🏁 opening titles 2025 🏁

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🏁 opening titles 2025 🏁
snoring? - paul aron x reader no labels
They say that, for the right person, you’re capable of pushing yourself to the edge of the world and doing things you wouldn’t even consider otherwise.
And that day, Paul couldn’t help but feel like the living embodiment of that timeless cliché, gripping the leather of his steering wheel as he drove down a countryside road in early May—when the sun had started to show itself, but sweaters were still necessary.
He’d left the city behind: the skyscrapers, the modern buildings, trading them for roads that led to open fields full of wildflowers, cared for by farmers who had known each other for generations, with the occasional horse wandering freely through the tall grass, its mane swaying in the wind.
He reminded himself to bring her there, once she had time. He knew she’d love spending the day with the animals.
A random playlist hummed softly through the car speakers while he drove on autopilot, shifting gears with the paddles, missing his favorite passenger—the one who never stayed quiet for more than five minutes and somehow made simple afternoons the most important thing in his world.
There was a disarming calm around the farmhouse he’d driven to—calling in a favor from an old friend of his sister’s, an opportunity Paul had jumped on because it felt perfect.
He walked back to the car with something warm and squirmy in his arms: a little sausage-shaped pup with fluffy blond fur and a tiny pink nose that almost convinced Paul to adopt every single puppy the man had shown him in the barn, right alongside the mares.
“You have no idea how important you’re about to become,” the Estonian murmured, stroking the puppy’s little head as it wriggled in his hands and let out the sweetest sneeze, making Paul chuckle while searching for his car keys in his hoodie pocket.
“She’s going to lose it. I mean actually lose it.” He smiled, placing the puppy on the blanket the old farmer had given him, securing it in the passenger seat so it wouldn’t roll out of its makeshift bundle if he had to brake.
A horse neighed in the distance as he got behind the wheel, and for a second, Paul allowed himself to imagine a future—a farmhouse like this, a beautiful car in the garage, and her, coming home late just to smell the cake he baked before catching a flight around the world.
The car had barely five hundred kilometers on it, still carrying that unmistakable new car smell.
“Don’t you dare throw up in here,” he mock-scolded, one hand on the top of the wheel, the other resting on his thigh, glancing sideways at the puppy every so often. “I just got this car.”
The little golden retriever rested its head on the center console with a soft whine, brown eyes locking with Paul’s.
“…Okay, fine. I’d forgive you,” he grinned, turning onto a narrow road that would take him home through orchards and open fields, chatting to the puppy like he’d known him forever, already certain they’d be good friends.
“You have no idea what kind of life you’re walking into,” he told the pup, waiting for her to get home—Anna had taken her to some sort of market downtown. “She’s going to spoil you rotten. And talk to you like you’re a person. And you’re going to go on more walks than you’ll know what to do with.”
Paul had his feet propped up on the coffee table in the apartment his sister shared with her. The puppy had nestled against his chest, breathing in his scent, comforted by his steady rhythm, while Paul gently stroked his tiny body.
The little thing let out soft, pleased sounds—like it was smiling.
“She’s been talking about getting a dog for months. ‘Just waiting for the right time,’ she says. Meanwhile, she’s got an entire Pinterest board full of dog names and knows exactly which harnesses look best on golden coats.”
He spoke about her like that—his voice soaked in love and affection, using a tone usually reserved for babies, whispering to the puppy that was quickly becoming part of his life just as much as hers.
“God, she’s going to love you,” he said again, watching the pup chew on one of the bracelet strings she’d once tied around his wrist.
It wasn’t just a dog.
It was something she’d wanted—something he knew would make her feel good, really good. The kind of warmth you only feel when you do something for the person who matters more than anything.
And then, the girls came back—finding him standing at the door just as they were putting their shopping bags down.
She was wearing a blue hoodie she’d stolen from him the previous spring and forgotten to give back, her hair tied at the nape of her neck, a few loose strands falling into her eyes, surprised to see him there unannounced.
He’d used the spare keys Anna always forgot in Tallinn and decided to bake cookies while figuring out how to earn the puppy’s trust, who, as soon as they got home, had shown his mischievous side.
“Hey,” he greeted, trying—and failing—to hide the wide smile on his face.
“Paul?” she blinked in disbelief. She hadn’t seen him in months—his schedule kept him busy, and school hadn’t exactly been kind to her either. She hadn’t been able to find the time to hop on a train or plane to visit him wherever he was.
“What are you doing here?” she asked, noticing his slippers and how settled he looked. “I thought you weren’t coming until next week.”
She was trying not to smile too hard.
“I was in the area,” he shrugged. “Had something to drop off.”
Anna shook her head and disappeared into her room with one of the shopping bags, leaving the two of them alone, hoping her brother had finally made the move she’d been waiting for.
“Every time you say that, it’s something ridiculous.”
“Define ridiculous,” Paul teased, raising an eyebrow.
“So? What are you hiding?”
She crossed her arms over the hoodie, bracelets clinking softly on her wrist—half of them matching the ones on his.
She was trying so hard not to launch herself at him and hold on like he might vanish again for months.
“Nothing.”
“You are literally hiding something. You have ‘guilty puppy smuggler’ energy.”
Paul bit his cheek at her word choice. Meanwhile, Anna leaned against the wall, stealing one of his cookies, watching everything unfold without being noticed.
And then… something stirred inside his hoodie.
A tiny head peeked out from the neckline. Two sleepy eyes and fuzzy ears twitching gently.
She gasped.
“No. No, no, no, Paul.”
He felt his heart swell at the look on her face—arms falling to her sides, her bottom lip caught between her teeth to keep from tearing up.
“Wanna say hi?” Paul pulled the puppy out of the hoodie, holding him up.
“Oh my God,” she whispered. “Is that…?”
He nodded.
“Is that the puppy? The puppy?”
“Yup.”
“In your hoodie.”
“Yup.”
He placed the little thing into her hands and pulled her into a side hug, his fingers running through her hair while her heart hammered in her chest and her hands cradled the fluffball against her.
“You’re serious?” she whispered. “He’s for me?”
She looked up, locking eyes with Paul—those blue eyes she loved so much. The ones that always made her feel like nothing could hurt her and all she needed was a car ride with him and the road ahead.
“I didn’t think you were actually listening,” she laughed quietly, blinking fast to keep the tears in.
“I always listen,” he said softly. “Especially when it’s you.”
And in her eyes, Paul saw something clear, raw, and full of love—so obvious it made his chest ache.
Anna, melting at the doorway, watched the whole scene unfold, overwhelmed by her brother’s gesture and the unspoken bond between the two.
“I might start crying,” she whispered, just as the puppy settled into the little bed Paul had bought, surrounded by new toys and bowls he’d picked out just for her.
“That’s okay,” he murmured, pulling her into a full hug, her arms wrapping tight around his torso, his hand cradling the back of her head, keeping her close.
They didn’t move.
Not when Anna stole another cookie.
Not when the puppy barked softly.
Because in that moment, the way they fit together felt like the most natural thing in the world.
That night, Anna was out of the apartment—off celebrating a friend’s birthday—so the three of them (two humans and one tiny golden ball of mischief) had the entire place to themselves.
They’d ordered a pizza from the restaurant downstairs, and Paul had gone to pick it up in his slippers, wearing the kind of smile that only comes when you feel so at ease, nothing in the world can touch you.
Then, after laying a blanket down on the parquet floor, they sat cross-legged and started trying out names the puppy might actually respond to—just in case it already had a favorite and they didn’t want to disrupt it.
“Waffles,” she offered. “Because her ears are soft and sweet.”
“Aron Junior,” Paul countered. “For legacy.”
She laughed and threw a fry at him, watching the little pup weave between Paul’s legs, hinting she was getting sleepy.
After finishing the pizza and watching the tiny belly rise and fall in a slow, rhythmic motion, they headed to the bedroom, flopping down onto the same bed.
The girls lived in a very quiet neighborhood, so the night felt still, peaceful—and sleep, when they were together, always felt even more restorative.
Paul had collapsed on the mattress, lying face down in a starfish sprawl, sunk deep into a sleep that had him dreaming about the kind of life he’d thought about all day. She, who tended to move around a lot in her sleep, had ended up draped across him, her stomach pressed to his back and her lips brushing against his jaw.
It was around 3 a.m. when she woke up, not quite realizing they were tangled together like that, startled instead by a loud sound breaking through the quiet.
“Paul,” she mumbled, half-asleep. “You’re snoring. Like, offensively.”
Paul tried to turn over, but something was stopping him—and once he realized what that something was, he figured it might be the best thing that had ever pinned him down.
“What?” he muttered, rubbing his face, pretty sure he had never snored in his life.
“That noise. It’s coming from you.”
“I don’t snore.”
“You do. It sounds like a bear trying to breathe through a straw.”
Paul shifted slightly so he could look her in the eyes, catching the soft scent of sleep and comfort her skin gave off—so warm.
But the sound persisted, echoing in the darkness of the room, cut only by the small nightlight they’d left on outside the door to keep an eye on the pup.
“…Okay,” she whispered. “That wasn’t you.”
He put his hands on her hips and gently moved her aside so he could get up and check, rubbing his eyes as she sat up in bed.
And that’s when they saw it.
The dog, lying belly-up inside one of the pilot’s slippers, clearly deep in a dream, tail flicking back and forth, head tilted to the side—emitting the stupidest snore imaginable.
“I was ready to smother you with a pillow,” she laughed as Paul flopped back onto the bed. She lay back down on top of him, wrapping her arms around his well-built torso.
“Guess I’m off the hook,” he murmured, voice raspy from being half-asleep.
“You’re lucky he’s cute.”
Her fingers absentmindedly played with the seam of his T-shirt as she chuckled sleepily and whispered:
“You’re lucky you’re cute,” Paul said, pressing a small kiss to her arm where it rested against his.
“You think I’m cute?”
She didn’t move—head resting on one of his broad shoulders, lulled by the sound of his breathing in the quiet of the bedroom.
“I mean… you’re fine, I guess. For someone who steals all my clothes.”
They stayed like that for a while, both knowing, deep down, this was one of those moments where everything shifts—where something changes.
Where maybe, just maybe, it would start to have a name tonight.
Or tomorrow.
“Why’d you really bring him to me?” she asked.
Paul looked at her, adjusting so she rested fully on his chest without being uncomfortable.
The way their legs were tangled together, the way her long hair followed her with every movement, the way his old T-shirt covered her like a blanket—like safety.
He could’ve deflected. Made a joke. Teased her or simply stroked her hair.
But instead, he spoke the way someone does when they’re talking to the person they love.
“Because I wanted you to have something good. Something constant.”
She smiled, her face resting on his chest, wearing his shirt, after he’d come back to her—again.
“You’re good,” she murmured. “You’re constant.”
Paul closed his eyes as the puppy started snoring again, making them both chuckle softly, while that particular kind of silence—the kind that follows a confession—settled in between them.
And there was no need to explain.
Because the simple feeling of spending time with the one person you’d do anything for…
That’s the perfect definition of everything.
I'm just writing paul fluff about lazy and slow mornings, and I know you'll eventually get bored of it but I just need him.
Undeniable | Lewis Hamilton
Lewis Hamilton x Giulia Moretti (OC)
--- my masterlist ---
Summary - In which he's a seven-time world champion drowning in a failing season and she's a brilliant, guarded GT driver who can fix the impossible. Neither of them expect each other and the motorsports' world can be merciless with people who weren't supposed to collide.
Warnings - Age gap, 18+ Content.
Note - This is a fanfiction. In no way it intends to offend or disrespect the real people the character take ispiration from. I absolutely do not in any way own anything in this story EXCEPT for Giulia's character. Everything in this story is based on real life people. Characters do not represent who they are in real life. Please, do not associate anything in this book to real life drivers and to F1 (or any other series mentioned in here) Enjoy!
tags - @scenesofobx
Lando's reaction to his pole in vegas from the cockpit camera
#LN4 - POLE POSITION - MEXICO GRAND PRIX 2025
Undeniable | Lewis Hamilton
Lewis Hamilton x Giulia Moretti (OC)
--- my masterlist ---
Summary - In which he's a seven-time world champion drowning in a failing season and she's a brilliant, guarded GT driver who can fix the impossible. Neither of them expect each other and the motorsports' world can be merciless with people who weren't supposed to collide.
Warnings - Age gap, 18+ Content.
Note - This is a fanfiction. In no way it intends to offend or disrespect the real people the character take ispiration from. I absolutely do not in any way own anything in this story EXCEPT for Giulia's character. Everything in this story is based on real life people. Characters do not represent who they are in real life. Please, do not associate anything in this book to real life drivers and to F1 (or any other series mentioned in here) Enjoy!
tags - @scenesofobx
The Man Who Only Knew How To Drive | Max Verstappen
Max Verstappen x Rosemary Hall (Journalist!OC)
--- my masterlist ---
Summary - No matter how many trophies he lifts, he still hears his father's voice telling him he's not a good enough. She's the first person to show him that he doesn't have to deserve to be loved. In which Max Verstappen needs someone to help him out with his reputation.
Warnings - Childhood trauma, 18+ Content, Strong Language
Notes - This is a fanfiction. In no way it intends to offend or disrespect the real people the character take ispiration from. I absolutely do not in any way own anything in this story EXCEPT for Rosemary's character. Everything in this story is based on real life people but characters do not represent who they are in real life. Please, do not associate anything in this book to real life drivers, to F1 or to anyone F1-adjacent! Enjoy!
The Red Horizon: A Comprehensive Analysis of Lewis Hamilton’s Transfer to Ferrari and the Pursuit of the Eighth Title
I. Introduction: The Gravitational Shift of Formula 1 Lewis Hamilton announced he would leave Mercedes-AMG Petronas. This was the team with which he redefined the statistical limits of Formula 1. He would join Scuderia Ferrari for the 2025 season. This change was not merely a transaction in the driver market. It was a seismic event that realigned the sport’s competitive, commercial, and…