âš Writer, fangirl, communicator, poet, philosopher, feminist, Swiftie, Argentinian, novelist, director of fictional scenarios and architect of aimless stories trapped in the body of a twenty-something girl!
â¶01.BACK ON TRACK â¶02.I DON'T WANNA TALK â¶03.ABOUT THE TEAM â¶04.MY BIGGEST FEAR â¶05.FEMALE DISAPPOINTMENT â¶06.I KNOW HOW IT FEELS LIKE â¶07.ALONE AT HOME â¶08.YOU CAME â¶09.WHY ARE YOU SO AFRAID OF HIM? â¶10.YOUR WORST TRAITOR â¶11.SKI SLOPE â¶12.WHAT DO YOU HAVE IN YOUR MIND FOR YOUR FUTURE? â¶13.OBSESSION â¶14.THE ACCIDENT â¶15.I DON'T WANNA GO â¶16.THIS IS LIFE â¶17.THE BLONDE LIAR â¶18.NEVER A 10 â¶19.WE ARE THE SAME â¶20.I JUST FEEL IT â¶21.OUR ETERNAL MOMENT â¶22.THE WORLD IS UNFAIR â¶23.THE MEETING â¶24.DO YOU WANT IT? â¶25.TAKE THE RISK â¶26.AN ITALIAN EVENING â¶27.I CARE ABOUT YOU â¶28.I'M SORRY â¶29.WHAT IF HE LOVES ME? â¶30.SILVERSTONE â¶31.HISTORIC DAY â¶32.PLAY DIRTY â¶33.HEAL AND HELP â¶34.WHY NOT? â¶35.IT FEELS LIKE HOME â¶36.GHOST EYES
đ SUMMARY: What if the best driver of recent years isn't actually him? What if the best driver is actually hiding something else? Would he still be the best? Or just a simple fraud?
đ GENRE: secret identity / rivals to lovers / he felt first, she felt harder / soulmates / slow burn
đAUTHOR'S NOTE: I'm still learning a lot of thing in the tumblr community so i'm always glad to read all your suggestions about anything that you may thing can make this little place much better.
Special thanks to @dreadity that has been really nice for telling me some advices in this whole new adventure.
I've been totally away from Tumblr lately, and I apologize for it. I know that many of you were obsessed with Max's fanfic and if you still are, I've been publishing it on AO3. So I'll be leaving the link below and I hope you enjoy the story once again. Don't forget that in my tik tok account there's soooo many edits that you may like to watch and if you are a Lewis Hamilton fan or a Tennis fan, I think you'll like my new story about Lewis and a fabulous tennis player đđâšïž
Capri Persson (F1) âžș 12. WHAT DO YOU HAVE IN MIND FOR YOUR FUTURE?
đ SUMMARY: What if the best driver of recent years isn't actually him? What if the best driver is actually hiding something else? Would he still be the best? Or just a simple fraud?
đ GENRE: secret identity / rivals to lovers / he felt first, she felt harder / soulmates / slow burn
đ§ WORD COUNT: 2488
đŹ PARTS: book one (two parts) / CP9, book two (one part)
đTAGLIST: @heyyurl @dreadity @moonchouus @wierdflowerpower @anunstablefangirl @deaddumblbumble @a-bbles @leviathan0000
(let me know in the comments if you want to be part) đ CAPRIPERSSON.MASTERLIST
Faenza, Italy. April, 2023
I came back from Chamonix before the others so I could talk to Franz first thing Monday morning. It had been fun to get out of the routine for a bit, spend time with everyone, and enjoy learning how to ski. On Saturday, we had lunch at a restaurant right there and then spent the rest of the afternoon skiing, and Iâm proud to say that I didnât think about Abu Dhabi at all for the rest of the day. For the first time since it happened, I was able to detach myself from that memory, at least for a while.
When we got back to the hotel in time for dinner, I spoke with Franz and he said heâd be at the office Monday morning, so I decided to head back early on Sunday with Jean. At breakfast, we said goodbye to everyone, and they made me promise we wouldnât lose touch.
Going unnoticed around the paddock would now be much more complicated, and just thinking about it was enough to make me anxious. When we got on the bus back, Jean looked at me like I owed her an explanation, but the truth is, I didnât know what she wanted from me.
âYes?â I asked, noticing her insistent gaze.
âI thought we told each other everything,â she replied with a hint of frustration.
âOf course we do.â
âOf course not, Capri! Why didnât you tell me about the party?â she demanded.
âIt was Lewis, wasnât it?â I went pale. âWhat did he say?â
âHe said you were amusingly drunk and that you argued with Verstappen, but apparently now everythingâs great because you talk as if a week ago you werenât about to kill him.â
âA lot happened.â
âIâm glad to hear that, because weâve got a four-hour trip ahead,â she said, settling into her seat.
I laughed. It would be an entertaining trip while I caught Jean up on what my life had been like this past week, laughing at her reactions. I told her everything, absolutely everythingâfrom how I refused to go to the party to what Max had told me on Friday night when he came to my room, including the filler week of solitude. Jean listened to me like no one else ever could, fully interested in whatever I told her, and worried for me like only she could. Jean was the only thing I truly had by my side, the only person I could trust. Jean was my real soulmate.
âBut you kissed him,â she smirked playfully.
âI know, and it was a good kiss, but itâs Max,â I replied in frustration. âHeâs still Max, thatâs never going to change. The upside is that now I understand my competition betterâhis weak points, his possible breaking points. If Max keeps dragging this along, heâs just as weak or even weaker than I could be after Abu Dhabi,â I explained to Jean, and she gave me a strange look. âI just need to figure out how to keep him close so I can see how thatâs going.â
âSounds a little cruel, donât you think?â
âSounds like life to me. Besides⊠Youâre the one who should be telling me everything. What happened with Hamilton?â I changed the subject, and Jean sighed, leaning back in her seat without looking directly at me.
âIâve got a better chance of driving your car and winning than ending up with Hamilton, letâs be honest.â
âBut you talked?â
âOf course we talked, but heâsâŠâ she sighed in frustration. âHeâs a lot. Way too much. Iâm not on his level. Not even for a one-night thing.â
âYouâre the most exceptional woman I know, Jean. How could you not be on his level?â I questioned.
âNo, donât say that just to cheer me up. Iâm not frustrated about it. Thereâs a pattern behind every driverâs partner, a somewhat sexist pattern if you ask me, where the woman usually has to keep a low profile. And itâs strange because it doesnât seem true until you see them. Theyâre gorgeous, slim, talented, and⊠Have you seen their skin? I can barely keep my hair in place because of my job,â she scoffed, and I wanted to change the subject entirely.
âHas Franz told you anything else?â I asked.
âNo. He said he needed to talk to you urgently. Thereâs a lot going around, Capri, and everyone already knows your contract with AlphaTauri ends this year. Maybe you ignore it because the FIA filters the questions you get asked or because you donât have social media, but the rumors are awful.â
âWhat do you mean?â I frowned, unable to picture exactly what she was talking about.
âI tried to get as much information out of Franz as possible, but he doesnât want to talk. Apparently, there are going to be changes in the team.â
Jean looked at me the way a parent looks at a child after breaking difficult news, waiting for their reaction. She knew exactly what she thought about itâsheâd made it clear the day before on a chairlift. But AlphaTauri was all I knew, and Franz⊠He would never let them lose Capri Persson.
âCan I see what people are saying?â I asked, somewhat innocently, and Jean nodded, taking out her phone and opening Twitter.
If it werenât for the questions I have to answer in the press release after each race, what Jean or the team tells me, and what certain TV shows say, Iâd probably be living under a rock, literally. I had no idea what was being said about me or my races in generalâI only heard from a couple of outlets, and that was it. It had been that way since⊠well, I guess at this point we all know since when.
When I searched my name, a flood of posts appeared, some very flattering, others not so much. Some stated that the status of my contract was still unknown, others speculated where I should go. I couldnât help but let out a small laughâit was more of a scoffâwhen I read one comment:
âCan you imagine Capri Persson being Max Verstappenâs teammate at Red Bull?â
The replies ranged from those who thought it was a good idea to those completely against it.
Scrolling down, I saw several tweets connected to the same topic. My skin tingled just reading them:
âThis season, Capri Persson is back to recover what she lost in Abu Dhabi 2022, and the Verstappen vs. Hamilton fight we saw only in the 2021 season is extending further this year.â
âIf Max didnât have enough with Lewis in 2021, as long as Capriâs on the grid, heâs got a fight ahead.â
âMax beat Lewisâcould Capri beat Max?â
âIs it possible the sister teams will let their drivers fight again? I donât think so. Capri could be off the grid next season; sheâs a nuisance for AlphaTauri, and Red Bull would never let her in one of their cars after the last two seasons. #capriperssonoutoff1â
I began to feel an intense heat at the back of my neck just noticing it. I knew tension had grown between Max and me after Abu Dhabi, tension weâd built over an entire season, ending with a single race to decide the championship. I knew exactly what that had been and what it meantânot only for our teams but also for the sportâs history. What I didnât know was the tension that still lingered beyond our reach. People were comparing this to an even higher level than what happened with Max and Lewis in 2021.
The track we were racing on now was different. In 2021, Max dethroned Lewis after seven years of glory and victory, not just for him but for Mercedes. Now, Max was fighting to hold on to the title while I came after him hungry and desperate, craving revenge. On social media, people believed I could win that last GP and rack up enough points to surpass Maxâwho, at that point, was only two points ahead of meâafter Iâd received a penalty in Brazil for accelerating under two yellow flags. I was ready to win that championship. But it didnât happen, and once again Verstappen was crowned 2022 champion in front of the world. He proved he could fight Lewis and anyone else in his way. Now, I had to prove I wasnât âjust anyoneâ in his way.
For me, the 2022 season wasnât over. For me, this year would define my career. And I had to win, because when I got home after the Abu Dhabi GP, I made myself a promiseâand I donât break my promises.
I was dying with anticipation and nerves to talk to Franz about it. I had many doubts, and the ground beneath me felt more and more abstract. I knew it was early to jump to a problem like silly season, but if AlphaTauri had no doubts about wanting me on the team next year, why were they waiting so long to make me an offer? Why were they letting it slide when Jean had already spoken with the other teams?
There were definitely a lot of things I didnât know, and it was making me far too uneasy.
âBuongiorno,â I greeted the team at reception upon arrival.
âIl signor Tost ti sta aspettando nel suo ufficio,â one of the women said, and I went upstairs to where I needed to be. It was incredible to think that just a couple of years ago, I had come here for the first time to talk to Franz about the future of Capri Persson in Formula One. I had turned down Mercedesâ program, just waiting for a call from Franz Tost. He had shaped drivers like Max, Carlos, and even Sebastian Vettel himself. I didnât care about anything else in the world except learning from him. And it meant a lot that he had chosen me to be on the team without me having gone through Red Bullâs junior programâthat said more than I could explain.
I knocked on his door, waiting to hear him from the other side, and when he gave me the signal, I entered his office.
âGood morning,â I greeted him with a hug beside his desk before sitting down in front of him, calm and comfortable.
âSo now you know how to ski, huh?â he asked, amused, and I nodded.
âCan you believe they didnât think I could?â
âThatâs the mistake everyone makes. But youâre Capri Persson,â he smiled proudly. âJean told me you were in Chamonix with the rest of the grid. How did it go?â
âFine, I suppose thatâs what the whole team wanted, right? For me to connect with the other drivers and understand theyâre nothing more than ordinary human beings,â I said with a sarcastic tone.
âVerstappenâs not doing so well. You know what they say: good at the game, bad in love. At this point, he might be bad at both.â
Franz chuckled, shaking his head at my antics and took a breath.
âDonât dodge the subject, Franz. You know I donât like beating around the bush.â
The playful moment vanished, tension filling the room. I would have liked for us to keep laughing, but I couldnât if I felt something was happening behind my back without my knowledge.
âWhat do you have in mind for your future?â he asked seriously.
âWinning, Franz. Obviously.â
âAnd after that?â he looked me in the eyes, expectantly, as if analyzing my every move.
âGo home, enjoy being the first woman to win an F1 championship, make history, give talks, train, and come back for next season. Iâll probably have to film a bunch of stuff for the seriesâshould I say yes?â I laughed, trying to break the tension, but Franz didnât laugh. I straightened my posture and spoke seriously. âI have no intention of accepting any contract that doesnât come from AlphaTauri.â
Franz looked away, shifting in his seat, clearly uncomfortable but trying to hide it like a businessman who knew exactly what he was doing and why. My senses were on full alert, searching his body language for a clue.
âIâm not leaving the team unless you want me to,â I added. âAnd I find it extremely strangeâand I have to admit, a bit painfulâthat you havenât called me yet to renew my contract if weâre both so sure about it.â I put my cards on the table. Franz took a breath, staring at the desk.
âHave you already signed with Nyck?â I asked, trying to push him.
âCapri,â he began, âI called you today because itâs my duty as team principal to tell you the current situation of the team.â He placed his hands on the table, fingers interlacedâa sign of trustâbut I couldnât help feeling a wave of panic. Franz was never formal with me. âItâs a complicated situation,â he admitted. âI wonât sugarcoat it. There are a lot of rumors going around. Apparently, they plan to change sponsors, maybe make changes in the team, but whatâs most talked about is that theyâre negotiating the teamâs future. And although none of this is official, thereâs no defined future right now, Capri.â
It felt like the floor was shifting under me. Even without specifics, the uncertainty itself was terrifying.
âAs for Nyck,â he went on, âI canât give you too many details, but after talking to Christian, weâll give him until mid-season. Itâs not good that every week we have to fix a car that could be in good condition in the right hands.â He pressed his lips together, showing how tough it was, but I stayed silent.
âNothingâs certain yet, Capri,â he tried to comfort me, moving his hand to mine. âBut my advice is to start looking at other options; Iâm sure you have plenty.â
Looking at other options meant a new team, new engineers, a new car, new strategies, new dynamics, a new teammate⊠a new principal.
âWhat will happen to you?â I asked, desperate. Franz took a breath, shrugged, and gave a small, uncertain smirk.
That was a blow I hadnât expected, and neither were the sudden tears stinging my eyes.
âHey,â he said, holding my hand, âyouâll face situations like this your whole career. This is just the beginning. We still donât know much, but itâs the perfect opportunity to consider new horizons, new challenges. Usually, AlphaTauri drivers prepare for Red Bull, but you have the chance to choose any team.â
âAnd what if I want to stay here?â
âFor now, youâre still here, and until I can confirm otherwise, thatâs how itâll be. Itâs just advice, and this time you need to listen to me.â
âI donât know if Iâm ready to switch teams, Franz,â I admitted, my voice shaking.
âYouâre Capri Persson. Youâre already a legend, and youâve only been here three years. If I hadnât worked with Sebastian, Iâd say youâre my best creation,â he joked, making me smile through my melancholy. âLeaving is also an act of courage, not just cowardice. And wherever you go, Capri, Iâll always be immensely proud to look at you and say: âI know that girl.â Iâll always be proud of you, Capri. Wherever you go, win or lose, never doubt it. Youâre one of the most talented drivers Iâve had in my entire career.â
đ SUMMARY: What if the best driver of recent years isn't actually him? What if the best driver is actually hiding something else? Would he still be the best? Or just a simple fraud?
đ GENRE: secret identity / rivals to lovers / he felt first, she felt harder / soulmates / slow burn
đ§ WORD COUNT: 3814
đŹ PARTS: book one (two parts) / CP9, book two (one part)
đTAGLIST: @heyyurl @dreadity @moonchouus @wierdflowerpower @anunstablefangirl @deaddumblbumble @a-bbles @leviathan0000
(let me know in the comments if you want to be part) đ CAPRIPERSSON.MASTERLIST
Chamonix, France. April, 2023
"Are you done?" I asked without looking, through the small gap between the bathroom door and the frame. Max answered yes after flushing the toilet, and I opened the door fully, seeing him sitting on the floor beside it, resting his head against the wall like he had just run the race of his life. He looked vulnerable but much better than when Iâd first opened the room door.
He sighed.
"Youâre very good-loâ"
"Donât even think about it," I cut him off, knowing what he was going to say and the state he was in. It was useless to listen or let him talk like that. Max lowered his eyes for a second, smiling mischievously.
"I lied," he looked at me, his eyes full of remorse. He was embarrassed. "I remembered Landoâs room number too, but he drank as wellâenough to laugh at me all night. And Pierre is with his girlfriend. They drank too, but I didnât dare bother them."
"What about Danny?"
"He wouldâve questioned why I drank so much. Weâre not supposed to drink that much," he explained, and I had to glance away to another corner of the bathroom so I wouldnât feel so overwhelmed by his gaze. I adjusted my posture against the doorframe. I didnât need his explanations. I just... felt a bit of empathy seeing him that way. "Did you drink that night to forget too?"
"What?" I asked, confused, looking back at him. Now it was Max who looked away.
"Iâm not in a great place right now," he smiled weakly.
"It shows," I muttered, and he let out a dry chuckle. I stepped closer, sitting on the floor against the opposite wall, cross-legged. "You donât have to talk about it. You can sleep on the couch in the room," I said with some timidity.
"Thatâs why I came," he looked down at his hands on his thighs and I sighed. It was going to be a long night. "Weâre not close enough for this."
"Come on, itâs late," I got up, cutting the conversation short, afraid he might keep talkingâafraid of learning more about him. I took Maxâs hand to help him up and made sure he reached the couch without bumping into anything. Once seated, I handed him a glass of water, and he stared out the window. I sat on the bed, watching him, analyzing his every move. He felt like a constant threat but was clearly lost, thoughtful, nostalgic.
"I shouldnât have drunk like thatâI never do," he said, staring at the glass in his hands.
"Whatâs done is done. Get some sleep."
"What do you do when you want to forget something?" he asked, looking me straight in the eye, and I felt paralyzed.
What do I do? Really?
"Sleep," I replied like it was obvious.
"Iâm serious."
"Sometimes I drink, but itâs not really an option. At least not the best one."
"Then whatâs supposed to make up for it?" he asked, almost pleading.
I thought about it, but honestly, I was out of words.
"Itâs not easy to forget what you desperately want to forget," I shrugged, but he kept staring like he needed clarity. "You forget the little things, but when you really want to forget something, itâs like trying to hide an elephant under a rug."
"This isnât an elephant," he confessed, and I narrowed my eyes to see whether it was tears or just the gleam of alcohol in his eyes. Max looked down and took a deep breath, and there was no doubt nowâhis eyes held tears.
"I thought I could fix things with Kelly, but I couldnât."
"You donât have toâ"
"I miss her so much, and I know she does too. I donât understand why itâs so hard," he choked out, and if he hadnât started crying, I probably wouldâve told him to shut up and go to sleep. But he did cry, and I didnât know what to do.
Thatâs the problem with men who always try to act like menâwhen they finally become human, they seem almost unreal. So much so that even they ache at the realization that theyâre not heroes made of stardust.
"Whoâs Kelly?" I asked, scooting to the edge of the bed, facing the couch.
"My girlfriend... ex-girlfriend," he corrected. "We were together for a long time... but it wasnât the same anymore."
"Do you expect things to be the same after a long time?" I asked.
"I love her so much," he gasped, breaking down and burying his face in his hands, elbows on his knees. This couldnât be happening to me. Maybe Max was exaggerating because heâd been drinking, but I couldnât bring myself to minimize his feelings, not even a little.
"We were a family, you know? And now P calls me from Kellyâs phone when we used to spend all our time together, and that... that feels horrible."
"Whoâs P?" I frowned even more, not understanding the depth of what was happening, especially considering how drunk he was.
"Penelope, Kellyâs daughter," he explained. "Iâve known her practically since she was born. Kelly wonât say it because she knows weâre not in the best place, but P misses everything we used to be, and... I do too."
I could barely understand what was going on, but I sighed and tried.
"Let me see if I got this. You and Kelly have been together for a long time, she has a daughter, Penelope, and you were all like a family. But now things arenât working and..."
"Weâve been taking a break since the season started," he said, trying to collect himself.
"Well, that explains a lot," I murmured, realizing the obvious drop in race wins this season compared to the beast he used to be. And I think thatâs when I understood the rest. "Do you need her?" I asked.
"Do I need her? Of course I need her, America! Sheâs everything to me! Who would I be without her?!" he exclaimed, pulling his hands from his face, consumed by a pain I wished I could shareâbut I couldnât, because Iâd never been in his situation, whatever it really was.
"If youâre nothing without her, then you donât deserve her," I recited, and he stared at me, stunned, like Iâd just told the cruelest lie.
"I donât know herâI donât know you or this Penelopeâbut I donât think Iâd want to be with someone who, beyond loving me, needs me."
"But I love her," he whispered.
"If you love someone, you can live without themâbut you choose them every day because you know lifeâs better with them by your side. If you just need her because you hate coming home alone after winning a Grand Prix... Let me tell you, she deserves better than you. Instead of promising her youâll keep fighting, maybe she needs you to stop that war," I sighed, and we both fell silent. Max let a few more tears fall, and I felt completely out of placeâlike I was intruding in a space that wasnât mine, witnessing a vulnerability I wasnât prepared to see.
Never watch your enemies break in front of you. Ever.
With nothing left to say, I lay down in bed, and before turning off the light, I wished him a barely audible goodnight. I heard him settle onto the couch until he finally fell asleep. But for me, it wasnât that easy.
When I woke up, I felt a bitter taste in my mouth seeing the couch empty. I stayed still to hear if he was in the bathroomâbut no. Total silence in the room. The couch was tidy and the glass he drank from was back where it belonged, like it had all been a dream. He didnât have to stay, but I couldnât help feeling disappointed. He could leave whenever he wantedâthere were no strings attached... even if, deep down, I wished he had stayed.
I looked up Kelly and was surprised to realize I had no idea she was the daughter of Brazilian driver Nelson Piquet. Her eyes were the most beautiful Iâd seen in a long timeâMax definitely didnât deserve her...
I didnât let that thought linger for too long. I was heading out with the girls that morning and weâd be back at the hotel later to get ready to go skiing. When I got down to the reception, Kika and Lily were already there, followed by Isa, then Laila and Carmen. Spending time with them was unlike anything else. The girls created a perfect atmosphere of trust and closeness, as if theyâd known each other their whole lives, and they had this wonderful way of making you feel like you belongedâsomething Iâd never truly felt before.
Even though my mother had tried my whole life, Iâd never been interested in making friends anywhere. Thatâs how Capri Persson was born. I was the shy girl intimidated by social interactions and long conversations with other kids. I just wanted to go, race, win, and go back homeâthat was all I cared about. Still, my mother was never fully on board with me keeping my helmet on at all times; sheâd even been too harsh once.
"I want to make a difference. I want to be a driver in my own right, not 'the only woman who raced in F1,'" I snapped back during one of our many arguments.
"If you want to make a difference, then take off the helmet and face the problem," she signed, angry and out of patience. "You want change? Take off the helmet and fight."
Sheâd basically called me a coward. That was my relationship with my motherâeven without a voice, her words were always too loud for me.
The question caught me off guard, but the answer came easilyâit was a story I had down by heart. There wasnât much to tell. My Swedish accent, camouflaged by a British twist, gave away my origin. Iâd studied mechanics on a scholarship at Lund University in Sweden (which was true), had been working with Capri Persson for a while, and hoped to keep doing so for the foreseeable future because I didnât have other plans. The girls asked a few more questions until our breakfast arrived, and we moved on to other topics.
Before heading back to the hotel, the girls helped me get proper ski gear, and once I had everything ready, we returned to change. Around 10 a.m., we all met in the hotel lobby to go to the ski resort together.
I had to admit I was a little nervous. I loved trying new things and had never skied in my lifeânot even when the Schumachers invited me to Aspen for my birthday. So I was genuinely excited about skiing in the French Alps.
When we arrived, everyone paired up for the chairlifts. Jean stuck to me like a magnetâit was a several-minute ride to the next station where weâd be skiing downhill. But as soon as the chairlift started ascending and we were away from the rest, with a bit of height-induced panic, Jean started talking.
"Franz wants to talk to you when we get back," she said.
"About what?" I frowned, confused.
"You know what about," she replied plainly, and my expression shifted immediately. Of course I knew.
"Iâm not planning on changing teams..."
"Maybe you should think that over," she interrupted. "There are plenty of options these days, Capri. Staying at AlphaTauri would be like Russell staying with Williams instead of going to Mercedes."
"Have you already spoken to someone?" I asked, referring to other teams.
"Even Aston Martin is willing to make Lance a reserve driverâLance, their own son! Do you get that? Stroll is willing to bench his son because he knows that no matter the car youâre in, there are at least three podiums a season waiting."
Jean turned completely toward me, forgetting how high up we were.
"How many teams have you talked to?" I asked, looking at her with a mix of pity and fear. I didnât want to talk about this. Not now. Not like this.
Iâd signed with AlphaTauri my first year, 2020. When they saw my potential, we renewed for three more years. But something felt offâsomething too strange to analyze while sitting on a chairliftâand it was the fact that Franz hadnât mentioned anything about a contract extension, while Jean was convinced I needed to consider other options.
"All of them," she murmured, sounding almost sorry for me. "Capri, you need to talk to Tost as soon as possible."
"But Iâm not leaving AlphaTauri, Jean," I snapped. "Unless Franz pushes me out, thatâs the end of this conversation."
"Fangio wasnât the best just because he won with skill and precision, Capri. Fangio is the best because he won no matter which team he drove for," she concluded, turning her gaze forward again. I had nothing more to sayâbecause once again, Jean was right.
I didnât want to jump to conclusions or assume the worst, but I could sense something different this season. I wasnât worried about my place on the gridâof that, I was sure. What really worried me was that Jean had already spoken to every team, and Franz Tost hadnât said a word about my contract with AlphaTauri, even knowing full well I had no intention of leaving, no matter what offers were on the table.
When we reached the next ski station, Jean and I got off the chairlift and took in the snow-covered landscape around us, glistening brightly. It was almost blindingâbut purely beautiful. There were plenty of people skiing down various slopes, suited for different skill levels. While Jean joined up with Kika, Pierre, Alex, Lily, and Lewisâwho had agreed to accompany my advisor on a beginner slopeâI blended in easily with Mick, Laila, Charles, Carlos, Isa, and Max on the expert slope. In my defense, I drove every weekend at 300 km/h. Skiing like a pro on my first try felt very on-brand.
Mick was talking about the best places in the world to ski, a favorite hobby of his, when he turned to look at me and furrowed his brow, realizing where I was.
"Wait a second," he stopped abruptly, and Laila looked puzzled until she caught on to what her boyfriend had noticed. "What are you doing here?" he asked once we were fairly high up on the expert slope.
"Sorry, werenât we baking cookies today?" I asked sarcastically, and the group laughed.
"Am," he said, stepping closer, "you donât have to come if youâre not ready. You can go to the other slope with Lewis and the others."
I should note that Mick was very sweet when he worriedâand I completely understood his concernâbut I couldnât help laughing. I needed the full experience, or it wouldnât count at all.
"You must have a lot of faith in me."
"You donât know how to ski?" Max cut in, and I turned to look at him for the first time since last night. His skin was redder, and his blue eyes shone even more under the snowâs brightness. No trace of tears or pain.
"No," I answered simply.
"Then what are you doing here?" he pushed.
"I can go with you to the other slope, Am," Charles offered.
"Come on, let her be. Sheâll do fineâweâll be with her," Isa stepped in, and Carlos backed her up.
"Sheâs never skied in her life. She should go back," Max objected, and suddenly everyone started debating whether I should stay or leave. We were perfectly positioned to start skiing, but they were more interested in figuring out if it was safe for me to stay. Mick knew I could do it if I wanted toâand I understood his point. Max, on the other hand, didnât need to butt in.
Just then, a kid about thirteen or fourteen launched himself next to me. I watched how he placed his poles, bent his knees, and got ready for speed. As he slid down the snow, he moved beautifullyâfrom the waist downâkeeping his shoulders steady and balanced. All right... I just had to copy him.
Turning my back to the group, I adjusted my goggles, remembered the kidâs posture, and launched myself without hesitation, pushing off with my poles.
"America!" I heard them shout behind me, but I burst into laughter as I felt the speed. The control was in my feet, and the direction was easy to manage as long as I kept my focus. I just had to move my knees and maintain my balance and confidence. It felt completely liberating. All the motion came from my lower body, so I could keep my gaze forward.
Of course, going downhill, I occasionally felt like I was losing control, especially when I zigzagged too widelyâbut I welcomed it. That was part of the experience. No brakes this time. It was nothing like racingâbut it felt just as fantastic.
I stopped at the end of the slope just like Iâd seen the kid do moments earlier, exhaling a deep sigh and relaxing my shoulders. Then I heard clapping and cheering from the side. I turned to see Danny, Jean, Lewis, and the others whoâd stayed on the easier slope. I took off my goggles smiling and bowed toward them. Then I looked back up the slope where Iâd been just seconds ago and saw Max, Mick, and Laila leaning over, ready to come down, clearly confused. I gave them a thumbs-up, laughing, and they soon followed.
"Well? What do you think, huh?" I asked Max as he reached me, just as Charles, Carlos, and Isa were arriving too. "Think Iâm ready to play with the big kids now?" I teased, and Mick stifled a laugh.
"Youâre good," he complimented.
"Oh my god, are we all hearing this?" I raised my eyebrows at Laila and Mick with sarcasm. "Did Max Verstappen just give me a compliment?"
"I can admit it. I just did," he lifted his hands in surrender, and I laughed. "America, last night..."
The second I heard his voice slip into a serious tone, I quickly bent down, scooped a snowball with my gloves, and threw it at him.
"What are you doing?" he asked, snow on his face, and I laughed. Mick turned around to see what was going on, and soon I felt a snowball hit my back.
"You didnât!" I turned to him, and he laughed. I completely forgot about Max and started pelting Mick with snowballs as fast as I couldâhe still owed me a snowball war.
"Donât start without us!" Daniel shouted from a distance, and within minutes, the ski area turned into a full-on snowball fight between a bunch of grown-ups. It was genuinely funâwe waited for someone to get distracted so we could aim and fire, and if you hit their face and they made a terrible expression, extra points. I also realized I had great aimâevery snowball I threw (especially at Mick) hit its target.
But then my phone started vibrating in the pocket of my coat, and I stepped away from the group without saying anything, trying to read the screen despite the light.
"Mom"
My skin tingled, but I didnât hesitate to answer.
"Where are you?" she asked, and I lifted my phone to show her the view.
"The French Alps. Skiing," I set my phone on the window of a small wooden hut that sold ski gear so I could use both hands to sign. My momâs confusion was clear. "Mick invited me."
"Oh, how nice," she replied. "How have you been? I saw Australia, but I wanted to wait for you to call," she added, and I sighed. I hadnât thought about Australia in a while.
"I donât want to talk about that right now. It didnât go as I expected."
"It was an incredible race despite everything, Capri," she replied with enthusiasm. "That overtake was amazing and when..."
"I donât want to talk about it right now," I repeated, signing with emphasis.
"Lately you donât want to talk about anything," my mom replied, and I rolled my eyes. "Will you come home for the summer?"
"Depends on the Hungarian Grand Prix. If I get enough points, maybe. Otherwise, Iâd rather stay and train." My mom let out a heavy sigh, clearly displeased with my decision, and shook her head in disappointment.
"You know I support you in everything. But I canât support you when you insist on destroying yourself in your obsession," she argued.
"Iâm not obsessed, Mom. Iâm doing what youâve told me my whole life to do. Face things and fight for my place."
"Being runner-up was enough. Do you know how valuable that wouldâve been for younger girls in the sportâto see that the greatest competitor of our time is a woman who finished second?" I hated when she did thisâevery part of it.
"Second place isnât enough."
"Nothing is ever enough for you," she concluded, and I sighed, tired of having the same argument over and over.
"Youâre right," I gave in, unbothered. "Thatâs what I call discipline. And without it, I never wouldâve made it to F2 in the first place." That silenced my mom completely. "Weâll talk later, Mom. I love you," I said, ending the video call. I took a deep breath and exhaled slowly, trying to find inner peace like Sarah had advisedâbut it wasnât working. And just when I tried to concentrate again, a snowball hit me in the face. I turned to see where it came from.
"I owed you one," Max smiled shyly, and I realized heâd noticed my absence.
"The battlefieldâs over there," I pointed to the others who were still throwing snowâLando had just tackled Danny to the ground.
"Were you talking to Persson?" he asked, gesturing toward my phone.
"Because of the signing?" He nodded. "No, it was my mom."
"I had no idea how many things you hide," he smiled, and I sighed. If only he knew.
"You barely know me, Max."
"America," he called, stepping closer, "I didnât mean to make you uncomfortable last night. I didnât mean to show up in your room. And when I woke up this morning, I felt terrible about it. I shouldnât have stayed. Iâm sorry."
"If Iâd known you were going to leave before I woke up, Iâd have stayed up all night," I said without thinking. To fix it, I added, "I donât know whatâs happening in your personal life, Maxâand I doubt you remember much. But it sounded alarming... and painful last night."
"I remember what you said," he answered, with an expression I never expected to see from him. Suddenly, we were talking like I never thought we couldâwith compassion and calm. "Maybe you donât know whatâs going on, but if it happens again, I know who to talk to," he smiled. "Do you have any other advice for me?"
"Besides not drinking so much?" I joked, and he laughed. "I guess you have to stay positive," I shrugged, honestly not knowing what else to say. Iâd never been in this situation before. "But you should know... everything feels worse when itâs just you and your breathing in a room. Itâs much easier to hear all the things we silence in the noise of everyday life."
"Have you ever had your heart broken?" he asked, genuinely curious.
"Yes," I said thoughtfully. "Last winter."
đ„PREVIOUS: 10. YOUR WORST TRAITOR
đNEXT: 12. WHAT DO YOU HAVE IN MIND FOR YOUR FUTURE?
đ SUMMARY: What if the best driver of recent years isn't actually him? What if the best driver is actually hiding something else? Would he still be the best? Or just a simple fraud?
đ GENRE: secret identity / rivals to lovers / he felt first, she felt harder / soulmates / slow burn
đ§ WORD COUNT: 3232
đŹ PARTS: book one (two parts) / CP9, book two (one part)
đTAGLIST: @heyyurl @dreadity @moonchouus @wierdflowerpower @anunstablefangirl @deaddumblbumble @a-bbles @leviathan0000
(let me know in the comments if you want to be part) đ CAPRIPERSSON.MASTERLIST
Chamonix, France. April, 2023
Charles left my room after we checked the time following a few more chess matches. I won 3â1, but time had flown. By the time we noticed, the sky was completely dark, and it was time to get ready for dinnerâthough, strangely, I kind of wanted to stay and play a few more rounds with Charles.
"Alright, see you in a bit then," he said as he reached the door after helping me put away the board and pieces.
"Where's the dinner?" I asked, since I had no idea.
"I can come get you, if youâd like. The hotelâs a bit of a maze."
"Just tell me where it is and Iâll be there."
"As you wish. Itâs two doors past the great hall where we all were today. Let me know if you need anything," he winked before walking out, and I sighed, realizing I had to face one of lifeâs hardest decisionsâpicking an outfit for dinner.
Jean had saved me a step by packing pre-selected outfits, but she packed several, which meant I still had to choose one myself since she had already gone down for dinner. Feeling confident, I took a shower, chose my clothes, and left the room determined to have a good evening. A nice dinner. But I couldnât pretend I wouldnât run into him in the halls when we were literally staying at the same hotel. It was starting to feel a bit too intentional.
"Are we going to run into each other like this all weekend?" I asked as I closed my door and noticed we were the only two in the hallway.
"Looks like itâweâre staying on the same floor," he replied, clearly amused. I turned to look at him. I couldnât believe it, but I had to admit he didnât look bad at all. Max also gave me a quick, subtle once-over. "I can ask for another room if you want."
"Oh, please," I scoffed. "It was just a comment," I rolled my eyes and we started walking toward the elevator.
"Are you going skiing tomorrow?" he asked, trying to fill the uncomfortable silence without looking at me.
"I donât know. Iâve never skied before."
"Seriously?" he turned to me like all his seriousness had fled the elevator. His eyes lit up with amusement and disbelief, like he couldnât believe it. I raised my eyebrows as if to ask, "What do I owe you?" and he looked back ahead. "Itâs not that hard, you just... need to stay focused and keep your balance. You can do that, right?" he looked at me again with that slightly annoying playfulness, and I sighed. At the end of the day, he would always be Max, and I couldnât change that.
"You're so funny."
"You crushed all my feelings last time. You said I could say whatever I wanted about you in return."
"Sure, but that coupon expired days ago. Maybe you can earn another next time," I stayed composedâwhen I wanted to, I could be both funny and sarcastic.
"Will it come with a final punchline?" he laughed with a snort.
"If you were that quick on track, you wouldnât have to worry about the rest of the season," I fired back cleanly, turning to look at him. Max looked at me, surprised but clearly entertained. I couldnât deny there was something addictive about poking at the sensitive parts of his champion know-it-all armor.
"Who said Iâm worried?" he shrugged, and I focused more on not being too obvious while glaring at him than on responding.
"Youâve had two podiums this season. How many points ahead is Capri? Twelve? Fifteen? Probably twenty?" I argued, barely hiding my annoyance. I tried to stay discreet and subtleâI didnât want to be too obvious. The elevator doors finally opened and we stepped into the main lobby, me walking a few steps ahead.
"Right, but... how many points does Red Bull have over AlphaTauri in the constructorsâ standings so far? Fifteen? Twenty, maybe?" he mocked me far too openly, and I turned to him, indignant. Max was openly mocking my team and looked at me, clearly expecting a sharp and hurtful comeback.
"Weâre sister teams, Max. You think we havenât sacrificed a few things for your victories?" I snapped. "If you win, donât forget why."
"Because Persson holds back from being as good as they say?" he barely held in his laugh, and I fully restrained myself. Hitting him wasnât a viable option, but in my head, I was already smashing his head against the shiny marble floor over and over again, gripping his infuriating blond hair.
"Is this going to be a regular thing with you two, or just a coincidence?" George laughed, approaching us with Carmen, who beamed when I turned to see her.
"I love that combo," Carmen complimented, eyeing my outfit and stepping away from her boyfriend to link arms with me. I had worried it might be too simple or not appropriate, but after seeing what Carmen was wearing, I knew it was perfect. If it werenât for the team giving us branded clothes to wear like walking billboards, I would never buy any of this.
"Well, if youâre complimenting me, I mustâve done something right."
In a corner, separate from the rest of the tables, was a more private area where the rest of our group sat. Jean was already there chatting with Lewis, Mick, and Laila, sitting quite far from the open spot left for me.
"There you are," Charles smiled. "For a second I thought Iâd have to come get you," he leaned toward me as I sat. Max sat between us, which made conversation a bit awkward.
"I thought you got lost," he added.
"Actually, they argued again," George chimed in, laughing, and Carmen turned to him with what I imagined was a warning look.
"Careful, Max. Thereâs nothing this woman doesnât do well," Charles said, and Max didnât even look at him when he answered:
"I already know that."
Having Max next to me all dinner was one of the most awkward and unexpected things of the year. A few months ago, I wouldâve sworn that if I imagined this scene, Iâd be plunging a steak knife into his thigh out of pure frustration. But now we were eating almost in sync.
The hotel chef served everyone sample dishes from the upcoming menu, and while everyone raved about the texture and overwhelming flavor of the soy sauce, Jean and I exchanged glances from opposite ends of the table, trying not to laugh. We werenât exactly culinary experts, so we felt completely excluded from those conversations, which made the topic seem downright ridiculous.
When the waiters came around offering the most popular cocktails after dinner, Max interrupted my order, grabbing everyoneâs attention.
"No alcohol for her," he joked. "Donât want you regretting anything later," he smiled, looking into my eyes. Strangely, there was no trace of the usual mocking tone. I could even detect some seriousness in his voice.
"Heâs right," I turned to the waiter. "I have to protect his ego. Maybe next time, once Iâve rebuilt his confidence," I smiled sarcastically, placing a hand on Maxâs shoulder to make sure everyone knew who I was talking about. The waiter gave an awkward smile, and the table burst into laughter and murmurs. "The things I do to protect your arrogance," I sighed, looking at him, and Max laughed, shaking his head.
"I wouldnât call it arrogance," he shrugged.
"Then what would you call it?"
"Itâs what you need to properly get in the mindset of a champion."
"So you just avoid criticism?" I frowned, and the conversation had become private and intimate.
"When the criticism isnât constructive or helpful for winning, yes. I avoid it."
"You avoid the criticism you donât want to accept," I rephrased.
"I avoid what doesnât benefit me," he replied like it was obvious, so I turned to the rest of the table.
"How do you all handle criticism?" I asked the group.
"Like this," said Carlos, grabbing a napkin, spitting in it, and tossing it over his shoulder so it landed on the floor. Everyone roared with laughter. "Without looking back," he smiled triumphantly, and although the advice was solid, it wasnât quite what I was hoping for.
"If the criticism isnât good or constructive, what use is it really?" Pierre shrugged.
"Are there bad but constructive critiques?" Daniel asked playfully, knowing the answer. "Itâs better to focus on the positive, not the negative. Your mind attracts whatever you surround yourself with," he explained to me directly, and before I realized it, I had my elbows on the table, giving my full attention to the answers.
"How does Persson handle criticism?" Lewis asked suddenly, and everyone turned to me for an answer.
He took it allâgood or badâdiving into a bathtub of comments and making them part of himself. There were no good or bad critiques, just people talking. And they said a lot.
"I donât want to imagine what it was like after Abu Dhabi," Alex muttered, staring down at his glass, swirling it and playing with the rim.
I completely zoned out, staring at a single spot on the table. Jean noticed.
"Capri doesnât distinguish between good or bad criticism. No matter what people say, heâll always be his harshest critic because heâs the only one who can destroy himself long before he even exists." Jean spoke her words as if I wasnât there at all, as if they hurt, as if she felt them. I was sure she did, but she didnât look at anyone in particular. She just adjusted the napkin on her lap like it wasnât important.
"Thatâs even worse," Charles replied.
"But you canât avoid it," I sighed. "If youâre not your own harshest critic... then you become a liar. Your own worst traitor."
And I meant it.
I couldnât spend my life telling myself positive things, lying to my face like everything was okay. I understood that after Abu Dhabi. I finished second, but I couldnât leave thinking, "Oh well, at least I came second." That wasnât fair after an entire season of sacrifice to win the championship. Second place wasnât what I aimed for, and I had to fix that. Maybe I needed more training, maybe better connection with the car, maybe I needed to push harder. I could accept the blame. What I couldnât do was be too forgiving with myself. I never had been. Thatâs what Jean meant.
As dinner wound down, people left graduallyâfirst a few, then more. Carmen and I left, leaving George, Max, Pierre, Lando, Carlos, Isa, Kika, and Charles behind. They said they were heading to a bar or something, but we skipped and went up to our rooms. The hotel was nearly deserted by then.
"You seem close to Persson," Carmen commented while we waited for the elevator.
"Iâm his assistantâIâm like a part of his body or something," I replied.
"Am," she said, taking a deep breath. "I donât know if I should say this, but I want you to trust me. If thatâs the case..." she turned to me just as the elevator doors opened. Carmen gestured for me to go in first and press my floor before she did the same. "The guys keep saying itâs obvious Persson is really tough on you and the team. I never wouldâve noticed if I didnât know you, but now that I do, it worries me. Is it true? Because if it is, I want you to know you donât have to be ashamed about it..."
"What are the guys saying?" I asked, frowning.
"I think we both know what theyâre saying." Her eyes locked on mine, and I couldnât help but feel humbled by her concern. I couldnât believe she cared about me that much.
"Capri is extremely hard on himself, Carmen. Heâs incredibly private and... purely ambitious," I explained. "All drivers are, to some extent. And I understandâprobably more than Iâd like. I get how he felt after last season and what heâs been dealing with since the start. But my working relationship with Persson isnât what it seems. I support him, a lot. But I canât separate certain things when I know better than anyone what heâs been through," I confessed, and she nodded, completely absorbed in my words. "I really appreciate your concern, Carmen. But itâs part of my job. And if youâre wonderingâheâs never laid a hand on me or verbally abused me."
"You have no idea how relieved I am to hear that," she smiled, visibly at ease. "I was scared he might be abusing his position over you, and while everyone else was speculating, I... I couldnât imagine what Iâd do in your shoes. I owe you an apology if this felt intrusive or silly, but... once they started talking, I couldnât stop thinking about it, and I needed to talk to you to make sure everything was okay. It didnât feel weird or silly, right? Because if it did, we can just pretend this never happened and..."
"Carmen," I interrupted her. "No one has ever cared about me like that before," I smiled, and she exhaled. "Thank you, really."
I couldnât miss the chance to give her a short, heartfelt hugâwoman to womanâto show how grateful I was that she noticed certain things and chose to act on them. I completely understood where she was coming from. It made me a bit emotional and sentimental that she saw it, but it also terrified me. Everyone had noticed something in how I acted around Capri. Everyone had noticed something... but how long until they found out the truth?
The elevator doors opened and I said goodbye to Carmen, thanking her again and looking forward to seeing her at breakfast. She said sheâd stop by to get me so we could go togetherâshe didnât want to go aloneâso I thanked her again. Sometimes I felt like a little kid in preschool, new and friendless, discovering the territoryâbut finding another kid with way more experience, willing to help me grow. That was Carmen. And I couldnât resist her warmth, because she was the kind of person you feel proud to have by your side.
I just wondered how close I could really keep her.
And as if the day hadnât been enough, the night played its own card. I stayed on my phone for what felt like a moment, but when I checked the time, almost two hours had passed. I changed into my pajamas and dragged myself toward the bedâI was exhausted. It had been a long day full of unexpected moments. As I undressed, I caught a glimpse of myself in the mirrorâand there it was again, a scar on my waist Iâd been trying to ignore for months.
Thereâs a name for this feeling. When you think youâve overcome somethingâand sometimes it really seems like you haveâbut then a memory, a thought, an emotion connected to it shows up... and everything falls apart. A famous author once said happy memories hurt a little, but painful ones still hurtâand thatâs how it was for me.
In Abu Dhabi, when I got out of the car with the front completely wrecked, a part of the front wing had flown up near the halo. With all the adrenaline, desperation, and anger, I got out without realizing how close it was. I slipped while trying to use the halo to climb out, and the piece of wing scraped a huge part of my waist. I thought it was just a scratch, but when I took off the dirt-covered suit, I saw my undershirt was soaked in bloodâthe âscratchâ was actually an open wound, and my suit had a slit in the same spot. At the time, it felt like a minor detail since I had just lost the championship on the final corner, but I had to make sure it didnât get infectedâit was a fairly big wound.
For a long time, I wanted to ignore it. While training, showering, getting dressedâI just didnât want to look at it. It was already torture enough carrying the weight of that raceâs guilt. But there it was again. The physical pain recorded, the mark that moment left on my lifeâand on my skin.
And thatâs when I asked myself why. Why, in silence, did I hear all the things I struggled to say out loud? Why did all those memories come back so easilyâso fresh? Why did it still hurt like the first time? Why couldnât I remember even one good thing that had happened since then? Why wasnât there any happiness between that championship and now? Why, in moments when I shouldâve felt proud and happy, did I only feel relieved I hadnât lost?
And I was terrified. Because I wasnât sure if Iâd remember the victory as clearly as the day I lost.
I held my breath when I heard the sound at the door. I froze, trying to figure out if it was mine or another down the hall. But there it was againâthe sound of knuckles on the door.
I quickly threw on my pajamas and opened the door, gasping in surprise when I saw him barely able to stand.
"Donât even say it," he slurred, and I noticed how hard it was for him to keep his eyes on a fixed point. "I think Carlos has my room key, but he left before the bar, and heâs a really heavy sleeper. Iâve tried everything but he wonât wake up," he explained, eyes tired, leaning against the doorframe. "Yours was the only room number I could remember."
"Alright, Iâll call reception and have them give you another key," I offered, turning to head for the room phone, but Max grabbed my wrist in a sudden, drunken movement.
"You think I havenât tried that already?"
"Let me guess," I pulled his hand off my wrist, turning to face him and crossing my arms. "They donât have another key?"
"The receptionist is an idiot."
"How convenient," I pressed my lips together. "Knock on a few doors. One of them has to belong to another driver. Goodnight," I said before closing the door and turning off the light to go to sleep. Drunk Max was a whole situationâthe half-open shirt, the messy hair, the vacant gaze, his chest partly exposed... A whole situation I hadnât expected to fully uncover until I heard him vomit in the hallway and sighed in frustration. I couldnât leave him there, especially not like that.
"Damn it," I muttered when I saw him bracing himself with his hands on his knees, and I helped him into the room. Max tried to steady himself against the walls, but as soon as he spotted the bathroom, he rushed in and didnât come out for several minutes. Meanwhile, I had to call reception to ask them to send someone to clean up the mess he had made.
Capri Persson (F1) âžș 09. WHY ARE YOU SO AFRAID OF HIM?
đ SUMMARY: What if the best driver of recent years isn't actually him? What if the best driver is actually hiding something else? Would he still be the best? Or just a simple fraud?
đ GENRE: secret identity / rivals to lovers / he felt first, she felt harder / soulmates / slow burn
đ§ WORD COUNT: 2334
đŹ PARTS: book one (two parts) / CP9, book two (one part)
đTAGLIST: @heyyurl @dreadity @moonchouus @wierdflowerpower @anunstablefangirl @deaddumblbumble @a-bbles @leviathan0000
(let me know in the comments if you want to be part) đ CAPRIPERSSON.MASTERLIST
Chamonix, France. April, 2023
I was clearly coming out of the gym while the others chatted in the great hall. Why does it sound like something I could've done myself? Yet he didnât lose the smile on his face while I was trying to think of a response.
"Well, it would be rude to turn down an invitation," I replied simply, and he nodded.
"I'm glad you didn't. Until just now, I thought you weren't coming."
"You weren't that far off."
"Were you going to say no?" he asked, licking his lips as if the answer were obvious. No one would say no to spending time with drivers. Of course.
"What reason did I have to accept?" I shrugged, and Max fell silent as if he were waiting for more from me.
"Of course," he lowered his gaze as if he now understood, pressing his lips together, and I kept watching his every move.
"You're going to the dinner, right?" I asked nervously, trying to fill the silence as quickly and awkwardly as possible. It was obvious he would go.
"Yes. You?"
"I think I'm invited to that too," I smiled without showing my teeth, and Max smiled back, amused, as if something I said was funny.
"Well, then I'll be happy to see you there too."
"I hope so. I promise not to say anything painful," I joked, and he laughed.
"I wouldn't mind if it ended like last time," he said casually, as if it were easy to remember, and I paled, more nervous than ever, recalling how little my mind had actually registered. I looked both ways down the hallway, then stepped closer to Max and lowered my voice.
"I donât remember exactly what happened, Max. But I think it would be best if we just let it go, donât you think?" I suggested, and he raised his eyebrows at my words. He seemed surprised.
"Yeah, sure. It wasn't anything that important anyway, you don't have to worry," he said calmly, and I sighed in relief. "See you later," he said goodbye before leaving, but I asked where everyone was before he disappeared. Max told me the great hall was two doors down, and I was thankful no one had come out. I didnât watch him leave because I left first.
"America!" Danny exclaimed when he saw me, standing up immediately to greet me. Mick, who had been sitting with his back to me on one of the sofas with Laila, turned at Danielâs excitement and smiled before the Australian pulled me into a hug, lifting me off the ground.
Daniel had too much energyâthe kind that sometimes scares introverts like meâbut it was Danny, after all. I had always liked him. He was incredibly kind and could be even more so, but I feared he already believed his time in the spotlight had ended. That's when everything ends for a driver. If you donât believe in yourself, then you're out, and the line that separates both ends is so thin that by the time you notice, you're already falling on the wrong side.
After Abu Dhabi, thatâs exactly how it felt. Everything looked blurry to me. And just remembering it gave me chills.
I greeted everyone generally since the room included those I already mentioned, along with George, Carmen, Lando, Carlos, Pierre, Kika, Charles, Alex, and Lily. Mick came over to greet me, and I asked if he had a minute to talk in the hallway because I needed to clear up a few things.
"Jean made it happen," he smiled as soon as we stepped out. "Did you come with her?"
"What did Max tell you?" I asked almost aggressively, and Mick looked at me, surprised.
"Okay, I get it now..."
"Mick."
"He asked about you after Sundayâs party."
"I know that already. Be more specific," I responded sharply.
"Wait... did something happen between you two and youâre not telling me?" he frowned, lowering his voice, and I hesitated for a moment. I just wanted to know what Max had told him because I didnât remember much. Otherwise, I could recall if I said anything about Capri Persson that could compromise me. That was all I wanted. But I also had to give something in return.
"I was out of my mind when I said all that. Lewis was there, and he told me I should apologize to him, so I did. But Max started talking, and oddly, it was the perfect momentâit would've been great if it weren't Max Verstappen."
"You're not being clear."
"We kissed, Mick. But I don't remember everything clearly, and I need to know what he told you to rebuild the memory and make sure I didn't say anything that could compromise me," I explained, and Mick got it, scratching his head, looking worried. "We were all a bit drunk that night, but apparently Max remembers it quite well."
"He definitely does, because he told me he met you at the party, that you were very nice, and that Daniel told him you arrived with us. He asked which team you work for, what you doâjust the basics."
"Nothing else?" I leaned against the wall across from Mick, parallel to him. He shook his head.
"Hey, I trust you didn't say anything else. Otherwise, Max wouldâve gone to Horner, Horner to the FIA, and you'd have heard the rest long before now. Max would never wait this long if he had the chance to... get back at you this way," he tried to reassure me while glancing around to make sure we were alone. "Anyway, Iâm glad to see you," he smiled innocently, and it was contagious. "It reminds me of Aspen, for your birthday."
"I remember it perfectly," I smiled at just the memory. "Corina was really good to me."
"She loves you more than me," Mick joked, and I couldn't deny it. I met Mickâs family after we became close friends once he found out I was Capri Persson. Although his family still didnât know the truth. Mick told them I was a friend he met while racing, doing internships here and thereânothing major. Corina thought for a long time we would end up together for some reason. There's no way you can end up with the person who almost broke your leg in a snowball war in Aspen. That was Mick.
"You still owe me a snowball war," I reminded him, and Mick laughed at the images likely flashing through his mind. It had been a lovely gesture from his mother to bring me along for my birthday. According to Corina, Mick hadnât stopped talking about me all winter and felt bad knowing I would spend my birthday far from him due to their planned vacationâwhich I didnât intend to celebrate. Corina was a huge birthday fan, so she contacted my mom, and although it hurt to spend a birthday away from her, it had never been a big deal until I celebrated it with Mickâs family. She still sends me messages every year. She was completely fascinated.
"I'll be waiting for you outside the hotel tomorrowâonly if you promise not to break my leg."
"Mmm... I'll think about it, I still thirst for revenge," I joked, and Mick laughed. Being together after so long did me good. It reminded me of the moments before that life-changing Abu Dhabi. It reminded me of when I was just a rising star and not a driver stuck in her own life.
"All jokes aside," Mick said, "Iâm really happy to see you here, Am," he pressed his lips together as if the moment was tough, and I nodded, feeling the same.
"I talked to Jean," I told him. "I wouldn't be here if she hadn't made me change my mind."
"I wonder what she said, but Iâm afraid it's too emotional a topic for you to answer that, right?" he smiled, stepping closer with his arms open. "How about a hug? Like Dannyâs."
"Too many hugs for today."
"Come on, you can't say no to this one," he insisted, and I gave in. I was never a fan of physical contact, but I knew what it meant to Mick. I couldnât deny him a hug now. At the end of the day, if I was here, it was also because of him. And if it helped me with the competition, it would be thanks to him too.
I used to lose track of time when it suited me. It was something I turned to when I wasnât comfortable with what was happening. I would simply disconnect from all presence and reality and dive into the absence of my mediocrity. Everything moved more slowly, but I could see it all pass by.
For a few hours, I sat by the window in my room and witnessed one of the most beautiful views of my life. I forced my eyes to watch without blinking, as if they were lenses of an old camera that had to remain still for a long time for the light to imprint the photograph.
Chamonix could have been depressing with all that snow and those cold, lonely landscapes, but the colorful flowers and the quaint wooden houses with old rooftops made it a less sad and more charming place. From where I sat, I could see the great snowy Alps, a few people skiing, and a fragment of the small mountain village as the sun set.
I had opened my small chessboard to play by the window on my own. Jean had gone to explore the village since I told her Iâd stay to sort my things and take a shower. But the truth was, I was wrapping myself in solitude, trying to get used to the idea of being out of my comfort zone.
Sometimes I wanted to go out and see what everyone else was enjoying, what was supposed to happen during the rest of the weekend, what normal people do on a short vacation in the mountains. What do normal people do?
I figured it was Jean when I heard the knock long before the door opened. I knew she would sit on the edge of the bed and tell me what the town was like and what she had bought or planned to buy in the morning. But I was surprised when I opened the door confidently.
"Good afternoon," he greeted with a friendly smile and his hands in his coat pockets.
"Good afternoon," I replied the same way and stayed silent because I didnât know how to react to Charles Leclerc at my door.
"Am I bothering you?" he asked.
"No, not at all. Would you...?" I gestured awkwardly toward the room, unsure how to respond to his presence, and he nodded, stepping inside. I didnât know what I was supposed to do. Should I be polite? Offer him a glass of water? Ask how his day went? Ask about his training?
"I figured youâd be here. You didnât come down after arriving," Charles commented, looking around my room curiously but not removing his hands from his coat.
"No, I was putting my things away and... itâs not like there was much for me to do down there."
"Yeah, Mick said youâre a bit shy," he added with a small smile.
"I tried being extroverted last time, and it didnât go as planned," I sighed, and Charles laughed, remembering.
"It was fun, though. Even if we didnât all agree, and you were very drunk."
"Donât remind me," I rolled my eyes, and Charlesâs gaze landed on the chessboard.
"Am I interrupting?" he pointed at it by the window.
"No, I was playing alone, so... I wouldnât mind the company."
"Great. Can you believe the hotel doesnât have any boards or pieces?" he sat excitedly in one of the armchairs by the coffee table, and I sat across from him. I felt like a cat exploring a new space but probably looked like an idiot. "You donât have to spend the whole weekend locked in this room," Charles said while we set up the pieces.
"Yeah, I know... but... I wonât lie, itâs weird," I confessed, and he looked up.
"I get it. We all know each other, donât feel intimidated by that. You work with usâyouâre already part of the group," he smiled. "And actually, Carmen spoke very highly of you after you left. Youâre welcome to all the get-togethers if you want to come... unless whoever you work for has a problem with it."
"You mean Persson?" I frowned as I finished setting up my pieces. I was black.
"I donât like to judge because I donât know him, but not everyone likes him. Is he good to you?" he asked, moving his first pawn.
"Of course. Iâm his assistant. Even if itâs hard sometimes... Persson is just like all of you, Charles," I replied, continuing the game.
"Yeah, I knowâthatâs what nobody wants to admit. But heâs just a man with a helmet and a reputation. I have to admit I was a little terrified when he beat us all in his first preseason," he recalled with amusement.
"Why are you all so afraid of him?" I asked. The question almost slipped out. As soon as I had the chance, it jumped onto the board, disrupting all his pieces in his eyes but laying perfectly in mine. Charles had raised his hand to move a white piece, but once the question was out, he froze, hand suspended over his side of the board, fist clenched, hesitating.
"Persson is probably everything we all want to be," he admitted. "I mean, he doesnât have it easy, but people love him, the FIA lets him get away with more than it should... He doesnât have to face the press directly. Do you know what weâd give for that?" he asked. "He just shows up, races, wins, and we donât see him again until the next event. Nobody knows who he is, but they know the power he has in a car. That guy can go out to dinner with his girlfriend anywhere without a camera following him. No one comments on his private life because all that matters is what he does on the track."
His eyes settled on the board as he thought through his next move, and I breathed in, swallowing every word.
"Capri was on Maxâs heels, dismissed Lewis like no one else, and could take any of our seats because we have no idea whatâs going on in his mind or what heâll do next," he moved his bishop, attacking my rook.
"He could take any of our seats," I recalculated.
"Heâs been a legend since F3. Even Vettel said it: 'If anyone can beat Hamilton someday, itâll be number 9.'"
"Do you think Persson is that good?"
"Persson is a machine behind the wheel. Heâs much more than good... Check," he declared and looked out the window while I assessed my options on the board. I moved my queen two spaces, blocking the check, and met his eyes.
"Checkmate," I said seriously, and Charles looked at the board for a moment before smiling in amusement.
"I wouldnât expect anything less from Perssonâs assistant."
đ SUMMARY: What if the best driver of recent years isn't actually him? What if the best driver is actually hiding something else? Would he still be the best? Or just a simple fraud?
đ GENRE: secret identity / rivals to lovers / he felt first, she felt harder / soulmates / slow burn
đ§ WORD COUNT: 2334
đŹ PARTS: book one (two parts) / CP9, book two (one part)
đTAGLIST: @heyyurl @dreadity @moonchouus @wierdflowerpower @anunstablefangirl @deaddumblbumble @a-bbles @leviathan0000
(let me know in the comments if you want to be part)
đ CAPRIPERSSON.MASTERLIST
Faenza, Italy. April, 2023
"Are you spying on me?" I asked, watching her close the door of her car.
"Of course not. Mick told me."
"Why?" I kept asking. I had so many questions, but I had to measure my intensity because I wasn't sure Jean would accept them all.
"Because I'm your advisor. He really wants you to go," she confessed, and I sighed.
"You told him the truth, didnât you?" I feared, and Jean silently nodded.
"It's time for you to stop hibernating every time the races end," she smiled with pressed lips, making a face knowing how hard that was for me.
"I can't give up now, Jean. I promised myself Iâd win this championship, and I wonât stop until I do."
"Part of winning is also having fun," she said almost jokingly, even though she wished it were true.
"Sure," I nodded. "But it wasnât like that for me, not even in go-karts. Iâd take your advice if I were doing something else, but I race, Jean. And Iâm a woman on a track full of men. Thereâs the academy, sure, but curiously the best drivers in the world are men... Winning isnât about fun here. Winning is about showing the world its own criticism to its face," I explained. I was sick with this championship, but if I managed to win itâif Capri Persson won the 2023 Formula One championship... I wouldnât just be the first woman to race in Formula One. Iâd be the best driver of the season, and if I kept going like this... I could even consider myself on par with the legends. It sounded crazy, but maybe it wouldnât be if I kept working as hard as I was.
"Why are you so against going?" she asked, putting her hands in the front pockets of her jeans and leaning against her car.
"Because if I lose, if I drop from the top three podiums in the upcoming races and donât win this year... thereâs something here," I pointed at my head, "that would never let me live it down."
"I spoke to a psychologist, Capri," she announced out of nowhere, and I tensed. "Itâs necessary after everything that happened. I thought you were okay and I wanted to believe you because apparently you did too... You even made Franz believe it, but..." she sighed. "You had a damn panic attack in the car. How much longer are you going to wait until you freeze at the wheel and cause a major accident?" she asked. "Youâre not only putting your own life at risk, Capri. There are 19 other drivers on that track, and if you donât see it yourself, then Iâll do what it takes to make you see it." She placed her hands on her hips, standing firmly in front of me. "Donât want to go skiing in Chamonix? Fine. But you wonât gain anything by staying locked up here race after race."
"Jean, I canât afforâ"
"You stayed here last season... and what good did it do you?" she snapped.
Oh, Jean... She was playing dirty. But she hit the mark. Jean was really good at throwing darts in conversationsâthatâs why she had been my advisor since I entered F3. Weâd been together a long time, and that gave her an advantage in hitting my weak spots and breaking me down. She was probably the only person who could do that besides me, of course.
I couldnât answer her. I just looked away and thought about it while she watched me.
"I wish I could stop being like this, Jean. Really," I admitted, and she walked up to me with long steps from her slender legs. She took me by the shoulders and I looked into her eyes. It wasnât easy to say things the way they happened in my head, but I knew Jean appreciated it in her own way. "I donât know if I like the way I am... but itâs the only way I know, and the only one thatâs worked for me for a long time," I said honestly, and she looked into my eyes before hugging me tightly.
Jean was the closest thing I had to a maternal figure while I was away from home, losing my own.
"What if we change that? Try something new?" she rested her chin on my head because she was tall enough to do so. I could smell that cheap French perfume sheâd been wearing since I met her. "Youâre really good at what you do, Capri. Youâre amazing, and that gives you great opportunities. Youâve worked your whole life for this, and maybe itâs time to relax a bit and let the work youâve cultivated over the years grow without pressing it so hard. You have a huge chance to change what you canât stand, because what you love has already set its roots in your life. Why donât you trust a bit and let me handle this?" she pulled away to look at me. "Have you ever packed for a last-minute ski trip on the border of France, Switzerland, and Italy?" she smiled, and I shook my head. "Good, Iâm glad to hear it. Me neitherâI could never afford something like that. So, letâs get to it."
Jean and I spent a good while choosing what to bring. This in case we went out, that in case we had dinner at night, or also if we did during the day. Jean had taken this very seriously, and since I preferred not to get into discussions about what would be best (clearly some AlphaTauri sweatpants, a few hoodies, and faux fur jackets), I let her choose what to pack while I ran on my treadmill. Apparently, the long-distance bus that would take us was departing from Milan, since there were no flights from the airport to Chamonix, meaning we had a two-hour train ride there and then another four and a half hours by bus. Obviously, everyone else would go on their private jets, but Iâd been clear about that kind of thing from the start. I didnât use my jet unless it was an emergencyâthe world is already ridiculously polluted to keep contributing when I could use other means of transport. Besides, traveling by train from Faenza to Milan wasnât bad at all, and it got better when we had to get on the bus.
Two hours and twenty minutes later, we were at Milan Central Station. Jean stopped to take a few photos of the station because it was quite big and had sky-facing windows that looked very satisfying due to their symmetry. A car loaded our bags into the trunk to take us to the bus terminal, and I must admit that this whole train-then-bus thing was quite entertaining. When you go from race to race on planes, thereâs not much entertainment between flights. This way, Jean and I spent the trip chatting about random things we saw in Milan.
When the bus arrived, we got ready for what would be the most exciting four hours of the day. The bus would climb the mountain, as it was the only way to reach the village. Traveling by road was something I loved deeply. My mom and I used to do it almost all the time we could. She would just take the car and weâd disappear looking for strange and spontaneous adventures. My mother helped me get to know all of Sweden before I turned twelve. She wanted me to know my whole country before leaving it, so every free day we had together was a new place to visit.
Climbing the mountain by bus brought back memories I didnât expect to visitâmemories I didnât have on regular days because I was too busy training and focusing on the races. And right then, I couldnât avoid them. I couldnât just ignore them.
"So?" Jean asked excitedly, sitting next to me. "How does it feel to get out of the routine?"
"I wonât lie... Itâs weird," I confessed. "But so far, nothing to worry about."
"Iâm glad to hear it. I thought you were going to die of boredom in that house," she joked, and I looked at her, pretending to be deeply offended. "Or from an overdose of training."
"You know what I still donât get?" I frowned, adjusting in my seat to look at her directly. "Why are you so excited about going skiing when you can barely walk?"
"Seriously?" she asked like it was obvious, and I waited for her to answer herself. "Mick said everything was covered, and when would I ever have another opportunity like this?" she shrugged. "Besides..." she added, "I deserve to have a little fun sometimes." The mystery with which she said that before looking back at her phone left me very curiousâtoo curious to leave her alone the rest of the trip, because she didnât say it like something casual. She said it like she was hiding something pretty obvious.
"What do you mean by that?" I frowned.
"You donât see it, but I can assure you drivers are extremely sexy," she whispered. "And I wasnât going to miss this opportunity."
"Iâm a driver too," I replied obviously.
"I didnât say you werenât sexy," she joked, and I laughed. Jean had a ridiculous sense of humor, but that was what I liked most about her. She accepted parts of her life others would consider unpleasant or inappropriate, confessed when someone was sexyâand you could see it on her faceâtold bad jokes often related to the frauds of her life. For Jean, there were no taboos; she could talk about vaginal discharge while walking into a meeting with Franz and Horner. Sheâd eye Toto Wolff every time he passed by, even if she tried to hide it since he was a married man, and joked about it because, according to her, "she had never fallen in love with a decent man in her 36 years of life."
Jean was all I had.
When we began climbing the snowy mountains, she didnât stop taking pictures from every possible angle. The place looked beautiful, the white snow covering the mountains like a heavenly eternal blanket, and everything looked straight out of a professional photograph. It felt like my eyes werenât worthy of such a miracle, like I was entering another realm of the earth above the mortal and ordinary.
When we arrived at the bus terminal, a car was waiting to take us to the hotel. We didnât bring muchâwell, maybe we did, but not by choice. Jean had decided what to pack, and I wasnât going to argue, so I had no choice.
Being an F1 driver, I expected to be used to the material luxuries hotels offered with their lodging: incredibly luxurious, symmetrical, and perfect facades, all the comforts, every gym machine imaginable, dining rooms full of meals from our exclusive diets, furniture that looked brand new. Everything was splendid and shiny just for usâbut arriving at the hotel the group of drivers had chosen to stay at while skiing in France... was another kind of luxury.
"Look who showed up," Lewis smiled as he saw me entering the hotel residence, taking off his headphones to greet us.
"Oh, God. Here he comes," Jean said almost breathlessly, and I turned to her, puzzled. I couldnât believe what sheâd just said, but I couldnât pay much attention because Hamilton was coming toward us.
"I didnât expect to see you here," he said, placing his hands on his hips.
"Me neither, but... Mick insisted," I half-admitted, and Lewis turned to Jean beside me.
"Jean Henderson, at your service," she introduced herself, and the driver laughed, shaking her hand with amusement.
"You didnât," I muttered, stunned.
"Itâs a habit, Iâm sorry," she went on, completely lost in Lewisâs eyes. "Iâm..."
"Perssonâs advisor, I figured," he clarified, and I frowned in confusion while Jean seemed to melt beside me.
"Oh," was all she managed to say, touching her neck like she was drowning in her own fantasy.
"Are you skiing?" Lewis asked me.
"Thatâs the plan. Isnât that why weâre all here?"
"Good, then Iâll see you at dinner. The guys are in the main hall," he said in farewell and left the hotel, putting his headphones and black glasses back on.
"I saw itâdid you?" Jean raised her eyebrows repeatedly, and I rolled my eyes, amused to see her like this. "Right, I think Iâll go to my room and think about what could happen after such a steamy encounter."
"Alright. Iâll look for Mick to let him know Iâm here, okay? See you later," I also said goodbye to Jean, watching her follow the bellhops who would take our bags to our rooms, and sighed, looking around. Who wouldâve thought? Today I woke up ready to train and race, but I ended up on a mountain in France, persuaded by my advisor who just wants to watch drivers ski for free. I could never have imagined a more ridiculous plan.
The hotel lobby was too big to figure out which of the hallways or double doors would lead me to the main hall where Lewis said the others wereâand where I assumed Mick was too. Some hallways were empty, others not so much. The spring sun waited patiently to set, still casting light for the evening. Outside, it wasnât snowing, but it wasnât summer weather either. It was the perfect climate to enjoy the snowy mountains and a walk through the mild town center.
While I was thinking about how wonderful the hotel and the weather were, I bumped into someone coming out of one of the double doors.
"You came," he smiled hopefully. His expression had completely changed, and now he didnât look so terrifying with sweaty hair, flushed cheeks, and damp skin.
The simple fact that he said a single word stopped me instantly.
"You came" echoed in my head.
Why did it feel like his words were embedding themselves in my mind as if they wouldnât leave for a long time? And... why did I still feel like he was my worst enemy even when he stood in front of me smiling just because he saw me?
Why couldnât I be happy to see him?
đ„PREVIOUS: 07. ALONE AT HOME
đNEXT: 09. WHY ARE YOU SO AFRAID OF HIM?
author's note: shit, it's been a crazy month, and with my final exams i literally left you all alone here. I'll try to keep working on this and soon i'll be updating more often. Thanks for your support!
đ SUMMARY: What if the best driver of recent years isn't actually him? What if the best driver is actually hiding something else? Would he still be the best? Or just a simple fraud?
đ GENRE: secret identity / rivals to lovers / he felt first, she felt harder / soulmates / slow burn
đ§ WORD COUNT: 2500
đŹ PARTS: book one (two parts) / CP9, book two (one part)
đTAGLIST: @heyyurl @dreadity @moonchouus @wierdflowerpower @anunstablefangirl @deaddumblbumble @a-bbles
(let me know in the comments if you want to be part)
đ CAPRIPERSSON.MASTERLIST
Faenza, Italy. April, 2023
Sometimes, when everything falls silent and it's just me and my presence in an empty house with nothing else to do, I wonder if this is what they call happiness, or if I'm just confused. When I come back after spending several weeks in different hotels in different cities, it seems like everything has changedâbut the only thing that changes is you.
Sometimes I wonder if this only happens to me, or if the other drivers go through the same thing. Maybe it's something collective, maybe it happens to everyone in general, but I'll never know because I never talked about it with anyone. Not even with Jean or Mick.
There were quite a few free days between Australia and Azerbaijan. Days that reminded me there was a world outside of racing and the championship. Days when I secluded myself in my house in Faenza, a nearly medieval town in Italy, close to the team's headquarters, close to Imola, but farâvery farâfrom home, from Sweden.
For many years I got used to that distance, that feeling of not knowing which place you could call home, beyond all the meaning and mystique behind it. If I was speaking of home in a poetic and meaningful way, then my home was on a machine going 300km per hour. My home was in that single-seater, no matter the model. My home was in the frenzy of speed, in the feeling of power, in the adrenaline captured by euphoria. But I couldn't sleep in a single-seater. So I had to find a place that could physically feel like home, even if it couldn't really be home because I couldn't be too far in case they needed me. So I moved to Faenza at Franz's request as soon as I signed the contract with AlphaTauri, just as I had when I was in F2 and F3, but my mother had never been able to stay close.
The stories you hear when you enter the sport vary, and although there are often drivers who had the opportunity to start from a good position, there are others who had to sacrifice everything. Hamilton is one of them, but he's not the first and certainly won't be the last. And when you're born into a middle-class family, with a deaf-mute and practically single mother in Sweden, there's no chance that something like what was happening to me could actually happen. I had no chances, and yet my mother insisted on giving me wings to believe in it.
The way I chose motorsport was quite trivial, since I always had that subtle curiosity for cars as a childâsomething the other girls my age barely understood. My mother nurtured that curiosity until she put me in a go-kart, and she never stopped. But I was far from the little girl who first got into a kart, and far from my mother too.
So as the days between races stretched out, my ability for retrospection stalked me from a corner of the living room. Everything came to my mind easily. Everything made me question the kind of life I was living, and my question was whether it felt this way for everyone, or if it was just me, lost in my own mind while waiting for the next race.
I was going through the chaotic and terrifying 20s. And even though I had a secured racing seat this season and enough money to live even if I didn't, there were other aspects of my life that haunted me during this process.
I could fill this time by avoiding everything that scared me about the part of my life that wasn't related to racingâthe part that was about reading as many books as possible, about visiting every place in the world, or figuring my life out before turning thirty. I was terrified just thinking about it, because probably the only thing I had done during these 23 years of life was focus on building Capri Persson into an exceptional driverâsomeone nobody knew the truth about. Outside of that, I knew absolutely nothing about the world.
Being a mystery had spared me from thousands of things in life. Jean worked for me and the team, my masseur, my engineers, the whole crewâthose were people who were there for work, not because I had to socialize with them. And besides Mick... I didn't really have friends. And with him, we could barely stay in touch because our lives were so different.
So those free days between races could be pure torture or just ordinary days where I avoided locking myself in with my thoughts at all costs.
When it rained, it was worse. Much worse.
My house in Faenza was almost as old as the city itself and had a large yard surrounding it. It was a real country house, and I hoped to have a small farm someday. I liked how cozy it felt with its old stone exterior and tile roof. I also loved how Italian it wasâa typical house lost in time, with large classic windows and ivy covering much of the exterior walls. But when it rained, there wasn't much to do, so I trained to avoid every one of my thoughts. Although it was never enough.
Was this really a life? Race, train, race, train, repeat. I did nothing but that. I had nothing but that.
Jean sent me the schedule for the photo session Nyck and I would have for a campaign before the Miami GP, and that was as exciting as my week would get. Every interaction with the real world ended there.
There was something else I used to do between races, something I stopped doing after last season's finale. When I came home between training and catching up with things, I used to work on an old car that, according to my mother, had belonged to my father. Since she thought it was junk, I brought it with me to Faenza during my first Formula One season. I'd been trying to fix it ever since in my spare time, but after Abu Dhabi I closed the garage and hadn't opened it since.
So I didn't hesitate to dive into my thoughts and the few hobbies I had to fill those days when I couldn't make elaborate or extended plans.
Until I got a call from Mick.
"Mick?" I asked as I answered the call.
"Hey, Capri. I'm not bothering you, am I?" he asked, and I sat on the living room couch, watching the rain hit the windows.
"No, not at all. It's a horrible day in Faenza, can't really do much," I told him.
"I see... I haven't been able to talk to you since the party. What did you think of it?" he asked enthusiastically, and I settled into the seat.
"Fine, I guess," I stretched my answer.
"You guess?"
"I don't remember, I think I drank too much."
"Oh," he sighed regretfully. "I shouldn't have left you alone there."
"No, no, no," I shook my head immediately. "Don't say that, I had a great time."
"You don't even remember, don't lie to me."
"Well, you're right about that. But I have the feeling it wasn't bad at all."
"The feeling, huh?" Mick replied in a playful tone, and I frowned, confused. I didn't understand where this was going. Mick doesn't usually callâMick texts. And besides, Mick and I hadn't talked like this in a while. "Okay... so could you tell me why Max Verstappen keeps asking me about you?"
"Shit," I muttered, bringing a hand to my mouth in surprise. The week I'd spent at home after Australia had made me completely forget everything that had happened at the party, and like a bucket of cold water, the memory of his lips on mine caught me off guardâand then his eyes. God, he really had beautiful eyes.
"What happened?"
"What did he say happened?" I asked immediately, cursing myself. How could I have forgotten?
"So something did happen?!" Mick exclaimed, surprised.
"What did he tell you, Mick?" I insisted, desperate.
"I asked first," he replied, scolding me, and I tried to remember.
"Nothing happened."
"I had no idea you could seem interesting to someone by doing nothing," I could tell he air-quoted the word, smiling amusedly.
"Did he say I seemed interesting?" I asked quickly.
"He said you said some hurtful things, but that you seemed nice."
"He said I seemed nice?"
"Do you have bad reception? You're repeating everything I'm saying," he laughed. "I don't know what you told him..."
"You don't want to know."
"Ohhh, now I do want to know what you told the world champion," he replied playfully, and I sighed, forcing myself to remember exactly what I had said.
"I don't remember all the details, but maybe... maybe I went too far with the criticism."
"Are you serious?" he asked, confused.
"I was drunk. What did you expect me to do?"
"Did you confess something? Did you talk about Capri?" he asked now, worried, and I stopped breathing for a second. What if I had said something like that and didn't remember? Oh, god. "Hello?"
"No, not that I remember. But..."
"But?" he insisted, impatient, and I stood up to pace nervously.
"But I told Max what I really thought. I told him the truthâI don't think he won Abu Dhabi."
"But he did win Abu Dhabi," he reminded me.
"I would have, if I hadn't crashed in the last corner, Mick. And you know it better than anyone. If I hadn't failed, I'd be world champion. Champion. Do you understand that? I was excellent the entire season..." I sighed, standing still, watching the rain fall through the window and remembering that race. "I told him that and I also said something about Abu Dhabi 2021..."
"No, you didn't," he mumbled.
"Yes, and... then I apologized and that was it. Nothing else... happened," I concluded, thinking about the addictive taste of his lips. I couldn't believe I was doing this. I wasn't going to deny itâhe was almost as good at kissing as he was at drivingâbut he was still Max, even if I wanted to separate a casual kiss from the rest of my life.
"Well, I think he liked being insulted by your words because he invited you to go skiing in Chamonix with me and the rest this weekend," he added.
"Skiing? Mick, I don't know how to ski."
"You still don't know how to ski? Aren't you supposed to be good at everything?"
"Not skiing, I assure you."
"Well, you learn fast, so it won't be a problem. What do you think?" he asked, and I wanted to say no. I didn't know how to ski, I didn't want to see Max after what happened, and even less now that he found me "interesting." Everyone would be there, no... I wasn't supposed to be there skiing.
"I don't know, Mick. I have a lot to do this week."
"Things more interesting than skiing with friends in France?" he asked, amused, and when I didn't answer, he sighed in frustration. "Fine, the offer's on the table. I would've liked you to come, we haven't spent time together in a while and Laila won't stop talking about how she wants to see you more often. Let me know if you change your mind, it'll be three days and two nights. Hope to see youâand if not... we'll talk," he said, fully aware that maybe what I needed to do wasn't something I wanted, but something I had to do for work. He knew what he was doing, but it wasn't going to work on me.
"We'll talk later. Good luck in Chamonix."
"Goodbye," he replied, and I hung up.
I couldn't lock myself in the home gym until the end of my days or until the next race. I couldn't pretend my personal life didn't happen alongside my professional one. I knew no one other than Jean, Mick, Franz, the team, and my mother. But I wasn't sure that skiing with drivers I worked withâbut pretended I didn'tâwas a good idea. I wanted to convince myself fairly, but a part of me knew that as soon as I got to Chamonix I'd want to leave, because I wouldn't feel comfortable there, because I was meant to follow the path my life had taken, because if the Azerbaijan GP came and I didn't win, I'd blame myself for choosing to learn to ski in France that weekend instead of staying to train and study the track from the workshop.
And I was so sick of that perspective on my life. Because... I deeply loved what I did, I loved devoting my entire life to what I loved mostâbut socially, I knew there was a part of my life I hadn't developed, and I didn't know if it would be too late to develop it once I had to retire from motorsport.
There I was again. Sitting at the edge of the couch in front of the window, watching the rain fall, thinking about how life passed by while I tried to figure out what to do with it.
When you can't take it anymore, you get up and lock yourself in the gym past your living room until you're exhausted, shower, eat dinner, and sleep until the next day. It was a routine I had gotten used to. I could go months without seeing absolutely anyone, without speaking to anyone, completely in my own world. I had discovered the art of planting and keeping my own garden, which I tried to maintain like juggling on a moving single-seaterâit was pretty hard to keep up while traveling all the time, but the strawberries never failed me, and that lifted my spirits.
I also liked walking through most of Faenza, it was a great pastime. I liked hiking, so if I had the chance, I'd find a place to go and disappear. If the activity didn't require talking or more than one person, it was perfect for me. That, and visiting the simulator at the team's offices or driving at the Faenza track. If there were no GPs, that would be my routine for the rest of my life. And I thought it would be for the rest of the week until I had the photo shoot with Nyck for a campaignâbut it was Friday morning, and someone had rung the gate bell.
"Yes?" I asked, frowning. Only Jean, my mother, and my trainer knew where I lived. No one else. And all three were supposed to be at home, living their lives.
"Can you open up? We're running late."
I went pale when I heard her voice. I didn't remember us having anything scheduled today, so I paused a moment to see if it came back to me.
"Do we have something today?" I asked.
"Open up and we'll talk. I'm in my car," she said, and I pressed the button on the wall that allowed me to open the gates for vehicles. I closed them as soon as I heard Jean's car in the driveway and went out immediately.
Jean was getting out of the car, dressed very casually.
"Pack your bags. I'm not missing the chance to ski in France, and neither are you."
đ SUMMARY: What if the best driver of recent years isn't actually him? What if the best driver is actually hiding something else? Would he still be the best? Or just a simple fraud?
đ GENRE: secret identity / rivals to lovers / he felt first, she felt harder / soulmates / slow burn
đ§ WORD COUNT: 2822
đŹ PARTS: book one (two parts) / CP9, book two (one part)
đTAGLIST: @heyyurl @dreadity @moonchouus @wierdflowerpower @anunstablefangirl @deaddumblbumble @a-bbles
(let me know in the comments if you want to be part)
đ CAPRIPERSSON.MASTERLIST
Melbourne, Australia. April, 2023
My gaze was lost, listening to conversations that didnât concern me. I had no idea how many drinks Iâd had, or how long Iâd been drinking and listening to the drivers talk about trivial things. I only remember one of the girlsâI think her name was Isaâgot all of us up to dance together before Carmen, George, Checo, and Carola headed back to their hotels. I remember going with them and enjoying dancing with Carmen, but not much else. There were gaps in my memory that night, but when I realized it, I was on one of the couches staring at a fixed point on the table, listening to the rest talk. Only Carlos, Isa, Max, Pierre, Kika, Lando, Alex, Lily, Esteban, Lance, Danny, Charles, Lewis, and I were left. I donât remember when I lost track of Mick and Lailaâor maybe they left and I just didnât notice.
âHow does it feel?â I heard Daniel ask. It was that point in the night when the rooftop had turned into a bar and the interior of the club into an electronic dance floor. Out here we could hear the breeze and the low music blasting inside the club while we drank and chatted, overlooking the city from above.
âHow does what feel?â Lewis smiled, confused, taking a sip of his beer.
âI mean, it must be great... But whatâs so bad about winning?â
âYouâre saying that so Max stops doing it?â Hamilton joked, and everyone laughed. âI donât know, man. After seven years, it sounds stupid, but you get used to it, and when you donât manage it, it feels like...â
âEverythingâs over,â I whispered beside him, and Lewis turned to look at me. âYeah, itâs stupid. And you know it, which makes it feel even worse. But you canât fight it because you know you didnât just lose a raceâyou lost all your confidence and that desire that kept you alive until then.â
âSomeoneâs got a melancholy hangover,â Carlos sang playfully.
âJokes aside, the girlâs absolutely right,â Lewis pointed out.
âYou go so high that the only risk you run is dying from the fall,â I looked him in the eyes, feeling that melancholy, nostalgia, as if I had once won something.
âOkayâŠâ Daniel added, ending the topic because the conversation had gotten so painfully deep. âWhat do you think, Max? Youâre the reigning champion.â
âWell... Itâs not that hard. I always say the same thingâŠâ
âThis time, no beating around the bush, okay? Weâre friends, not the press,â Charles clarified, giving him his full attention, and I turned to stare at him. I suppose he noticed because we made eye contact. My stomach turned, and his face was dangerously addictive to the masochistic side of me that remembered all the times I watched him step onto the podium this winter.
âLast season was inexplicable. I had completely given up before those last seconds. Until Persson crashed into the wall and I felt... Itâs horrible, but I felt relieved. Not even like I had won, just... relief.â
âBut you didnât win, so it doesnât count,â I interrupted, cracking my neck without moving my hands. The whole group looked at me, my eyelids droopingâI was dying of sleep.
âWhat?â Max asked, confused.
âLast season doesnât count. Danny asked whatâs wrong with winning... You didnât win Abu Dhabi.â
I no longer had full control of my words.
âDidnât I?â he raised his eyebrows.
âPersson crashed, America. And the points went to Max for finishing the race because they were tiedâŠâ
âI know how points work, Lando,â I snapped. âBut Max didnât win.â
âWant to explain your point of view?â Charles adjusted in his seat, clearly impressed by the little argument that had sparked and giving me his full attention.
âIf Capri hadnât crashed, she wouldâve won. And Max wouldâve been second. But she crashed because there was an issue with her car. Otherwise... the world champion would have been Capri Persson,â I shrugged.
âYou win when you cross the finish line first,â Max replied, eyes locked and brows furrowed.
âYeah, you did. Good for you. But you didnât win because you crossed first. You won because Persson had an accidentâŠâ
âWell, if weâre thinking that way, then Persson didnât win Bahrain either,â he insisted. In minutes, the friendly conversation had turned into a heated argument between Max and me.
âOkay⊠So you admit youâre not the world champion?â I squinted, and everyone fell silent. Max looked at me strangely, as if he didnât understand the purpose of this argument, although deep down we couldâve gone all night. âJust like the 2021 championship belonged to Hamilton.â
âGuys, weâre not here to argue about this now,â Pierre downplayed. âWeâre trying to relax after a long day, and youâre going to argue about that?â
âIf he needs to relax after doing what he loves, then he should do something else,â I shrugged, ending my part of the conversation and leaning back, sighing. Max scoffed, and I could see everyoneâs faces. Charles raised his eyebrows in surprise but tried to hide it. Daniel and Lewis pressed their lips together. Carlos shook his head, and the rest didnât know where to look. The champion of Melbourne left in silence, and I followed him with my eyes.
âYou were a bit harsh, donât you think?â Hamilton asked beside me, but I couldnât answer. He was probably right. âCan I say something without wounding my pride?â he joked, and I smiled weakly. âWhatever problems Capri Persson has on the track, let them stay with him. I know spending a lot of time with someone like Persson can change things a bit, but... Youâre not him. And whatever problems he has, theyâre his.â
âAre you going to make me go apologize to Max?â I asked.
âNo. What you do next will determine whether youâre like Persson, or if youâre yourself.â
Shit. I was so drunk.
I wonât deny that everything I saidâI meant it. Every single thing. But I had crossed a line, and I was mature enough to admit it. Just not mature enough to stop it.
I had never felt so light with my words in my life, but... at what cost?
That night, in the middle of my drunkenness, I got up from the couch where I was lying next to Lewis Hamilton and realized something Iâd probably spent a long time trying not to see. As I stood, Lewis winked at me, and I turned to the rest of the group that kept talking, though I didnât pay them any attention.
âItâs nothing personal, Iâm just a bit drunk and feel like Iâm going to puke,â I admitted, running a hand across my forehead.
âItâs alright, Am. Weâve all been there,â Daniel laughed.
âOkay... Iâm out for today, Iâve got something to do,â I added before scanning the rooftop for Max. What I didnât notice was that it circled the building, so besides the area where the drivers and their friends were, there was a nearly empty section past a hallway between the edge of the rooftop and the clubâs windows. It probably wasnât open to guests, but when youâve just taken heavy criticism to the face and your spirits are on the floor, the way is fully open.
I donât know if he heard me approaching because he was alone, looking out over the other side of Melbourne with his arms resting on the edge, completely still in time. Probably thinking about everything I said.
âI wonât make it long, I promise,â I said as I approached, and he turned only his head to look at me over his shoulder. âI admit it, I went too far this time. I was... God, I was unpleasant,â I confessed, standing beside him, unable to stop thinking about how strange it was to have him close.
âIt doesnât matter.â
âYes, it does. Iâm drunk and trying to justify myself. It sucks,â I went on. âBut that wasnât fair.â
âYou said what you think. Itâs fine,â he replied as if he wanted to get rid of meâand this conversation. I wouldâve let him if I werenât under the influence, unable to measure my words.
âIt doesnât matter what I think if Iâm going to say it like that,â I shook my head, and thatâs when Max turned to look at me, making me feel insecure about my own words. âCongratulations, by the way,â I admitted for the first time, with a bit of bitterness on my lips. âYouâve probably heard it a hundred times. You must be sick of it, but... whatever,â I shrugged, sighing, and turned my body to face him. âI didnât mean to be so nasty and repulsive. I promise Iâm not usually like that. You can say whatever you want if it makes you feel better. Whatever you want,â I clenched my teeth, lowering my gaze, and Max smiled slightly, shaking his head as he looked away.
âThatâs what happens when youâre a public figure. Everyone thinks they know you, and this kind of thing happens. But I donât know you, I canât say anything about you. I barely know your name,â his gaze returned to mine, and the blue everyone talked about so much turned extremely dark in front of me.
âItâs an honor, Mr. Max,â I joked half-heartedly, but it still amused him. âI promised Iâd be brief. Youâve got more fun things to do than this,â I motioned between us, but when I was about to say goodbye, I went blank. Everything I had said...
âIt mustâve been a long day,â he commented, and I didnât understand what he meant, so I just stared at him, confused. âI mean for you... Capriâs second place,â he clarified, but seeing my continued confusion, he turned fully to face me. âItâs the first time itâs happened since Abu Dhabi. Must suck,â he concluded.
The pain in my chest returned, and my lip trembled like I was about to cry. How stupid and childish I was trying to hide it.
âI completely understand that,â he swallowed hard and looked down at his shoes in sympathy. I thanked him internally because a couple of tears were forming in my eyes and my stomach felt strange. âAfter the 2021 championship, I think I was a little scared to win Abu Dhabi again after everything that happened. People went totally crazy, and I wasnât ready to deal with it all at once,â he bit his lip. âI was probably wrong, I wonât deny that. It weighs on me sometimes, but when it happened, I thought it was part of the gameâwhat the world expects. It was stupid, but it got people talking, it helped the teams, the series, the industry. Everyone got something. I got a trophy, Lewis the collective grief,â I listened carefully. âWhen I watched the race again, I called Christian and told him I wanted to speak with the FIA, that the circus was too obvious. He told me it wasnât something we could discuss because the FIA had agreed to it. Theyâd wanted to dethrone Lewis for a long time, and when they saw me as a worthy driver to do it, they didnât hesitate.â
I could barely breathe for fear of interrupting him. I remembered that race in detail, but I wondered how many people knew about this.
âI never wanted to talk to Lewis about it. Itâs a bit cowardly, you can say it. But when I won Abu Dhabi, it felt... I donât want you to feel sorry for me. It was strange. I thought everyone would talk about it like last time, and then you go home wondering if youâre really that good,â he ran a hand over his chin, and I couldnât do much more than watch him lit by the city lights. âSo when what happened with Persson today happened, I couldnât stop thinking about Abu Dhabi. How everything repeats itself and comes back to you without asking. And the more you try to avoid it, the closer it gets. He mustâve gone through the same thing.â
A tear ran down my cheek, and I didnât bother to wipe it. If I moved, it wouldâve been too obvious, so I let it fall, taking advantage that Max wasnât looking directly at me.
âYou feel like itâll be part of you for the rest of your lifeâbut not the good part of you. The worst part. You try to rip it out, but if you do, you might bleed out. Sometimes I watch the race again, both of them, and I wonder if I really deserved it. And then you come along and tell me I didnât win and... I canât argue that when Iâm not even sure myself if Iâm good enough to win,â he sighed. âI want to prove that I am. I really want that. But at the end of the day, when no oneâs watching, you fall apart without being able to stop it. I guess you had to endure Persson at the end of the day, and thatâs very brave,â he admitted, pausing. I felt strange inside, but I wanted to believe it was because of everything Iâd drunk that night. âThough I hope it doesnât go too far. A driverâs rage sometimes has to be stopped.â
I couldnât believe Max was confessing like that in front of me, so I half-suspected he must have had quite a bit to drink too.
"You're partly right. But this is a game, and thatâs how things are. When you get in the car, you accept two deathsâone physical, and the other, glory. If you go home without touching either, it means you won. Otherwise... you die anyway." He turned to look at me, and I took a breath, trying to quickly divert my gaze. "Iâm glad I didnât die."
"Dying is not cool at all," I slurred my words in that silly, playful tone every drunk person has at the end of the day.
"Otherwise we wouldnât have ended up here," he added flirtatiously but subtly. And I donât know what went through my head.
"Youâre lucky Iâm not drunk enough to kiss you," I blurted out, drunk enough to do it.
"Thatâs a shame. I wouldâve liked you to," he replied, and I turned to look at him. How drunk do you have to be to kiss your rival? Because I knew I was, but I didnât know how much until I saw Max differently in front of me.
With one hand on his neck, I pulled him toward me to press my lips against his, trying to forget who he was. It had been so long since Iâd kissed someone like that. I just hoped that desire didnât show when our chests pressed together as if it were possible to merge into one. Max slid both hands around my neck, trying to take control, and just as he could on the track, I moved my hand down to his jaw, taking his chin to guide his lips.
I donât remember much, except the desire to keep going, stupidly, as if it were possible. I had to admit we were both tipsy, and I didnât even care that it was him I was kissing in a corner of the clubâs rooftop. But the moment I took a breath, opened my eyes, and saw him in front of me, something short-circuited in my head.
"Ugh," I mumbled. "I donât know what Iâm doing."
"But I like it."
"Should I keep going?" His face was so close to mine, and one of his thumbs caressed my lips, making me tingle. Max nodded, and now he was the one who leaned in, taking the next step. It was stupidly sensual but also timid. I wasnât sure if thatâs how everyone kisses someone casuallyâa stranger. Itâs usually rougher, less relaxed. But somehow Max did it differently and... addictive, it was incredibly addictive, I didnât want to stop.
God, but it was Max!
"Why did you stop?" he murmured, and I felt his breath against my lips. His hands were resting on my cheeks. His eyes were no longer clear, but to me, they looked incredibly haunting.
"Itâs not right."
"But it was magnificent," he whispered, caressing my cheeks, and a shiver ran down my spine.
"The wrong things usually are magnificent. But we work together and youâre drunkâweâre drunk," I corrected myself, placing my hands on his chest, and I could feel his heart beating hard under my palm. "I promise youâll regret everything that happens when you wake up in the morning, Max," I whispered, slurring slightly.
"Say it again," he pleaded, looking at my lips with a playful smile, and I knew he meant his name.
"Goodbye, Max," I whispered close to his lips, smiling, and pulled away from him, hoping heâd forget everything in the morning, just like I would from how drunk I was.
In fact, thatâs what happened. I remembered nothing more than the argument, a slight touch between us, and the rest of the party. I collapsed as soon as I got to the hotel, regretting all my bad decisions that night.
You should (if you want) post the "introducing capri persson" section on your ao3 story.
Also, did you posted this story on wattpad??
I love the story and you are so talented is incredible. đ€
It's been a long time!!! BUT i got news and this is that i've finally publish Capri Persson on AO3, and it's already on Wattpad (completed only in spanish). So, if you feel more confortable reading on AO3 or Wattpad, now you can choose your perfect plataform to read this fantastic fanfic that i love very very much.
PS: Sorry for being sooo slow with updates, y'all going to hear (read) more about me soon!!
đ SUMMARY: What if the best driver of recent years isn't actually him? What if the best driver is actually hiding something else? Would he still be the best? Or just a simple fraud?
đ GENRE: secret identity / rivals to lovers / he felt first, she felt harder / soulmates / slow burn
đ§ WORD COUNT: 3373
đŹ PARTS: book one (two parts) / CP9, book two (one part)
đTAGLIST: @heyyurl @dreadity @moonchouus @wierdflowerpower @anunstablefangirl @deaddumblbumble @a-bbles
(let me know in the comments if you want to be part)
đ CAPRIPERSSON.MASTERLIST
Melbourne, Australia. April, 2023
"I know thereâs a good chance Iâll get this back because you refuse to go, but either way, Iâd like you to keep it. I also know what youâre thinkingâdonât worry about the money, although I stand by the fact that womenâs clothing should be cheaper and equivalent to menâs. Think of it as a nice gift from me and Laila, who took over two hours to decide which one would suit you best. If only she knew the only thing you wear are pants and a uniform with that helmet. I hope to see you there and good luck with the race.
âMick."
Thatâs what the card saidâthe one that came with the elegant white designer bag left in my room while I was out. I reread it a couple of times while watching the sunset through the hotel window, overlooking the track, biting my nails. I took out the dress the friendly couple had given me, folded perfectly and meticulously in a box with special paper. It was a black strappy dress with rounded edges at the neckline and small, neat sequins that gave it a special shimmer, almost invisible in the dark. Not bad, I suppose. I didnât usually wear dresses; when I had to dress up, it was always two-piece suitsâcomfortable outfits that didnât show too much. The one Laila had picked for me fell below the knees and was fitted at the torso. When I tried it on, I complimented her good taste, but I felt incredibly strange. Deep down, though, I knew it wasnât because of the dress.
A damn panic attack in the car had cost me the first place.
As soon as the teamâs medical staff left the motorhome room that evening, having concluded from what I told them that it had just been a panic attack, Jean stared at me in silence, her face pale. I knew she was dying to say âI told you soâ for all the times sheâd told me to see a psychologist after last seasonâs finale. But I always brushed it off, even if that didnât mean I didnât care. It was extremely and stupidly important to me, and thatâs why it felt ridiculous. What am I supposed to say when I sit in front of a psychologist and they ask why I think Iâm there? âI lost an important race and came in secondâ? Seriously? It seemed too absurd to consult someone else over something I knew I could fix myself. And the only way to fix it on my own was to face it and overcome it. The only way was to win, no matter how much I lost in the process. Because the thing is... I had already lost everything in that last corner, so everything I was risking was just the ghost of what Iâd already lost and still believed I had.
âJohn was calling you over the radio seconds before the end, and you didnât respond,â Jean said, leaning back against one of the walls in front of me, arms crossed. Someone knocked on the door.
âPersson, itâs me, Franz,â came a voice from the other side. Jean didnât give me time to answer.
âGive us a moment, Franz,â she replied, still by the closed door and unmoving. She paused, and the silence allowed me to hear how hard my heart was trying to calm down. âIs this how itâs going to be all season? Or are you going to take responsibility and admit you need help?â
All I could do was look her in the eyes. No words would come out.
Jean shook her head and left the room, giving Franz space to enter, followed by John. I hadnât even taken off my race suit.
âWhat happened?â Franz asked, pulling up a chair to sit across from me, elbows resting on his knees.
âItâs nothing. It wonât happen again,â I downplayed it. âWe made up for it in the pits anyway, we should be celebrating,â I pretended everything was fine, because itâs weird when your boss and your engineer look at you confused, completely baffled. How was it possible that I had overtaken 19 positions in 26 laps and ended up like this? I was sure both had been informed about the verdict on what had happened, but I didnât know how serious they thought it was.
âWeâll review what happened and talk to the team, okay? Other than that... I only have congratulations for you, Capri. Big and heartfelt congratulations. What you did out there today was priceless,â Franz smiled, trying to cheer me up. I smiled back with tight lips, knowing I had a long write-up about my perspective on the race waiting for the press.
"It wouldâve been way better if I had just overtaken Max and hadnât frozen up like that," I thought while smiling. And a few hours later, thatâs all I could think about, sitting on the bed in my hotel room, wearing the dress Laila and Mick had bought me for the after-race party. My hair was a mess and my face was hiding a bitter mix of guilt, disappointment, and pain.
I didnât want to sleep that night. If the memories came while I was wide awake and lucid, I couldnât imagine how theyâd hit me in my dreams. But I also couldnât bring myself to sit in a corner of the room in silence and relive that moment over and over again involuntarily. Training all night would kill me, not to mention I doubted theyâd let me use the hotel gym all night. Walking until dawn wasnât an option either, so I looked at the champagne bottle that had been brought to my room as a congratulatory gift and opened it, still in the dress, hair undone. I took a long gulp, holding my breath, until I felt it was enough. Half the bottle was already in my system.
I turned on my phone and called Mick.
âThe dress is beautiful,â I said when he answered. âBut I wonât be able to wear it if you donât send me the party address.â
âAre you serious? Iâll send it right now. Want us to pick you up?â he asked excitedly.
âIâll let you know when I get there. See you soon,â I hung up and took off the dress to shower. I wasnât ready to face this night alone.
If there was one thing that made me feel like I didnât belong in the world of racing drivers, it was the excessive, grotesque luxury they all lived in. The watches, the brands, the outfits, the attitude, the houses, the apartments, the parties, the cars. Insanely fast machines that spent most of their time locked away in garages because they were too expensive to drive, waiting for extravagant parties to make their grand appearances.
When Mick sent me the address, I didnât hesitate to look it up first. It wasnât a nightclub, nor an event hallâsomething in between. It was the top floor of one of the most luxurious buildings in the city, with a view of everything and a huge rooftop. After my shower, I called a cab, and when I arrived, the street was overflowing with luxury and high-end cars.
A racing driverâs salary depended on performance and team, and ranged in the high six or seven figures. Most blew it all on extravagance, and while I wasnât exactly an exception, I still wasnât fully aware of how much I earnedâpartly because I preferred to donate to charity, and partly because I didnât manage my accounts. After a long debate, Jean and I agreed on hiring a financial advisor to handle that. I did have a lifestyle to maintain alongside my career, but I didnât need the other things most drivers relied onâlike their carefully crafted image.
I couldnât deny it felt weird getting out of a taxi on a street corner while everyone entering the building stepped out of absurdly expensive sports cars. But I had nothing to proveâI was just one of the crowd tonight, and my goal was to keep the tormenting thoughts at bay. As long as I kept them away, I could handle this.
Lewis Hamilton stepped out of his iconic Ferrari and handed the keys to the valet while discreetly smiling at a few cameras. I could tell he thought I was a fan trying to get a picture with him as we entered, but when I didnât follow the expected script, the moment turned awkward. At the reception, Mick was waiting to hand me my VIP pass. There wasnât a word strong enough to express how much I hated all of this.
âLailaâs upstairs,â he warned me as he put the wristband on and greeted Lewis, who waited for him to go up in the elevator. I got through security quickly and followed the two drivers. âLewis, this is...â
âAmerica,â I jumped in, seeing the uncertainty in Mickâs eyes.
âPleasure,â said Lewis with a smile, shaking my hand. âHave we met before?â he asked, frowning as he studied my face in the elevator.
âIâve worked for AlphaTauri for a few years,â I admitted.
âOh, cool. Theyâre having quite a season. Congrats on today, by the way. Persson never ceases to impress,â he praised, and Mick had to hide his smile by looking ahead.
âYeah, heâs really good,â I nodded. âBut he couldâve finished first today.â
âI donât know if my contract allows me to say this, but between us, I think Capri Persson is one of the best drivers out there right now,â Mick added warmly, and Lewis laughed like it was a joke. I glanced at Mick, a bit confused, and he winked at me. Sometimes Mickâs warmth and innocence were exactly what this harsh world needed.
The three of us walked down a hallway to the party, and we could hear the music from three floors down in the elevator. Greetings and praise came quickly for both drivers. Todayâs podium had been specialâafter the photo with the trophies (Max first, me second, Lewis third), an outlet had published an article titled: âCapri Persson and the End of the Verstappen-Hamilton Dispute.â In short, it talked about how my presence in AlphaTauri was widening the gap between the two drivers and teams, even leading to alliances to stop Perssonâs meteoric rise. It was funny to read the circus that was sports and media journalismâhow harsh they were on everyone and how dramatic their headlines were for mostly mediocre, often false stories. But I couldnât deny that Iâd read it again just to boost my mood and confidence after this rough streak.
Mick led me to Laila, and I was genuinely happy to see her. Even though it killed me that Mick had to lie to her about all this, he had accepted it was something he had to do and promised to keep the secret from the moment he agreed. That was probably the heaviest burden of allâthat those who knew the truth had to lie so shamelessly to the rest of the world. But he kept saying it was something everyone agreed to for Capri.
âGod, you look stunning in that dress,â Laila said, taking my hand to admire me.
âMe? Have you looked in a mirror? Laila, you look absolutely gorgeous,â I replied.
âOh, donât say that twice, youâll boost my ego.â
âIâll say it as many times as needed, babe. If Mick doesnât treat you right, you know my number,â I joked, and Mick widened his eyes in mock surprise as we laughed.
âCould you two stop flirting in front of me?â
âMicky!â we heard someone yell through the crowd and music. With his iconic smileâbetter known as âthe grid smileââDaniel appeared, greeting people on his way to us.
âDanny!â Mick hugged him as soon as the Aussie reached us. âYou know Laila,â he pointed to his girlfriend, and she greeted him. âThis is America, she works for AlphaTauri.â
âIâm Daniel, but call me Danny,â he said, smiling as he looked at me, and when I offered my hand, he pulled me into a hugâor more like an awkward shoulder bump. Someone else called for Mick, stealing his attention, and Laila told me to find her later to dance as she walked away with him. Danny leaned toward me.
âHow have I never seen you around? There are always engineers, mechanics, drivers, assistants... Are you new?â
âSort of,â I replied. âIâve worked with the team for a while, but I donât usually come to places like this.â
âWhatâs your role?â he asked, nearly shouting over the music.
âAssistant.â
âTo...?â Daniel frowned.
âCapri Persson,â I answered confidently. That was the story the world believed about America, and that was the story I had to maintainâat least for now. Daniel made a funny face, sympathizing with me before laughing.
âRough day?â he asked, amused.
âHorrible,â I confessed, and somehow it was extremely easy to talk to Daniel.
âLet me take care of that,â he licked his lips and smiled mischievously. âMay I?â he asked, taking my hand, and for a moment, I panicked about what might happen next. Half a bottle of champagne had brought me here, and now I was questioning whether it was a good idea to mix my low alcohol tolerance with my blind obsession with bad decisions. But Daniel was a gentleman when he asked if he could take my hand and pull me to the bar.
âFor an assistant, you still have a lot of hairâand very beautiful hair, by the wayâ he joked, and I nodded. I had indeed suffered major hair loss that winter.
âItâs not as bad as you think.â
âNo?â he raised an eyebrow. âOrder whatever you want, itâs on the house,â he offered, and though I hesitated, I couldnât resist.
âSomething strong,â I told the bartender, raising my voice over the music, and turned back to Daniel. âCapriâs not a monster,â I added.
âYou know him?â
âI guess,â he smiled without showing his teeth, and our drinks were placed on the bar. Thinking about Capri made me think of Abu Dhabi, of that afternoon. Thinking of Capri meant thinking of the second after Verstappen. It meant thinking about everything I had lostâand was still losing. It meant remembering the pain of the lonely winter and the anxiety in the car.
After a big gulp of whatever I had ordered, I didnât want to think about Capri anymore. I didnât want to think about racing, or drivers, or second place finishes, or panic attacks.
âUhh, I love this song,â Danny exclaimed, moving his shoulders with joy, and I smiled.
âWhat are you waiting for?â I held out my hand, and Daniel smiled playfully as I pulled us to the dance floor, under the colorful lights and shiny disco balls. I didnât recognize the song, but America didnât need to recognize the song to dance. America didnât hesitate to dance with strangers in public. America was fun, sarcastic, and outgoing. America didnât think about racing or failure. America didnât look much like Capri. And instead of thinking about the problems that created, I let go on a dance floor full of strangersâpeople I probably worked with every weekendâin a Melbourne club.
I donât know how long we stayed in that time warp, dancing freely, face to face, without any physical or eye contact. We were both in our own little bubbles, feeling the effect of that first drink, yet never straying far from each other, like we had silently agreed to some unspoken deal. When the music softened, I gathered my hair in my hands to get it off my face and let my neck breathe.
âCome on, Iâll introduce you to the group,â Daniel whispered in my ear, and I froze. I wasnât very interested in talking to anyone I competed with, and although Daniel was the exceptionâbeing Red Bullâs reserve driver this seasonâI didnât plan to take things further. But I was slightly tipsy and needed air, so I didnât mind taking his hand and letting him lead me to the big rooftop.
Outside, a fresh, soothing breeze wrapped around me like a blanket in bed, and I breathed deeply, following Daniel toward a more private area of the venueâcouches arranged in circles, a VIP bar, and a space full of drivers, mechanics, and people from the business.
âDanny!â someone called out excitedlyâand I immediately recognized the voice.
It was Pierre.
âPierre Gasly!â Daniel exclaimed with a laugh, and everyone turned to look at us. Daniel was still holding my hand over his, and when Pierre approached us, he gave me a curious and confused look.
âI know I know you,â he said, squinting at me.
âOf course!â Pierre said with a smile. âSorry, must be the alcoholâI didnât recognize you,â he said, stepping forward to greet me.
âPersson?â Lando frowned, seated next to Carlos.
âCan you believe it?â Danny laughed.
âThere are some bad jobs out there, but choosing to be Capri Perssonâs assistant⊠that takes guts,â Charles admitted, leaning toward us to offer me his hand. âCharles, nice to meet you.â
âHard not to know,â I smiled back. âYou were pretty easy today.â
âOh, she knows her stuff,â Carlos joked. âCarlos, but you can call me whatever you like. I already like you a lot,â he added, also reaching out to shake my hand. I pressed my lips together with a smile. âCome, sit with us. We need to interrogate you about Persson.â
âLeave her alone. Canât you see she needs a break?â I heard from behind me and quickly turned around at the sound of her voice. Carmen smiled at me and came over to hug me in greeting. âItâs good to see you, Am.â
âThanks, again,â I sighed, and she waved it off with a flick of her hand.
âWell thenâŠâ Daniel interrupted. âWhereâs the champ?!â he exclaimed, and a change in the lights signaled his arrival. Everything happened quickly, and seconds later Max stepped onto the rooftop with the trophy in hand, and everyone clapped and praised him.
Male ego was one thing. It completely thrived in a competition like this. They would all yell, stomp, and complain if necessary. That male ego was so shallow and praised that no one would ever dare to crush it. But female disappointment was something far more powerful.
Male ego created drivers filled with rage and ambition, ready to destroy every piece of their car if they lost. But female disappointmentâmy female disappointmentâwatched my car burn in flames while the man crossed the finish line. This female disappointment observed and brewed in silence; it was stealthy, not aggressive nor obvious. This disappointment killed you slowly and painfully, only to leave you dying in the ashes from which it forced you to rise again. There was no rage or ambitionâonly the crack and grief of my disappointment.
And there I was. Feeling the flames of that female disappointment burning inside me. That winter had completely consumed me, and I had gathered every ash with what was left of my soul to rebuild myself in solitude and coldness. But now I could feel the phoenix flames of my disappointment stretching out as I watched him walk past me with that smile, that trophy, and that⊠male ego.
I donât know what I would do if I donât win this championship. But that night, I knew exactly what I would do, because I didnât want to return alone to that hotel room, sunk in memories and disappointment from a grief I thought I had already overcome.
đ SUMMARY: What if the best driver of recent years isn't actually him? What if the best driver is actually hiding something else? Would he still be the best? Or just a simple fraud?
đ GENRE: secret identity / rivals to lovers / he felt first, she felt harder / soulmates / slow burn
đ§ WORD COUNT: 3639
đŹ PARTS: book one (two parts) / CP9, book two (one part)
đTAGLIST: @heyyurl @dreadity @moonchouus @wierdflowerpower @anunstablefangirl @deaddumblbumble @a-bbles @freyathehuntress
(let me know in the comments if you want to be part)
đ CAPRIPERSSON.MASTERLIST
Melbourne, Australia. April, 2023
I was beginning to believe that it wasnât necessary to arrive just in time for Grand Prix weekends. I could arrive early, wander aimlessly through the paddocks, watch others endure the weight of the press, the photos, and the cheap questions thrown at them by the worst journalists in the industry. I liked drinking coffee in the hospitality area, sitting near the windows to watch everything others had to suffer and I was lucky enough to avoid. I hadnât noticed how many things they had to do that I had negotiated with the federation not to. The Netflix cameras harassed anyone they came across, and even though I was part of the group of drivers who entered F1 after Netflix and its whole production, I was grateful not to have a camera on my shoulder 24/7.
I hadnât seen Carmen again since the Saudi Arabian GP, but I had made sure to send her a new pair of pants to replace the ones she gave me to help me out of a jam, along with a thank-you card. She had been very kind and warm to me, and I felt a strong need to return the gesture, even in the smallest way. If she hadnât given me a nudge to ask for feminine hygiene products, I might not have even been able to race due to the discomfort. I could handle a flooded track, but menstruation was another matter.
I returned to the motorhome when I got a message from Sarahâmy masseuse, trainer, and companion since I started racing. Sarah and I werenât the closest people in the world, but along with Jean, she was one of the only people Iâd known since the beginning, and she had always done an excellent job with me. So we were like a strange, long-term, open marriage.
"Did you miss me in Saudi Arabia?" she smiled when she saw me, and I gave her a welcoming hug.
"You canât imagine what happened to me."
"Having kids sucks. Donât do it," she joked, and I laughed as we started warming up. Sarah had become a mother two years ago, but Sidâher sonâhad gotten sick a few weeks back, and if she wasnât the one helping me train, it wasnât going to be anyone else. So when I couldnât have her around, I just did what I could on my own.
"... and since we started, Nyck hasnât stopped crashing the car. I donât know whatâs going on, heâs good. He has a lot of potential, and now he canât even blame the car because itâs obvious it works with me," I explained to Sarah what she had missed so far. "I donât want to think about it, but I donât know how much of a future he has if this continues."
"Havenât you thought about talking to him?" she asked from behind me while helping me stretch.
"In three years of sharing with Gasly, Iâve never said a single word to him. What makes you think I should talk to Nyck?"
"The fact that youâre scared of having to change teammates again. I donât know, think about it. Maybe itâs time to start telling everyone the truthâas a sign. You could even encourage him, youâve been in his shoes too."
"No, no. I was a rookie too, but I never had to retire from more than two races in less than half a season," I explained.
"Is it really that bad?"
"Heâs not bad, donât get me wrong, he managed to finish Saudi Arabia. But for how the seasonâs going, it doesnât look good, and Franz has already hinted that the team bosses are starting to move pieces."
I stared at a fixed spot in my motorhome room while Sarah gently massaged my shoulder blade as I sat. I was deeply worried, not just about Nyck but about the constructorsâ championship. At this rate, it didnât matter how much I won if he kept causing problems.
"I barely talk to my teammates, and when I see theyâre at risk of being replaced, I grow fond of them. I donât know if I can get used to someone new all over again," I shook my head, and then I heard the door open without warning, making my whole body tenseâuntil my eyes met those bright, playful blue eyes laughing at my reaction and that ridiculously blond hair.
"Youâd die to have me as your next teammate, wouldnât you?" he laughed teasingly, but with his usual innocence, and I jumped off the massage table to hug him tightly, bumping into his chest.
"Finally, you show up! Has being part of Mercedes gone to your head?" I punched his shoulder, and he laughed loudly.
"Youâre dying of jealousy, thatâs whatâs happening."
"At least Iâm a full-time driver, not a reserve," I teased, and he laughed even though it stung.
"Low blow, Persson. Extremely low blow," he shook his head.
"Iâll leave you two alone. Good luck, Capri," Sarah said, picking up her things and leaving the room, closing the door behind her. Mick sat down with his characteristic shyness on one of the couches, and I handed him a water bottle.
"I waited for you all winter. Do I need to send you a formal invitation to remind you weâre friends, Schumacher?" I pulled my suit out from where I had it stored and laid it over my leggings and T-shirt.
"Sorry, I know I shouldâve called, but you know⊠Dad," he sighed.
"I know, Mick. You donât have to explain anything to me," I turned to him, giving him my full attention, and he smiled wistfully.
My friendship with Mick wasnât something I had planned; in fact, it was a strange accident back when we used to race together in F3. Before the Baku race in 2017, I had to use the restroom and, to avoid holding things up, I ran into the nearest one. I took off my helmet to go into the stall and came out to wash my hands without it, thinking no one would come in since everyone was already getting ready for the raceâbut I was wrong. A rushed Mick came into the bathroom, and his already big eyes seemed to take up half his forehead in shock.
"So..." he took a few seconds to say something once he sat in front of me, but even trying, no words came out of his mouth.
"I thought itâd be easier, but thereâs not much to explain," I swallowed hard from nerves, and Mick slowly nodded, still amazed.
"How did it happen?"
"When I realized I didnât want to be seen as the only woman on the track but as a driver like the rest of the guys," I explained, confused by my own words. I had never told anyone that and never planned toâexcept Mick at that moment. "It doesnât affect anyone, and I race under the same conditions as the others."
"Then why donât you tell everyone that youâre... a woman?" he asked, the echo of his surprise present in each word and his hesitant tone.
"Because Iâve already accepted that no matter how much inclusion and equality they promote, if they find out Capri Persson is a woman, they wonât see Capri Persson anymore. Theyâll see âthe girl on the grid,â" I explained without looking him in the eyes, fixing my gaze on the coffee I had ordered but wasnât drinking.
"Arenât you proud of being the girl on the grid?" he kept asking, innocently.
I thought about it for a few seconds, looking out the window at the rest of the paddock.
"No," I shook my head. "I want to be Capri Persson."
"I guess now that I know, Iâll have to sign a few things, right?" he asked, a little worried.
"You know too much now," I narrowed my eyes at him, jokingly threatening, and he laughed. "We can be friends, and thatâs enough. Letâs not make it bigger."
"Okay, sounds good," he smiled, placing his hands on the table to get up.
"Mick," I called, and he turned to see me holding my pinky up toward him. "Do you solemnly swear not to disclose anything discussed in this private meeting of two premature friends?"
Mick smiled, showing all his teeth with that contagious grin.
"I swear on my family," he said, linking our pinkies.
"Youâve got a great sense of humor when youâre not trying to kill us on the track."
After that, Mick was the only person I could lean on, but then I moved to F2 and then F1, and he stayed in F2. We couldnât see each other often, and I accepted that making friends in the paddock was tough. We didnât have time to meet outside races, and when everything happened at the end of last season, Mick checked in on me, but his father was going through health issues he didnât want to talk about. Then he moved from Haas to Mercedes, and we lost touch. It was like realizing your high school friends now had completely different lives from yours, and despite the friendship, they were strangers. It was accepting that weâd grown up, that we werenât 17 or 18 anymore, and that we didnât race together anymore.
"Donât you want to talk about it?" he asked as I zipped up my suit.
"No, I donât want to talk about it."
"It wasnât a bad season, anyway. You were runner-up," he crossed his arms.
"Are you going to keep talking about what I said I didnât want to talk about?"
"Sorry, I forgot youâre a trust-issues character written by Taylor Swift," he raised his hands in defense as he began to pace the room.
"Excuse me?"
"Never mind. Too much time with Laila," he muttered, and I laughed.
"I love Taylor Swift, but this isnât about my trust issues. How would you feel if, in the last lap, the last corner of the entire race, of the entire season, you crashed into the wall when you were just secondsâmillisecondsâfrom the finish line and becoming champion?" I challenged, getting worked up. Mick handed me my helmet. "I was so close, Mick. So damn close..."
"Things happen for a reason. God mustâve wanted it that way..."
"I donât believe thereâs a God out there, Mick. Iâm sorry. Maybe itâs the perfect comfort for other drivers, for you, for everyone. But not for me. God was never there for me, and I stopped believing in that a long time ago," I took the helmet and put it on while Mick watched me and adjusted the cables.
"You must believe in something when you go out there," he suggested.
"No," I shook my head simply. "Ordinary people need to believe in something to keep from being afraid."
"Let me guessâyouâre not ordinary?"
"No, Mick," I laughed, knowing exactly what Iâd say. "Iâm not afraid."
"Whatever you say," he chuckled, and I took a deep breath, getting ready to leave. "Thereâs a party on Sunday, just a regular thing. Everyoneâs going," he said.
"Okay, sounds fun. I hope you have a good time."
"Yeah, I hope so tooâbecause youâre coming," he replied, adjusting the collar of my suit.
"No, I donât think so."
"That wasnât a question, Capri."
"I donât have anything decent to wear." That was partly true. If I knew there wouldnât be any important events that weekend I had to attend, all the clothes packed in my suitcase were either sportswear or team-branded outfits. Not much else.
"Well, Iâll take care of that with Laila, because Iâm sure you'll tell me you donât have time to shop for anything. You're going to that party whether you like it or not."
"Reasons?" I stopped him before he could cross the door convinced the conversation was over. No way. Mick looked at me, confused. "What are the reasons I should go?"
"There are plenty of reasons."
"Then pick the best one to convince me."
"That you start seeing the other drivers as your teammates, not your enemies," he crossed his arms with a satisfied smile.
"Good thing I told you to use the best one."
That Friday's practice went pretty well, we had done a great job and Nyck had managed to escape his streak of bad luck, setting a record for the fastest lap count of his season so far. It was a big achievement for my teammate, so when I got back to the garage, I didnât hesitate to give him a thumbs-up. That was as far as Iâd go. Franz and the team looked happy and confident, and we were all excited about the results since the cars didnât have any issues requiring major changes. Saturday's qualifying session was perfect â I placed behind Alonso and ahead of Max, securing third position. The race atmosphere already felt as close as victory, but everything went to hell in the pits on Sunday.
When you're going 375 km/h, you never imagine that your worst enemy will be the moment when everything stops. Pit stops are one of the most normal things in F1 â necessary and part of the strategy â but your car refusing to move? Not normal.
"Whatâs happening?" I almost screamed inside the car in the pits with the entire crew around me waiting for me to go. I changed gears, hit the accelerator, but nothing happened. I could hear the cars passing on track and mentally counted the positions I was losing. Your mind splits into hundreds of pieces to think separately and form conclusions while trying to get the machine working.
"What the fuck is going on?!" I shouted over the radio and exchanged glances with Franz and John from their spot across the pit lane.
"Keep trying, weâre working on it," John said over the comms.
"Well, it doesnât look like it, because this shit isnât working!" I cried out in frustration, pressing every button I could to get the car started.
I couldnât lose my position â and I already had. I couldnât drop below fifth â and I was already tenth. I hadnât worked so hard all weekend just to end up here. I wasnât getting out of that car until I crossed the finish line in first place. I wasnât going to give up.
I had never retired from a race in my entire F1 career until... that day.
I had a flashback â one of those no driver should have in the middle of a race, especially not while trying to revive a dead car. But seconds felt like years in that moment, and I hadnât felt anything like it since Abu Dhabi. The sound of the cars flying by, the panic in my chest, the heat on my neck and ears, the pounding heartbeat, the wildfire growing silently inside. I had never retired until Abu Dhabi. I had never given up until then, and now... now everything came rushing back like it was the first time.
But unlike back then, I didnât step out of the car defeated. Somehow, I found the solution buried in those bad memories and that overwhelming desperation that clouded my ability to process the present. Without saying a word and in less time than a regular pit stop, I was back on track.
If I had been just any other driver with 26 laps to go and a massive disadvantage from last place, I wouldâve started praying. But I didnât have time for that kind of nonsense, so I started racing.
Even Nyck was four positions ahead of me. In moments like that, you canât think about failure. You canât dwell on the frustration spreading through your system like bad medicine administered in the pits. You canât focus on the rage flowing through your body like fuel in the car. You canât overthink.
"Distances," I asked over the radio, and John replied immediately. I had already passed Magnussen and Albon was ahead, with 25 more laps and a goal to chase.
"Donât mess this up," I whispered to myself. "Donât you dare, Persson. Not again."
"Good, Capri! Good!" John shouted over the line when I pulled off a double overtake on Sargeant and Leclerc. "Nyck is ahead of you, weâll tell him to let you pass."
"No. Iâve got 25 laps ahead of me, I can waste one on him."
"Capri..."
"Let him build his confidence, okay? He needs it." I concluded, and I wasnât lying. I wasted half a lap battling Nyck, and although it meant nothing for the competition, I knew he needed that. How would he feel after seeing I couldnât take down the rest of the grid, and now the two of us were fighting for position? Itâs not the same comparison â I donât even know if Lewis had the same intention back then â but I remember the first time I felt like a giant for fighting Hamilton for a position. I gave it everything, and I wasnât going to back down â and neither was he â and although he passed me and I ended up third... I had made things hard for Hamilton, and no rookie gets to enjoy that. But I sure did.
Ahead were Ocon and Gasly â another double overtake â before I reached Carlos Sainz Jr. Son of a bitch. He was good, I wouldnât deny it â extremely good. But not good enough. When I passed him, he tried to take the position back from the outside, and thatâs when his confidence crumbled. If youâre going to break the rules, at least do it right.
Twenty laps to go. Ten places to steal. I couldnât fail.
"Capri," John called. "You okay?"
"Yeah. Why?"
"Your heart rate, Capri."
"Thatâs what happens when you actually race, John. If you donât have anything important to say, weâll talk later."
I hated those unnecessary interruptions, but he was right. The moment he mentioned it, I became aware of the sensation â like my heart was about to burst out of my chest, like I didnât have full control of my head, and while I raced, I fought my thoughts, my memories, that memory. I passed Zhou and had a flashback, overtook Piastri and another memory came rushing in.
It felt like I was driving straight and brakeless back in time, to that moment, that pain, that disappointment, that irrational force I couldnât fight. It was bigger than me. Stronger than a race car at nearly 400 km/h.
"P5, Capri, thatâs amazing. Six laps left. Stroll is 0.132 ahead. If you pass him, itâs enough. Youâve done an incredible job in 20 laps."
"It wouldnât be incredible if I finish fifth," I replied, and I could picture John shaking his head. "Positions?" I asked.
"Verstappen leads, followed by Hamilton, Alonso, and Stroll."
"Come on, Capri. Do it," I told myself, holding back tears. I couldnât control it anymore. I gripped the wheel tighter so no one would see my hands shaking. Sometimes I couldnât breathe, and I found comfort in the strategy John and the team had prepared for me. I passed Lance quickly, then Fernando. Just 3 laps left. Lewis and Max. My tears mixed with sweat as I fought sentimental thoughts pulling Abu Dhabi back into my mind like a magnet.
"Capri, youâre doing an excellent job," I heard John say again and again between race data. It was the final lap, and once again it was Max and me, at war for first place. There was far more at stake than anyone could see. Would these tormenting memories help me understand how much it hurt to lose against Max? Would everything I had endured over the past 26 laps help me learn I couldnât keep coming second to Max Verstappen? Did I need anything more to pressure myself?
Apparently, I did. And that "more" was about to show up. The gap between our cars was almost nonexistent, but Max wouldnât let me through for anything. He made aggressive moves, and I tried attacking with equal aggression, but nothing worked. I could hear the crowdâs screams getting closer, and I tried. I gave it everything I had to overtake him, but our tires made contact, forcing me to fall back by a few hundredths â giving Max a quarter of a second lead over me. And as we reached the finish line, I saw him cross it first.
This time, I didnât pretend to be okay. I didnât wave as I got out, I didnât even celebrate. I ran to the motorhome and ripped off my helmet, struggling to breathe. The look of panic on Jeanâs face burned into my memory as he called the medical team. It would have been less ridiculous if they had diagnosed me with a terminal illness right there, but my soul sank when, in less time than my pit stop had taken, the team doctor said I had suffered a panic attack.
There I was again. Me and my worst enemy, living in the same body. Me and my greatest fear.