.
Everyone keeps working hard during the long break between Suzuka and Miami. Drivers with their simulators, staff with their thing. Well, the drivers might be having one or two days off, but you're too busy to notice that. A month fleets so fast, there's always something to work on every day.
Then there's a shorter break between Miami and Canada. You never thought the workload would be crazier than it already is. Expectations are also raised because McLaren got a double podium last time.
The target is now to make it P1.
You don't know how many brainstorming sessions are left until your head explodes. McLaren wants to bring a lot of upgrades in Canada. Samuel said there would be a workshop with the other side of the garage too tomorrow.
God help you. You're just an overcaffeinated intern with too many ideas in your head.
The workshop part is real. It's happening. McLaren got a hall big enough for 50 engineers to sit down and discuss. You're about to squeeze your brain to its maximum potential 5 hours before lunch.
What a horror experience.
It's almost 11.00 a.m. when Lando and Oscar enter the room. You didn't care anymore. All you thought was how to optimize the aerodynamics, compressions, battery mechanisms, ... did you mention aerodynamics already? Yeah. Aerodynamics.
"Hey, guys!" Lando approaches your group with Oscar, joining to sit between the staff.
You're halfway scrabbling the moment Oscar takes a space beside you, muttering "Uhh... You don't feel cold in this corner?"
You lift your head to meet his gaze. The hoodie is warm enough on your body, but your legs are freezing as well. That's because you sit under the AC, the only space left and you are actually grateful because you can always bump your head to the wall every 30 minutes. "I'm fine. I wear a thick hoodie."
Oscar didn't answer. He takes off his hoodie and lets it sit between you and him.
"You hate it when your legs are cold."
Sure. Of course he still remembers that. Sure, he remembers the times he draped his hoodie over your legs.
You're about to push the hoodie back to him, but he already walks away to another group.
His hoodie, papaya hoodie, is warm with the heat left from his body, smelled of cinnamon mixed with musky scent this time. You let it drape over your legs while finishing a front wing sketch. Familiar. You do this a hundred times before.
Everyone takes a big exhale as the workshop ends. The development team notes each idea from every group. You stretch your body before receiving a lunch box, silently eat, and exit the hall when you're done.
Oscar stands in front of the hall entrance. You put forth his hoodie whispering, "thank you."
His hand stopped mid-air.
"Is it too obvious if I don't want to take it so I can meet you again?"
Fine. A very normal sentence from a friend on a Wednesday afternoon.
"You're ridiculous. I will work here tomorrow too." You shove it to his chest, making sure he takes his hoodie.
"Then I'll see you tomorrow." Oscar left with a grin, holding his arms up.
You blink your eyes, look at his hoodie on your hand, and decide to put it in your drawer.
⊹₊⟡⋆
You never knew that was the beginning of a hoodie saga.
Oscar Piastri will stand in front of your workspace first thing in the morning to swap yesterday's hoodie on your hand to the hoodie he is wearing right now, soft and warm and always with his cinnamon musky scent.
That's it. That's your interaction of the day these 9 days. Then almost nothing for the rest of the day. He will hop onto the sim, media duties, sponsorship events, or every other possible thing he has to do and come back the next morning. You will get back to work and drape his hoodie on your legs if they feel cold.
You tried really hard so he didn't give you another hoodie anymore, but he insists that you need it or just lay it on your shoulder and walk away.
“Please, take this as my peace offering.” He said with those eyes. Those puppy eyes you can never resist.
This is bizarre. But then again, which part of you and Oscar ever make sense? None.
You must admit it is effective. Whatever this is he's trying to do. He planted a sense of familiarity in you. You stopped trembling around him. You breathe easier, your shoulders relaxed, sometimes capable of cracking a conversation.
You find yourself staring at the door, gripping his black hoodie. Still warm from his body heat. He will catch a flight to Canada today, so he won't be able to do a hoodie exchange for 4 days … or more.
You let yourself, for this once, sniff on his hoodie longer. Draping it along your shoulders.
And maybe, just maybe, bring it home.
Just for tonight.
Or for a weekend.
-
A/N: let us have a fluffy moment first 🥹
taglist: @beabadoobee81 @oscgr @clarenciago @kindersupremacy @theonefanatic13 @airenicbibliophile @eloisevlstuff @heartsformarie @hannahbananababybanana @aka99ob @witherstrum @starriss @lily-ann22 @pharmasennapuff @lalaland43 @pitchplease95 @katlyric @sanguineassassinblizzard @houseoftwistedspirits @lydia-demarek @elegancefr @honeyedshark
⋆˚ GIRL NEXT DOOR ⋆˚࿔
pairing: oscar piastri x fem!reader
after your estranged grandmother leaves you her apartment in monaco, you’re ready for a fresh start. too bad the man next door seems determined to make your life a living hell.
﹙ ⓘ ﹚ warnings: non f1!au ( oscar is an engineer ), angst, slow burn romance, elements of humor. grumpy x sunshine / opposites attract, emotionally unavailable love interest that disguises pining as irritation. 8.0k words
✶ author’s note 𑣲 oh my gawddd i luv you all so much !!! the feedback i've gotten from f1blr after posting my first fic ( linked here ) is the sweetest thing everrrr ... you're all so kind i genuinely want to cry just thinking about it !!!! i don't have enough words to express my gratitude as a beginning ff writer ... anyways , this is my next offer , i was inspired to write this story because my neighbors are always soooo loud , and i sure wish that one of them was a socially awkward but handsome man that was in luv with me ( unfortunately , they are not , ugh ) . anyways , i hope you like it , the grumpy x sunshine trope is one of my faves to read about : )
THE FIRST THING YOU LEARNED ABOUT MONACO WAS THAT THE WALLS WERE THIN ENOUGH TO HEAR YOUR NEIGHBOR SWEARING AT HIS ESPRESSO MACHINE AT SIX-THIRTY EVERY MORNING.
Not loudly, either. That was the unsettling part.
Most people yelled when they were angry, but not your neighbor. He sounded calmly, professionally furious, like a man filing a formal complaint against God himself.
“You useless piece of —”
A metallic clank. After a moment, very distinctly: “I swear to Christ.”
You stared up at the wood tiled ceiling of your grandmother’s apartment, still tangled in unfamiliar sheets, sunlight spilling through the gauzy curtains in watery gold. For one peaceful second after waking up, you forgot where you were.
And then it punched you in the gut. You were in Monaco, following the surprise inheritance…and the funeral. You still couldn’t believe the fact that you’d uprooted your entire life — or whatever meager semblance of a life you had — on what could generously be described as an emotional breakdown and a legally binding whim.
Then the espresso machine hissed again, like a snake waiting to strike.
“Oh, come on.”
You blinked slowly. Your neighbor’s accent was distinctly Australian, so unlike the prim and prudish French accents that were common in Monaco.
That difference, somehow, made it worse.
Rolling onto your back, you checked your phone. 6:34 A.M. Why the fuck was your neighbor cursing at his coffee machine at such an ungodly hour of the day?
You considered several possibilities.
One: your neighbor was the victim of a murderous kitchen appliance.
Two: he was deeply unstable.
Three: Monaco apartment walls were apparently constructed from decorative tissue paper.
The machine gave one final tortured sputter before a cupboard slammed hard enough to rattle a framed painting in your bedroom.
You bolted upright, heart pounding. “Jesus,” you muttered.
On the other side of the wall, the man sighed. Not a normal sigh, either. A long-suffering, exhausted sound. The sigh of someone moments away from throwing a very expensive appliance directly into the Mediterranean.
Against your better judgment, you laughed at the thought. Immediately there was silence, and you froze.
The silence somehow felt… pointed. Like he’d heard you. Which was very possible, considering you could hear every phonon of movement that he made.
Then came three sharp knocks against the shared wall. You stared at the blank space, contemplating what to do — either respond and interact with your Negative Nancy of a neighbor at an hour where half the population was fast asleep, or just go to bed yourself and pray he didn’t send that espresso machine flying through the wall. Before you could choose, though, another three knocks were rapped. Your eyebrows lifted slowly in pure astonishment. “No way.”
Three more knocks in quick succession.
You climbed out of bed, still wearing oversized sleep shorts and one of your oldest university hoodies that definitely had a hole in the armpit, and crossed the apartment barefoot. The hardwood floor was cold beneath your feet as you pressed your palm lightly against the wall.
“…Hello?”
Nothing for just a second.
“Your laugh is loud.”
You gasped. Actually gasped. “Oh my God,” you whispered to yourself, horrified.
The voice came again, muffled through plaster. Dry. Flat. Annoyingly attractive. “And your footsteps.”
You narrowed your eyes at the wall. “You’re the one verbally abusing an espresso machine before sunrise.”
“It’s not my fault.” He said it as easily as though he were stating the freezing point of water.
You stared for a beat longer before a disbelieving laugh escaped you again.
Instantly, your neighbor shot back: “See? That.”
“Oh, you cannot possibly be serious.”
“You’ll find,” the voice replied coolly, “that I usually am.”
The audacity. The sheer, unbearable audacity of this man. Whoever he was, he had a massive ego and a chip on his shoulder, and you wouldn’t stoop so low as to engage in these petty squabbles.
You looked around your grandmother’s apartment as though searching for hidden cameras. Yesterday, you’d landed in Monaco carrying two suitcases, grief wrapped tight around your ribs, expecting reinvention and glamour and maybe a little healing by the sea.
Instead, you’d inherited a passive-aggressive wall enemy before unpacking your shampoo.
“Incredible,” you muttered. No response. You waited another second before asking, “…Did your coffee at least work?”
Begrudgingly, your neighbor answered, “No.”
You bit your lip to stop smiling. Which was unfortunate, really.
Because you had the distinct feeling your neighbor would hate that.
A month prior, you’d been standing in uncomfortable black stiletto heels beside a coffin wondering whether grief was supposed to feel more dramatic than this.
Rain tapped softly against the church windows. Someone in the second row was crying. Your aunt was pretending to dab away tears.
And you? Well. You mostly felt tired. You hadn’t seen your grandmother in almost four years.
That was the part nobody said out loud. Not during the service, at least.
Instead, people spoke about her elegance, her intelligence, her impossible standards. They talked about the way she carried herself through rooms like royalty and the way she never repeated an outfit twice in the seventies and how she once insulted a French ambassador so severely he refused to attend dinner parties she hosted afterward.
You believed every word of it.
Your grandmother had been difficult in the way expensive perfumes were difficult: sharp, overpowering, impossible to ignore. Loving her had always felt like the equivalent of losing an argument.
“You should stand straighter,” she used to tell you as a child, gently tapping your spine with two fingers.
“You should call more,” she’d say later, over increasingly strained phone calls, where long stretches of silence became more and more frequent. “You should want more from your life than this.”
This, apparently, meant everything. Your studio apartment in New York City. Your degree in art history. Your relationships, of which you had none. Your job as an intern at the Met.
You never seemed to reach the moving target of her approval, and eventually, you stopped trying to.
So one missed Christmas became two, a birthday phone call never went through.
And now she was dead.
The priest said something solemn. Your cousin sniffed loudly. You stared at white lilies until they blurred at the edges.
You thought grief would feel heavier, but instead it felt unfinished. This couldn’t be it; it just couldn’t. And yet it was.
After the burial, your family gathered beneath gray awnings outside the cemetery while rain misted over black umbrellas and expensive coats.
Your aunt Marianne caught your elbow before you could escape.
“There you are,” she said tightly, words clipped. “The lawyer is asking for everyone to meet Monday regarding the estate.”
You blinked, taken aback. “There’s an estate meeting?”
“She owned property in three countries,” Marianne replied, as though you were thick-headed. “Of course there’s an estate meeting.”
Right. Normal grandmothers left behind photo albums and recipe cards, but yours was anything but normal.
You almost didn’t go when Monday arrived, heavy and humid. You spent most of the morning sitting in your old Kia outside the law office debating whether you could fake your own death instead.
Unfortunately, curiosity won.
The lawyer’s office smelled like polished wood and old paper. Everyone sat around a long table wearing expressions ranging from grieving to openly competitive. Your cousins looked like they were putting on their best imitation of a shark, eyes bloodthirsty and slitted as they waited to hear what the lawyer had to say. You took the chair closest to the exit. Just in case.
The lawyer adjusted his wire-rimmed glasses. “Thank you all for coming. We’ll begin with the personal allocations.”
The meeting dragged on.
Jewelry, investments. Art collections. Properties in two different continents, places you’d never been to and could only dream of going to. A stake in a film company.
Your grandmother apparently possessed the financial portfolio of a minor Bond villain.
You stopped listening after twenty minutes. Until —
“And to her granddaughter —”
You looked up automatically, heart suddenly thrashing in your chest like it were a rabbit trying to free itself from a trap.
The lawyer smiled politely. “The apartment located in Monaco.”
Your brain completely shut down.
“…Sorry,” you said after a second. “What?”
Across the table, your aunt’s expression tightened almost imperceptibly.
“The residence in Monaco,” the lawyer repeated calmly. “Per your grandmother’s instructions, ownership transfers fully to you.”
You laughed. Not because it was funny, but because there was genuinely no other possible response. “I think there’s been a mistake.”
“There hasn’t.”
“No, I —” You looked around the room helplessly. “I haven’t spoken to her in years.”
The lawyer’s face softened slightly. “She amended the will six months ago.”
Six months ago.
“She also left a letter,” he added.
A cream envelope appeared in front of you moments later, your name written across the front in your grandmother’s elegant handwriting.
Suddenly, you couldn’t breathe properly. You stared at it for several seconds before opening it apprehensively.
Darling,
If you are reading this, then I am dead, which is unfortunate timing because Monaco is beautiful in spring.
You swallowed hard, tears pricking in your vision, yet you charged on.
You were always too sentimental for your own good. Too soft-hearted. I suspect the world has punished you for this already. But softness is not weakness, no matter what I may have taught you otherwise.
The apartment is yours because you are the only one who will live in it properly. Do not waste your life waiting for permission to become someone else.
And for God’s sake, answer your phone more often.
— Grand-mère
By the time you finished reading, your vision had gone embarrassingly blurry. You stared down at the paper, feeling completely out of your depth. Even her final act of affection still somehow sounded like criticism.
“Are you alright?” the lawyer asked gently.
You folded the letter carefully before answering.
“No,” you admitted. After a beat, you added: “But maybe I could be.”
By the time you arrived in Monaco, you were operating almost entirely on caffeine, blind optimism, and the kind of emotional dissociation that only occurred after making several catastrophic life decisions in rapid succession.
The train station spilled sunlight and noise and expensive luggage onto the streets in dizzying waves. Everything gleamed. The sea in the distance looked unreal, too blue to belong to an actual country, and every person you passed seemed aggressively well-dressed. Women in silk trousers walked tiny dogs that probably had trust funds. Men in linen shirts leaned against polished cars worth more than your student loans.
Meanwhile, you were dragging two overstuffed suitcases with one broken wheel through the streets while sweat collected at the base of your spine.
A glamorous entrance like no other, truly.
The apartment building itself sat tucked along a quieter street several blocks from the marina, elegant in that understated European way that made American luxury suddenly feel embarrassingly loud. Cream-colored stone climbed four stories high, ivy curling around wrought iron balconies. The windows were tall and narrow, their shutters painted faded green from years of Mediterranean sun.
You stood across the street for a long moment staring up at it.
Your grandmother had lived here.
The realization landed strangely every time it returned. You could still barely connect the woman who corrected your French grammar over Christmas dinners with this place that looked like it belonged in a film.
For a second, fear crawled unpleasantly into your throat. What if you didn’t belong here either?
Then one of your suitcases tipped sideways and nearly launched itself into traffic. “OK,” you muttered, yanking it upright. “Fantastic start.”
Inside, the building smelled faintly of lemon polish and old books. Cool air wrapped around your overheated skin as you stepped into the lobby, immediately grateful.
Until you saw the staircase. You stared upward. No elevator. Presumably, your grandmother’s final wish was for you to die dramatically hauling your earthly possessions up four flights of stairs.
The apartment keys dug into your palm while you mentally calculated how many trips this would take. Too many.
By the second trip, your arms were shaking. By the third, you were actively considering abandoning half your belongings on the staircase and reinventing yourself as the kind of woman who owned exactly two shirts and no cookware. The final box, a massive one filled almost entirely with books because apparently you’d inherited your grandmother’s inability to travel lightly, was balanced precariously against your chest as you stumbled up the last flight.
You couldn’t see, vision blacking out with sweat and sheer fatigue.
“One more step,” you whispered to yourself breathlessly. “One more —”
The box slipped out of your slick grasp. You made a strangled sound, knees buckling as the entire thing tilted sideways. And — a hand caught the edge of it, steadying it effortlessly.
You looked up. Oh.
Oh, that was unfortunate.
The man standing above you on the landing was tall in a way that felt deeply inconvenient at the moment, broad shoulders blocking part of the afternoon light streaming through the stairwell window. Dark brown hair curled slightly at the ends like he’d run a hand through it too many times, and his expression?
His expression was profoundly unimpressed.
Not annoyed, exactly, as that would have implied emotional investment. No, he looked at you the way someone might look at an unusually loud pigeon.
You straightened slightly, breathless and sweaty and immediately defensive. “Thanks,” you said, as politely as you could manage.
His eyes flicked once over the massive box in your arms, over your wobbling posture, and back to your face. “You know,” he said evenly, accent unmistakably Australian, “most people make more than six trips.”
You blinked at him. The nerve. “I have made more than six trips.”
“Hm.”
“Hm?” you repeated incredulously, too winded to even think about the ridiculousness of that one word.
He released the box slowly, clearly unconcerned whether it crushed you or not. “That explains why you look like that.”
You stared.
He stared back. Completely serious.
The worst part was that he wasn’t even mean about it. There was no cruelty in his voice, no mocking grin. Just blunt observation delivered with the emotional warmth of a spreadsheet.
You adjusted the box against your chest with increasing offense. “Wow. You’re really committed to being unhelpful, huh?”
His gaze drifted toward the staircase below, where another one of your bags had fallen over dramatically. “You seem to have it handled.”
“I very clearly do not.” You waited for him to help.
He did not help.
Instead, he slid one hand into the pocket of his dark trousers and tilted his head slightly, studying you with mild curiosity. Like he was trying to determine whether your situation was genuinely concerning or simply entertaining. You suspected it was the second one.
You narrowed your eyes in suspicion. “You’re enjoying this.”
“Not at all,” he responded.
“You hesitated.”
“I was thinking.”
You cocked your head to the side, studying him. “About?”
“How someone survives adulthood while carrying a box like that.”
You let out a disbelieving laugh. He blinked once at the sound, almost caught off guard by it.
Up close, he looked around your age. Mid-to-late twenties, maybe. Tired eyes. Sharp jawline. One of those faces that would probably look devastating if he ever smiled…which, judging by current evidence, had perhaps never occurred.
He wore a black button-down with the sleeves rolled to his elbows, revealing strong forearms dusted faintly with grease or graphite. Engineer, maybe. Or mechanic. Something precise and frustratingly competent. Definitely not a job that involved being surrounded by people, for sure.
“Do you always stand around watching women suffer for fun,” you asked, shifting the box again, “or am I special?”
His gaze dropped briefly to the way you were struggling to hold it. “You’re loud,” he answered.
You frowned. “What does that have to do with anything?”
“You’ve been swearing in the stairwell for twenty minutes.”
Heat crawled immediately into your face. “Oh my God.”
“One box said fragile before you dropped it.”
“It slipped!”
“Hm.” There it was again. That stupid little hum.
You already hated him. Which would’ve been easier if he weren’t annoyingly attractive in that severe, exhausted sort of way.
“Do you live here?” you asked.
“Yes.”
“Great. Then you’re my first Monaco enemy.”
Something shifted in his expression. Not quite amusement, but close enough to count. “You just moved in?” he questioned, lips quirking upward insufferably.
“Yes.”
His eyes flicked toward the door beside yours. The apartment next door.
The realization hit you instantly. Looks like this intolerable, unaccommodating jerk was going to be a staple of your new life in Monaco. How wonderful. And you didn’t even know his name — which was for the better, since you did not want to be on friendly terms with this jackass.
He glanced down at the box still threatening to crush your internal organs. “You’re holding that wrong.”
“Oh, now you want to help?”
“No,” he said calmly. “I’m criticizing your technique.”
You made a noise of outrage. And to your absolute horror, the corner of his mouth twitched. Just slightly.
Not a smile.
But dangerously close.
Five days into living in Monaco, you came to two important conclusions.
First: the city was absurdly beautiful in a way that became almost irritating after a while. Every street looked curated, a perfect home feed on Pinterest. Every café seemed to exist solely to make tourists romanticize their lives. Even the air smelled expensive, saltwater and sunscreen and citrus drifting together beneath the afternoon heat.
Second: your neighbor was either avoiding you deliberately or naturally moved through life like a suspicious alley cat.
You’d heard him through the walls plenty.
Cabinets opening at precise times. Low music occasionally humming through the apartment. Classical sometimes, instrumental piano other times, once an aggressively miserable jazz playlist that lasted nearly four hours. You’d also discovered he worked insane hours, judging by the fact you’d heard his front door close sometime after midnight twice already.
But actually seeing him was rare.
It was beginning to annoy you on principle.
Especially because every interaction so far had ended with him looking faintly exasperated by your existence while you developed an increasingly inconvenient curiosity about his.
So on Thursday afternoon, after unpacking exactly half your kitchen and collapsing over a box labeled miscellaneous wires, you decided you deserved a break.
Monaco unfolded lazily beneath the sun as you wandered downhill toward the older part of the city. Laundry fluttered from narrow balconies overhead. Scooters buzzed past. Somewhere nearby, church bells rang softly through the heat.
You stopped in little shops mostly to escape the temperature. A tiny bakery where the woman behind the counter called you darling after you butchered your French pronunciation. A stationery store filled with fountain pens you absolutely could not afford.
Then finally… the bookstore.
It sat tucked between a wine shop and a florist, nearly hidden beneath climbing ivy. The sign overhead was faded slightly with age, the windows crowded with stacked novels and handwritten recommendation cards.
You paused outside immediately. Unlike most places in Monaco, it didn’t feel polished. It felt lived-in.
Inside, the air smelled like paper and dust and old wood soaked warm by sunlight. Shelves stretched from floor to ceiling in crooked little aisles, books stacked sideways where they no longer fit properly. Soft jazz played somewhere overhead. You exhaled slowly.
OK.
This might be the first place in Monaco that didn’t make you feel wildly underdressed. You wandered aimlessly at first, fingertips brushing over spines. French novels. Travel memoirs. Architecture books bigger than your torso.
A sleepy orange cat blinked at you from atop a stack near the register.
“This is perfect,” you whispered.
The cat yawned.
You drifted toward the back corner before stopping abruptly, fear clenching your chest nonsensically.
Your stupid neighbor — Oscar — stood near one of the shelves with a book open in one hand, entirely absorbed. Dark gray T-shirt this time. Black trousers. Glasses perched low on his nose.
Glasses.
You stared for a second too long. They somehow made him look even more severe, like he was someone who corrected grammar in emails for fun.
Unfortunately, they also made him hotter, which felt deeply unfair considering his personality.
You should probably leave him alone. Instead, you walked directly toward him.
“Are you stalking me,” you asked pleasantly, “or is this just fate?”
Oscar looked up slowly. His expression changed the exact same way it always did when he saw you: a tiny flicker of recognition immediately followed by visible mental exhaustion. “You live next door to me.”
“That doesn’t answer the question.”
“No,” he agreed calmly. “It doesn’t.”
His eyes returned to the book.
You stared at him. He focused on the page, as though you no longer existed to him.
“Wow,” you muttered. “You really commit to the whole emotionally unavailable thing.”
“I’m reading.”
“In public. Dangerous choice.”
A pause. Without looking up, he countered: “You’re loud in bookstores too?”
You scoffed. “That was almost a joke.”
“Well, it wasn’t supposed to be.”
You moved beside him anyway, tilting your head to read the title in his hands. Advanced Structural Systems Engineering.
You blinked. “Holy shit.”
“What?” he said, exasperatedly.
“You actually read these voluntarily. And here I was, thinking that nobody could ever find building infrastructure fun.”
Oscar finally looked at you properly again, gaze steady and unreadable behind his glasses. “It’s relevant to my work.”
“Oh God, that’s worse. Why would you choose that of all careers?”
“You ask too many questions,” Oscar muttered, but he lowered the book and affixed his eyes on you again.
“And you answer too few,” you retorted.
“That usually discourages people.”
“Well, disappointingly for you, I’m deeply irritating.” You flashed him a wide smile.
He scowled, lines marring his face. “I noticed.”
The thing was, he never sounded cruel. Dry, yes. Constantly unimpressed, absolutely. But there was something strange underneath it all, something restrained rather than genuinely cold. Maybe speaking too much physically pained him, but listening didn’t.
Because he did listen. You were beginning to notice that.
Even now, his attention stayed fixed on you with unsettling steadiness despite his minimal responses. Most people waited impatiently for their turn to speak. Oscar seemed content letting silence stretch between your words.
“So,” you said, pulling a random novel from the shelf and thumbing through it. “Engineer.”
“Yes.”
“What kind?”
“Mechanical.”
You blew out a low breath. “That sounds important.”
“It’s mostly spreadsheets and suffering,” he remarked, tilting his head to the side.
You laughed. Again, there it was, flitting on Oscar’s face — that almost-expression. Close enough to a smile that you caught yourself wanting to earn another one. You leaned lightly against the shelf. “You know, when I first met you, I thought you were incredibly rude.”
“That implies you changed your mind.”
“Oh, no,” you said quickly. “You absolutely are.”
Oscar’s eyebrows raised.
“But,” you continued with a hint of a smile on your face, “I think maybe you’re secretly less horrible than you pretend to be.”
There’s a moment of silence as he thinks of what to say. “That sounds like a disappointing realization for you.”
You laugh again, bright and loud. Everything Oscar claims he hates.
The bookstore owner shuffled past pushing a cart of books, eyeing the two of you curiously before disappearing again. Oscar glanced toward the architecture section nearby.“You inherited the apartment?”
The sudden change in conversation surprised you slightly. Maybe because it was the first personal thing he’d asked. “Yeah,” you answered more softly. “My grandmother’s.”
“She lived there a long time.”
“You knew her?”
“A little.”
You watched him carefully. “Did she terrorize you too?”
To your shock, his mouth actually twitched upward. Small. Brief, but definitely real. “She corrected my pronunciation once.”
“Oh my God.” You snorted. “That means she liked you.”
“I don’t think that’s true,” he objected.
“No, seriously. She only bothered correcting people she found interesting enough to fix.”
Oscar looked down at the book in his hands again, thoughtful now. The light from the windows caught against the frames of his glasses, softening the sharpness of his face. For the first time since meeting him, he looked less like an irritation and more like he was… lonely, maybe.
You wondered how long he’d lived next door. The thought sat strangely heavy in your chest. “You know,” you joked, “you can smile. I checked. It won’t kill you.”
Oscar looked at you for a long moment, and then reached past you toward a shelf overhead, entirely ignoring the comment. Unfortunately, his arm brushed yours lightly in the process.
Your brain short-circuited instantly. He pulled a book free.
“You’d like this one,” he said, handing it to you.
You looked down automatically. A Moveable Feast. Your brows lifted slightly. “You’re recommending me books now?”
“It’s Hemingway.”
“That doesn’t answer the question either.”
Oscar met your gaze evenly. “No,” he said again, quieter this time. “It doesn’t.”
Something shifted after the bookstore, but not as dramatic as one might expect.
Oscar did not suddenly become warm or talkative or capable of expressing emotions like a normal human being. He still looked vaguely inconvenienced every time you appeared unexpectedly within his line of sight. He still answered most questions with the fewest words possible. He still treated social interaction like a mildly unpleasant administrative task.
But the edges softened, tiny things at first. The next morning, the espresso machine was quieter. Not fixed, exactly — you still heard a muffled curse around six-thirty — but quieter in the deliberate way that suggested Oscar had used a modicum of effort to not be as loud.
Which was a ridiculous thing to think.
You stood in your kitchen holding a spoonful of yogurt and stared at the shared wall suspiciously. “Was that for me?”
Faintly, Oscar’s disgruntled response. “No.”
You grinned into your breakfast.
Later that afternoon, you found a folded piece of paper slid beneath your apartment door. Not a note, but a list. Three cafés written in precise handwriting. Good coffee, not tourist traps. Stop going to the one on the corner. Their espresso tastes burnt.
You laughed so suddenly you nearly scared yourself. Even though there was no signature, you knew exactly who the list was written by. Like there was anyone else in the building passive-aggressive enough to leave anonymous coffee criticism at your doorstep.
You went to all three cafés. And despite your reservations, he was right.
After that, Monaco started feeling smaller in strange ways. You’d spot Oscar unexpectedly throughout the week like some bizarre recurring character only you seemed able to unlock.
At the market buying exactly six oranges and nothing else. Walking home late at night with rolled-up blueprints tucked beneath one arm. Standing outside the florist beside your building while an elderly woman enthusiastically spoke French at him while he listened with the exhausted patience of a hostage negotiator. And every time you interacted with him, he stopped a little longer when talking to you.
Not enough for anyone else to notice, but enough for you to. You were observant in that sort of way. “You’re becoming significantly less terrifying,” you informed him one evening when you crossed paths on the staircase.
Oscar glanced at you from beneath tired eyes. “That sounds unlikely.”
“You gave me coffee recommendations.”
“You were drinking bad espresso. I could smell it.”
You harrumph. “OK, but you carried my groceries upstairs yesterday.”
“You dropped a tomato,” he rebutted.
“It burst dramatically.”
“It exploded.”
You smiled brightly. “And yet you helped me anyway.”
He adjusted his grip on the folder tucked under his arm. “That’s since you were blocking the staircase.”
“See, that’s the thing,” you said, pointing at him accusatorially. “You always pretend you’re helping people accidentally.”
Oscar looked almost wary now, like he disliked being perceived too closely. “Do you analyze strangers often?”
“Only interesting ones.”
That earned you silence. Not the dismissive kind you were familiar with, but the thoughtful one. You were beginning to understand the difference, slowly but surely.
A handful of days later, rain swept over Monaco in silver sheets so heavy the streets below your apartment blurred completely. Thunder rolled somewhere over the sea while warm wind rattled the shutters. You’d spent the evening curled beneath a blanket reading the Hemingway novel Oscar recommended.
Which was annoying, because it was good. Quiet and aching and observant in ways that slipped beneath your skin without permission.
You were halfway through rereading and admiring a paragraph for the third time when someone knocked on your door. Three sharp taps.
Your stomach flipped immediately, and you opened the door to find Oscar standing there holding two mugs of coffee.
You blinked at him. Rain darkened the shoulders of his dark ebony sweater slightly, curls damp from the weather. He looked unfairly good in low lighting, all sharp lines softened by the glow spilling from your apartment.
“The power’s out in my kitchen,” you said.
Oscar glanced past you toward the darkened appliances.
“I know.”
“You know?”
“The whole building lost partial electricity twenty minutes ago.”
“Oh.” You looked at the coffee, then back at him. “So to commiserate the loss of my appliances, you brought me pity beverages?”
“You looked miserable earlier.”
Your eyebrows shot up. “You noticed I looked miserable?”
“You sigh loudly when frustrated.”
“I do not.”
Oscar smirked. “You do.”
Offended, you crossed your arms. Oscar held one mug out slightly.
“It’s temporary,” he said. “The outage.”
You took the coffee carefully, fingers brushing his for half a second.
Warm. Dangerously so. “Thanks,” you murmured.
“You finished the book?” The question caught you off guard, and you took a second to reorient yourself.
“Almost.”
Oscar nodded once towards the general direction of his apartment. “I have more. If you want.”
Your brain buffered as you understood what he was suggesting. “You’re inviting me over?”
A flicker of hesitation crossed his face then, so brief you almost missed it. Like he was already reconsidering the decision in real time. “It’s raining,” he said finally. “And your apartment currently smells like burnt toast.”
Heat rushed immediately into your face. “That happened one time.”
“Not true. You set off the fire alarm twice.”
“The second one was unrelated,” you argued.
Oscar’s expression remained perfectly neutral. “You can come over,” he said. “Or continue destroying your kitchen independently.”
You stared at him for another second, but you couldn’t help it. A slow smile grew on your face. “Wow. Oscar Piastri voluntarily initiating social interaction. Historic moment.”
“I can leave,” he pointed out.
“No, absolutely not.”
His apartment looked exactly how you imagined it would. Clean to the point of suspicion. Dim warm lighting. Bookshelves arranged with alarming precision. One massive desk crowded with sketches, mechanical parts, and monitors filled with things you absolutely did not understand.
The place felt lived in quietly, as though someone who spent most of his life inside his own head but had tried, carefully, to make solitude comfortable.
Music played softly somewhere in the background. Piano again.
“You own candles,” you said immediately, spotting one lit near the bookshelf.
Oscar shut the door behind you. “That’s your first observation?”
“You don’t seem like a candle person,” you informed him.
“What does a candle person look like?” Oscar scoffed.
“Happier.”
To your delight, you caught it again. That tiny near-smile. “You can sit down, you know.”
You wandered instead, deciding to uncover some fragments about the mystery that was Oscar’s life. “You alphabetized your books,” you accused him as you inspected his perfectly organized shelves. The ones in your apartment looked nothing like this.
“No.”
You paused, looking closer.
“Don’t tell me it’s chronologically? By publication date?”
“Yes,” he confirmed, a soft blush spreading on his cheeks.
“That’s somehow worse.”
“You reorganized yours by color yesterday.”
You turned sharply. “How do you know that?”
Oscar froze for approximately one second too long. “You left your curtains open,” he answered finally.
“Oh my God.” You pointed at him accusingly. “You do watch me.”
“I live next door.”
“That is not helping your case.”
He looked genuinely unimpressed by your delight over this revelation, but there was something looser about him tonight. Less guarded around the edges. You settled onto the couch eventually, curling one leg beneath yourself while Oscar sat in the armchair opposite, coffee resting untouched in his hands. “You liked Hemingway?” he asked after a while.
You looked down at the book beside you.
“Yeah,” you admitted quietly. “It feels… lonely.” Oscar’s gaze lifted toward yours. “Not sad,” you continued thoughtfully. “Just… like someone trying very hard not to say what they actually feel.”
Silence settled between you. Heavy suddenly. And for the first time since meeting him, Oscar didn’t immediately look away first. “You do that too, you know,” you said softly before you could stop yourself. His expression stilled. “With the whole pretending-not-to-care thing.”
The rain filled the quiet for a moment. Then Oscar leaned back slightly in his chair, studying you with that same unsettling steadiness he always seemed to reserve only for you. “You’ve known me for a week.”
“Mm. And?”
“And you think you understand me already?”
“No,” you clarified honestly. “I just think you want people to underestimate how much you notice.”
Something flickered across his face then. Recognition, changing the air between you two. The room didn’t suddenly become charged with cinematic tension. Nobody leaned closer. Nobody confessed anything dramatic beneath the rain and candlelight.
Oscar simply looked at you for a fraction too long. And for a man who treated eye contact like a limited resource, it felt strangely intimate.
The piano music hummed softly through the apartment while thunder rolled somewhere over the sea. Outside the windows, Monaco glittered silver and gold beneath the storm, headlights smearing against rain-slick streets below.
Inside, Oscar remained very still in his chair across from you. “You say things like that often?” he asked eventually.
“What, annoyingly perceptive things?”
“Yes.”
You smiled slightly. “Only when I’m trying to bother someone.”
“And is it working?”
“You invited me into your apartment voluntarily. I think I’m making incredible progress.”
That earned you the smallest exhale through his nose. Not quite laughter — or a smile — but God, you were becoming disturbingly addicted to making Oscar Piastri happy.
His fingers tapped once against the side of his coffee mug before he asked, quieter this time, “What made you say it?”
“The underestimating thing?”
A nod. You considered him carefully. “I don’t know,” you admitted. “You notice everything.”
Oscar’s brows pulled together faintly.
“You remembered which café I kept going to. You knew I reorganized my books. You notice when I’m frustrated… through a wall.” You gestured lightly around the apartment. “Half your personality is pretending not to care while secretly paying attention to literally everything.”
“That sounds exhausting.”
“It sounds lonely.”
The words slipped out before you could soften them. Immediately, silence settled again. You watched his expression shutter slightly. He wasn’t angry, or offended, just instinctively guarded. You’d stepped accidentally too close to something private. Your stomach twisted. “Sorry,” you said quickly. “That was probably—”
“No,” Oscar interrupted. His voice was calm. “It’s fine.” Which, you were beginning to learn, usually meant absolutely not fine at all.
You shifted slightly on the couch. “You don’t have to answer personal questions, by the way.”
“I know.”
“You just look at me like I’ve committed a federal crime every time I ask one.”
“That’s because you ask invasive ones.”
“You invited me over to discuss literature. This is what happens.”
“I regret it already.”
“No, you don’t,” you corrected him.
Oscar glanced at you then, and there it was again. That impossible almost-smile threatening at the corner of his mouth before disappearing. “I usually don’t invite people over,” he admitted after a moment.
Something about the quiet honesty of it made your chest ache unexpectedly. “You don’t seem like you usually invite people anywhere.”
“You’d be right about that.”
“Do you have friends?”
A pause. “Yes.”
“You hesitated,” you said, pouting.
“I was deciding if you counted as one.”
Your heart did one deeply humiliating thing, but you recovered with visible effort. “Wow. That was almost nice.”
“Don’t get used to it.”
After that night, things changed in ways so subtle you almost convinced yourself you imagined them. Except you didn’t.
Oscar started existing around you differently.
You’d hear your front door open in the mornings only to find coffee sitting outside sometimes — not every day, just occasionally. No note, no explanation. Just a paper cup from one of the cafés he’d recommended.
The first time it happened, you knocked on his door immediately. When he opened it, he looked annoyingly unsurprised to see you. “Did you leave this outside my apartment?”
Oscar leaned one shoulder against the doorframe. “Probably.”
“Probably?”
“You drank the terrible coffee near the marina again yesterday.”
“You can’t punish me into having better taste,” you reminded him.”
He shrugged. “I can try.”
You stared at him, looked down at the coffee, and back up again. “Wait. This is kind of sweet.”
His expression changed instantly, like the word itself physically alarmed him. “No, it isn’t.”
“It absolutely is.”
He fumbled for what to say next. “You looked tired.”
“So your solution was caffeine and emotional repression?”
“That solves most things.”
“Jesus Christ.” But you smiled the entire walk back into your apartment.
Another evening, you came home balancing groceries against your hip only to find Oscar sitting on the floor outside his apartment door with a screwdriver clenched between his teeth.
You stopped short. He glanced up briefly from where he was taking apart the lock mechanism. “…Did you break into your own apartment?”
“No.”
“You look like you did.”
“The lock jammed,” he corrected you.
You crouched down nearby immediately despite the groceries cutting painfully into your fingers. “How long have you been out here?”
“Twenty minutes.”
“And you didn’t call someone?” you inquired, choking out a laugh.
“I can fix it.”
“You say that with the confidence of a man currently sitting in a hallway.”
Oscar removed the screwdriver from his mouth with visible patience. “Go inside.”
“No.”
“You don’t even know what I’m doing.”
“I know moral support is important,” you added, beaming.
He flicked his gaze up to you, brown eyes crinkling with frustration. “I don’t need moral support.”
“That’s objectively false.”
He sighed quietly. You sat cross-legged on the floor anyway.
The hallway was warm from the lingering heat outside, golden evening light filtering through the stairwell windows. Somewhere downstairs, someone played music softly while dishes clinked faintly through open windows. Oscar worked in silence for another minute before speaking suddenly. “You really don’t get discouraged easily.”
You tilted your head. “What’s that supposed to mean?”
“Most people stop talking when I clearly want them to.”
“Oh.” You smiled brightly. “That’s because I think you secretly enjoy it.”
“I don’t.”
“You invited me over.”
“That was one time,” he refuted.
“You bought me coffee.”
Oscar tossed his head back. “You looked exhausted.”
“You repaired my window latch yesterday.”
“It was hanging off.”
You inhaled, annoyed. “You notice every time I come home late.”
“That’s because you stomp up the stairs like a soldier returning from war.”
You grinned triumphantly, finally having gotten what you wanted. “See?”
Oscar looked deeply dissatisfied with the direction of this conversation. Before you could say anything, the lock clicked open. He blinked once. “Hm.”
“That’s your reaction?” you asked incredulously. “Not even a little celebration?”
“It’s a lock.”
“You have the emotional range of a Victorian widower. God.”
Oscar looked up at you from where he still sat on the floor. And finally — he laughed. Small and startled, like the sound escaped accidentally. But real.
You froze instantly. That was significantly worse than the almost-smiles. Because now you knew what he sounded like when he genuinely laughed, and unfortunately it was warm and low and unfairly nice.
Oscar seemed to realize what he’d done a second later because his expression shifted immediately back toward guarded neutrality. Too late.
Your eyes widened slowly. “You can laugh.”
“That was barely a laugh.”
“But it was one.”
“No.”
You nudged his shoulder. “You literally laughed at my joke.”
“I exhaled.”
“You’re embarrassed,” you chortled.
“I’m opening my door now.” He stood up smoothly, towering over you again as he pushed the apartment door open. “Goodnight,” he said flatly.
You got to your feet far slower, still grinning like an idiot. “Goodnight, Oscar.”
He paused just before stepping inside, glancing back toward you standing in the hallway. “You can borrow the other Hemingway book I have when you finish,” he said. And then he disappeared into his apartment.
You stood there for another few seconds holding your groceries, heart beating strangely hard beneath your ribs. Somewhere between the bookstore and the coffee and the quiet conversations in the rain, your grumpy neighbor had stopped looking at you like an inconvenience.
By the fifth week of you living in Monaco, Oscar started lingering. That was how you knew things were getting dangerous.
Not because he became openly affectionate — heavens no. Oscar still spoke like every additional sentence cost him money. He still answered the door looking mildly inconvenienced by human interaction. He still acted personally betrayed whenever you made him laugh unexpectedly.
But now he stayed. In the hallway after brief conversations should’ve ended. At your apartment door after returning borrowed books. Beside you at the little market near the marina while you spent fifteen minutes dramatically debating between peaches and nectarines.
“You can’t actually taste the difference,” he informed you.
“That is an insane thing to say.”
“You’re choosing based entirely on vibes.”
“You say that like it’s wrong,” you protested.
Oscar looked at the fruit. “The peaches are objectively better.”
“You have strong opinions about fruit,” you grinned, “I’m surprised.”
“I have correct opinions about produce.” There it was again, that warmth hiding underneath the dryness.
It showed up more often now. In the way he automatically walked on the outside edge of sidewalks without seeming to realize it. In the way he started bringing an extra coffee downstairs if he saw your lights on early in the morning. In the way his apartment door remained cracked open occasionally while he worked, a silent invitation that you’d somehow learned how to read.
Sometimes you sat there for hours doing nothing together. You’d curl up on his couch reading while Oscar worked at his desk nearby, sleeves rolled up, glasses slipping lower down his nose while blueprints and mechanical sketches crowded his screens.
You’d always thought connection had to be loud to matter. Big conversations, grand confessions, immediate understanding.
Oscar was quiet in a way that made tiny things feel enormous. One night, you looked up from your book to find him watching you absentmindedly from across the room. “What?” you asked.
Oscar blinked once, like you’d caught him doing something embarrassing. “Nothing.”
“You’re staring at me.”
“You’re reading intensely.”
You frowned. “How does someone read intensely?”
“You keep making faces.”
“That’s because I’m emotionally invested.”
“You gasped twenty seconds ago,” he concurred.
“It was warranted!”
His mouth twitched faintly. Your chest did something deeply pathetic. The thing was, you couldn’t pinpoint exactly when you started falling for him.
Maybe it was the bookstore. Maybe it was the rainstorm. Maybe it was every tiny moment afterward: the coffee, the conversations, the way he always noticed things about you nobody else did. Or maybe, it was moments like these. The terrifying gentleness hiding underneath all that restraint. Oscar never reached for attention, instead for specifics.
The exact pastry you liked from the bakery downstairs, the fact you hated overhead lighting at night, the way you reread paragraphs when you were anxious.
He noticed everything.
And once he cared about something, you got the feeling he cared permanently. Which was horrifying, really. Especially since you were beginning to suspect the same thing about yourself.
It happened on a Thursday evening.
Warm wind drifted through the open balcony doors while the city glowed beneath the sunset. You sat cross-legged on Oscar’s kitchen counter eating strawberries directly from the carton while he made coffee with the concentration of a surgeon.
“You know,” you said thoughtfully, “for someone who claimed I was too loud, you spend a shocking amount of time with me.”
Oscar slid a cup toward you without looking up. “You’re still loud.”
“And yet here you are.”
“Hm.”
You smiled into your coffee. Outside, Monaco buzzed softly with evening life. Scooters somewhere below. Distant laughter from the street. The sea beyond the buildings turning molten beneath the setting sun.
Oscar leaned back lightly against the counter across from you, arms folded. “You like France?” he asked suddenly.
You looked up, surprised by the question. “I think so.”
“Think?”
“I’ve never… really been.” You glanced toward the balcony. “I mean, unless you’re counting Monaco as being a part of France. But I’m not sure if you are or not. Anyways, my grandmother would have loved the thought of me moving here… at least that’s what I hope.”
Oscar watched you, a flicker of amusement crossing his face. “She was difficult.”
“She was terrifying.”
“She liked you,” he murmured. The certainty in his voice made you look away from him unexpectedly, refocusing down at your coffee.
“I don’t know about that.”
Oscar was quiet for a moment. “She talked about you.”
Your head lifted immediately. “What?”
He looked almost reluctant now, like he already regretted speaking. “She mentioned you sometimes,” he admitted. “Mostly after you stopped visiting her in Newport.”
Something inside you twisted painfully. “Oh.”
“She kept photos.”
Your throat tightened further.
Oscar’s gaze stayed fixed somewhere near your shoulder instead of your eyes now, voice calm and even in the way it always became when talking about emotional things too directly. “She worried about you.”
For a second, neither of you spoke. The air between you felt fragile suddenly. “I thought she was disappointed in me,” you admitted quietly.
Oscar looked at you then. Really looked at you. Something about his expression made your pulse stumble. “I don’t think,” he said carefully, “you disappoint people as much as you think you do.”
The words landed harder than they should have. Oscar never said things he didn’t mean, either because he noticed too much, or because somewhere along the way, his opinion had started mattering to you in ways that felt terrifyingly irreversible.
The dying sunlight caught against the edges of his hair and the curve of his jaw. You suddenly became hyperaware of how close he stood. How easy it would be to step forward.
Neither of you moved.
Oscar cleared his throat softly and looked away first.
“There’s a vineyard in Nice,” he said.
“That’s… random.”
“I know.” He laughed, then played it off as a cough before you could point it out.
“You hate random.”
“I tolerate some exceptions.”
Your lips curved slightly. “Do you now?”
Oscar rubbed a hand once across the back of his neck, and to your absolute shock, he looked — nervous? “They do outdoor dinners sometimes,” he continued, gaze fixed very firmly on the coffee machine instead of you. “It’s quieter this time of year.”
Slowly, your smile faded into something softer. “Oscar.”
“They have good wine,” he added, clearly making things worse for himself now. “And olives. You like olives.”
Your heart practically melted onto the kitchen floor. “You noticed I like olives?”
His jaw tightened faintly like he regretted existing. “You order them constantly.”
“And this is…” You tilted your head slightly. “What exactly?”
Finally, Oscar looked at you again. Steady, certain, but terrified regardless. “A date,” he said simply.
The word settled warmly between you. You smiled before you could stop yourself. Gentle enough that something in Oscar’s expression immediately unraveled at the sight of it.
“I’d love to go,” you said.
For a moment, he just looked at you, like he couldn’t quite believe you answered that easily. And then he smiled. Not the tiny restrained flickers you’d spent weeks chasing.
A real one.
Small and crooked and devastating enough to knock the breath directly from your lungs.
Suddenly, with the sea glowing outside the windows, you understood something all at once: You hadn’t moved to Monaco to start over.
You’d moved there to be found.
this is sooooo cute 😭🫶
Liquid Courage — OP81
Pairing: Oscar Piastri x Fem!Reader
Length: 0.8k
Snippet: You never see Oscar Piastri this vulnerable.
Part 6 of 'Let It Left' series
Oscar knows he was, or still, a coward.
There are lots of things he kept to himself and himself alone. That never ended up well. Tonight just emphasizes that more since the man lost his composure far from the night reaching the end.
He knew well his last resort was to drown in champagne and hoped to have liquid courage.
Four glasses of it is enough to ease his mind. Enough to give him confidence. Oscar walk towards you and he did it. He finally grabbed your wrist. At the moment you're truly alone.
But the only thing coming out of his mouth is "Please."
Turns out, seeing your eyes up close open the vaults he locked for 10 years. There's too many things to say, too many things to apologize. Every moment they had flashes in front of his eyes, taking up every word he crafted weeks before. Reducing them to one word. One word for many pleas he doesn't know which one to begin.
Please don't go.
Please don't avoid me.
Please don't hate me.
Please, we need to talk.
⊹₊⟡⋆
"Please, Y/N..."
You never see Oscar Piastri this vulnerable. His hair mussed, shirt disheveled, completed by watery eyes and rosy cheeks. Those same eyes that used to look proud and soft to you, now look ... broken.
You don't know why you stay still. The lift is open, you can just walk in and forget this happened. You don't know why you listen to him. Where's the rage? Be mad or just ignore it.
Walk away right now! you repeat that in your brain, but your foot can't move any inch.
"I... I don't know where to start, but please... Please stay."
That's it. That's the word.
Stay.
He said that with trembling lips, eyes flickered everywhere, searching for any sign on your face.
That word was the one you were looking for from him all this time. Stay. If only he had reached out to you and said that years ago…
Your heart is still burning with ache when you open your mouth. "Okay."
Because frankly, you’re also tired of running away.
⊹₊⟡⋆
Oscar leads you to a speakeasy nearby. None of you speak until the bartender makes your order and turns away. A dimly lit lamp reflected very little on his face, hiding his rosy drunk cheeks. You sit next to him, shivering as you can sniff his chocolate perfume mixed with cold air.
Oscar takes a deep breath before breaking the silence. "Glad to see you work with McLaren."
You sip on your glass, trying to relax. "Glad to see you drive their F1 cars as well."
A glass of mocktail should freshen you up, but this awkward silence makes it really hard to savor any taste. Your fingers trace along the glass, busy with your own thoughts. You won't push anything tonight. You had your own battle in your mind.
"I'm sorry."
You turn your head to see him. Oscar. Oscar Piastri with his unguarded eyes.
He continues, "there are too many things I want to say to you. We haven't met since that British F4 grand final. I—we..." His words hang in the air.
"—we were both busy." You cut him. A tear escaped from a corner of your eye. You wiped it away immediately. You don't want to remember those times. Those nights you spent crying and questioning yourself. "Highschool was a busy time for me too. It's okay, Oscar. It's natural for a friendship drifting apart over time."
Lies. Lies. Lies. You can feel your throat burning.
"But why do you act like you don't know me at all?"
That leaves you stunned. You were sad, but you were angry as well for him leaving you that way. You even practiced to be strong enough if you ever meet him again.
"I don't know how to act." You squeeze your palm.
"We haven't met in 10 years. You're an F1 driver now. What kind of business do you want to have with an intern?" An inescapable bitter laugh coming out of your mouth.
"You know you mean so much more to me." His shoulder brushed your arms, sending buzz all over your body. He leans closer, trying to find the truth behind your eyes.
You backed away. "I don't know, Oscar. We never talked about this." You whisper low. He can't say that to you. Especially now. Especially when he left on a Sunday morning with promises he can't keep.
Oscar's body tenses. A guilt crept up to him. He never knew wounds caused upon his departure. He never knew the toll of a ‘drifting away friendship’. Oscar shook his head and spoke. "I also don't know how to react when I figure you're here and I'm the last person on earth to know."
He continues, "I'm still a coward as well, I need to chug champagne and let the courage talk to you."
"But I don't want to lose you again." His hand hangs in the air, wondering if he can touch your arm or pull you into a hug. He knows that won't happen any soon.
"Not after I searched for you everywhere."
His voice soft, almost breaks. “I know we can't pretend there's no 10 years lost between us.”
“But will you let me get to know you again?”
-
A/N: congratulations to my strongest soldiers (re:reader). you survived the cliffhangers <3
taglist: @beabadoobee81 @oscgr @clarenciago @kindersupremacy @theonefanatic13 @airenicbibliophile @eloisevlstuff @heartsformarie @hannahbananababybanana @aka99ob @witherstrum @starriss @lily-ann22 @pharmasennapuff @lalaland43 @pitchplease95 @katlyric @sanguineassassinblizzard @houseoftwistedspirits @lydia-demarek @elegancefr @honeyedshark
☆ masterlist ☆
☆ Oscar Piastri (OP81)
✶ Bite (flash fic - 500+ words)
✶ Let It Left (series - driver!oscar x fem!reader!engineer, friends to strangers to ???)
Let It Left — OP81
Congratulations!
Since you're the best student at mechanical engineering this year, you got the opportunity to do a 6-month internship with the McLaren Formula 1 Team.
But what if you have a hefty history with one of the drivers?
Would you still take the chance?
Contains: driver!oscar x fem!engineer!reader, best friends to strangers to ???, unresolved romance, a lot of effort to heal.
status: ongoing...
1. How It Goes
2. Falling Apart
3. Hide And Seek
4. Deja Vu
4.5. Skipped
5. Amateur Chaser
6. Liquid Courage
7. First Strike
A/N: this is my very first series fic published here, impulsively, rooted from midnight thoughts and unbearable boredom. THANK YOU SO MUCH for reading, liking, reblogs, and giving comments!! ❤️
Amateur Chaser — OP81
Pairing: Oscar Piastri x Fem!Reader
Length: 1k
Snippet: But girl, you're wrong.
Oscar Piastri tries even harder in Miami.
Part 5 of 'Let It Left' series
"You're weird lately."
Lando Norris thoroughly scanned his eyes through Oscar Piastri.
"You, the person who loves your private space, eat lunch at MTC's canteen this three days. You came earlier and went home later. Now you're here, outside my engineers' meeting room, told people you wait for me, but when I ask you what is it, you just say, 'nah, forget it'?" Lando fold his arms.
Oscar scratches his head. "I really forgot, okay? It was wind tunnel or something ..."
"Sure. Very convincing. That's something you would ask me." Lando snarked. He brushed his hair with his fingers. "Let's go. We need to talk about this over wine or something. My treat."
Oscar shook his head hard as he saw you leave Lando's engineers' room through another door, already walking away. "Yea, that's nice. Talk to you later."
"What the fuck is wrong with you, mate?!" Lando throw his arms up air.
⊹₊⟡⋆
This wasn't as easy as Oscar thought. Sure, technically he can now see you. But what should he do now? What should he say when he approach you? What if you approach him first?
The boy even practiced in front of a mirror.
'Hi, I'm Oscar Piastri.'
'Hey'
'Hello, Y/N, I...'
"Okay. This is ridiculous." He stared at his own reflection at mirror. Even that piece of furniture will told him he look pathetic right now.
So he think about what to say to you while he's following you around at McLaren Technology Centre.
At a very proper distance.
Like, 2 meters minus 10 centimeters or sometimes 15.
For 1 week.
You obviously know he's looking at you. There is no other level of awkwardness can top this. Can you imagine? You ate your lunch and the man stare at you from a table two meters away, munching his own sandwich.
Or when you have to work from factory and he's busy with his own laptop at the lounge.
Or when you meet with Lando's engineers and he stand still in front of the room like a polite cat.
Now, this is the chaos you didn't sign up for.
You were shocked at first, of course. Never thought he would just show up ... everywhere, all at once.
You're also frustrated because he will only glance at you for 5 seconds max and go on with his day, unaware the effect he had on you.
You're also confused because this man will just sit there, looking at you like he had something to tell, write at a small notebook with worn-out cover, but then shake his head.
What is that supposed to mean???
Glad that the exposure therapy is a great work on you. With his gradually increasing appearance, now you can function even when he's staring at you. Most of the time, you turn your head away so you can't see him, actually. You just hope this will be over when Miami comes. He's a driver. He should be super busy by then.
⊹₊⟡⋆
You take a deep breath when your feet land at Miami. This is it. Your first away engineering internship from McLaren.
The salty air and bright sun buzzed on your skin. Paddock circus can't be more sensational than it already is, media and celebrities and influencers and fans swarmed all over the area. You were glad you have definitive spot to sit or else you will stressing out to see thousands of people moving around.
If a staff like you already busy calculating superclipping and discussing tyre management, then you're sure the drivers are busier than you. Oscar won't follow you around. And you can only hope he will stay that way for at least the rest of your internship.
But girl, you're wrong.
Oscar Piastri tries even harder in Miami.
You get up and whispering you'll grab a cup of coffee to Samuel every time Oscar looks like he is about to come over (He actually did! How convenient since the drivers' garage aren't fully separated). It's been the third time, and you're sure Samuel is about to question your coffee intake.
You already avoid driver's room and every route possible from there to grab coffees from hospitality, but of course the space at McLaren's garage and hospitality weren't as generous as McLaren Technology Centre. also, Oscar Piastri suddenly had business to hang at the hospitality when he has his own very cozy driver room.
That's how your life goes for the last three days every second Oscar had no media or briefing obligations, by the way. Everything happened, crashing you in the middle of endless data analysis and brainstorming race strategies.
The first surge of relief you experienced that weekend is at the moment Lando crossed the finish line in P2 after fighting with Kimi Antonelli. Your stress melts away as the garage erupts with cheer for McLaren double podium. Oscar is P3.
You just had to be there, the celebration. Samuel pushed you to the front barricade, giving a clear view for every person stepping onto the podium. That's where you finally look at Oscar's eyes. Those brown eyes glimmer with happiness.
The memories of you watch his karting and British F4 surged. It was exactly like this, you stand from the side to cheer and watch him take the trophies. The same Oscar Piastri who you know stands proud wherever he's at with a shade of pink across his cheeks as a result from peak adrenaline.
Nothing much changed, you suppose.
⊹₊⟡⋆
It isn't Miami if there's no party.
Since McLaren got a double podium, throwing one would be mandatory. Everyone from the team filled a club at the hotel, releasing their remaining energy after a long day.
You sit in a quiet corner with three girls from marketing, watching everyone while sipping one or two drinks before slipping out. You're not a fan of wild crowds. No one will care much about your existence anyway.
You were waiting for the lift to open when you feel a hand circled your wrist.
"Please ..."
You know that voice too well.
You turn around to see the despair eyes of Oscar Piastri, probably slightly drunk. Those brown, proud and bright eyes you saw at the podium that afternoon now turn into a pair flickered between sadness, worry, curious, and desperate.
A pair that mirror your own.
"Please, Y/N ..." He repeats.
Please ... what?
You really want to scream that to his face.
—
A/N: so they met ... kinda ^____^
taglist: @beabadoobee81 @oscgr @clarenciago @kindersupremacy @theonefanatic13 @airenicbibliophile @eloisevlstuff @heartsformarie @hannahbananababybanana @aka99ob @witherstrum @starriss @lily-ann22 @pharmasennapuff @lalaland43 @pitchplease95 @katlyric @sanguineassassinblizzard @houseoftwistedspirits @lydia-demarek @elegancefr @honeyedshark
can i pls be added to the 'Let it Left' taglist 🙏🏽🙏🏽
hii. of course, dear! 🤍
Skipped — OP81
Pairing: Oscar Piastri x Fem!Reader
Length: 0.7k
Snippet: Sure, he skipped your existence. Or that is what you really are to him.
Part 4.5 of 'Let It Left' series.
A/N: filler chapter while I'm freaking out for part 5...
"Who are you talking to?" Jace lies on her bed, eyes looking red.
You pour lemon juice into your batter. "To you, obviously?"
"No, I definitely heard something. Some voice."
"Oh." You tilted the phone a little bit to show your iPad. "Piastri's podcast."
"Are you …" Jace massages her forehead. "Are you mad?!"
You hold your hand up. "Exposure therapy. I can't keep crying when I hear his voice. At least we start with a digital format."
"Okay. If that works for you. That looks yummy, by the way."
Sweet scent fills your kitchen. You smile at the camera. "Of course, these are my famous lemon cupcakes!"
"Now I regret being too far from you."
How hard was it, Oscar? To leave home at the age of 14?
I wouldn't say that's easy. I miss home all the time. Glad I have 6 months to settle in before I have to balance study with racing.
You stopped your whisk.
He mentioned that 6 months to 'settle in'?
Sure, he skipped your existence. Or that is what you really are to him.
Someone who helps him to settle.
That's nice, isn't it?
⊹₊⟡⋆
14 is a confusing age.
You're definitely not a child child. But you're obviously not an adult, either. That is the age where you start to understand the world, start to have your opinion, and perhaps start to fall in love.
All of that is still confusing for 14-year-old Oscar, who had just arrived from Australia after an 18-hour flight. His mind is only filled with cars, race, and Tim-Tams. He let one of them go to chase the two others. He also left his mom and his sisters and his friends back home. Because Oscar's dad said there are better opportunities for him in this country where people really love to discuss the weather.
He only learns what distance takes from him years later.
He had just woken up when his father told him to greet the neighbors.
Which was you. A girl in a pink cardigan with dazzling eyes and the most devastating smile he had ever met in his 14-year-old life. Oscar had the urge to look cool in front of you just because.
Just because, who doesn't want to impress a pretty girl?
The pretty girl who listens to him well and is fascinated by his blazing blue and yellow kart.
The pretty girl who loves romance movies and bakes lemon cake.
The pretty girl who is willing to learn about his world. She seemed to love it too.
He used to do things with you the way he did with his sisters. He used to look at you the way he did with his sister, mixing mischievousness and care. It took him 3 months to realize that he needed to rethink the definition between you two. That just happened to be the day when Oscar's dad, being the forgetful man he is, dropped him on the path Oscar didn't choose and only told him when he almost figured out what to do with his heart.
The path is to study at Haileybury.
Oscar never wants to leave you. Leave a home where he can always be close to you. Why would he when he is in love with you?
But what can a 14-year-old boy do?
So he tucks his feelings into a corner inside his heart. Because there is no rejection that comes from not telling. Because he can't give you anything as a boy at the starting point of his career.
So he races and studies, races and studies until you slip away.
So he folds, becomes a 14-year-old boy who sometimes makes a dumb decision.
⊹₊⟡⋆
"Oh, this is good!" Lando sighs. He takes one more bite.
Oscar appears from behind. "What is that?"
"Lemon cupcakes. You want one? My trainer wouldn't be happy if I finished all four. But I want to eat three."
Oh, Oscar doesn't have to ask who made it.
He knew the taste of this lemon and cinnamon too well.
So, that's really her.
But what the hell should he do with this information?
Oscar stared at the lemon cupcake in his hand.
He's 25 years old now. He can do something about this.
—
taglist: @beabadoobee81 @oscgr @clarenciago @kindersupremacy @theonefanatic13 @airenicbibliophile @eloisevlstuff @heartsformarie @hannahbananababybanana @aka99ob @witherstrum @starriss @lily-ann22 @pharmasennapuff @lalaland43 @pitchplease95 @katlyric @sanguineassassinblizzard
Deja Vu — OP81
Pairing: Oscar Piastri x Fem!Reader
Length: 0.9k
Snippet: "God, I never knew you had a twin! You guys remind me of each other.”
Part 4 of 'Let It Left' series.
A/N: I have no intentions to write the chapters getting shorter. I would try to hit 1k on my next one!
You can't see anything for a second.
"Y/N?"
That was Samuel's voice. You try to lift your head and find your mentor's blue shoes walking fast to you.
"Oh my god! Mate, are you alright?"
You can finally breathe as you hear the high-pitched voice. The blurry floor and walls and everything slowly come back to normal.
The person standing in front of you was Lando Norris all along. He gasps, eyes frantically looking around to help. His hand takes the water bottle from your hand and helps you open it.
After a sip of water, you have the ability to respond. "Um, yeah, sorry. My stomach betrays me."
"Thank God. Maybe I should inform you beforehand that you will meet Lando today." Samuel pats your shoulder, giving energy. "You were just as shocked when you heard his voice yesterday. Must be nice to see your favorite driver, eh?"
"Really, really, nice." You clutch your grip to the water bottle, slowly regaining consciousness. "Ni-nice to meet you, Lando. I'm sorry that my first impression is disturbed by this." Your fingers squeeze your stomach.
Lando Norris, being the giddy man he is, just chuckle. "Nah, you're good. If anything, this will make me remember you better. Y/N, is it?" He turns to Samuel who gives him a thumbs up.
"Samuel told me you analyze my data, so I thought I would stop by and ask you to join our engineers' meeting. Your stomach is alright now?"
Your own brain would scream if they can. Yes, a hundred times yes!
"I feel better now. I would be really grateful to join." You smile for the first time after the chaos happens.
⊹₊⟡⋆
This is the point.
Scratch that. This is the whole point of sleepless nights, sour coffees, and the very tiny will to stay alive.
A lot of colors greet your eyes. Monitors full of data, engineers sit and discuss with each other. Some frantically tapping on their keyboard, one looking at a cat meme on their phone, but mostly their eyes are on monitor.
It's chaotic. A very good kind of chaotic. The only chaos you expect when you apply for this internship. You sit on a vacant seat beside your mentor, absorbing the environment.
When the meeting starts, each of them present their innovation and calculation. You just nod along and make notes on how you could improve your analysis.
Totally unaware when Lando turned his head at you and said, "What about you, Y/N? I want to hear your take."
You almost fumble your laptop to kiss our mother earth. "Huh? Yeah. Oh! Okay, wait."
"So far, I only look at Q4 2025 and Q1 2026 datas. From what I see on average, we must notice this point where Lando ..."
“And if I can have a say on the design, this kind of rear wing will have better functionality as it reroutes the dirty air …”
Wow. Where does that confidence come from? You just yap for 5 minutes in front of 7 McLaren's engineers and THE F1 2025 World Champion Lando Norris. He nods and listens at your explanation. Really listens, even records some parts with his own phone.
But you would never dream of what he says next.
"The way you present your data is like Oscar. My teammate, Oscar Piastri."
Your body felt like it was struck by thunder. Gulping seems like shoving rocks to your throat, every inch of your body can feel the invisible needles prick on your skin. This can't happen now. You shut your eyes, clenched your fist hard.
Oblivious Lando enthusiastically continues. "Which is great. Yours a little bit better structure wise. He only told me this-and-that sometimes. We need your point of view. Can you come with us to Miami? Still have a few weeks to prepare. No rush."
Oh, how sweet it is to dig your own grave.
But you know you need this. This is what you signed up for.
"I—oh my god, yes. I would love to be there."
⊹₊⟡⋆
"Oi, mate."
Lando taps Oscar's shoulders. He stretched his body with a deep groan.
The man who finished a session removes his headset and nods. "Haven't seen you since morning. Where were you?"
Lando sits in his own simulator. He can't wait to share a story to his teammates. "Meet my engineers. There's this one intern. Can you believe me, mate? She explains her data like you."
Oscar just shrugs his shoulders. "Must be a coincidence. She should go to my garage if she thinks like me, no?"
"No, you can't! She's my fan. Her mentor told me." Lando shook his head and laugh before turning on his simulator. "Poor Y/N, she was shocked when she saw me."
Little did his teammate know, Oscar Piastri grip his steering wheel tighter.
No. That can't be her.
He closes his mouth when he gathers his courage to ask but sees Lando already deep in his own sims.
There's nothing he can do right now except steadying his own heart and clear his own mind.
And repeating a sentence that sounds like a lie to his ears.
That can't be her.
Lando glances when Oscar's last sims data looks off.
“Mate, you're good?” Lando squeezes Oscar's shoulder.
“You were as pale as Y/N when she saw me. God, I never knew you had a twin! You guys remind me of each other.”
No, that can't be her.
-
taglist: @beabadoobee81 @oscgr @clarenciago @kindersupremacy @theonefanatic13 @airenicbibliophile @eloisevlstuff @heartsformarie @hannahbananababybanana @aka99ob @witherstrum @starriss @lily-ann22 @pharmasennapuff @lalaland43 @pitchplease95 @katlyric
OUT OF MY LEAGUE ⭑ KA12
MASTERLIST
BONUS: HIS FIRST WIN
pairing: kimi antonelli x reader
you thought andrea kimi antonelli was just your childhood classmate. then he became a formula 1 driver. then he became technically family. then he started looking at you like that.
genre: rom-com, soft romance, teenage feelings, emotional support boyfriend (in training).
warnings: kimi antonelli being a cocky menace, idiots in love behavior, hands appreciation (sorry not sorry), terrible and mildly suggestive jokes, mutual pining, fluff levels may be dangerous, one (1) very smitten driver, one (1) girl trying to survive it, poor attempt at italian.
word count: 9.7k
a/n: guys, oh my god, this took me such a long time to finish! i’ve done my best to proofread it, but there might still be some pacing, structural, or grammatical hiccups. i apologize in advance if anything slipped through! this is my first long-form story, and i really hope you love it as much as i do.
The story of every legend begins… simply.
First, you are born. Then you grow. Then you live through childhood. It would be possible to quote Batman and say, “you either die a hero or live long enough to see yourself become the villain,” but this isn’t that kind of story.
No. These are different kinds of legends.
Take Lewis Hamilton as an example: born in Stevenage, a small town north of London, England. He spent part of his childhood with his mother, and it wasn’t until he was ten that he chose to live with his father to focus on racing. At five, with a remote-controlled car, he was already making a name for himself, and at six, with a small used kart, he kept chasing it.
Years later, after countless hardships and difficulties, a legend emerged. Seven-time world champion, three teams in Formula 1, he now stands among the most remembered and respected names in motorsport history, not only for his skill, but for what he represents.
And it isn’t just him: Senna, Prost, Schumacher, Vettel, and so many others who shaped the sport into what it is today are remembered as symbols of determination, greatness, and pride for their fans and their nations.
For years and years, that was all Kimi Antonelli ever talked about.
You were never close to him, even though you studied at the same school. In fact, the only thing you truly shared was a photo from a recital you both took part in at five years old — the one where you thought it was perfectly appropriate to kiss his cheek and cause a chorus of “awww” around you.
But proximity was never the point.
You didn’t have to be part of his inner circle to know that Kimi Antonelli was in love with motorsport. Anyone who cared to listen had heard him say he would become a legend one day — just like those drivers.
For that reason, during the second-to-last year of high school, you weren’t surprised at all when he told the entire class he was going to Formula 1 the following year.
Kimi had already climbed the other steps. He had already been champion in lower categories more than once. There had been tributes to him on ordinary school days — celebrations of his talent and the pride he brought to both the school and to Italy. But Formula 1… Formula 1 was different.
It was big.
A step closer to the dream he had chased for so long: becoming one of the best.
And at that age, he was already considered a rising promise in the racing world. The golden boy. The next prodigy. It wasn’t just Formula 1, that alone would have been enough, but for Kimi Antonelli?
Kimi Antonelli would begin his first Formula 1 season driving for the Mercedes AMG PETRONAS F1 Team, personally chosen to take the seat of none other than sir Lewis Hamilton himself, a fact that earned him his own Netflix documentary.
So many good things followed that, if the announcements hadn’t been officially published, you wouldn’t have believed them.
Oh — and you had the biggest crush on him.
Having a crush on Kimi Antonelli was hardly absurd. In fact, at school it was the most normal thing in the world. After all, he wasn’t just famous, well-managed, and surprisingly intelligent, he was also kind to everyone and very, very cute. And, perhaps, just perhaps, you had occasionally caught yourself daydreaming about rebellious wavy hair that only behaved under a cap and an easy smile that gave his face that boyish look.
And his hands.
In a completely appropriate way, of course.
But that had only become a thing during the final year, when one of your best friends shoved her phone in your face to show you the photoshoot he had done with George Russell. The focus was very specific: Kimi putting on his helmet, his hands fully on display. You had never noticed them before. Naturally, you were completely normal about it.
Totally normal. Completely normal. Nothing unusual whatsoever. Just a normal boy with long fingers and prominent veins and…
Yeah. Right. Sure.
Now school was over. All of that (cute boys, inappropriate hands, endless books about subjects you never quite mastered) had been left behind. A great relief, if anyone asked you — and yet, now that it was over, you missed it too. Years and years with the same classmates, hearing updates to the same stories, walking through the same hallways had quietly created a sense of attachment.
You hadn’t really wanted it to end.
And some people might have wondered whether that feeling could, at some level, be related to a certain prodigy driver who, by a twist of fate, had studied alongside you since early childhood, but… life is strange. And it does even stranger things, because after everything — after the whole year had passed and Kimi Antonelli had traveled the world and become a rookie with two podiums in his debut season, making history — he ended up spending Christmas in your living room.
Because your sister had done you a great favor: she had said yes to becoming an Antonelli.
It was there, on December twenty-fifth, two thousand and twenty-five, that you discovered your sister was engaged — not to Kimi Antonelli, thankfully, but to one of his older cousins.
You didn’t even know she was dating anyone! That’s what happens when your sister decides to move to another country and forgets to tell you about her dramatic new relationship.
Anyway, you were happy for her all the same. And it happened. So… somewhere between plates that were never empty, constant hugs, and elegant clothes, Kimi Antonelli had his first proper interaction with you.
You stood near the Christmas tree, finishing adjusting the bow on the head of one of your younger cousins, who refused to stay still for more than a second. She kept talking nonstop about how badly she wanted to open the presents, and you had to keep reminding her that it wasn’t time yet.
With an exaggerated pout, she ran off, leaving you behind with a fond laugh lingering on your lips.
Beside you, however, with steps far too deliberate to pass as casual, Kimi Antonelli approached.
“I didn’t know your sister was dating my cousin,” he said, taking a relaxed sip of his drink.
He was talking. To you. As if that made perfect sense. And, well… technically, it did. Aside from a couple of his cousins, you were the only person there who was actually his age.
You smoothed a hand down the skirt of your red dress. Blink. Blink. Blink. An attempt at normalcy. You had to make a double effort not to stare at the ring resting on his index finger like a complete weirdo.
“O-Oh! Yeah. Yes. Well,” you said, a little awkwardly, your gaze drifting toward the couple. They looked comfortable, happy. Your expression softened. “I didn’t know either. But I think they really like each other. From what I can tell.”
What a stupid answer. My God. You sounded like you had never learned how to speak. Kimi didn’t seem to notice, or perhaps he was just too polite to comment on your painfully obvious lack of composure.
“Yeah. I can see that too,” he agreed, his eyes following yours in the same direction. It didn’t last long, though. His attention returned to you. “We studied together.”
Yes, Kimi. We did. I know that. I know that very well.
You nodded, because words suddenly felt unreliable.
“That’s cool. And now we’re family,” he said, sounding so casual about it that it bordered on absurd.
It wasn’t normal. It was the complete opposite of normal. You hadn’t thought about it that way before, but… thinking about it now, he was kind of right.
You were going to faint right there.
Except you didn’t. You did something far more human — far more reasonable and, honestly, surprising: you smiled like a perfectly normal person.
“That’s crazy, right? It’s nice,” you replied.
You were actually quite proud of yourself.
He laughed softly and pointed toward the table with his thumb.
“Should we get dessert before it’s all gone? Maggie was planning to finish everything.”
You, who had fully expected the conversation to end after the first sentence, laughed quietly and followed him to get dessert, still not entirely convinced this was actually happening.
It had been a nice night — you had to admit that. Your sister announced her engagement, your nonna made your favorite dessert, your mother somehow won at karaoke, and two families met for the very first time. And you, somewhat shyly, allowed yourself to laugh until your stomach hurt at the silly things Kimi Antonelli kept saying, as if he were just a boy like any other.
When it came time to open the presents, the festive Christmas evening slowly drew to a close. It ended with him unwrapping the gift his mother had chosen for him — a plush version of himself dressed in his Mercedes race suit — which he immediately declared, laughing, “this one’s going into the collection,” before she handed him the actual present.
Nice. Very nice, actually. Something interesting to tell your friends, something that would absolutely blow their minds. You would see Kimi again at the wedding and… that would be it. A very interesting story to tell. Maybe you’d run into each other at another family event or a school reunion — both unlikely, considering his packed Formula 1 schedule — and life would simply move on from there. You were already happy with the night you’d had.
But the next day, he texted you.
“Okay, I have thoughts about your farm take.”
And the day after, he texted again.
“My mum says you’re exactly like your sister. I don’t agree with her, but that’s not a bad thing. Hear me out…”
And the next day. And the one after that. Always something new. Always a conversation that somehow wandered into unbelievable directions, music tastes, colors, dinosaurs, terrible internet jokes, about how much he knew about Formula 1 or motorsport in general, and that topic could go on forever. You had never imagined Kimi could talk that much.
The messages became so constant they turned into… normal. So normal that you forgot to ask how he had gotten your number, considering you had never given it to him.
Everything had gone completely off script, assuming there had ever been a script to begin with. So far removed from anything you had imagined that, on a random day in the middle of January, you somehow found yourself at his family’s house.
Because he wanted to show you his new helmet. The one he would wear for the entire racing season.
He had actually come back to town just for that.
Ah! You said house? No, no, no. Bedroom. You ended up in his bedroom.
“Wait here, I’ll grab it!” he said, already heading toward the closet.
And you waited, sitting on the bed.
During the three minutes Kimi took to grab the helmet and bring it back to you, you had enough time to look around and understand a little more about him. First, you needed to calm your racing heartbeat and the slight tremor in your hands. Then you noticed all the motorsport posters — and basketball?! — on his walls. There were some books too. Everything was organized in a way that suggested no one really lived there for long.
You knew Kimi didn’t actually live there anymore — he had his own apartment now, or so your sister had said. Somewhere else.
Kimi came back carrying the helmet inside a black case, holding it carefully with both hands. You had never seen a Formula 1 helmet in person before, so you hadn’t realized it was that big.
“Are you ready? I haven’t opened it yet. I don’t even know how it turned out,” he said, placing it on the bed as you stood up.
He hadn’t seen it yet? You frowned.
“Okay… show me,” you said, stepping closer. “I’ve never actually seen one before. It's my first time.”
“Hm, is it?” he asked, looking at you thoughtfully. “Alright. I’ll be gentle. No need to worry. It doesn’t hurt.”
Wait.
You blinked.
Was he saying what you thought he was saying?
The corner of his mouth twitched, like he was barely holding back a laugh, and you immediately covered your face with both hands.
“Oh my God,” you groaned. “You are such a boy. Just open it already!”
And Kimi was laughing. Really laughing. Until he wasn’t anymore, and all that remained was a cheeky grin. He walked back to the bed and unzipped the helmet case.
“You got all flustered. The way your neck turns red when you’re embarrassed is really cute,” he said casually, taking the helmet out of its cover.
Your heart skipped a beat. Your brain didn’t quite manage to process his words, looping instead on a single thought — compliment, compliment, compliment. Much to Kimi’s obvious delight, you turned even redder. Your hands suddenly unsure of where to exist, and for one terrifying second, you forgot entirely how conversations were supposed to work.
Apparently, this was going to be a recurring problem.
You went quiet, didn’t answer, and honestly wouldn’t have been able to. If Kimi noticed, if he had been expecting a response, he didn’t show it. In fact, he picked up the helmet to examine it, now genuinely focused on the object. He turned it from side to side, running his hand along the inside to test the padding before lifting it over his head to look inside it.
“What do you think?” he asked, holding it out to you.
Stepping closer, you took the helmet carefully into your hands. The first thing you noticed was the weight of it. Heavier than you had expected, solid in a way that immediately made you adjust your grip.
You glanced up at Kimi instinctively, as if searching for confirmation that this was normal. Your eyes landed on his neck. Very… different… from a normal neck.
Right.
Neck training.
Mandatory.
Just a neck. But bigger. Nothing unusual.
That long voice message he had once sent you about G-forces. You knew about it, of course.
You swallowed and forced your attention back to the colors, and there were many. A very colorful helmet. Very Kimi.
“Doesn’t this one have stars?” you asked.
He tilted his head to the side.
“Stars?”
“Yeah, stars. Like those on last year’s helmet.”
Kimi raised an eyebrow and crossed his arms. You looked up at him, confused.
“You know what my helmet looked like last year?”
Oh. Oops. You had just revealed that you knew an extremely niche detail about an object he used exclusively for work. Haha. So funny. You were very tempted to put the helmet you were holding straight onto your own head and disappear inside it forever, but you didn’t get the chance, because Kimi gently took it from your hands.
“You’re going to help me put it on,” he said.
Wait, what? A sudden flutter settled in your stomach.
“You don’t know how to put it on by yourself?” you asked, instinctively hiding your hands behind your back.
Kimi shrugged and pushed his hair back from his forehead with his free hand.
“I don’t have a balaclava. It’s harder,” he said, as if that explained everything, which it absolutely didn’t. His eyes drifted back to yours, like he couldn’t quite understand what was holding you back.
He adjusted his grip on the helmet and waited.
“Hm… you’re not coming over here?”
“Over there?” you repeated, still rooted to the spot.
Kimi tilted his head, a hint of amusement tugging at his mouth.
“Unless you have magical powers I don’t know about, I think you’ll need to stand a little closer if you’re going to help me adjust the helmet.”
“Right. Okay. I’m coming over,” you said.
“Okay.”
You took a step toward him. Kimi wiggled both eyebrows, a mischievous smile spreading across his lips. You rolled your eyes, glanced away, and threatened to take a step back. He clicked his tongue.
“The three longest steps I’ve ever seen in my life.”
Your arms stayed relaxed at your sides as you looked back at him.
“Could you put the helmet on so I can adjust it, please? You’re talking too much.”
Kimi let out a quiet laugh but lifted the helmet anyway, lowering it carefully over his head before looking back at you through the visor opening.
“You’re very bossy.”
You stepped closer, raising your hands hesitantly toward the sides of the helmet.
“I thought you wanted me to adjust your helmet.”
He tilted his head slightly so you could reach better, but instead of answering right away, his gaze lingered on your face, far too amused for someone supposedly focused on racing equipment.
“Oh, no,” he said softly, his voice muffled behind the helmet. “I just wanted you closer.”
Fuck.
Once again, there were no words in the world that could fully describe what had just happened. You were starting to lose all dignity at an alarming rate. You blinked once, twice, your gaze slipping away from his, even knowing Kimi was still watching you, dropping instead to focus on fastening the helmet strap beneath his chin. Without the balaclava, your fingers brushed softly against his skin.
When that happened, Kimi closed his eyes.
“Done?” he asked, voice low.
“Yes,” you agreed, taking a step back.
Kimi lifted a hand to close the visor and tilted his head slightly, testing the fit. Then he took a step back and turned toward you. Even with his eyes hidden behind the dark visor, you had the distinct feeling he was looking right at you.
“Is it good?”
At one moment, your eyes were on the helmet. You really wanted to say it was beautiful, that you loved it — the colors were vivid and cool. But your eyes had a habit of betraying you, and now they drifted slightly downward… his neck again… his shoulders… the movement of his arm as he lifted his hand to test the tightness of the strap. And his hands themselves. You’d already mentioned the hands, hadn’t you? The rings around his fingers and… well. Yes.
You cleared your throat.
“It looks good,” you managed, swallowing right after.
For one brief moment longer, the two of you stayed like that: the helmet visor lowered, Kimi standing still, and you not quite sure what to do with your own hands. The silence stretched just a little too long, your heartbeat suddenly loud in your ears. You tucked your hair behind your ear, glancing around the room as if searching for something to anchor yourself to — and your bag on the bed became the perfect excuse. You stepped toward it, grateful for the movement. When you looked back at Kimi, he was finishing taking off the helmet, unsuccessfully trying to fix his hair with one hand while holding it with the other.
“Are you leaving already?” he asked, setting the helmet carefully inside its case as he spoke.
“Yeah, I… have to help my mum with a few things.” You shifted the strap of your bag on your shoulder. It wasn’t a lie, but it wasn’t entirely the truth either.
Kimi watched you, his gaze steady enough to make you suddenly aware of yourself. You straightened your posture without meaning to. His hair was a mess, his face slightly flushed from the helmet.
“I’m traveling tonight,” he said suddenly, glancing down as he adjusted the zipper of the case before looking back at you.
“I thought you were staying there until testing started,” you replied, fingers absently brushing the pendant at your neck.
“I was. I am.” He hesitated, one hand resting on top of the helmet case. “But I wanted to come here to see the helmet at home.” A small pause followed as his thumb traced the edge of the case. “I chose the details, so it felt fair that the first time I put it on would be somewhere important.”
For someone who had worn special helmets so many times before, he seemed to consider this new one something particularly meaningful. You still hadn’t decided why that was.
Your gazes met again, and you became fully aware of the soft shiver that ran down your spine. At last, Kimi let the helmet rest and stepped away from it, moving closer to you.
“I guess this is a goodbye, then. For now.” He said, cutting through the growing tension that had nearly become tangible. But there was something hopeful in the way he looked at you. “I’ll be back soon and, well, you can watch me through the pre-season testing cameras if you want.”
A little breathless, you nodded, and a second later remembered to smile.
“Yeah, okay. I will.” you replied, trying to match his enthusiasm.
Kimi let out a laugh, light and melodic, and then did something you would have never, not in a million years, imagined would ever happen to you: he lifted his arms, closed the distance between you, and pulled you into a tight hug, as if you were close friends who had known each other for years and not… Andrea Kimi Antonelli and, well, you.
Your face had never felt so warm before, so close to being mistaken for a fever. When you hugged him back, uncertain, trembling, hesitant, he destroyed whatever remained of your sanity:
“Thanks for coming. I’ll text you when I land.” as if it were unthinkable that you wouldn’t be informed of his safe arrival in another country.
You weren’t entirely sure how you made it to the front door. All you knew was that your heart was beating so loudly it could probably have been heard from the other side of the city.
That night, while Kimi was crossing continents, you stayed home, reading a book in bed, trying to decide whether you should ask your mum to take you to a doctor just to make sure you weren’t experiencing some kind of delusion or if you should look for someone specialized in the supernatural to confirm you hadn’t accidentally slipped into a parallel reality.
You knew there were plenty of movies like that.
There was that one… 16 Wishes, right? The one with Debby Ryan, where her character receives a box of candles on her sixteenth birthday that grant the wishes she had written in a letter as a child. Maybe that was what had happened to you, just by accident.
You set the book aside and threw yourself onto the bed, staring up at the ceiling. For a long moment, you simply lay there, stretched out and thoughtful, thinking that after spending so long liking a boy from afar, hearing him say sweet things to you should have felt like a dream coming true. Especially when the boy in question was him.
So why couldn’t you fully sink into the idea that someone like Kimi Antonelli was deliberately flirting with you because something about you had caught his attention?
The thought made you laugh.
You knew the kind of girls he was surrounded by. Not at school, outside of it. The kind of girls he had access to, the kind of girls other drivers dated. Beautiful women, models, actresses, famous singers. They all wanted to be with guys like them. So it was better to be realistic, because if Kimi Antonelli hadn’t been within the realm of possibility back when he was just a little boy dreaming of becoming a kart driver, how could he possibly be now?
But all of that, that entire spiral of thoughts, was a cliché too. Everything about this whole story felt impossibly unreal anyway.
You let out a childish little whine, pretending to cry as you rolled onto your stomach, burying your face in the pillow.
You remembered his scent.
That scent. God.
At the time, everything had felt so overwhelming that you hadn’t stopped to notice it properly, but your brain had kept it anyway. Even through the frenzy, you could still remember the smell of his cologne: something so unmistakably Kimi that you couldn’t even begin to describe its notes.
Oh, no. I just wanted you closer. Handsome, smug bastard. Pulling off something that smooth without a hint of shame. And you fell for it. Of course you did. Honestly, you’d fall for it again and again and again. He should stop saying things like that. Stop doing things like that.
But really, the most pathetic part of this entire situation was you treating it as if it meant more than it did. Honestly, what an exaggeration. Kimi flirted as naturally as he breathed, and now, as he had already made clear at Christmas, you were family.
Except he still hadn’t seen the finished helmet and had flown all the way there to see it with you. In a place that mattered.
And he hadn’t even needed to be there. It was the middle of his work week. Kimi had made the trip just to spend a single day in his hometown to see the helmet somewhere important, when he could, and probably should, have seen it with his teammate and the staff who would actually help him put it on properly, balaclava and all.
You switched off the bedside lamp and slipped beneath the covers as if you were trying to escape your own thoughts. It felt dangerous. Like a ritual, you whispered, stop thinking, stop thinking, stop thinking, and finally closed your eyes.
Falling asleep that night wasn’t difficult. What was difficult was stopping your brain from deciding to dream about WAGs and magazine covers where you were holding hands with your handsome driver boyfriend.
You liked the dream, of course. You would never admit that out loud.
Kimi really did send a message saying everything was fine. Except he was late. He texted two hours after landing and apologized for it.
Apologized. Right.
He said his mum had been worried sick and that he’d had to send her a photo with his engineer just to prove he was alive. Oh, yes he’d been late texting her too. Which, in all the unnecessary explanations he insisted on giving, basically meant he had texted you right after replying to his own mother.
You knew how much Kimi adored her.
You were trying not to let that go to your head.
The following days passed silently. You didn’t hear from Kimi as often because he had a lot to do: interviews, team videos to film, birthdays coming up that required him to record something thoughtful, photoshoots, and pre-season preparations in general. And you were busy in your own way too. University was coming up. You had to study twice as hard if you wanted to get into that specific one you had dreamed about since you were very young.
But he still showed up.
Kimi was there — in the messages you read a little too late because of the time difference, in the photos of odd little things he found around the paddock, in the selfies he sent covered in silly filters. And you sent things back too.
The bubble grew so comfortable that, before you realized it, you had settled into it.
With time, he became just… Kimi. Even from the other side of the world. Even knowing he was there, racing in one of the most expensive sports on the planet.
He called you two weeks later.
You were still asleep when you heard your phone ringing. Annoyed, you reached out to grab it and bring it closer to your face to see who could possibly be calling. And then you saw his name on the screen. You almost declined it. If it had been anyone else, you probably would have.
But you answered.
It was a video call. Kimi appeared in all his effortlessly beautiful glory, Mercedes cap on and that constant smile that seemed permanently etched onto his face. You, however, had your camera turned off — and he noticed immediately.
“Ehi, buongiorno! What is happening? Where are you? Why is the camera off?”
You let out an irritated groan.
“I don’t want to talk.”
“My God, your voice… I woke you up?” Kimi asked, his voice softening instantly.
“What do you think?” you muttered.
Kimi let out a laugh and glanced upward, away from the camera, answering someone nearby. It didn’t take more than two seconds before his attention returned to you.
“Okay, doesn’t matter,” he said. “I’m about to get in the car for testing, and if I don’t see your face now, I’ll have very bad luck and the car will crash. The fans will know it was your fault.”
“They will? You’re going to tell them?” you asked.
He looked momentarily surprised by your answer. A good kind of surprised.
“You get quite mouthy when the camera’s off, don’t you?” he said, amused. “Let’s see if that attitude survives once I actually see your face. Come on.”
You rubbed your face and sat up in bed, yawning audibly. It took you a moment to fully wake up, running a hand through your hair until it looked at least somewhat presentable.
“You’re very annoying,” you said. A lie, of course.
He dragged his tongue slowly across his lips and nodded in approval. With a long sigh, you finally switched the camera on.
“There she is.” he said, his face lighting up at the sight of you. “I really did wake you up, look at you. Che carina.”
Your face turned red, and you buried it against the pillow beside you. Kimi burst out laughing. He was clearly having far too much fun with your reactions.
“Stop,” you said.
“Stop what?”
“That.”
“I’m literally walking toward the Mercedes motorhome. I can’t stop.”
“Very funny. You know exactly what you’re doing.”
You looked back at his face, brushing the strands of hair away from your eyes only to be met with his smile again. You were starting to suspect this call didn’t actually have any real reason to be happening.
Your stomach flipped.
“Is Kimi talking to someone?” you heard a strong British accent ask from somewhere behind him — somewhere you couldn’t see.
He shot a quick glance toward the voice, but before he could stop whoever it was from approaching, an arm wrapped around Kimi’s shoulders and George Russell’s face suddenly appeared on screen, curious and openly amused.
“Oh! It’s a girl!” he announced. Not to the camera, but to the nearby team members. Then he turned back to Kimi, who quickly lowered the phone, leaving you staring at nothing but a section of his T-shirt. “Your girlfriend?”
“Mate, give me a second. We’ll talk later,” Kimi replied, his tone noticeably different from the confident one you were used to hearing.
He sounded… shy.
“Aaaah, so it is your girlfriend,” George teased.
“She’s not my girlfriend…” Kimi said, uncertainty slipping into his voice.
“Yet,” the voice called from farther away, as if George had already walked off.
The tips of your ears burned red when Kimi lifted the phone back toward his face. And it wasn’t just your ears that were red: Andrea Kimi Antonelli’s entire face was flushed too.
He cleared his throat.
“Sorry about him.”
“Oh, it’s okay.”
“He’s an idiot.”
You laughed.
“He seems nice, though.”
Kimi smiled.
“He is. He just likes to mess with people.”
Your laughter faded into a small smile, almost matching his. Then Kimi glanced away from the phone, finally coming to a stop, clicking his tongue softly.
“I should go. Duty calls.” His attention drifted back to the screen. “Are you going back to sleep?”
You shrugged, letting out a fake sigh of annoyance.
“I don’t know. Someone kind of ruined my peaceful morning.”
“Ah, mi dispiace.” He didn’t sound sorry at all.
“Bye, Kimi,” you said, biting your lower lip to hold back your smile.
He looked at the screen for a second longer.
“Bye, carina,” Kimi said, then ended the call, leaving you with every butterfly in the world fluttering in your stomach.
Five minutes later, he sent another message:
Ah! I forgot to tell you. You and your sister need to stop by my mum’s house later to sort something out for the wedding. I told her I was going to call you, and she asked me to let you know.
You smiled to yourself in your room, your phone resting on your chest, because he had actually had a perfectly legitimate reason to call you and had simply forgotten.
Cute. Cute. Cute. Cute. Ugh, cute.
Somehow, in a way completely beyond your understanding, Kimi had managed to get time off from pre-season testing with only two weeks left before the first Grand Prix of the year just to attend his cousin’s wedding.
Before, you hadn’t realized what that truly meant. Now you did. For a Formula 1 driver, days reserved for family were almost a luxury, yet Kimi talked about it as if it had taken no effort at all to convince the people in the garage — as if being there had always been the obvious choice.
It was incredible.
You didn’t saw him when he arrived, even though you knew exactly when it happened because he had told you. You knew he was having a serious problem with his tie and that “you would be a great help in solving this situation, but he wasn’t going to force anything because you were busy being the bride’s sister” — his words. You knew when he made it to the reception, and just how handsome he looked, because he sent you a photo that nearly made you lose track of all your responsibilities that afternoon.
Only fifteen minutes before leaving the room where your sister was finishing getting ready for the best day of her life did you finally feel panic threaten to swallow you whole.
You stopped. Just… stopped. Your breathing came out uneven, your body refusing to respond the way it should. The anxiety was strong enough to make your stomach ache.
Through the mirror, your sister noticed you. She was already ready — spectacular, so beautiful you wouldn’t even know where to begin describing her — and definitely the person who actually had every reason to be nervous. And she was. Still, the moment she saw the slight tremor in your body, she stood up to help you.
“What is it, shorty?” she asked, cupping your face gently between her perfectly done hands.
Your eyes refocused and met hers.
“I think he’s waiting for me downstairs,” you admitted, biting the inside of your cheek.
The smile she gave you was so sweet it nearly gave you a sugar rush. Her laugh was just as soft, like she couldn’t quite believe that was your problem.
“You’re more nervous than I am, you know that? And it’s my wedding.” She sighed, her fingers brushing affectionately along the side of your face before settling on your shoulders. “Go talk to him before the ceremony starts. Kimi’s just a silly boy. I’ve seen him throw socks at the man I’m about to marry, a grown adult. They’re all ridiculous. Don’t let yourself be intimidated by those idiots.”
You let out a nervous laugh and lifted your hand to touch hers. The smile lingered as you thought about what your sister had said, turning her words over in your mind. Slowly, the smile faded, a small crease forming between your brows as you clearly drifted into thought. The sudden change made your sister’s expression shift into concern.
“What if he hugs me?” you asked, almost in a frightened whisper, as if that alone were something dangerous, something forbidden.
Her expression dropped instantly before she rolled her eyes. The hands resting on your shoulders turned purposeful as she spun you around and started pushing you toward the door. You let out a startled, “Wait! Hey!” but she had already grabbed the handle and pulled it open.
“You’re going to do me a favor and go talk to that boy right now! I need my own panic moment in peace. Go!”
Before you could protest, the door closed in front you with a soft click.
“She’s quite intense, isn’t she?” he said from behind, his voice lightly amused, a hint of laughter tucked into the words.
Oh, no. No. No. Oh my God, no.
You froze, still standing there with your back turned to Kimi.
“How much… um, how much of that conversation did you hear?” you asked, your fists clenched at your sides.
Footsteps. Getting closer. Oh no.
“That last part. The one suggesting there’s a boy you didn’t want to talk to… was that me?”
His voice was so close now. You could feel his presence behind you.
“No. It wasn’t you,” you answered quietly.
“Oh. So there’s another guy I should be worried about, then.”
“No! I mean… no…” You hurried to correct yourself, words tangling together. “It was you. Just… not like that.”
You didn’t see it, but the corner of his mouth curved into an amused smile.
Kimi took another step closer. Close enough now that you could feel the warmth of him at your back. Close enough that your heart felt one beat away from escaping your chest altogether.
“How was it, then?” he asked, more quietly.
You swallowed hard but didn’t answer. Kimi bit his lower lip, thoughtful for a moment, as if weighing a decision, and then he made up his mind. He placed his hands gently at your waist, and you felt electricity rush from your head all the way down to your feet.
“Can I turn you around?” he asked softly. “I want to see you. Your dress.”
You let out a shaky breath, worrying the skin of your upper lip between your teeth before finally nodding.
His fingers tightened slightly at your waist, and you instinctively closed your eyes. Slowly, carefully, Kimi turned you until you were facing him.
Your eyes stayed shut.
He laughed, a boyish sound, tipping his head back for a second in disbelief.
“You’re really not going to look at me?”
“No…”
“That hurts my feelings,” he said lightly. “Do you think I’m ugly?”
“No! No—”
A strand of hair had fallen across your face; he reached up and gently brushed it away from your eyes, his fingers lingering for just a moment longer than necessary.
“Then open your eyes,” he murmured. “Look at me.”
Slowly, you did.
Your knees nearly gave out.
Oh my God, he was beautiful. Truly, unfairly beautiful. His smile, his eyes, the softness of his cheeks. Those stupid eyebrows lifting again just to tease you.
You dropped your gaze almost immediately, but his hand moved to your chin, guiding your face back up until your eyes met his again.
“You’re torturing me,” you whispered.
“Oh, so you do think I’m ugly,” he said, the smile never leaving his face.
“Shut up.”
He laughed softly.
Then silence fell, charged, impossibly fragile as the two of you simply looked at each other.
His gaze flickered briefly to your lips before returning to your eyes.
“I could kiss you right now,” he said quietly.
Your eyes widened.
A beat passed.
“But I won’t.”
You weren’t sure whether you felt relieved or completely, hopelessly doomed — and he noticed.
His hand slipped away from your waist only to find yours instead, his fingers threading gently through yours.
“At some point tonight,” he said, “I’m going to kiss you. And it’ll be a surprise. You won’t see it coming.”
Still holding your hand, he stepped back slightly. His gaze traveled slowly from your head to your feet, and suddenly you became painfully aware of everything: the way you were standing, your dress, your hands, your breathing.
But he looked… awestruck.
Kimi drew in a deep breath and let out a quiet hiss.
“Yeah,” he murmured. “That’s unfair.”
Then he tugged you gently toward the exit.
The wedding was ruined.
Not properly, of course. Everything unfolded exactly as it should: your sister was still the most beautiful woman in the room, and you cried appropriately (excessively, actually) when she finally walked down the aisle. The groom looked at her as if she were the only woman in the universe, exactly as he should, and the ceremony was beautiful.
While you stood at the front, Kimi was beside you, both of you witnessing one of the most important moments in their lives. He looked genuinely moved, repeatedly lifting a finger to his eyes to brush away falling tears, far more discreetly than you.
When it was over, your sister raised the bouquet for photos and was quickly pulled into a kiss that bordered on excessive. Everyone applauded, celebrated, and embraced one another — perfection. It was the most beautiful wedding you had ever attended.
And it would have remained perfect, just as it had been planned from the very beginning, if not for one small interruption: the memory of Kimi’s voice. At some point tonight I’m going to kiss you. And it’ll be a surprise. You won’t see it coming. The words lingered over every quiet moment, impossible to ignore — and having him standing right beside you did nothing to calm the feeling.
Before the two of you walked down to join the reception, you lifted your eyes only to find his already fixed on you. Warmth rushed to your cheeks. He smiled soft, knowing and headed downstairs ahead of you.
The dance began, and you stood beside a pillar with a stolen little dessert in hand, watching the newlyweds spin across the dance floor. Your sister looked so genuinely happy that you couldn’t help the soft smile resting on your face, your head tilted slightly to the side as you watched her.
She deserved to be loved like that — completely, devotedly, breathtakingly. Nothing could have made you happier than seeing her that way.
The music drifted softly through the room, warm and golden, wrapping itself around laughter, clinking glasses, and conversations that overlapped into a comfortable blur. For a moment, you allowed yourself to simply exist there — unnoticed, safe behind the pillar, watching love unfold from a distance.
You took another bite of the dessert, barely tasting it.
At some point tonight.
You exhaled slowly through your nose, eyes still fixed on your sister as she laughed mid-spin, her dress catching the light with every turn.
Focus. This isn’t about you. This is her day.
You cleared your throat, as if that alone could convince you that you were fully present, appreciating what you were supposed to be appreciating: the beautiful solemnity of witnessing a love so strong it had to be made official, announced to the world.
You liked weddings. A lot. You wanted to get married someday too. You just didn’t know when that would happen, obviously — especially considering you didn’t even have a boyfriend who could… you know… propose… or—
Your train of thought derailed completely.
Because somehow, your traitorous brain teamed up with your equally traitorous eyes, and together they landed on Kimi across the reception, laughing with his cousins on the other side of the room.
Kimi stood in the middle of a conversation he seemed deeply invested in. There were animated hand gestures, frequent nodding, a lot of “yeah, yeah, yeah” slipping into the discussion. You could tell he genuinely liked the people around him.
None of that stopped you from noticing other things.
His tie was slightly crooked, apparently still losing its battle. The subtle tension along his jaw whenever he clearly wanted to say something but was politely waiting for the other person to finish. And his eyes.
Which shifted focus the very next second.
Toward you.
When your gazes met, his expression changed instantly — as if he had been waiting for you to notice him. A small smile tugged at the corner of his mouth.
Not teasing.
Not smug.
Just… fond.
Your stomach flipped so suddenly you nearly dropped the dessert in your hand. When you lifted your eyes to find him again, Kimi was no longer there.
Oh, no. Oh, no. No.
Your gaze swept across the room, searching instinctively, as if spotting him first might somehow prepare you for whatever he was about to do. Without thinking, you set your plate onto a passing waiter’s tray and turned quickly to keep looking.
Thud.
Your hands collided with something solid — a firm wall of very well-trained muscle belonging unmistakably to driver number twelve. Perfect timing. Almost suspiciously perfect.
Your shoulders pulled inward as you instinctively stepped back, just one step.
But Kimi’s hand closed gently around your elbow before you could go any farther.
“I want to show you something,” he said simply.
“You do? What is it?” you asked, still trying to steady your breathing.
“The maze out back. The garden.”
You blinked. “You want to take me to the maze? Just you and me?”
He laughed softly, like the answer was obvious.
“That’s the idea.”
Oh, no.
You drew in a slow breath, suddenly very aware of how close he was standing.
“You look scared,” he observed, amusement slipping gently into his voice.
“Me? Scared?” you said, a little too loudly. “No. Uh-uh. We should absolutely go to this… this… maze. Just you and me.”
He narrowed his eyes, clearly seconds away from laughing, his teeth catching his lower lip as he tried, and failed, to look serious.
Smug idiot.
Then he took your hand.
Smug. Idiot.
“You’re shaking a little,” he said, tilting his head, thumb brushing lightly over your fingers. “Cold?”
Smug. Idiot. He knew exactly what it was.
“Mm-hmm,” you murmured, barely parting your lips. Words were failing you at the moment.
Oh, God. He was leading you through the crowd, past people giving you that look — the unmistakable one that said they knew exactly what was going on and were fully rooting for it.
“Give me a minute,” he said casually. “I’ll warm you up. We just need somewhere a bit more private.”
Excuse me?! Your grip tightened around his hand, and Kimi laughed immediately.
“Wow, that came out terrible,” he said. “I meant my suit jacket. I’m lending it to you. I swear I’m normal.”
You took a deep breath. A very deep breath. This was actually happening. Andrea Kimi Antonelli was leading you by the hand toward the maze, his intentions suspiciously ambiguous, while your heart felt so tightly squeezed it almost hurt.
You hadn’t known it was possible to be this nervous.
As you passed beneath the archway, your eyes followed the leaves overhead. You had walked through there earlier in the day with your sister, seen the place in daylight — but it felt completely different now. Not just because of the lighting, breathtaking under the night sky, or the stone sculptures that gave everything a faintly mystical atmosphere, but because of the situation. Because of what the moment meant.
Kimi guided you toward the bench. Before either of you sat down, he loosened his tie, slipping it off without looking at you — his gaze fixed on the entrance as if making sure no one would interrupt. Then he turned back to you, tucking the fabric neatly into his pocket.
He smiled.
You blinked.
Oh.
Suddenly, you remembered school. Every time you had sighed when he walked past you in the hallway. All those chaotic mornings when he entered the classroom with his friends — loud, unmistakably boys, always seconds away from announcing something ridiculous.
The corners of your notebooks with his name written at the top. The silly games you and your friends used to play — who are you going to be happy with forever? — and every time it landed on Andrea Kimi Antonelli, you clapped like it was the revelation of the year.
You used to watch him from afar. The boy on the rise. So untouchable. So handsome. So… so many things.
You swallowed hard.
Kimi noticed.
“Hey. What is it?” he asked gently, draping his suit jacket around your shoulders.
His scent was everywhere now, and you needed an extra second just to steady yourself through it. God, you liked that smell.
“I… was thinking,” you admitted.
“Oh no,” Kimi said playfully.
You laughed, and a half-smile tugged at his mouth in response.
Then you looked up at him again. He waited patiently, giving you his full attention, ready to hear whatever you were about to say.
“I’m scared.”
“Of what?”
“Of getting my heart really, really broken.”
“Fair,” he said softly.
You hesitated, gathering courage you weren’t entirely sure you possessed.
“Because I’ve liked you for… for a very long time,” you said, your voice coming out small and fragile. “And if what we’re doing here is just… just this… you need to tell me.”
Your breathing felt uneven. Saying those words had taken everything out of you, and Kimi seemed to understand that. He watched you carefully, like someone choosing his next words with care.
“I don’t want it to be just this,” he said softly. “Really… I don’t.” He hesitated, searching for the right words. “I like you. A lot. I thought maybe I was being obvious, but… maybe not enough. And maybe I arrived a little late compared to you, but… I cannot stop thinking about it.”
His hand lifted, gently catching a single strand of your hair between his fingers, absentmindedly playing with it.
“But?” you asked, already bracing yourself.
Kimi shook his head.
“No but,” he said quietly. “It’s simple for me. I like what we have. I don’t want it to end. I don’t think I could just… go back to before.”
You swallowed.
“But you’ve seen my routine. You know being a driver comes with… things. And being the… girlfriend…” He cleared his throat, suddenly shy. “The girlfriend of a driver, she has to deal with… Well, it comes with things.”
You nodded and stepped closer, closing the distance between you.
“I think… we could try,” you said softly. “Not everything right now. But we can start.”
You looked up at him.
“Okay?”
Kimi lifted his gaze to meet yours. He didn’t answer, but his eyes moved slowly across your face, as if mapping every detail. You didn’t interrupt him — you simply watched, feeling the anxiety begin to creep back in.
And then his lips were on yours.
Just like that. Sudden.
You didn’t even register the moment Kimi leaned in to kiss you.
It didn’t last long. He pulled back just enough to look at you, a small smile tugging at the corner of his mouth.
“Okay,” he finally murmured. “I told you I’d catch you by surprise.”
You laughed. Silly boy. The warmth of his lips still lingered against yours.
He lifted his hands, gently cradling your face just to look at you again — that soft, boyish smile you’d already learned you were helpless against. And then… he wiggled both eyebrows.
“Stop doing that,” you said, sticking your tongue out at him as if your heart wasn’t currently dancing wildly inside your chest.
He rolled his eyes playfully and pulled you closer by your cheeks.
This time, when his lips met yours, his arms slipped around your waist, drawing you in — and you finally… gave in.
Your eyes closed.
So did his.
Your hand found the back of his shirt before you even realized it, fingers curling into the fabric as if you needed something solid to hold onto. He pulled you closer in response, arms tightening around you as the kiss deepened, gently guiding your head to tilt toward his.
Would it be cliché to say it felt like fireworks were going off above you?
“Do you hear that?” he murmured against your lips.
You opened your eyes — only to gasp softly when you saw fireworks bursting across the sky overhead, actual fireworks, bright and undeniable, not just something your overwhelmed heart had invented.
“Oh my God. I thought that was just in my head,” you admitted without thinking.
Kimi pulled a smug little pout.
“Am I really that good at kissing?”
You rolled your eyes, ready with a comeback, but he kissed you again between a laugh before you could say a word. A warm, tender kiss — full of affection and the quiet promise of a happily-ever-after that had once felt unreal in childhood but somehow now belonged to you.
Andrea Kimi Antonelli might one day be remembered as one of Formula One’s next great legends. But there, on an ordinary night wrapped inside an extraordinary day, he was just your boy.
MELBOURNE, MEDIA DAY (Australian GP) — 2026.
No one knew you were there yet. Not even him.
All you knew was that the past few days had been chaotic — managing to secure paddock access much later than you should have, with tickets nearly sold out, scrambling to find a hotel and a last-minute flight, and still having to adjust to the completely unhinged time zone of that country.
It was a lot.
Even so, on the morning of media day, you had already landed — and after only a few hours of sleep, you were in an Uber on your way to the circuit, your anxiety growing with every turn the car made.
You kept wondering what Kimi would say. Would he be surprised? Would he be annoyed? How were you even supposed to introduce yourself? Were you his friend? Someone he knew? Or… could you actually say what you really were?
Had anyone in the garage even heard about you yet?
You had absolutely no idea.
When you stepped out of the car and thanked the driver goodbye, your stomach very nearly filed an official complaint.
You knew he was in the cafeteria having lunch, and you also knew you’d have to get past security to reach the Mercedes facilities. That part scared you too, because if you weren’t welcomed there, a very real possibility, your entire surprise plan would fall apart on the spot.
Still, you made it through the turnstiles with your paddock pass and suddenly… you were there.
There was so much to take in. So many colors, so much movement: drivers walking past toward their motorhomes dressed in their team merch, others stopped for interviews, surrounded by journalists carefully kept at a distance by security. The place buzzed with energy, crowded and alive in a way that made everything feel bigger than you had imagined.
For a few seconds, you fidgeted with the strap of your bag, turning slowly in place as you looked around, completely lost. There were no signs pointing toward the cafeteria or the Mercedes area, but you figured you’d just keep searching.
That was the problem with doing things without a plan.
A security guard approached, clearly noticing your confusion, stopping at a polite distance.
“Can I help you?” he asked.
You blinked, startled, then quickly held up your access pass.
“I’m looking for the Mercedes facilities. I…” you said, glancing around uncertainly. “I’m… acquainted with Kimi Antonelli.”
Ah, yes. Very convincing. Excellent delivery. Truly flawless.
Of course, he looked at you suspiciously, one eyebrow lifting. Maybe you should show him the photos on your phone? Would he even believe them? With AI these days, you doubted it.
“Yeah, alright. Sure. This way,” he said, already gesturing for you to follow him in the opposite direction.
“Hey! I am telling the truth!” you protested, hurrying after him.
He didn’t even spare you another glance, simply continuing forward while making sure you stayed close behind him.
For nearly an hour, they left you waiting in the public paddock courtyard — without your phone, without your bag, completely alone while they carried out the standard security check. Apparently, showing up at the paddock with a specific driver’s name on your lips qualified as a crime of the highest order and had to be handled with maximum seriousness.
On one hand, you were oddly relieved it meant Kimi was safe. On the other, it was incredibly frustrating to stand there unable to send him even a single message to explain the mess you had somehow gotten yourself into. At last, you were pulled out of your momentary trance when you felt a light poke just behind your ear.
“I think you let them take this,” a familiar voice said right behind you, your bag swinging lightly in his hand.
With an enormous, inevitable smile, you jumped up from the bench and threw yourself into his arms. Kimi let out a warm, surprised laugh as he hugged you back, dropping your bag onto the table beside him.
“What are you doing here?!” he asked, pulling back just enough to cup your face in his hands, as if he needed to make sure you were actually real.
But you didn’t say anything. You were too busy looking down at him — at the team kit, at the sight of him standing there in his Mercedes colors, dizzy from that unmistakable scent you were no longer satisfied experiencing only through the sweatshirt you had stolen from him.
You hugged him again, hiding your face in the curve of his neck.
“You’re so handsome. This feels like a dream,” you murmured, and he laughed softly once more.
Kimi gently ran a hand through your hair, resting his head lightly against yours.
“I wanted to surprise you,” you admitted, “but security didn’t believe me. Not even when I answered your favorite sock color.”
“That’s a very strange question. What kind of interrogation was that?” he said, amused.
You laughed and pressed a quick kiss to his chin.
“Thank you for coming to get me.”
He pressed a soft kiss to your forehead before pulling back, lacing your fingers together and picking up your bag so he could carry it himself, slinging it over his shoulder.
“Always.”
“Now let’s get you somewhere actually decent. It’s ridiculously hot out here.” He glanced at you, already guiding you forward. “And after media day, I’m having a word with that security guy. Nobody leaves my girlfriend waiting.”
Girlfriend.
Okay.
Hehe.
You hid your smile behind your free hand and let him lead you wherever he wanted to go.
kinda wondering how should i post my next fic...
which one do you prefer?
5k+ words in 1 post
5k+ words in 3-4 posts (posted all in the same time)
5k+ words in 3-4 posts (posted 1 /3 days)
Hide and Seek — OP81
Pairing: Oscar Piastri x Fem!Reader
Length: 1k
Snippet: At this point, you can call this internship as an exposure therapy.
Part 3 of 'Let It Left' series.
Turns out, you worried for almost nothing.
The said AV—Audio Visual room is as big as a cinema. You can easily slip to the farthest seat from the aisle and hide behind the wall. You don't even need to alter your face with makeup because you sit at 40th-something row.
You believe Oscar will sit in front. He's one of the highlights from this company, after all.
You lay your head to the wall beside you, murmuring 'sorry, headache' to someone sit next to you, and the said person only nod their head and go on with their own business.
At this point, you can call this internship as an exposure therapy.
You were startled when you first came to McLaren's Technology Centre and found Oscar face printed at a 2m² banner in the lobby.
Your hands were trembling. You turn your back and find another way, blocking your sight from his banner with your hand.
The third time you passed the lobby, you decided to look at it, catching every detail that looked different from 10 years ago. Because you suddenly realized it's just a banner. It won't do anything to you. And you are slightly curious how he looked like now.
First of all, you noticed his hair. Those dirty blonde hair turns into dark brown. His neck went wider, of course. His smile looks professional—if that makes sense. He appears more calm, more refined. His moles—the ones you often count when you're with him and compare with stars—appear darker, there are new spots on his neck.
So much happened since then.
"Hi, I'm Oscar Piastri, McLaren F1 driver."
But you never prepared to hear his voice. That explains tears that drop without you realizing when Oscar introduced himself in front of all the McLaren staff.
His soft voice buzzed through the speaker, through the walls.
Through your cheek since you pressed your face to walls, hiding between the dint.
Somehow, that's worse.
One tears lead to another, and you can't stop it. Not even if you want to. You bite your lips and sob in silence. A sharp pain pierce through your chest and your throat burns, trying so hard not to bawl.
So that's his voice now. Still soothing as ever, still calm as ever. Slightly deeper, but still unmistakably Oscar.
⊹₊⟡⋆
"I'm being too dramatic, am I?" You wipe the tears that fall again.
Jacqueline pressed her lips, trying to find an answer that fits. "You want to know my opinion?"
You nod.
"I think ... this is because you never have a closure from him. Think again. Both of you slowly leave your 'friendship'." Her fingers air quotes. "Your feelings for him were—or is real. No closure might make you think all the what ifs. What if you confessed? What if he stays? What if he goes with you to the prom? You have endless questions and maybe ... 10 years can't erase that. You're not dramatic. You just ... " Jace's words hang in the air.
"You just wounded. Deeply wounded. And there is no exact time to heal from a heartbreak."
"It's silly," you muttered. "I grieve him for longer than I know him."
Jace shook her head. "It's not silly. He's your first love. He changes your life. Makes you realize you love engineering. That kind of person would always be hard to forget."
"And he met millions of people after he met me. I probably shouldn't be this scared. Maybe he doesn't remember me at all." You bite a smile. The 'truth' felt so heavy on your throat.
Your best friend grips her phone. "My intuition says he still remembers you."
"I bet he won't."
"If he remembers you, what would you do?"
"Oh God, help me." I lift my arms in despair and throw myself to bed.
⊹₊⟡⋆
"A trip to the factory?" You echo the word your mentor just said.
Samuel nods. "Yes! We collaborated with other divisions. Our factory is a 10-minute drive from MTC. Still in this area, though. You'll see chassis developments and there will be another enjoyable activity with other divisions tomorrow."
Enjoyable activity.
That sounds very, very, suspicious.
However, you're glad you avoid McLaren's headquarters for a while. It's a break from Oscar's banner exposure therapy. Or his voice. Or his name. Or every tiny bits of his existence. McLaren's factory is a fresh air for you. They focused on designing and producing spareparts. Every room is clinical white with a lot of projectors and machines. You walk with your mentor through every room, taking notes about things you first encountered.
"We always try to listen to everyone's input. If you find any thing that we can improve, don't be hesitate to tell me. We will brainstorm all the ideas and find the best solution," Samuel end his explanation. "Do you want to walk around on your own? Just tap my shoulder if you need anything."
You nod, saying thank you and start wandering around the factory. The glass makes everything inside the room seen clear, except for secluded meeting rooms. You already went to see front and rear wing assembling, livery design department, and engine analyst department. That leaves you with chassis team and car engineers. You decided to go to the chassis team first, near the car engineer's meeting room.
As your feet reach the door, you stunned when you see a leg with black-papaya trousers from a room across it—
Wait, no. That isn't trousers.
It's ... race suits.
You retreat immediately, walking fast. Your eyes move quickly, looking around and finding a place where you can sit down. The knot inside your chest eases as you find a chair in the pantry room.
Turns out you still can't bear to see him in person.
Unfortunately, you didn't realize someone follows you.
You only hear footsteps coming closer when you already droop your head, hands trembling to open a water bottle.
You lost your breath as you see the feet of person in front of you.
It's the same black shoes and papaya race suit from the car engineer's meeting room.
-
Geeee! Another update because Oscar is P3 in Miami (go off king, we love to see you smile)
taglist: @beabadoobee81 @oscgr @clarenciago @kindersupremacy @theonefanatic13 @airenicbibliophile @eloisevlstuff @heartsformarie @hannahbananababybanana