iâm lowkey writing the next part of princess of the paddock and like i wanna give reader a home race and part of me wants to make it australia because i am australian but also i donât want to because obviously not everyone who reads is going to be from Australia
it would play into the fact that CH loves an australian letâs forget the fact his not principle anymore
iâve gotten a couple messages asking if thereâs more of princess of the paddock and honestly I donât know i just kinda wrote it cause i kept daydreaming about it lol
potentially i could but i also lose momentum and motivation for writing really quickly #adhd and id hate to start something that people enjoy and then cant finish it
okay this is my first f1 story i've written so please be nice.
also ignore the terrible insta photo lol if anyone has any good websites to make texts or anything i'd love to know
also also I wrote this story and then put it into chatgpt because 1. i'm dyslexic and needed someone to fix my mistakes and 2. i daydream my stories and i can do it in so much detail but then i really struggle to get my stories to be exactly how I want so I tried using chatgpt after
Summary:
Red Bullâs second seat has a reputation â and now it has its first-ever female driver.
Y/N L/N enters Formula 1 with two F2 championships, zero F1 experience, and the entire world waiting to see her fail. But between press scrutiny, social media storms, and a nickname that clings to her like glitter â âPrincessâ â sheâs determined to prove sheâs more than a headline.
Sheâs not here to play nice. Sheâs here to race.
f1:
âL/N has been on our radar since her first year in F2. To get back to back championships in F2 is an incredible achievement and we canât wait to see what she can achieve in the second redbull seatâ - Christian HornerÂ
liked by redbullracing, maxverstappen1 and 152,826 others
user1: interestingâŠ
user2: baby noooooo not the cursed seat đ« Â
user3: great watch all the drama start
-user4: what because sheâs female that immediately means drama?Â
-user5: you must be new hereÂ
redbullracing: watch out đ
maxverstappen1: excited to see what we can do togetherÂ
Bahrain Pre Season testingÂ
Walking into pre-season testing felt like standing at the edge of a cliff, the unknown stretching out beneath you. Terrifying and exhilarating all at once. You sat in the stillness of your car for a moment longer, fingers clenched around the steering wheel. With a deep breath, you adjusted the brim of your Red Bull cap.
Your cap.
Your number embroidered into the fabric.
Yours.
A nervous smile settled on your lips as you opened the door and stepped out into the heat and noise. The fans were already gathered, their cheers rising like a wave, while the press pack swarmed like bees beyond the barrier. Cameras flashed. Voices called your name. Some excited, others demanding.
You waved politely, forcing calm into your posture even as your heart pounded against your ribcage. Every step toward the paddock felt heavier than the last. You didnât need to hear the questions to know what they were asking â youâd heard them since the day your signing was announced.
âDo you really think youâre ready for Formula 1?â
âHow will you cope alongside Max Verstappen?â
âCan a woman genuinely fight for podiums?â
âArenât you going to distract the other drivers?â
The doubt wasnât new, but the volume of it had grown louder since stepping into the spotlight.
As soon as you crossed into the Red Bull Hospitality, everything felt right. The space was cool, crisp, familiar. Christian Horner looked up from where he sat chatting with Max and GP. The moment his eyes met yours, he stood without hesitation and pulled you into a quick, grounding hug.
âFeeling good? Ready to take on the circus?â he asked, his voice light but kind.
You grinned despite the tension still coiled in your chest. âAs ready as Iâll ever be.â
Max offered you a quick fist bump. Over the winter, youâd spent a lot of time in Milton Keynes, training, working through data, and learning everything you could. You and Max had become something unexpected. Not just teammates, but a kind of chaotic harmony. He was calm, calculated, and fiercely competitive. You were fire, energy, and laughter. Somehow, it worked.
âMedia day ready?â Max asked with a teasing tilt to his head, as if he already knew the answer.
You groaned. âUhhhhâŠâ
Christian chuckled. âYouâll do fine. Brettâs with you the whole time. If anyone crosses a line, we shut it down. Full stop.â
Max leaned back, smug grin in place. âYeah, gotta protect our princess.â
You rolled your eyes and swatted his hat off his head, making everyone at the table burst into laughter.Â
Princess.
A nickname that clung to you like perfume: sweet, but impossible to shake off. You loved it. You kinda hated it. It had started innocently enough, a quip from Toto Wolff at the F175 Live red carpet event.
âAh, the Red Bull princess,â he had murmured with a grin, kissing your cheek in a gesture as old-world as it was cheeky. âAt least now thereâs some class on the grid.â
You sat sandwiched between George Russell and Lando Norris on the couch, your fingers absently flipping a microphone from hand to hand. The media team bustled around, adjusting lights and cameras, prepping for your first official press conference as an F1 driver. Nerves hummed beneath your skin, but you took comfort in your company, two British drivers with sharp tongues and playful smiles. If anyone could keep the spotlight from settling too harshly on you, it was them.
âQuestion for Y/N,â a reporter's voice cut through your thoughts. You looked up.
âHow are you feeling going into testing tomorrow?â
You straightened slightly, voice calm and practiced. âHonestly, Iâm really excited. Iâve done a ton of SIM work during the break, but nothing compares to actually being in the car. I just want to get out there and see how we stack up.â
The follow up came quickly. âAre you concerned that, of the six rookies on the grid this year, you have the least experience in an actual F1 car?â
A pause. You didnât flinch. âYeah⊠thatâs fair. Iâve never driven a real F1 car⊠no test runs, no Friday sessions. Even Kimiâs had more seat time than me. But Iâm confident Iâll be okay once I find my rhythm.â
âShe says that like she hasnât just come off two back-to-back championship titles,â George chimed in, chuckling. âPrincess, I think youâll be more than okay.â
The word slipped out before he realized it. You saw his eyes widen, mouth twitch as he cursed himself silently.
âThis is George laying the groundwork,â Lando added quickly, âso when Y/Nâs beating him on track, he can pretend he saw it coming.â
A couple of hours later, George found you backstage, sheepish and apologetic.
âY/N, Iâm really sorry about earlier. The whole âPrincessâ thing⊠I didnât mean toâŠâ
You waved him off. âItâs okay. It was bound to come out eventually.â
And come out it did, viral on social media, scrawled on fan signs, printed on unofficial merch. Some embraced it with charm. Others used it as ammunition.
The next morning, you walked into the paddock flanked by Max, Charles, and Lewis. Practice 1 and 2 had gone better than expected, your pace promising, your feedback sharp. But today, the air felt heavier.
The crowd outside the gates was louder, more agitated. Cheers mixed with sneers. You kept your head down until you heard the first one:
âGet out of here!â
âF1 isnât for girls!â
âOi, Princess whoâd you have to sleep with for that seat?â
The words hit like stones, sharp and deliberate.
Max tensed beside you, jaw clenched, eyes scanning the crowd like a predator on the edge.
âLeave it,â you whispered, grabbing his wrist. âJust ignore it.â
And he tried. He really did.
Until something flew from the crowd and struck you squarely in the face.
You staggered back, hand flying to your eye. âShitâŠâ
A pink plastic tiara clattered to the ground.
Charles was at your side instantly, pulling you away from the barrier. âY/N, are you okay?â
Max turned, fury radiating from him like heat. But before he could take a step, a deep, commanding voice cut through the chaos.
âThat one,â Toto Wolff said coldly, pointing. âSecurity, remove him. Now.â
Guards moved fast, seizing the man who had thrown the tiara. The crowd parted as whispers spread.
Toto stepped forward, voice raised just enough to carry. âLet me make one thing perfectly clear: there is no room in Formula 1 for hatred. For misogyny. Y/N earned her seatâevery lap, every win. If I ever see behavior like this again, I will make sure you never set foot near a race circuit.â
Silence.
You bent down, picked up the tiara, and with deliberate calm, placed it on your head.
Then, chin high, steps steady, you walked into the paddock like it was a throne room.
Princess? Maybe.
But this crown was yours. And youâd earned every jewel in it.