Words: 4,816 Summary: Y/N Rosberg, Nico Rosberg’s little sister, returns to the world of F1 after six years away. And she returns in the most unexpected garage. Warning(s)/Note(s): Takes place in 2022, Past Relationship with Lewis Hamilton that involves an age difference of about 11 years. Secret/Private Relationship(s), Smut in the Imola 2022 part
Masterlist | Support Me! | It's Like I Don't Know You Anymore Verse
Jeddah 2022
Lewis scoffs as he reads the trash article. It was anything but substantial and from a site that was more known for just recirculating already known things in their own words and for the occasional lie to stir up drama.
He had only seen it because he had alerts on his personal phone for her name and he couldn’t help but click on it seeing that it was popping up on an F1 related site. He expected it to be one of those top ten outfit things, he hadn’t expected utter garbage.
He’d know if she was returning to the paddock, he would’ve been told, especially during one of the first few weekends of the new season. The first season since he had won that he won’t have the number one on his car and his jaw clenched at the reminder that he was no longer the current world champion, that he had to stay longer, needed to stay longer. He wanted that eighth championship, and until he got it he was staying, needed to. And this year could be the year, would be the year.
“Have you seen this rubbish?” Lewis asks Toto when he steps out of his driver’s room and into the garage. It’s filled with life as everyone gets ready for the first free practice session. Shouts being heard back and forth. The whirring of tools as mechanics make sure they’re all working and where they should be.
“What rubbish?” His Austrian accent is thick as it wraps around the words.
He glances around, looking for cameras, spotting none, he still lowers his voice. “Y/N,” the name is awkward off his tongue and it makes Toto flinch, no one had called her that, not unless it was for something important, like life or death. “Some blog reported that she’s in Red Bull’s garage.” He laughs.
The taller man stills.
Toto after all these years still wasn’t sure what exactly had happened between Mouse and Lewis. He knew what had happened between Nico and Lewis, had tried to fix it, to patch it up, to stay neutral, but his preference for Lewis had been obvious to Nico and the brotherhood that had been so strong, had spanned so many years, ended quicker than it began as the season drew on and the tension got tighter.
And while he hadn’t managed to play middle man without one of them getting mad, shouting, screaming, storming away like a toddler. Mouse had. She had easily gone between the two men as they both threw fits. He still wasn’t sure how the girl had done it, barely an adult, but dealing with two grown men, but she had and handled it like a champ. Toto had never been allowed to hold Nico’s trophy like Lewis had allowed him to when he had won before, but he knew and had seen how Nico let her hold. As if it was not just his but hers as well.
Toto had expected when the 2017 season started even with Nico, leaving, retiring, for her to come anyways. Had set aside passes for her, made sure that she was in the system to be allowed in despite knowing that she would show up with Lewis, because that’s how it had always been. If she wasn’t showing up with her brother, she was showing up with Lewis. But she was a no show and when he tried to reach out, he was blocked.
She went full no contact with everyone in the racing world and at first Toto had thought that maybe something serious had happened, but she was still posting on her blog, though there was a distinct lack of F1, she just wasn’t talking to him. He could still remember the swell of anger that came over and then the shame that had quickly followed. How he had gone to Lewis to ask if she was alright, if she was mad at him, mad at Mercedes, only for Lewis to flinch, to shake his head. Telling him that he hadn’t heard from her or seen since the day after Nico won his championship. He could still feel the bitterness that rolled off of Lewis’ tongue as he said that none of the Rosberg’s were talking to him.
“It’s not rubbish.” Toto manages to say after a moment, trying to push back the memories, the grief of no longer getting to see Mouse grow up, because god she had just turned twenty-six and the last time he had seen her, she was twenty, still a child in many ways. “She is at Red Bull’s garage.”
“What?”
“She showed up after all the drivers did, waited I think, and made her appearance. Went straight to Red Bull. She had passes.”
“She’s never liked Red Bull.”
“You’ve never liked Red Bull.” Toto corrects.
It was a thing that had frustrated much of the Mercedes team, how despite himself, Nico, and Lewis despising Red Bull, she still liked them, would pop into their garage, chat with their drivers, mechanics, engineers, and such. Toto nearly had an aneurysm the first time he saw her and Horner talking.
“Doesn’t make sense.”
“No it doesn’t.”
—
“Red Bull, huh? Naughty, naughty girl.” He clicks his tongue.
She rolls her eyes, “You already knew that I was going there.”
He laughs, “Doesn’t mean I can’t tease you about it.”
“Was there a reason you called, Nico?”
“What? I can’t check in on my sister?”
She rolls her eyes again, but grins.
“I just wanted to make sure that nothing happened.”
“Lewis didn’t try to talk to me or at least not that I know of.” It was easy to read between the lines with Nico. “I stayed at Red Bull, in their garage, no one but Red Bull personnel came close to me.”
“And you still want to do this?”
“Yes.” Her voice is soft and she sits on the hotel bed, crossing her ankles. “I’ve missed it, the sport, the paddock, it’s nice to be back.”
“And Mercedes?”
“I have no interest in talking to anyone at Mercedes, past or present. They don’t matter, not anymore.”
“Mouse. You will be careful, yes? I’m not there anymore.”
“Careful as can be.”
Australia 2022
He expects her to be at the next race in Australia and he doesn’t know why. It had been one of the races she was always willing to miss as she hated flying there. Not feeling it was worth it.
So he pretends not to be disappointed when no photos of her arriving popping up, not even whispers of rumors of her sneaking in which he wouldn’t believe in the first place. The idea of her sneaking into a race made him scoff. It wasn’t her, that wasn’t how she operated. He knew her, knew she liked the attention of arriving at the races just like he did. He also pretends that it doesn’t hurt to think about how they used to show up together to races.
Imola 2022
“You’re going to win.” She soothes, rubbing his shoulders and he can’t help but let them drop, let her loosen the tension in them.
“I retired from the last race.”
“And that was the last race.”
He wants to deny it, there’s still that feeling that settles at the bottom of his stomach when he doesn’t win, when he isn’t on the podium, in the points. But it’s lessened as he’s been with her. “And tell me, schat.” He grabs at her hand, gently pulling her until she’s in front of him, standing between his legs. “Will I just win the GP or also the sprint?”
She smiles and he can feel his heartbeat quicken. “Both.” She tells him, resting her hands on his face and letting their lips brush together. “You’ll win both, Max.”
He wins the sprint and then the GP and he’s thankful that she isn’t out with the rest of the team when he’s on the podium, that she stayed in his drivers room, waiting for him. Because he knows that if she had, he would’ve ruined their plans of staying private, secret. He would have kissed her, told her that she did it, she told him he was going to win, so he did. He won both of them for her.
Max does tell her that. He tells her that in between champagne flavored kisses, along with thanks and murmurs of his love against her skin as she sighs and tugs at his nomex.
“I could win every race this season with you supporting me, schat.” His breathing is heavy, he’s in between her thighs, racesuit and nomex just tugged down enough for his dick to be free, ass exposed.
She hadn’t protested, but moaned when he ripped through her tights that she was wearing underneath her skirt, and moaned again when he moved her underwear to the side. Rubbing at her clit to get her wet as he quickly prepped her before sinking into her. He repeats it as he thrusts inside her, high on not the two wins, but on her, on her support, her belief. “You’re my lucky charm.”
She freezes around him, her moans tapering off and he curses as he realizes what he said.
“I’m sorry.” He murmurs, lips against her forehead. “I did not mean.”
“I know.”
She sounds sure, truthful, but her legs that had been tight around him, heels digging into him, have loosened.
“If I don’t win a race that is my fault or the teams. It is not yours.” He tells her.
She nods but doesn’t look at him.
“Schat.” He holds her chin between two fingers, holding eye contact with her. “You are my lucky charm. Not because I think I will win races because of you and your support. Because you make even the races I don’t win feel okay, like I haven’t failed.”
“You haven’t failed.” She immediately says frowning and her legs are tightening back up around him. “You can’t win every race no matter how good luck it looks on you.”
He flushes at her words.
“I know you are different from him. You have shown that already.” She struggles with the next words. “I just don’t think I can handle being called a lucky charm yet.”
“Then I won’t.” He tells her.
She blinks at him, at how easy he said, at simple he’s making it. “But you said.”
“Yes.” He shrugs, shifting his weight and they both hiss at how his body moves from it, both having forgotten that he was still inside her. But he pushes his building arousal away. “But I won’t say it any more. Not if it makes you uncomfortable.”
She stares at him for a few seconds before smiling. “Ik houd van je, Max.”
He smiles back at her, kissing her. “Ik houd van je, schat.”
He goes to pull out, unable to ignore the arousal building in him anymore, but not wanting her to feel like they need to have sex, but her heels are pressing into him, thighs tightening around him.
“Fuck me, Max.”
He says her name, quiet and with wide eyes.
She moves her hips and he follows them with a snap of his own. “You won two races.” She murmurs, breathing tickling his lips before she’s placing her lips on his jaw, moving them down to his neck. “Fuck me, Max. I want you to. Want to celebrate with you like this.”
She’s sucking a mark into his skin and he’s choking down a groan. “Just us two, our own quick celebration before you have to go with your team. Before I’m left all alone in our hotel room.”
He starts to thrust again, pressing his lips against hers before she can say anything else, before he really leaves any earlier than he was already planning to at the dinner celebration the team was holding.
As he continues to thrust into her, his lips stay against hers, muffling both of their sounds, but as he feels his balls tightening, he breaks them apart, pressing her face into his neck, encouraging her to bite at him as his other hand goes between their bodies, to her clit.
The bite of hers against his collarbone when she clenches around him, cumming, has him hissing. He stills his hips as she comes down from her orgasm, still rubbing at her clit, but more gently.
“Where do you want it?” He asks, when she bats his hand away from her and presses for him to continue to rock into her body. His orgasm is quickly approaching and really he should be pulling out, just finish in his own hand in case he finishes inside her before she says it’s okay. But she’s tight and warm and feels too good. “Do you want it in your mouth? Want me to pull out? Finish in my hand, feed it to you?”
She moans at his words, at the thing they’ve done once before.
“Or do you want me to leave you something? Cum inside you and have you feel it drip out, go back to the hotel with just your underwear stopping it from dripping down your leg and ruining your tights.”
“Inside Max. Please, inside me.”
He groans at her words, hips speeding up. He only manages a few solid thrusts before he’s shuddering, pressing as close as he can as cums inside her, muffling a moan against her shoulder.
His hips twitch a little in the aftershocks of his orgasm as he pants against her shoulder.
“You’re going to kill me.”
“With what?” She laughs. “Orgasms?”
“With your dirty little mind.” He tells her, slowly pulling out, rubbing at her thighs as he does.
She laughs again and he smiles at how her whole face lights up.
Miami 2023
It’s Miami. It’s extravagant. It’s the first race at the new circuit. It’s her.
She’s dressed in a soft color, bringing out her eyes. She’s wearing the bracelet he gave her when she turned fourteen, the ring her father gave her that once belonged to her grandmother. She’s not wearing the necklace he gave her when she turned eighteen. It’s back in Monaco, still sitting on the nightstand of what’s still her side of the bed.
She has new bracelets, rings, and a new necklace. The necklace makes his jaw clench, fists tighten. He had never thought to consider that maybe she’d be with someone else after all these years. He hadn’t, not for anything more than one night.
Lewis stares at the clasp of her necklace. Wonders if it’s worth anywhere near what he gave her. Wonders who gave it to her. Some boy with a trust fund? Some guy that managed to make it to the top not because of hard work but because of connections?
He doesn’t know and it burns alongside the anger. He used to know nearly everything about her and he still knows her, he just doesn’t know the new things and that hurts worse than not knowing her at all anymore.
He watches as Geri fixes the necklace for her and wonders when exactly she got so close to Horner’s wife. “Where exactly did you get this darling?”
She glows at the name, “From a jeweler that Nico loves. I can never remember the name.”
The burning inside him vanishes at his name. Something had changed, he knew something new about her. Necklaces were no longer just things she wore from significant others.
Spain 2022
He cocks an eyebrow as George comes up to him nervously, messing with his hands. “You alright?”
“Yeah, I just heard a weird rumor.” His eyes dart away and George hates that Toto is making him do this but doesn’t want to think about why, can feel the headache from just imagining thinking about the why.
“What did you hear?”
“Apparently, Y/N Rosberg,” Lewis stills at her name and curiosity clutches at George before he pushes down and away. “got snuck into the Red Bull garage.”
The older man immediately scoffs. “Yeah, right. She likes arriving at the races.”
He raises his hands, “that’s just what I heard.”
“Well, it’s wrong. A shit rumor. Anyone who knows Mouse,” the nickname leaves his mouth before he can think, can stop it, “knows that she loves arriving on a race weekend, all the cameras, getting to show off whatever outfit she put together.”
“Just what I heard, mate.” George repeats, before quickly retreating, cursing Toto out underneath his breath as soon as he rounds the corner and is far away from Lewis.
Monaco 2022
She’s not at Monaco. She’s not at Monaco.
The words are on repeat in his head. He doesn’t understand it. She lived here or maybe had lived here. Monaco was small, it was hard to imagine that he had never run into her since the end of 2016 but then again he managed to dodge him. So it was possible.
He just didn’t like the idea of it. That if she still lived here that she had made sure to dodge him, to make sure they never ran into each other.
Austria 2022
She doesn’t show up at Baku, her favorite circuit, Montreal, or Silverstone, but she’s here at Austria. He can’t make sense of why she’s showing up at the races she is. Can’t make sense of why it’s only Red Bull’s garage that she visits.
It’s driving him insane trying to make sense of it. Just like he can’t make sense of another rumor that she sneaked into watch the race in Baku. This one hadn’t been quiet though from George. It had made its run on twitter and instagram, though most fans of hers just like him, knew that they were false. Her blog was still full of talking about how much she loved showing up at race weekends, feeling the energy, interacting with fans, even if they were years old. It was telling that she never deleted them. And he knew that she’d never sneak into a race.
July 2015
“Lew?” Her voice is quiet, barely a whisper, as if she’s afraid he fell asleep.
He makes a humming noise, keeping his eyes closed but pressing his fingers a bit more into her back as they dance along her spine.
“When do you stop?”
He frowns at the vague question, eyes blinking open. “Stop what?”
“When did you stop seeing me as Nico’s sister? As a kid?”
His fingers pause as he thinks about her questions, wonders if he really wants to tell her, really wants her to know. He takes a deep breath, in and out of the nose before letting his fingers continue to dance. “As Nico’s sister? Probably around 2011 and Nico wasn’t hiding you away from everyone as much. I still see you a bit as his sister, don’t know if that will ever change.”
She nods, “and as a kid?”
“December 2013.” He’s just happy that he doesn’t remember the day. “Nicole and I joined Nico, Viv and you on that yacht.”
She makes a humming noise, curling closer to him.
“Nicole noticed actually.” And he has to chuckle remembering his then girlfriend’s reaction. “She hadn’t seen you for a few months and had never seen you like that. Told me that I’d have to help Nico out with keeping guys like us away from you.”
She huffs out a laugh, but doesn’t say anything, sensing that he’s not done.
“She said that and I looked and suddenly you weren’t five years old content only in Nico’s arms, or ten crying because Keke and Nico were leaving without you again. You had grown and you were fucking gorgeous.”
She stares at him, unsure of what to make of what he just told her. Not sure how she felt that it was Nicole that had made him realize that she wasn’t a little girl anymore. “You know,” she starts. “I had boobs way before I was seventeen.”
Lewis sputters out a laugh and she laughs as well. “Well, I wasn’t looking.”
She shakes her head, before tucking it into the crook of his neck. “No, just waited until I was a month away from being legal.”
“Yeah and I waited longer to do anything about it.”
“Not that much longer.” She mumbles, grinning against his skin when he pinches at her.
Spa 2022
They’re making a statement, not one that says much, her prior years coming to so many races and being friendly with drivers preventing that, but it’s still a statement.
It’s the second race since she’s returned instead of arriving before all the drivers or after when making an appearance in front of the cameras that she arrives when they are. More importantly she’s arrived with Max. She’s not on his arm or holding his hand, there’s a well kept distance between them. One that reads friendly, close, but not intimate. She wasn’t quite ready to go public with him, but she was willing to make it known that she and Max were friendly with each other.
“It’s nice having you here.”
She smiles at Sophie, taking her eyes briefly off the little boy in her arms. “It’s nice being here.”
The couch sinks next to her and she leans into Max as he wraps an arm around her shoulder, dropping a kiss to her temple. “Looks good on you.” He murmurs, smiling at his nephew in her arms.
“A baby? Or a baby that looks identical to you?”
“Well I’d much prefer one that looks like both of us.”
She sends him a look, but can’t not smile at his words. “Sap.”
“Just for you.”
Two days later she sits in a garage for the first time in years during a race and she remembers how much she loves it. There was nothing better than watching a race from the garage.
She watches as Max manages to recover from his grid penalty, making his way through the field and winning the race and she cheers with the rest of the garage, hugs everyone she can reach. As everyone runs out to greet Max, to watch as he celebrates his win, she stays.
Max didn’t have any impulse control when high on adrenaline, she knew exactly what would happen if she went out there with him, so she went back to his driver’s room and waits for him.
Dutch 2023
“Mouse!” Lewis calls and he watches as she stills while Horner stiffens at the name. It makes him itch. Horner and the rest of Red Bull had always been the odd ones out, never calling her Mouse, but rather her name or girly, the last she took a shining to.
He could still remember the first time they had heard Horner call her that. He had been ready to punch him, but she had beamed at the team principal, jumping up to give him a hug and asking him about his wife.
“Lewis.” Her voice is cool and he nearly flinches at her calling him Lewis. He had never been Lewis to her, always Lew.
“How have you been? It’s been awhile.” Nearly six years, he thinks but doesn’t say.
“Good. So has Nico.”
He flinches at his name. “Good.” His voice is quiet. “That’s good.”
Horner wraps an arm around her shoulders, “Let’s go. We’re going to be late.”
She nods and doesn’t even glance at him as she and Horner walk away, leaving him looking after her with despair and grief threatening to swallow him whole.
Japan 2022
He watches as she looks at Max with tears in her eyes as the Red Bull crew cheer as Max gives his post race interview, smiling as he thanks the fans, smiling because he won his second championship.
As soon as the interview is done, he’s launching himself back into the arms of the Red Bull crew, they all easily take his weight, patting him on the back, cheering for him. And then he watches when as soon as they release him, Max sees her. His eyes going wide with surprise at seeing her.
Lewis watches as she leans as far over the barrier as she can, wrapping her arms around his neck as his go around her waist to hold her. He watches but nothing prepares him for what happens next, the pain that strikes his heart. Because suddenly she’s kissing him, tears running down her face and Max is kissing her back like he’s done it a hundred times.
He doesn’t hear it or see it, but one of Red Bull’s cameras does and it makes it into their video to celebrate Max winning his second championship. Her saying that she’s so proud of him, never been prouder, and that she loves him and the easy way Max says it back, no hesitation.
It’s that, not her kissing Max in front of seemingly the whole world, that makes him realize that the future he had imagined, the image of her that was still the nineteen year old girl he fell in love with, is gone and has been since the night that Nico won his championship and when she came to comfort him, he only had harsh and degrading words for her.
They never could have been together again after his accusations of her feeding Nico information, blaming her for his lack of winning because she wasn’t supportive enough, his accusation of the lucky charm she was supposed to be was nothing but bad luck just like she was and always had been.
He had deluded himself into thinking that they still would end up together, that her being the love of his life, meant that he was also hers. He’s deluded himself for almost six years and now it’s not just heartbreak that fills him but shame and guilt. Because how could he have ever thought she’d want to be with him again when he never even tried to offer her an apology or to tell anyone about her.
Pagan Gods || SB5
Summary: In the face of his own sins, he had no choice but to kneel and venerate.
cw: just a smut drabble with sebastian vettel
a/n: That doesn't mean my return yet, just thoughts about Sebastian Vettel that Twitter has been feeding in me (the things I would let Seb do to me)
•• 🇧🇷 ••
He knew it was a way for him to pay for all his sins. Lewis had warned him:
“Brazilian women are different, you are not prepared for them.”
And he wasn't, Y/N passed through his life like a hurricane, shaking his convictions, snatching a space that not even he knew was vacant. When Sebastian realized, he was on his knees for her, worshiping her as if she were a goddess, a pagan deity that needed to be worshipped every day, forever. And nothing would give him more pleasure than being on his knees for her, for her. Only Y/N and his car were capable of making him fall.
He had just won the 2012 championship, the world was once again, under the tires of his car, the team wanted to celebrate with him, his parents outside, wanting to congratulate him on the victory, journalists wanted to interview him, but Sebaatian just wanted those legs to suffocate him again.
“Seb, f-fuck,” she gasped, pulling at the blond curls under her summer dress, trembling with each stroke of his tongue against her clit. Sebastian didn't even give her time to lie down, or sit up; he pushed her against the wall, fell to his knees in front of her and like a starving man, ripped her panties off and ate her. “Holy God, s-slow down Sebastian!”
“So fucking good, puppe” he grunted, licking her taste from his mouth.
He looked at her, trembling, panting and sweaty, shining as only paradise could look. “Moan softly, love… I don't want anyone hearing my wife moaning while I make her cum,” he ordered, grabbing her pussy again. Y/N opened her mouth, only a soft whisper escaping her lips, the orgasm growing in her womb like a huge wave. Sebastian didn't let her think, react or even breathe. It all came down to his mouth sucking her clit as if it were the last thing he could do. She closed her eyes, letting her body melt under his attack, and dear God, she was burning.
Without her being able to think, Sebastian pushed her to the small bed and lifted her dress until Y/N was almost naked before him.
He leaned over her, licking the Brazilian's hard nipples, loving her pleading moans. He opened the jumpsuit in a hurry and got between his girlfriend's hot, wet folds. She sank her nails into his back, grinding with every inch. of his cock that entered. he kissed her, giving her everything he had, his love, his devotion, the world he had just won, Y/N was a goddess and he was her faithful, her acolyte, a profane god ready to put everything at her disposal, including her right there.
Charles Leclerc x Fem!Reader
Warnings: dad!Charles, dad!Carlos and dad!Pierre all in one!!, mentions of pregnancy, the Leclerc children are a headache and a half, alcohol and the consumption of, a singular mention of drugs, a very old fashioned way of thinking from Charles’ end, a few swear words, one big happy family.
Word Count: 3.9k
Author’s Note: thank you to the anons that sent in these asks, this one is for you guys!! thank you to @timetoracewrites for letting me use sofia in here!!
based on these asks – one // two // three // four // five
—-
You two had been incredibly blessed your entire lives; you had fallen in love at a young age and got married, you had been fortunate enough to be able to travel the world with your husband, Charles, watching him do what he loved and you were still were able to keep up with your writing, number one seller after the other.
The first time you got pregnant, it wasn’t planned. Twins in the first go. Your family of two quickly became a family of 4; the two boys making their appearance after a long yet short nine months.
Gabriel Hervé Leclerc was the older of the boys, born a whopping 12 minutes before his twin, Christopher Jules Leclerc.
They were troublemakers from the day they were born; they had their father’s eyes, his dimples and smile.
The family of 4 remained 4 for another 2 years before you found out you were pregnant again. This time you had a baby girl; Eloise Marie Leclerc.
She too bared great resemblance to her father; the only thing was she has your eyes but his dimples prominent on her little cheeks, her fair skin identical to her father’s. As she got older, you quickly learned that she turned tomato red in the sun like her daddy.
Even though she was the youngest of the 3 children, she had her brothers (and her father) wrapped around her little finger from day one.
The kids didn’t stay little forever, you basked in the memories but now they were all grown up. The boys were 19 and your baby girl turned 17 last month.
You and Eloise were at the nail salon, a regular Friday for the Leclerc women. Pascale usually joins you two, the gossip overflowing between you 3 but she wasn’t able to join you guys today.
Charles was taking you to an event tonight, some F1 gala that required his presence for a few hours to give out an award.
You were showing your daughter a colour, asking her which one she liked between but she waved you off, “blue, mom.” She answers, her eyes glued to the phone sitting on her thigh as the woman worked on her left hand.
“Who’s texting you that you’re so busy you can’t even look up?”
Eloise looks over at you, her cheeks red. “Anthony.”
You racked your brain – Anthony ? Who the hell was Anthony? It was like the light bulb turned on when you looked over at her again, a smile on your own face.
“Anthony as in, Anthony Gasly ?”
Keep reading
Pairing: Max Verstappen x Isabelle Leclerc (Original Character)
Summary:
Max Verstappen is a World Champion. Isabelle Leclerc is invisible.
She watched her family give up everything for Charles’ career—Arthur’s karting, their father’s savings, even her childhood horse. She understood. She never asked for more.
But Max does. He notices the things no one else does, listens when no one else will, and puts her first in ways she never imagined. With him, she isn’t an afterthought—she’s a choice. And for the first time, she realizes she doesn’t have to be invisible.
Warnings and Notes:
we have now moved on from Charles bashing to bashing his whole family, Discussions of the death of a parent, talk about loosing a childhood pet, toxic families...I think that's it?
As always big thanks to @llirawolf , who listens to me ramble
Max: Just a heads-up. I have a girlfriend.
Jos: …And you’re only telling me now?
Max: Yes.
Jos: How long?
Max: Four months.
Jos: Jesus, Max. Who is she?
Max: Isabelle.
Jos: Isabelle who?
Max: Isabelle Leclerc.
Jos:
Jos: LECLERC??
Max: Yes.
Jos: You’re dating Charles Leclerc’s sister?!
Max: Yes.
Jos: And you didn’t think to mention this sooner?
Max: Why would I?
Jos: Because she’s a Leclerc.
Max: And?
Jos: And that’s complicated.
Max: No, it’s really not.
Jos: Do her brothers know?
Max: No.
Jos: They’re going to lose their minds.
Max: Probably.
Jos: And you don’t care?
Max: Not really.
Jos: …You’re serious about her.
Max: I am.
Jos: Huh.
Max: That’s all you have to say?
Jos: What do you want me to say?
Max: I don’t know. I expected more yelling.
Jos: Would it change anything?
Max: No.
Jos: Exactly.
Jos: Don’t let her distract you.
Max: She’s not a distraction.
***
There was something to say about Isabelle Leclerc in her element.
High Heels clicking against the dark wood that now covered the floor of his penthouse (Walnut, as she had explained to him once, laid in a herringbone pattern), the cream dress she wore swishing around her calves, nearly the exact same colour as was on most of the walls (Max had realised that he was colour blind by the time she had shown him five different shades of cream, told him to pick one, and he had been certain that she was playing a practical joke on him because they all looked the exact same. Who knew that there was a different between Snow White, Skimmed Milk White, Shaded White, Strong White and New White?) and telling him all about the light fixtures that were now hung in the space.
She walked ahead of him, soft voiced, giving a quiet tour of the apartment she’s spent the last few months designing.
Max trailed behind her, hands in his pockets, watching her more than the rooms.
She was different here.
Not in a big, obvious way—Isabelle was always composed, always graceful—but here, in the space she had built from the ground up, she walked with ease. She fit into the light like she belonged to it. And the truth was, she did.
Isabelle stopped in the living room, where the late sunlight stretched across the wooden floors, and looked around.
“All that’s left is the furniture install,” she said, brushing a stray curl behind her ear. “It’ll be livable in a week or two.”
Max nodded, but didn’t answer right away.
Isabelle turned to him, mistaking his silence for something technical. “Unless there’s anything you want to change?”
He shook his head slowly. “No. It’s perfect.”
She gave him a small, pleased smile, and turned back to the windows. That’s when he said it.
“You should move in.”
She stilled.
“Belle.”
She looked back at him. Her smile didn’t vanish, but it wavered at the edges. “Max.”
“I’m serious.”
“I know,” she said softly. “That’s the problem.”
He stepped closer, gentle, careful—because he knew that look on her face. It was the look she wore whenever he offered her something she wasn’t sure she was allowed to accept.
“You made this place feel like home,” he said. “Everything in it has your fingerprints on it. You already live in it, in every way except physically.”
She didn’t answer. Just looked around again—at the walls she’d chosen, the soft gold hardware, the faint echo in the emptiness.
“I don’t want to take up too much space,” she said finally, so quiet it hurt.
Max frowned. “I want you to take up space.”
She hesitated. He knew she would. She always thought twice before stepping forward, especially when it came to being wanted. He also knew that hesitation wasn’t about him—not really. It was about every time she’d been treated like an afterthought.
So he took a step back, and pulled out his phone.
She blinked. “What are you—”
“Exhibit A,” he said, tapping open a photo and turning it toward her. “Jimmy. Sitting by the front door. Waiting for you after you left last week.”
Isabelle’s lips twitched. “That’s just because I give him treats.”
“Exhibit B,” Max continued, swiping again. “Sassy. Nesting on the blanket you left on the couch. Will not accept substitutes.”
“Max…”
“And Exhibit C,” he said, putting the phone back into his pocket and walking over to her, eyes soft but unwavering. “Me. Also useless without you.”
She bit her lip, trying to hold back a smile. “Are you emotionally blackmailing me with your cats?”
“Absolutely,” he said. “And if this doesn’t work, I will start sending photos of Sassy looking depressed. I will weaponize her pout.”
She laughed, head dropping slightly as she shook it. “You’re ridiculous.”
“I’m right,” he said. “And I’m not asking for something huge or scary. I just want you here. Where you already belong.”
She looked up at him, eyes glassy but smiling now.
“I’m scared,” she admitted.
“I know,” he said. “But I’ll be here. So will Jimmy. And Sassy. And we’ll all be very supportive and dramatic about it.”
She laughed, but the sound was splintering around the edges.
“Are you sure?” Isabelle asked him, her voice shaky.
Max reached for her hand, lacing their fingers together. “I’m sure,” he said firmly. “But if you’re not ready, that’s okay. I just—” He exhaled, rubbing his thumb over her knuckles. “I just want you to know I want this. I want you.”
She stepped into his arms then, wrapping hers around his waist, burying her face in his chest. And when she whispered, “I think I want to say yes,” he smiled so wide it made his cheeks ache.
And if Jimmy and Sassy got extra treats that night when she came over?
Well. They’d earned it.
***
Isabelle: Max asked me to move in.
Isabelle: Like. Officially. Into the penthouse. With him.
Isabelle: I said yes.
Emilie: YOU SAID YES??? YES TO WHAT??
Isabelle: Max. The penthouse. The cats. All of it.
Emilie: AAAAAAAAAAAA
Emilie: I knew it. I KNEW he was going to ask. He’s been treating you like a man who wants joint bills and matching key hooks.
Isabelle: He was so calm about it. Like he’d already pictured me there. Like it was obvious.
Emilie: Because it is obvious. You designed that penthouse and made it a love letter to your own taste. You’ve already moved in emotionally. Time to do it physically.
Emilie: So when do we pack?
Isabelle: That’s… actually why I texted. Can you come help? I need moral support.
Emilie: Say less. I’ll be there with wine.
Isabelle: …perfect. Also, if I start backpedaling emotionally, please just throw a throw pillow at me.
Emilie: I’m bringing the heaviest one. You’re doing this, Belle. I am SO proud of you.
Isabelle: I’m scared. Like… what if I mess it up?
Emilie: You won’t. You don’t know how to be anything but steady and brilliant and thoughtful.
Emilie: And Max is completely in love with you.
Emilie: You’re building a life with someone who sees you.
Emilie: Not someone who just remembers you when they need a reservation booked.
Isabelle: That’s a little mean.
Emilie: I am your best friend. I am required to be mean on your behalf.
Emilie: Max loves you. He sees you. You get to have a gorgeous man AND a rooftop pool. This is the dream.
Emilie: Let’s pack your life, Belle. You’re going home.
***
Emilie Abadie had always believed that homes told stories.
Not just the curated kind you shared in design portfolios, or the kind Instagram filtered into perfection. The real ones. The stories that lived in cluttered drawers, forgotten shelves, and the boxes you avoided packing because they were full of things you didn’t want to explain.
Isabelle’s apartment told a quiet, thoughtful story—soft linens, deep greens and warm woods, books arranged by mood, not color. A ceramic cup collection that made no cohesive sense except to her. It was lived-in, and loved, but also… careful.
Emilie knew what careful looked like.
She’d watched Isabelle perfect the art of it for years.
Which was why it didn’t surprise her when, halfway through packing up the hallway cupboards, she found it. The collection of objects that could only be described as “well-meaning psychological warfare,” wrapped in tissue paper and reluctant affection.
Highlights included:
A desk plaque that said Think Like a Leader.
A collection of self help books.
A coffee mug that read Worlds Okayest Sister.
A heavy coffee table book about golf.
A Bluetooth speaker shaped like a race car that lit up in flashing LED colors.
A number of scented candles, all of them unburnt. All of them with the kind of sickly sweet scents that Emilie knew Isabelle would get headaches from.
A bright red umbrella. Ferrari merchandise.
A black pantsuit Isabelle had never worn and would never wear—tags still attached.
A Diet cookbook. Which pretty much exclusively featured recipes that involved red meat, which Isabelle never ate anyway.
A pair of trainers in a garish neon yellow. Two full size too big.
It was Isabelle Leclerc’s version of a family scrapbook.
Emilie didn’t say anything at first. Just sat cross-legged on the floor and started lining them up like museum artifacts. Like evidence. And it made her blood boil.
“You kept all of them,” Emilie finally said, not bothering to mask her disgust.
Isabelle, predictably, didn’t flinch. Just looked over from where she was folding dish towels and sighed. “Please don’t start.”
Emilie snorted. “I’m not starting. I’m documenting.”
Isabelle walked over and perched on the armrest of the couch, staring at the collection like someone facing down a polite ghost.
“They’re not trying to hurt me,” she said, because of course she did.
“They’re not trying to see you either,” Emilie finally replied.
God, they had trained her to make excuses for them so well.
And that was the thing about Isabelle.
Isabelle defended them. Always. Even when they ignored her. Even when they handed her a gift that said, in a thousand unspoken ways, we don’t know who you are, so here’s who we’d rather you be.
Emilie loved Isabelle for her grace. Respected her for her patience.
But sometimes she wanted to scream on her behalf.
Because Isabelle Leclerc was brilliant. Quietly, devastatingly brilliant.
She could sketch out a space and see a life inside it before anyone else could.
She knew how to listen, how to hold space, how to fill a room without taking it over.
And yet, her family treated her like the placeholder sibling.
The support system.
The “how lucky we are to have you manage our chaos” afterthought.
Emilie wanted to shake her sometimes.
“You’re allowed to admit it hurts,” she said, softer than she meant to.
Isabelle just hummed noncomittingly.
Emilie had watched this play out for years: birthdays where Isabelle got gifts that felt like HR perks, dinners where she was interrupted or talked over, family holidays where she played event planner and emotional buffer and never, not once, was asked what she wanted for herself.
And then Max Verstappen had shown up.
At first, Emilie had been skeptical. Who wouldn’t be? He was Max—F1 World Champion, known for being blunt to the point of rudeness.
But then… she saw the way Isabelle softened around him.
Or no—that wasn’t it.
Isabelle didn’t soften with Max. She just… relaxed.
Like for the first time, she didn’t feel the need to justify her existence. Max didn’t question her decisions, didn’t treat her like she was delicate or invisible. He watched her. Not with confusion, but with certainty. Like he already knew she was extraordinary.
And when he asked her to move in, Emilie saw the panic. But underneath it? The wonder.
The possibility of being seen. Fully. Without apology.
So as Emilie watched her best friend now—holding that terrible mug with a rueful smile, defending the people who had handed her metaphorical shrink-wrap year after year—she didn’t say the things she wanted to.
She didn’t say, They don’t deserve you.
She didn’t say, They never tried hard enough.
She didn’t even say, You don’t have to keep forgiving them just because it’s easier than facing the truth.
Instead, she handed Isabelle a roll of bubble wrap and said, “I’m glad you’re moving.”
Isabelle didn’t answer, just smiled faintly and kept folding.
But Emilie meant it. Not just because the apartment was too small for her, or too carefully arranged around other people’s expectations—but because Max had asked her to move in.
And Max—despite being the chaos of F1 incarnate—saw her.
He wasn’t perfect—God, no—but he made space for her. Real space.
And for someone like Isabelle, who had spent her whole life tucking herself into corners… that mattered.
Max didn’t just love her.
He made her feel unchallenged in her existence. Like it was safe to take up room. To bring her books and her silly teacups and her weird throw pillows and be.
Emilie looked around the apartment one last time. The walls felt like they were exhaling. Letting go.
And when Isabelle asked, softly, “Do you think I’ll miss it?”, Emilie didn’t hesitate.
“No,” she said. “You’ll be too busy building something better.”
With someone better.
And that made all the difference.
***
Isabelle didn’t expect it to feel like this.
The shopping trip was meant to be practical.
They had all the essentials, really—Max’s penthouse was fully furnished, a curated blend of sleek lines and soft warmth, every finish and fixture carefully chosen. By her. For him.
And now… for them.
Because Max had asked her to move in. And she’d said yes.
And suddenly, the things she used to walk past in shops—the towels, the sheets, the coffee mugs—meant something entirely different.
They weren’t just purchases.
They were choices.
Isabelle ran her fingers over the display of Egyptian cotton sheets, crisp and cloud-white, then turned to a soft beige set that made her think of sleepy mornings and Max’s warm skin under her fingertips. She held up the tag, inspected the thread count, and caught herself smiling.
It felt a little silly, how giddy she was. How young she felt. Like a teenager dreaming of her first apartment. But this was different. This wasn’t fantasy.
This was real.
She was going to live with him. Not just crash on weekends, not just brush her teeth beside his before tiptoeing out the next morning.
She would be there when he got home.
She would be there when he left.
She would be home.
That thought made her pause.
The nerves came creeping in—quiet but insistent.
Would she take up too much space? Would she somehow get in the way? What if she over-decorated, what if she made it feel less like his place?
What if she loved it more than she was allowed to?
She picked up towels next—thick ones, luxurious ones. One set in cream, one in a dusky grey-blue. Neutral. Calming. Shared.
Would Max care?
Probably not. He’d happily dry off with whatever was closest.
But Isabelle cared.
Because this wasn’t just shopping.
This was settling.
Belonging.
She carried the towels and duvet set to the counter and added a couple of throw pillows she hadn’t planned to buy, and still did, before she went to her favourite antique store.
The store smelled like old books, wood polish, and dried lavender. Isabelle had always loved it—the quiet hush of it, the way everything creaked slightly underfoot, how time seemed to fold in around the edges. Nothing here rushed. Nothing here demanded.
Which was why she came.
When she needed to think.
When she needed to feel like she was choosing something entirely her own.
The console table caught her eye almost immediately. Oak, mid-century, solid but delicate somehow—slim legs, warm finish, brass drawer pulls that looked like little leaves. It wasn’t flashy, but it was hers. In the way certain pieces just are.
She stood in front of it for a while, her hand brushing over the edge.
They had space for it. Max had said she could pick what she wanted. He meant it. He’d said things like it’s your home too and whatever makes it feel like us, but Isabelle still felt the pull of hesitation in her chest. A quiet anxiety that came not from Max—but from all the years of not quite being allowed to take up space.
But she wanted this one.
This table. This little symbol of her taste, her joy, her voice.
She turned to the shopkeeper. “I’ll take it.”
The words were quiet, but steady.
A few minutes later, she stood at the counter, scribbling her name on the delivery slip. The butterflies were still there—flapping somewhere between her ribs—but so was something else. Something lighter.
***
Isabelle: So hypothetically… if someone were to have bought a few things for the apartment while you were gone… would that be a problem?
Max: Define “a few things.”
Isabelle: …Towels. Throw pillows. A vintage console table I may have emotionally imprinted on.
Max: Was it whispering to you in the store?
Isabelle: It was practically begging to live in our hallway.
Max: Then obviously you had no choice.
Isabelle: Exactly. Also, I got a really pretty ceramic tray for the kitchen island. You know, for keys. Or snacks.
Isabelle: You’ll love it. It’s very “Max doesn’t know what it’s for but agrees it looks nice.”
Max: My favorite kind of décor. You’re making this apartment ours. I love it.
Isabelle: You can thank me by letting me put the throw pillows I just found on the couch.
Max: Are the throw pillows neutral or secretly pink?
Isabelle: Neutral… ish. There’s texture. You’ll survive. I debated between “soft beige” and “almond stone.” I chose “soft beige”.
Max: That’s not even a real difference.
Isabelle: Says the man who can feel the difference between tire compounds while going 300 km/h.
Max: Touché.
Max: Buy anything you want. Cover the couch in throw pillows. I miss you and imagining you decorating makes it feel closer to coming home.
Isabelle: That was dangerously sweet.
Max: I’m in a hotel room with bad lighting and no you. I’m weak.
Isabelle: I’ll save you a spot on the couch. And possibly hide the pillows until you’ve emotionally adjusted.
Max: Deal. Now send me a photo of that tray. I need to know what I’ve agreed to.
***
Comments:
@f1fashionista93: where is this shop?? asking for a friend (the friend is me)
↳ @isabelleleclerc: It’s called Vintage Collection, at the Carré d’Or!
@emilie_abadie: You’re so lucky I wasn’t with you or that lion would be in my living room.
↳ @isabelleleclerc You would’ve named him and given him a tragic backstory. ↳ @emilie_abadie And he would’ve deserved it.
@paddockprincess: how is this not a painting???
@victoriaverstappen: “Something older than everyone in the room” is my new golden rule—thank you for this! ❤️
↳ @isabelleleclerc: It’s such a good trick!
@/F1GossipQueen: You’ve inspired me to go antiquing this weekend. Hoping to find my own weird lion.
***
Max wasn’t sure when it hit him exactly—somewhere between unrolling a rug Isabelle had ordered and setting it gently under the coffee table, or watching her rearrange the spice drawer for the third time like she was memorizing her own existence.
She was here. She had moved in. But somehow… she hadn’t arrived yet.
He watched from the doorway as she unpacked a box labeled “Books + misc. (bedside stuff?)” in her neat handwriting. Her movements were precise. Careful. Like every item she placed might be quietly retracted if it took up too much space.
It wasn’t the way she moved in his life. With him, she was steady. Present. Laughing softly in the kitchen or curled up with Jimmy or Sassy, or leaning into his touch like she belonged there—which, to him, she did.
But this… this looked like someone trying not to leave a mark.
“Hey,” Max said softly, leaning in the doorway.
Isabelle glanced up. “Sorry. I’m taking over the dresser—if you want the top drawer back—”
“I don’t,” he said, crossing the room. “I want you to take all the drawers. And the shelves. And the bathroom counter.”
She looked at him warily, like she didn’t quite believe it.
Max reached for her hand. “You’re not a guest, Belle. You live here. I want to see your things around the place.”
Isabelle hesitated, fingers curling slightly in his. “I just… I’ve never had space before. Not really. And I don’t want to—”
“Take up too much room,” he finished for her. Gently.
She nodded, eyes down.
Max cupped her cheek, making her look up. “Take up all the room. Please. I’ve seen this place without you in it. It’s beautiful and cold.”
She huffed a soft laugh, like it surprised her. “I just didn’t want to… clutter it.”
“You’re not clutter,” he said firmly. “You’re the heart of it.”
He tugged her into his chest, arms wrapping around her tightly, and pressed a kiss to her hair.
“I want to trip over your shoes in the hallway,” he murmured. “I want your throw blankets on every surface. I want the picture of Blanche in the living room and that stuffed bunny from your childhood sitting next to my championship trophies.”
She buried her face in his chest, breathing in deeply. “You’re sure?”
“I’m certain,” Max whispered. “Make it yours. Make it ours.”
There was a long silence—warm, safe.
Then Isabelle pulled back slightly and smiled, small but real.
“Okay,” she said softly.
And just like that, the penthouse began to feel like home.
***
Isabelle hadn’t meant to hide it.
The roll-up keyboard wasn’t a secret. It was just… something small. Something she kept. Tucked away behind art books and a folded throw blanket. She’d placed it there quietly, the way she placed most of her things in this space—carefully. As if she were still trying to make sure she belonged.
So when she heard him call from the living room—“You didn’t tell me you had this”—her stomach fluttered.
Isabelle padded out of the bedroom, barefoot, hair still damp from the shower, the sleeves of Max’s hoodie falling over her hands. He was crouched near the bookshelf, curiosity written across his face as he unzipped the worn canvas pouch she hadn’t touched in months.
The roll up keyboard. That sad little silicone thing she’d used in university apartments and rental flats, when the idea of owning a real piano had felt laughable.
“Oh,” she said, voice faintly embarrassed. “Right. That thing.”
Max looked up at her, the faintest smile tugging at his mouth. “You actually play on this?”
“I did,” she admitted, sinking onto the rug beside him. Her legs folded under her easily, like muscle memory. “When there wasn’t room for anything else.”
There was a time when she’d pulled that keyboard out just to feel normal for five minutes. Between assignments, between shifts, between everyone forgetting she existed.
“You’re full of surprises,” Max murmured, watching her fingers hover above the keys, not quite touching them.
Isabelle shrugged, soft. “Not really. We had a piano growing up. At the country house.”
He glanced at her. “Do you write music too? Like Charles?”
She blinked, surprised that Max knew that…but then she remembered that her brother had actually released some of his compositions. Of course, Max would know. “Do you?” Max asked again, gentler this time. Not pushing—inviting.
She shook her head. “No. I was never interested in writing anything new. I liked learning. Things people said were difficult. Pieces with layers. There’s something comforting about playing something that already exists. Like translating someone else’s thoughts.” Her voice dropped slightly. “It felt less scary than putting mine out there.”
Max watched her like he always did—closely, quietly, like he knew what she wasn’t saying.
“So you were more of a storyteller than a composer.”
She blinked. That was… accurate.
“It felt like less pressure,” she said. “I didn’t have to be brilliant. I just had to be present.”
And that, she thought, was the kind of safety she rarely felt in her family. But somehow, she found it here. In this penthouse she helped design. In this quiet space with the man who saw her entirely.
Max turned to glance at the empty corner by the window, where soft light spilled from the sconces she’d chosen herself. “We should get you a real piano.”
She looked at him quickly. “Max…”
He didn’t flinch. “I’m serious. You shouldn’t have to unroll your music out of a drawer. Not here. Not anymore.”
Her throat tightened. Not just at the gesture, but at what it meant. What he understood without her having to explain it.
“I don’t even know if I’d still be good,” she said quietly.
“I don’t care,” Max replied. “I just want to hear you play.”
She leaned in and kissed him—slow, grateful, still in disbelief that someone wanted this much of her. When she pulled away, her voice was soft and full of warmth.
“What kind?”
“You pick,” he said simply. “I’ll just be the guy who listens.”
***
Isabelle: Serious question: Am I allowed to touch your trophies?
Max: …What?
Isabelle: Your F1 trophies. The actual ones. Like, are they sacred objects or can I move them?
Max: I’m sorry… what?
Isabelle: I want to move them into the built-in display we had made. The one with the custom lighting and matte black shelves you pretended not to care about but totally loved.
Max: I do love that wall.
Isabelle: It’s ready. And your trophies are going in. But I needed to check if you’re one of those people who’ll panic if I breathe too close to the 2021 Abu Dhabi trophy.
Max: What?? No. They’re trophies, not cursed artefacts.
Isabelle: You say that like it’s obvious.
Max: Why would it not be obvious??
Isabelle: Because Charles once lost his mind when I breathed too close to his karting trophies. Like—actual panic. Told me to “never touch the silver one from 2012,” because apparently my mortal fingerprints could destroy the legacy.
Isabelle: So I’m checking. Do I need gloves? Tongs? An FIA certification? Or can I just move them like a normal person?
Max: ...Your brother is completely insane.
Isabelle: So can I move your trophies? Dust them? Put them in the light-up cabinet I designed with my whole heart?
Max: You could build a pyramid out of them and I’d say thank you. They’re metal, not ancient relics. You don’t need ceremonial gloves.
Isabelle: Okay good. Because the lighting is chef’s kiss. I even have little engraved name plates.
Max: Touch whatever you want. Including me, when I get home.
Isabelle: Noted. Trophies first. You second.
Max: I’ll take it.
Max: Send me a photo when it’s done? I kind of love that you’re doing this. Feels like the trophies finally have a home too.
Isabelle: I’ll send you a whole slideshow. With dramatic lighting.
***
The flight back had been mostly quiet.
Well—quiet-ish. If you didn’t count the eighty-four times Lando had apologized for breaking Max’s trophy, or the part where he genuinely offered to ride in the luggage compartment as penance.
Now they were back in Monaco. The sun was doing that rich golden thing it did right before it sank into the sea, and Lando was trying very hard not to think about how he’d destroyed a priceless piece of Verstappen history.
Max had just unlocked the front door of his brand-new penthouse—the penthouse, the one Lando hadn’t seen yet—and turned back with a smirk.
“Come in,” Max said. “You can personally witness the replacement trophy making it home safely. Might help your guilt complex.”
Lando followed him in, dragging his emotional damage behind him like a suitcase. “Mate, I broke your winning trophy. They handed it to you and I just—smash. Right there on the podium.”
“Honestly, that thing fell apart like IKEA furniture,” Max said over his shoulder, already tossing his keys into a surprisingly stylish bowl. “That’s what they get for making a teapot the trophy.”
Lando barely heard him. His brain had short-circuited the moment he stepped into the apartment.
It was… insane.
Vaulted ceilings. Curved walls. Warm lighting that didn’t feel clinical or rich-guy sterile. It didn’t scream money, it whispered it, in like, six languages. And the view—the view—was like something out of a dream. Monaco glittered below them, golden and lazy, like it had been placed there just for Max.
Lando looked around the massive open space—sleek kitchen, moody wood floors, an actual staircase—and had to bite back a seriously?!
It looked like Max Verstappen lived in a Pinterest board for emotionally stable billionaires.
He flopped dramatically onto Max’s disturbingly soft couch. “Do you know how many people sent me the slow-mo of that moment? Like I wanted to be immortalized as the idiot who destroyed the winner’s trophy.”
Max snorted from the kitchen. “Gods, you’re worse than my girlfriend.”
Lando blinked. “Wait, what?”
Max poured two glasses of water like he hadn’t just dropped a bomb. “Belle used to be terrified of touching my trophies. Wouldn’t even go near them. Her brother’s obsessed with his, told her once that she could ‘smudge the history’ by getting fingerprints on them.”
Lando stared. “Your what?”
Max, with the calm of a man not fully aware of the chaos he was about to cause, strolled past him. “My girlfriend.”
Lando’s entire brain short-circuited. "SINCE WHEN DO YOU HAVE A GIRLFRIEND?"
Max shrugged. “About… four months?”
“FOUR MONTHS?” Lando shrieked, sitting up straight. “And I’m just now finding out?”
Max raised an eyebrow. “I didn’t think you needed to know.”
“I’m your friend, Max!”
And then, as if the universe were determined to finish Lando off, the front door opened.
Lando turned.
In stepped Isabelle Leclerc.
Isabelle Leclerc in all her soft, gently glory. Wearing sunglasses on her head, a bag slung over one shoulder, in high heels and a pink dress… her expression soft and content in that way people were when they walked into a space that felt like home.
“Hey,” she said, smiling at Max. “I missed you. Did the box with the spare trophy arrive?”
Max pointed to the dining table. “It’s right there. Lando helped escort it home personally.”
Lando’s soul evacuated his body.
He turned to Max.
Then to Isabelle.
Then back to Max.
In a hoarse, horrified whisper, he said, “That’s Charles’ sister.”
Max, the absolute psychopath, just nodded. “Yes.”
“You’re joking.”
“No.”
Lando turned to Isabelle. “And you’re okay with this?”
She smirked. “Clearly.”
Lando turned back to Max, voice rising. “And Charles knows?”
Max popped a chip into his mouth. “No.”
Lando nearly fell off the couch. “HE DOESN’T KNOW?”
“We’re keeping it private,” Isabelle said, casually crossing her arms like she wasn’t detonating Lando’s entire worldview.
Lando laughed. Or maybe screamed. Or both. “You’re keeping it private?” He pointed at Max. “Does Victoria know?”
Max nodded. “Yes.”
“Sophie?”
“Yep.”
“Jos?”
“Yes.”
Lando stared, hands flailing. “So just to confirm—everyone in your family knows—”
“Right.”
“—and none of hers knows?”
“Correct.”
Lando dragged a hand down his face. “Okay. Okay, cool. Cool cool cool. So when Charles finds out, do you want your funeral to be in the Netherlands or Monaco?”
Max rolled his eyes. “Charles isn’t going to kill me.”
“YES HE IS!” Lando turned to Isabelle. “He’s going to kill him!”
Isabelle just shrugged. “I’ll deal with him.”
Lando made a strangled noise. “You’ll deal with him? This is the worst idea Max has ever had!”
Max just grinned, maddeningly pleased with himself. “Is it?”
“Yes!” Lando pointed at him. “And I want no part in it! I’m officially removing myself from this entire situation!”
“Noted.”
“I’m serious, Max. When Charles comes at you with, like, a Ferrari spoiler, I was never here.”
Max smirked and held up his hands. “Understood.”
And yet somehow, Lando knew that when it all inevitably exploded… he’d still end up involved.
Because, apparently, this was his life now.
***
Max had survived media scrums, championship-deciding races, and Jos Verstappen's silence-with-a-side-of-glare disapproval—but nothing, absolutely nothing, compared to waiting for Emilie to step foot into the penthouse.
Isabelle’s Emilie.
The best friend. The sister-by-choice. The one person Isabelle never sugarcoated anything for. The one who’d once, according to Isabelle herself, told a former boyfriend, “I hope you fall down an escalator and land on your ego.”
Max was… a little afraid.
He wasn’t nervous often. His job didn’t allow for it. But now, standing in his own kitchen, hands resting on the marble countertop Isabelle had picked out, he was nervous.
Because Emilie was the kind of person who saw things clearly—and said them out loud. And Max wasn’t stupid. He knew that Isabelle’s past was littered with people who hadn’t protected her the way she deserved. Especially her family. Especially the ones who should have known better.
So Emilie was the gatekeeper.
And Max? He was the boy who had fallen in love with the girl she protected.
The intercom buzzed. Isabelle, barefoot and glowing, went to let her in.
Max exhaled, rolled his shoulders once, and silently promised the cats not to make this weird.
When the door opened, Emilie stepped in with a tote bag on one arm and sunglasses perched on her head like she belonged on the cover of “Best Friend With a Sharp Tongue Monthly.”
“Hi,” she said to Max, all easy charm and narrowed eyes.
“Hi,” he replied, with what he hoped was equal ease but probably came off a little like please don’t hate me.
Emilie looked around slowly. Took in the space. The light. The symmetry. The faint scent of lemon and clean wood. Then: “You let her pick the rug?”
Max blinked. “I mean… yes?”
Emilie turned to Isabelle. “He’s either deeply in love with you or very smart.”
Isabelle grinned. “Both.”
Max cleared his throat. “Can I get you something to drink?”
Emilie studied him for a beat. “Coffee?”
“Coming right up.”
He moved toward the machine, listening as Isabelle showed her around—explaining where things were, which parts of the design had been last-minute additions, what Max had insisted on and what she had picked out.
Max made her coffee exactly the way Isabelle had once told him Emilie liked it—strong, touch of oat milk, pinch of cinnamon—and slid it across the island as Emilie wandered in, Sassy having demanded Isabelle’s attention like she was prone to be doing.
Emilie took it, sipped, and raised her eyebrows. “Alright. You pass step one.”
“There are steps?” Max asked, mouth twitching.
“Oh, so many,” Emilie said. “But relax. You’re already ahead. You didn’t try to impress me with vintage wine or your Rolex.”
“I was going to offer cookies,” he admitted.
“Smart man.”
She took another slow sip, then set the mug down.
“Max,” she said, and her tone shifted—less playful now, more real. “You know she’s never done this before, right? Never let someone be her safe place. Never believed she could build something and live inside it, too.”
“I know,” Max said quietly.
Emilie studied him a moment longer.
“I don’t care that you’re a world champion,” she said. “I care that when she comes home, she gets to rest.”
Max nodded. “She does. That’s all I want. I don’t need her to fit into anything. I just want her to feel like she doesn’t have to be anything more than she is.”
Emilie stared at him.
Then, finally, she smiled. “You’re not what I expected.”
“Better or worse?”
“Infinitely better,” she said. “But if you screw this up, I will make you regret it in very creative ways.”
Max raised a hand. “Understood.”
Isabelle returned to the kitchen then, breezy and radiant, unaware that Emilie had just conducted an emotional background check in under five minutes.
“I like him,” Emilie said, already helping herself to a cookie.
“Thank God,” Isabelle murmured, leaning into Max with a smile.
And Max—well, Max just exhaled for the first time in twenty minutes. Because if he had Emilie’s approval?
That meant he was doing something right.
Which mattered.
Because Isabelle?
She was everything worth getting right.
***
Max: Need vacation recommendations.
Lando: Oh no.
Max: What?
Lando: This is about her, isn’t it?
Max: …So do you have suggestions or not?
Lando: I knew it.
Lando: Max, I know you and Isabelle are a thing.
Lando: But Charles doesn’t.
Lando: And I would like to stay alive.
Max: This has nothing to do with Charles.
Lando: It has everything to do with Charles.
Max: No, it has everything to do with Isabelle.
Lando: SAME THING.
Lando: I don’t want to know. I don’t want to hear it. I don’t want to be involved.
Max: I’m literally just asking for vacation recommendations.
Lando: And yet somehow, I will still end up suffering because of this.
Max: Lando.
Lando: FINE. Seychelles.
Max: That was fast.
Lando: Because I don’t want to talk about this any longer than I have to.
Lando: Seychelles is private, expensive, beautiful. Go there.
Max: Thanks.
Lando: Do not tell me anything else. I don’t want to know.
Max: Got it.
Lando: Seriously.
Max: Okay.
Lando: Like, if Charles finds out and demands to know what I knew—
Max: Then you knew nothing.
Lando: Exactly.
Max: Thanks, Lando.
Lando: I hate you.
***
Stream starts, Max joins the call.
[Background reveals a brand-new sim room: sleek LED lighting, perfectly mounted curved monitors, and a back wall entirely dedicated to trophies, helmets, and framed photos—immaculately designed.]
Chat:
WAIT.
NEW ROOM??
WHERE TF IS HE
TROPHY WALL HELLO???
Bro has a museum behind him
That’s not the old sim room 😭
Chris Lulham: “Hold on, what is that behind you??”
Gianni Vecchio: “Is that a whole new background?? Did you move? Why do you look like you're in an actual Formula 1 museum?”
Luke Crane: “That is not the same white wall with the sad curtain.”
Chris: “Is that a trophy wall?? With lights?? WHY IS IT GLOWING.”
Gianni: “That’s a custom setup. Someone made that. You did not install LED strips yourself, Max.”
Max: glances around “Oh, yeah. I moved. Still in Monaco.”
Chris: “Wait, what?! Since when?”
Max: “Few weeks ago.” shrugs
Chat:
🚨 BREAKING NEWS: MAX VERSTAPPEN MOVED AND DIDN’T TELL US 🚨
Max casually dropping life updates like he’s talking about the weather.
Bro didn’t even hint at it???
NEW SIM ROOM???
OH MY GOD THE MONACO TROPHY IS ON A LITTLE TURNTABLE
Luke Crane: "Hold on, hold on—are we just glossing over this? You moved and didn’t tell us?"
Max: laughs "I don’t tell you guys everything."
Luke Crane: "Clearly."
Chris: "Okay, but like… why?"
Max: shrugs again "Just wanted a change."
Chat:
He’s so unserious about major life events.
“Just wanted a change” bro you’re in a whole new house.
Luke Crane: “Alright, when’s the housewarming party?"
Max: "Never."
Chris: "Figured."
Chat:
That was the fastest rejection ever.
LMAOO Max really said NOPE.
Someone check the Monaco real estate listings 😭😭😭
Chris: "Okay, but real question—do we at least get a tour?"
Max: “Hold on, check this out.”
[Max adjusts his camera slightly, reaching off-screen.]
[Trophy wall lighting shifts smoothly from warm white to deep racing red.]
Enzo Bonito: NO WAY.
Luke Bennett: Did you just change the color?
Max: It’s all programmed. RGB control. Motion sensors too. They dim when I leave the room.
Gianni: That’s actually ridiculous.
Max (grinning): Also acoustic panels. So no echo. And the mic quality’s better now too—right?
Luke Bennett: Sounds dangerously smooth, yeah. Honestly, this is a Bond villain layer disguised as a sim room.
Chat:
max literally lives in a batcave
this is a SIM LAIR
rich people don’t build houses they build race temples
bro’s sim room has mood lighting and better HVAC than my entire apartment
WHY DOES THIS LOOK LIKE A NETFLIX SET
Luke Bennett: Man, I feel like I should be wearing a tuxedo just to race you now.
Max (grinning): Anyway. Let’s race.
Chris: If my wheel breaks mid-race, I’m blaming this emotional damage.
Gianni: If I lose tonight, it’s because your RGB lighting intimidated me.
***
Isabelle always arrived on time for family dinner. With dessert, of course.
She always brought something. Homemade or picked up from her favorite patisserie. No one commented on it, but the plate was always clean by the end of the night.
Dinner was in full swing now, a chaotic medley of pasta, overlapping voices, and half-remembered updates from everyone’s life—except hers.
“So I told the media team we should change the graphic for next week,” Charles was saying, gesturing with his fork. “And they acted like I was speaking a different language.”
“Maybe they were,” Arthur said, grinning. “You barely speak one as it is.”
Charles rolled his eyes. “And you’re in F2, so calm down.”
“I’m in F2, not in last,” Arthur shot back.
“Boys,” Pascale said in a long-suffering tone. “Please. Eat.”
Isabelle had barely spoken since they sat down.
It wasn’t that she didn’t want to contribute—she just never quite found the opening. Every time she tried, someone else jumped in louder, faster. She was used to it. It had been this way for most of her life.
Still, she tried.
“Oh,” she said lightly, when the conversation briefly turned toward travel. “I’ll be in Nice next week for a client install. Final stages of a boutique I’ve been working on for a few months.”
Charles barely looked up from his glass. “Interior stuff again?”
Isabelle smiled tightly. “Yes. It’s the final phase.”
“What are you installing, like… pillows?” Arthur asked, half-joking, half-serious.
“Furniture. Lighting. Custom cabinetry. Architectural finishes,” she replied, ticking them off calmly. “You know. The usual.”
“Right, right,” Lorenzo said, tone absent. “Pinterest, but expensive.”
Isabelle bit her tongue.
Hard.
She smiled again—her polite, polished, professional smile—and took a sip of her wine to swallow down everything she wanted to say.
No one asked more about the project. The conversation veered into Charles’ media schedule for the next race. No one circled back to Isabelle.
They never did.
Until, several minutes later, Arthur mentioned Max.
“Did you know he just finished renovating his place in Monaco?” Arthur said, gesturing with his fork. “Fully redone. It’s all over the sim racing forums—some insane setup.”
“Oh, yeah,” Charles added. “I saw it. Trophy wall, hidden screens, mood lighting. So over the top.”
“It’s not over the top,” Isabelle said, casually.
They all turned.
“I designed it.”
Silence. Actual silence.
Isabelle set down her fork and took another sip of wine, just to give them a moment to catch up.
Charles blinked. “You—what?”
“I was the lead interior architect on Max Verstappen’s penthouse,” she said, voice steady. “From layout to lighting to final finishes.”
Arthur’s mouth opened and closed like a fish. “Seriously?”
“Yes.”
Lorenzo frowned. “Like… the Max Verstappen?”
“No, Lorenzo, the other one,” Isabelle deadpanned.
Pascale blinked. “Well. That’s… quite something.”
“It was,” Isabelle said mildly. “A lot of work. High standards. Very involved client.”
…not really, but nobody needed to know that. Mostly Max had just let her do whatever she wanted.
“You never said anything,” Charles muttered, confused.
“You never asked,” she said, sweetly. “You thought I was just picking out pillows.”
No one had an answer for that.
And Isabelle didn’t try to change the topic. instead she just stood up, starting to clean up plates— graceful as ever.
“I’ll help clean,” she said, voice still perfectly polite. And then, with a final smile that didn’t quite reach her eyes, she added, “Let me know if you ever want help picking out throw pillows, though. I’m very good at that.”
***
The front door opened with a soft click, followed by the unmistakable rustle of paper shopping bags and the sound of someone toeing off their shoes with slightly more force than necessary.
Max looked up from the couch, one arm draped around Jimmy, who had fully claimed the throw blanket. “You’re back late.”
Isabelle stepped inside, arms full of muted-toned bags from an upscale decor shop near the port. She dropped them on the kitchen island with a sigh that sounded far too heavy for a casual stroll home.
“I stopped at—” she started, then waved vaguely at the bags. “—somewhere.”
Max raised an eyebrow. “Shopping?”
“Frustration shopping,” she muttered, pulling off her coat and hanging it neatly by the door.
He got up slowly, padding barefoot across the floor to meet her. “What happened?”
She didn’t answer right away. Instead, she unpacked …something that looked like a seashell and a pretzel had a baby, a geometric candleholder she didn’t need, and a cushion cover in a color Max was pretty sure they used in the guest room.
“They laughed at my job,” she said finally, quiet but steady. “Again.”
Max’s jaw tightened. “What did they say?”
Isabelle didn’t look at him. She kept unpacking. “Arthur made a joke about installing pillows. Lorenzo called it Pinterest, but expensive.”
He let the silence hang, waiting.
“And then I told them,” she said, meeting his gaze now. “About the penthouse. The sim room. The trophy wall. All of it.”
Max stepped closer, brushing his fingers lightly against her hand. “Good.”
“I wasn’t going to,” she admitted, her voice dipping. “I didn’t want it to sound like name-dropping. But I just—snapped. I was so tired of biting my tongue.”
“You don’t have to bite your tongue,” Max said, his voice low and firm. “Not with them. Not with anyone.”
She looked up at him, eyes a little glossy but not crying. Not yet.
“I built something for you,” she said. “Something real. And they still treat me like I’m playing house with fabric swatches.”
Max reached behind her and gently tugged her into his chest, wrapping both arms around her and pressing a kiss to the top of her head.
“They can’t see it because they don’t want to,” he murmured. “But I see you. Every detail, every decision, every part of this place that feels like home—you did that.”
Isabelle closed her eyes and let herself lean into him.
The silence was softer now. Safer.
After a beat, Max pulled back just enough to glance at the bags.
“...Please tell me that weird seashell thing isn’t going in the sim room.”
Isabelle laughed, a real one this time, even as she sniffled. “No promises.”
***
Lando Norris: Okay, I’m in. Finally.
Max Fewtrell: Took you long enough. What’d you do, build a new rig?
Lando: Nah, I’m not Max Verstappen. I don’t have a personalised sim fortress with like… ambient lighting and a trophy shrine.
Max F: Bro, that room is insane. I saw a clip on TikTok, and I swear it looked like he was about to launch a space shuttle.
Lando : That’s because Isabelle did it.
Max F: …Isabelle who?
Lando: Isabelle Leclerc.
Max F (pauses): …As in… Charles Leclerc’s sister?
Lando: Mhm.
Chat:
LANDO WHAT
BACK UP
ISABELLE LECLERC DESIGNED MAX’S SIM ROOM???
Max F: Wait wait wait hold on. Max Verstappen’s sim room was designed by Isabelle Leclerc?
Lando: Yep.
Max F: Okay but like—can she do my room?
Lando: Have you got Max Verstappen money, mate?
Max F: …Right. So that’s a no.
Lando: That’s a hard no. She’s not out here doing LED lighting schemes for the boys on a Logitech G29.
Max F: Ouch. No, but seriously, that room looks like a race car museum had a baby with an interior design Pinterest board.
Lando: It’s ridiculous. He’s got like… hidden drawers, ambient color modes for quali, race, cooldown—mood lighting for his championship mood swings.
Max F: You’re telling me my man gets P1 and then sets the room to gold sparkle mode?
Lando: Wouldn’t even be surprised.
Max F: And Isabelle did all that?
Lando: Yeah. Interior architect. Like… architectural degree, portfolio, the works.
Max F: I’m gonna DM her my IKEA shopping list and see what happens.
Lando: All she’ll say is “please never contact me again.”
Max F: Worth it.
Chat:
“do you have max verstappen money” LMAO
lando fully spilling the tea again i love him
ISABELLE IS THE INTERIOR ARCHITECT???
makes so much sense now why it has taste
Max F: This stream just turned into an episode of MTV Cribs: F1 Edition and I’m emotionally unprepared.
Lando: You and me both, mate.
***
The rooftop club was loud—bass pulsing through glass walls, drinks flowing freely, and the scent of something expensive lingering in the air. Monaco glittered below, and the whole world above felt like it had hit pause: one final blowout before the second half, before the summer break.
Charles had been halfway through a conversation with Pierre when he heard it—faint, over the music, slipping in between thudding bass and the occasional shout of laughter.
French.
With a Monegasque accent.
He turned instinctively, blinking through the crowd.
Who the hell—
It was Max.
Max Verstappen.
Speaking fluent French.
Not just French—Monegasque-accented French. Clean. Polished. Lightly clipped consonants in the way Charles had grown up hearing around every market stall and café table. Max’s cadence had shifted too—not quite native, but not clumsy either.
Max was leaning slightly over the bar, talking to a bartender Charles recognized. His posture was relaxed, like it was normal. Like he’d done this a hundred times. His accent wasn’t perfect, but it was close—soft R’s, local cadence, the kind that didn’t come from a Duolingo app.
Charles couldn’t move. Couldn’t look away.
He didn’t even know Max spoke French.
Pierre elbowed him, confused. “What?”
Charles shook his head, blinking. “Is he speaking French?”
Pierre followed his gaze, did a double take, then frowned. “Oh. Huh.”
“Where the hell did he learn that?” Charles muttered.
“Don’t look at me,” Pierre said. “Last I checked he couldn’t even pronounce ‘quiche’ properly.”
Lando strolled up then, already laughing at something Oscar had said. “What’s going on?”
“Max is speaking French,” Charles said, still stunned.
Lando blinked. “Oh. Yeah, he does that now.”
“What do you mean now?”
Lando shrugged like it was obvious. “He’s been learning. Says it’s good for Monaco. And, you know with…” He trailed off.
Charles narrowed his eyes. “And?”
Lando opened his mouth to respond and then suddenly blanched. “Nothing! Just…I need another drink!” and off he went. Charles stared after him.
What was that about now?
Charles frowned deeper, watching Max accept his drink with a quiet merci, bonne soirée like it wasn’t the most confusing thing Charles had witnessed all summer.
It wasn’t just the French.
It was the accent. The ease.
Charles couldn’t figure out what bothered him more—that Max was speaking French… or that he was doing it like a local.
And somewhere in the back of his head, a quiet, suspicious thought began to form:
Why would Max Verstappen bother learning Monegasque-accented French?
✐ᝰ "You knew all too well i was right where you left me" | CL16 ࣪𓏲ּ ᥫ᭡ ₊
parings: retired!charles leclerc x writer!ex!reader
series summary: It’s the story of a woman frozen in the moment her world fell apart. A perfect dinner ended with, “I met someone else,” and while everyone moved on, she remained stuck in that instant, unable to let go of the past. A poignant tale of heartbreak, grief, and the weight of being trapped in a “forever” that never was.
🔎 chapter one: “love is short but forgetting is so long”
🔎 chapter two: “did the love affair mail you too?”
🔎 chapter three: “you kept me like a secret but I kept you like an oath”
chapter four: “help, I’m still at the restaurant” -> chapter five
‼️ best friends in this chapter: nikola (nik) , dorothy (dottie) and beatrice (betty). They all know each other from Oxford University where the four of them studied creative writing.
word count: +5,1k.
BLOG MASTERLIST - series masterlist
⋆˚࿔ 𝜗𝜚˚⋆
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agostinabff: hope you have a lovely week off mon amour!! You deserve it. We love you 💘
↳ yourusername: thank u for being the best part of my life 💌
y/nstan: omg GIRL we are the same person wtf 😭
user4: who is he and where can i find him to KILL HIM?????
nikolabff: is my air bnb recommendation good enough ????? (That looks disgusting, uber eats exists darling)
nikolabff: can't wait for tomorrow!! London should be scared of us 😈
nikolabff: did dorothy call you? She isn't answering my calls
↳ yourusername: babes!!!! Aaaaaa i'm so excited. I just ended call with dottie. She arrived safe and well, i missed you guys so much 😭 did betty text you?
↳ nikolabff: tbh she didn't but you know how she is. can't wait to see you all tomorrow!!
arthurleclerc: hey y/n i know this may be weird but just wanted to say, i read your book and it is amazing! my brother was an idiot you know? you are an amazimg person im sure you'll find someone who loves you deeply (if you didn't already. maybe you did) okay, i don't bother you any longer. hope we can meet again someday!
⋆˚࿔ 𝜗𝜚˚⋆
⋆˚࿔ a week ago 𝜗𝜚˚⋆
“There'll be happiness after you, but there was happiness because of you. Both of these things can be true. There is happiness, past the blood and bruise, past the curses and cries. Beyond the terror in the nightfall haunted by the look in my eyes that would've loved you for a lifetime and leave it all behind. Tell me, when did your winning smile begin to look like a smirk? When did all our lessons start to look like weapons pointed at my deepest hurt? I hope she'll be a beautiful fool who takes my spot next to you. No, I didn't mean that. Sorry, I can't see facts through all of my fury. You haven't met the new me yet” you read that piece out loud from your personal journal to your therapist. She stayed silent for a while. You looked over at her knowing you skipped some parts but what you read in the end sank in.
“I think there’s a lot to discuss from just that single piece you wrote. But I wanna ask you something before anything else: do you really believe there will be happiness after him?” your therapist made you a question that felt like daggers pinching you that resulted in leaving you breathless for a few seconds. you loved and hated therapy for this reason. There were things you couldn’t question by yourself because you never thought about it and things you didn’t know how to answer like this one.
“I wish I could say yes. But i don't think i’ve been happy since he left” saying that out loud hurt yourself even more. It was not something easy to admit and accept. But it was the truth. You have never felt really happy since then.
She nodded, writing down in her notebook “but do you believe you can be happy without him? Why is he still so important or has so much space in your life that you can't be happy if he isn’t there? Why were you happy when he was with you?” as always, too many questions with so few answers. You felt exhausted, frustrated by the fact you didn't know what to think about it all.
“I'm sure I want to be happy, I can't live like this anymore. I'm tired” you assured her and yourself. You took a few seconds to think and she respected that. “I guess if I want to then I can, right? I mean, I talk to my friends and all of them tell me time and time again ‘don't let what happened define you’ and I try but I don't know why it is really hard for me” you explained looking at the floor.
“And what’s that definition of yourself?”
“That i'm not worthy of love i guess. that there will always be someone better than me, more attractive, more lovable, more interesting. I can't be the one, for anyone” admitting it felt like an elephant stepped on you and you just died in the act. Your therapist, Maria, nodded looking at you.
“Well, but in what you wrote you tell this woman he left you for, that you hope she is a fool like you, right?” she intervened. You nodded. “What can you tell me about it?”
You looked at your hands a bit sweaty. “I really don’t know. I mean her existence made me compare myself to her. She is so different. It made me feel all of those things I said before. And maybe i blamed her existence because if she didn't existed then, charles would still be here”
“You think so?”
“I guess, yeah” you looked at her. She wrote down more stuff on that notebook you were so intrigued by.
“So, for you, there doesn't exist the possibility that maybe he just stopped loving you? Like even if she existed or not - could be any other woman or could be no one at all. Would it hurt more if he just stopped loving you?” you felt your brain make a 180 turn on itself.
“I don’t know. Maybe, yeah, I mean. I Think it’s easier to blame someone then not have an explanation for it” your therapist nodded.
“So, why would she occupy your same place then? If you are different from each other, why would she be just like you? As a replacement it seems and at the same time who’s at fault for all of this situation and insecurities. And before you answer, I think we can connect that to what happened between your dad and mom, right?” she saw your face so confused she knew this was gonna be the end of the session so you could think about it during the next two weeks. “You told me you discovered your dad cheated on your mom. So all you ever dreamed was to find someone who would be better than him, to prove yourself that that isn’t your destiny, just like your mom. And then Charles left you for this other girl. And everything you built up in your mind to try to believe in love and to escape from the reality you had to live through, then it crumbled down in that instant. Leaving you feeling like there was no way you could be worthy of love, because you tried but Charles did exactly what your dad did to your mother. And since then you couldn’t date anyone else. This is a theory, I'm not saying it is what it is of course. But it seems that if they didn't exist then you wouldn’t be this hurt and maybe forgive charles,as you said when you wrote ‘and leave it all behind’ just like your mom did with your dad”
Her words echoed in your head for a while. The knot in your throat intensified. “Charles was my everything just like my parents were. And after what happened, with Charles and my dad, I guess I let that define me. I wanted to show myself that the love i’ve seen in books and movies existed, not like in my house. I wanted to make things right. In a way, to mend what hurt me the most. The betrayal of my dad. So I put Charles under that pressure and maybe that made things the way they went down. I don’t know to be honest. I don’t know why I want alexandra to be like me. Maybe that’s another way of convincing myself I'm not the only fool in this mess.”
“I don’t think you are a fool. Relationships are complicated and the reason he decided to leave could be based on a million reasons, and even in that situation. Maybe any of them are because of you or who you are as a person. People are complex and most times messy. Feelings aren’t easy to control or understand” she explained to you. “So, coming back to this new encounter you had with him, how did you feel about it?”
“It felt weird, very uncomfortable to be around him. But at the same time a force drove me closer to him. I wanted to be closer. Ask him everything and at the same time punch him. He felt the same to be honest. Just like the previous day he left, when everything was alright.” you pulled a face you didn't know how to describe at that moment.
“And you felt the same?”
“No i think, i didn’t” she nodded and half smiled at my answer.
“Then, what’s the new you he didn’t meet?”
“Who i am now i guess”
“And who are you?” her question made you realize you didn’t know how to answer that question yet. You knew you were different, because you felt different although stuck dealing with the aftermath of that relationship. She noticed your silence (because she knew all too well you didn’t know how to answer it) and smiled gently.
“Alright, y/N. Let’s leave it here and continue next session, okay? See you in two weeks”
Who the fuck were you now?
⋆˚࿔ 𝜗𝜚˚⋆
Mornings at your balcony were your favorite moment during the day. Your coffee was warm and comforting on a grey and windy day. You were covered in clothes and blankets. You needed that moment anyway. You wouldn’t let the winter win. You watched your neighbor cleaning his living room. He had his window opened so you could see a bit of what he was doing. However, you didn't see him very well because you didn't have your glasses on so it’s a bit blurry. You thought there was someone else with him. Probably a girl.but you weren’t that interested.the only thing you hated about your balcony was the fact that the view was partially blocked by that damn house up the hill.
After a while, you took your stuff and went into your house again. You felt warmer instantly. You left the blankets on the coach and washed up what you used to have for breakfast a few minutes ago. You had to pack as soon as possible. On saturday, you travel to london to see your college friends and also because your friend franco, another formula one driver you met by chance at a college party, it was his birthday party. You wanted that week to be a good one. Be a week you genuinely enjoy and just be happy.
But after everything that happened the last month around Charles, it was really difficult. Your therapist was a really good help of course. But you hated not knowing how to handle all of these feelings you didn’t understand and that paralyze you.
You only had one phrase in your head: ‘no one teaches you what to do when a good man hurts you’.
You couldn’t think of Charles as a bad man, or person or anything. Yes, he was stupid. And he destroyed your self esteem. And your trust. And yes, you still were kind of stuck in that restaurant. But you also had some kind of responsibility. And that also troubled you a lot.
Your self esteem shouldn’t be defined by anyone else but you. What do you think about yourself? Who are you? That was your fault. You didn’t know how that would affect destiny for him to leave you but well, it is what it is yet. You kind of thought that maybe it’s the price you had to pay for putting him in a role he didn't want to be in. maybe you were too much. Too intense. Too dependent. He only wanted someone to talk and have fun with. But you wanted a good husband at 18, and a good father, and the one who would take away your pain and fix your traumas.
Maybe he wasn’t the only one who hurt someone, but you also hurt him in some way.
Ten years in, and you still couldn’t explain what happened. What did you do or not do for him to stop loving you? Or perhaps you can actually stop loving someone but you didn't experience it yet.
You sighed, reaching your travelling suitcase from on top of your closet. You almost fell so you had to grab a chair from your kitchen. You loved travelling but packing was a nightmare (also, because you couldn’t decide which outfits were good so you had to take two suitcases and pay extra everytime. Not that you didn't have the money and it was a problem. But you knew it was an unnecessary spend).
That’s when you remembered how it was like to travel with charles. And you hated yourself for remembering his stupid laugh so cute it made your heart melt every time. Would he still laugh like that? Maybe it was best not to know it.
If you were younger and he came back, you’d probably forgive him and leave it all behind just to be happy with him. But now, you wanted to leave everything behind: him, his family, the memories, the feelings, the hurt. And maybe that is what changed.
That was the new you.
⋆˚࿔ 𝜗𝜚˚⋆
Your laugh was so liberating. Your hair was free in the wind. He was driving through the Monaco coast. It was finally summer break and you decided to have a picnic at the beach. His hand on your tight. David Guetta on the radio. You were singing along without a care in the world.
Your fingers brushed his hand making him look at you through his sun glasses in a beautiful cute smile.
“You look gorgeous, cherie” you saw his lips pronounce those words in slow motion, feeling your every fiber get wild inside you. Your smile was so big and your cheeks pink. He could melt forever just to see you this happy. You wanted to freeze those moments with him and live in them forever.
“I love you, Charles,” you said so warmly and softly. It was your romance movie playing over and over again. That’s how you felt. But when he heard you say those words, his face turned serious. Almost pulled a face of disgust. For some reason you got so scared you wanted to jump out of the car to save your life.
You wanted to save your life.
He noticed you wanted to escape so he tightened his grip on you tightly, hurting you but he wasn’t letting you go away.
“Charles, let go of me” you said almost in a whisper. Your breath was fast. You needed to jump. You started fighting so he would let you go.
“Stop, cherie. We’re gonna have our happily ever after, isn’t that what you wanted?” he said, trying to drive and grab you at the same time. You started crying not knowing what to answer. The anxiety took over you.
“You said you loved me cherie, you can’t go now” he was crying and let go of the steering wheel. You got desperate seeing the car had no control and you were at the Monaco cliffs.
“Charles! CHARLES!” you screamed from the top of your lungs as you watched both of you exiting the driveway into nowhere. All the sea around you. Slow motion Charles looked at you with a huge smile.
“Happily ever after baby” he said and you looked horrorized. But when you were about to scream again as if that would change anything.
Everything went black.
You woke up drowning in cold sweat and tears. Your heart was beating too fast for your liking. The feeling you had in that moment of pure confusion was scared to death. For a moment you didn’t know if you were alive or dead. Your room was pitch black so it kinda felt like you died. But you were thinking and you thought there was no way you could think when dead, so you were alive.
After a few seconds of paralysis, you react and turn on your light from your bed table. You took a deep breath and scrubbed your face to wake yourself up. Your face was wet still from your tears. The moment you were conscious again you felt defeated. It was the third time in the night you were having this kind of nightmares, now three days in a row. You laid back again in bed for a moment.frustration was all over your face. You were so tired of living like this. Yet, you didn’t know how to stop. You grabbed your phone to see what time it was. It showed 5:46 am. You snarled, hating your brain more than anything in the world.
You got up from bed and went straight to the bathroom to wash your face. You knew all too well you couldn’t be able to fall asleep again nor you wanted to. It has been a terrible night already. So you let your brain win once again.
You went downstairs to your studio where it was warm. Sun isn't out yet, so here you’ll be warmer. If not, you probably would have chosen the balcony as always. Or the restaurant, although you haven't come back to it since the last encounter with charles. You just didn’t want to go back there ever again. Just like the time he left.
You sat on your chair at your desk. Eyes tired. You opened your journal. You didn’t remember writing so much like in the past week or so. But you had so many thoughts to write sometimes it got difficult for you to function properly. You just had to stay at home writing non-stop. Not only your upcoming book but your feelings. After the dream you had, a lot must be processed.
I know I'm probably better off on my own than loving a man who didn't know what he had. And I see the permanent damage he did to me.
Never again.
I just wish I could forget when it was magic.
But I also just wish you could’ve been a better man.
You sighed reading your words again on paper. You felt worried about yourself. Like, maybe you were broken and couldn’t ever be fixed. You were scared that you wouldn’t be able to fix yourself back up again. Or even thinking that maybe you were born broken so how could you fix yourself then? You were scared there was no way out of this pain, agony, self hatred, nightmare you have lived these past years… or your whole life. You dreamed about being in love again with someone so different from charles yet maybe who makes you feel the same high. Or maybe higher erasing every trace of him or memory of your dad. Now lines were blurry. You didn’t want to think about your dad, not only because he was gone and you couldn’t do anything about it, but because it felt weird linking him in some way to charles, but if your therapist said so, maybe you were more troubled than you thought.
Would there be a good guy? Do they even exist? You guessed you’ve never met one of them yet.
I hold onto this pride because, these days, it's all I have. And I gave you my best, and we both know you can't say the same.
Were you writing about him? Or about your dad?
You stared at the wall thinking about the answer that never came around.
Just like the both of them did when it came to you.
⋆˚࿔ 𝜗𝜚˚⋆
It was 10 am in the morning already. You didn’t sleep a bit. You’ve been in a zoom meeting since 8. Talks about the movie in the making were held. Casting started so they sent you a few ones they think are perfect for the roles so you have to watch them after the meeting. Also, they go through the aesthetic and changes they will make from the book, and that’s why this meeting has been so long. They needed to discuss everything with you to make sure you agreed. They wanted to be respectful with your work and you appreciate it very much. It made you feel important. In other news, they thought that taylor swift could make the soundtrack for the movie and you got very excited about it. You loved Taylor's songwriting and believed (and were almost sure) she would make the perfect song for the movie.
It was gonna be a long day ahead, full of work and watching hours of footage from castings. But it was for your dream. You still couldn’t believe you had your book be a movie in the making. It still feels surreal.
Then you remembered charles’ ex followed you and liked your posts. And you were mad at him again. You were sure (no doubts at all for real), she didn't know who you were. Because he kept you buried like you were sin.
A part of you wanted to believe he did it because he knew he fucked up and didn’t want people to judge him for his lack of sympathy towards his last lover. But at the same time you just found it cruel behavior with no reason at all to do that. You kinda felt dirty as if you were bad. Very bad. Banned from his life.
You shook your head, getting yourself back to the present time and starting working again. Your lack of rest doesn't help in getting distracted with thought every minute but you were doing the best you could. Plus, work helps you not to think about anything else. And that’s good.
You really needed a break from thinking.
⋆˚࿔ finally the london trip arrived 𝜗𝜚˚⋆
yourusername made a post
liked by nikolabff, beatricebff, francolapinto, landonorris and 678,435 others
yourusername: first few days back in london = first few days of happiness ❤️🩹
tagged: @nikolabff , @beatricebff , @dorothybff and @francolapinto
view more comments
user345: girl is happy we are happy
user3: omg such QUEENS
↳ francolapinto: i guess ur not talking about me
↳ user3: oh im so talking about you too
↳ francolapinto: 🤨
nikolebff: the girls girled
dorothybff: happy looks very hot on you darling 🫦
beatricebff: can you kiss already??????
↳ yourusername: no ❤️
nikolabff: gossip so good bro was giggling and kicking his feet
↳ francolapinto: it was indeed
↳ alexalbon: better bring that gossip to the paddok asap
↳ yourusername: it's CONFIDENTIAL
↳ alexalbon: booooooo ur so boring
↳ oscarpiastri: i wanna be part of this group please
↳ nikolabff: yes you can sir
↳ francolapinto: i thought no one else was allowed
↳ nikolabff: stfu 🩷
User231: i love this crossover of y/n and formula 1 drivers. I would've never expected it tbh
↳ franstan: same!!! I love it!! Didn't know she was friends with franco
↳ user354: i think they met a few years ago, y/n was asked about it on insta questions and she said they met randomly at a college party
↳ franstan: interesting
User1: girl!!! You look so good omg
francolapinto: te amo amiga so happy to see you happy ❤️🩹
↳ yourusername: te amo tambien ❤️🩹
↳ user778: EXCUSE YOU ???????
↳ franstan7: OMG OMG OMG
user4: WHAT IS HAPPENING ?
user324: so no one is gonna talk about lando world champion fucking norris being on the likes ????? 🤨🤨🤨🤨
↳ landostan: that was what i was thinking
⋆˚࿔ 𝜗𝜚˚⋆
⋆˚࿔ finally the london trip arrived 𝜗𝜚˚⋆
Laughter was all over the place as well as a lot of bottles of alcohol with names you haven’t seen in your life. It was finally Saturday night, which meant it was Franco's birthday celebration. And because it was his birthday of course all the decorations were argentina flags everywhere and boca junior club t-shirts for everyone, including you. As you got to his house you were given one at the door to wear it. Fortunately, for you it didn’t ruin your outfit and I could say it looked great on you. Or well, that’s what franco said to you while preparing you a drink you haven’t ever tried before. He said it was called fernet with coke. You were already a bit drunk because you were drinking vodka with the girls while getting ready. You didn’t like vodka that much but after everything that happened in your life, you kinda felt the urge to drown in vodka or tequila. Mi gente latino music was playing non-stop. You knew Franco loved duki and bizarrap, and they were actually at the party. You couldn’t talk to them yet. So everything was a bit crazy even if you weren’t that many people. He was just a close friend to franco. So i guess it was like 60 people. Way too many people to be honest but for a famous 2 times world champion it was really a small amount of people so it was super intimate.
“There you go, hermosa” he said, handing you the glass full of black liquid. You looked at it a bit worried in a funny way and grabbed it. He let out a cute laugh. “Try it, you’re gonna like it, i promise” he encouraged you. He couldn’t resist the view of you with that boca juniors on. Probably, the combination of you and that was his heaven made on earth. He was really down for you, since it felt like forever. Probably since that night at that party back 6 years ago or so. You always have a different light that anyone can match. and that’s what he liked most about you along with your authenticity. You were so unique to him. He looked at you biting his lip a little trying not to be so obvious.
You tried the drink looking into his eyes. You were really close but you felt really comfortable. Your friends have left you alone with him the minute he came forward to you, of course. They really believed you could work out with him. And after vodka and long talks about it with them, maybe you would give it a try. But it scared you, you didn’t want to use him as a friend. So it was a risky situation in your opinion. Although, you could see he liked you for a long time now. And you found him funny and really attractive in your opinion. You give it a few more sips to taste it fully. “Oh I think I like it,” you said, giving him a funny smile.
“I told you. I’m the best fernet preparer in this whole country… and also, I did it with love just for you” he said, making you laugh and blush after the last sentence he said.
“I’m sure it’s the love you put in it” you gave it another sip looking at him. His face turned red and let out such a cute giggle. Alcohol was making you melt for your best friend? We guess so.
He got closer grabbing your waist and planted a sweet kiss on your cheek making you nervous as you never felt for a long time. However, it felt weird. Maybe as if this shouldn’t be happening.
⋆˚࿔ 𝜗𝜚˚⋆
Franco’s house was enormous. The party was being held at the gallery near his garden. It was cold but the lights and the people stuck to each other made it warmer. You were with your girls again dancing to bad bunny and los del espacio songs. You didn’t understand a word because Spanish was definitely not your talent. You tried to learn because of Franco, and he tried to teach you, but failed every time. You did learn a few words anyway but speaking fluidly was something you won’t ever do. Or that’s what you thought about it. It was your third fernet. You didn’t know it was so good. Also it could make you so drunk. And you were way too drunk by now but you never felt so happy. You were laughing about anything and everything. Dancing without a care in the world. Enjoying being surrounded by your friends. Charles wasn’t on your mind nor any trace of him or his family or the history behind you two. Memories have faded away, washed by the alcohol in your veins. You didn’t remember having so much fun since forever. Your girls were right. Life was so much more than Charles, you were so much more than what you were with him. And all of this you have it because of you and you alone. In that moment you felt liberated. Free from the curse it was put on you. Free of judgment. Free of insecurities. Until you saw that damn mullet and when it turned around you felt kind of speechless. Your eyes locked in that man you didn’t know but he was so hypnotic. You couldn’t stop looking at him.
“Girl! Close your mouth, you're drooling! Is it for franco, huh?” Nikola joked when she saw you like that, making you laugh while shaking your head.
“No it isn’t girls, is that guy over there i don’t know who he is but he is so beautiful” you said pointing your finger in his direction unconsciously. Because when you looked at him again he was looking at you straight in the eyes. You almost freaked out and ran away from there. His fucking smile. What the hell is happening to you? Your friends looked over at him as well with no simulation at all. The four of you were pretty obvious. And that’s when another guy turned around to see where his mate was looking over with that face. Nikola almost fell to the floor.
She turned around freaked out, making all of you stop looking at them so weird. Alcohol makes you behave so embarrassing for your liking.
“Holy shit girls, it’s oscar fucking piastri and lando norris” her eyes were leaving her face for a bit. You grabbed her arms still confused. You didn’t know them but you heard nik talking about that oscar a few times. Betty and Dottie looked over at them again but they were gone.
“Okay they are gone nik” dottie said. Betty took a sip from her drink. You wanted to say something but you felt someone grab your waist from behind and kiss your head.
“Hello ladies” of course it had to be franco. You smiled nervously looking at your friends. One of your hands placed over Franco's arms not wanting him to let go. You liked it. Or that’s what you drowned in alcohol though about it.
“Hello mister, i guess we will grab more drinks at the bar, goodbye bye byeee” Betty said, taking her two girls with her leaving you alone with franco. You laughed and resigned. Nik gave franco a warning sign ‘im watching you’ making franco laugh too. And they disappeared through the people dancing and talking.
He kissed your cheek letting you go a bit so you could turn around to face him. “Hey handsome, where have you been? Are you having fun?” you said surrounding his neck with your arms and he did the same around your waist. He nodded in a smile.
“Now that I'm back with you, I'm really having fun,” he said cheeky.
“Oh shut up” you said rolling your eyes funny because of his flirty side.
“Hey, I'm telling the truth. I was with my school friends though ,they came from home” he told you and made you smile while stroking the curls on his head gently. Your fingers in his hair sent shivers down his spine. He couldn’t stop looking at your lips and you noticed. But you liked it so you let him.
“I’m happy you’re enjoying your night fran. You deserve all of this love, world champion” you said sweetly looking at his eyes so shiny and deep green right now. Your words made him melt.
And there were you, the girl who can win over the man known for being the most professional at flirting. You always win with him. He is so down bad for you he felt stupid. You were so beautiful in his eyes. So amazing. He hated Charles so much. He even celebrated when he retired. They couldn't even pretend to like each other and actually it was one of the most famous feuds between drivers in the history of the sport. Franco just couldn’t comment anything positive about charles. Even if he tried he just couldn’t. The most infamous moment was when Charles won his first championship and he was asked about it. He said he didn’t want to comment about it because he had nothing to comment about. So franco started to be known as the guy who was nice to everyone except for charles leclerc. And it was hilarious to see because no one knew why. And the why was always you.
Franco wanted to have you and couldn’t. Charles had left you alone and destroyed another woman. How could he? Franco took that as an insult. You were an amazing woman. The most amazing woman he has ever met and that asshole did that to you. He just couldn’t stand him. Breathing the same air as Charles was unbearable for him.
All of these thoughts rambling around and neither of you didn’t realize you were kissing already. Your lips melting into each other in the sweetest and softest kiss you have ever had. Even better than any kiss Charles could have given you before. You hated yourself for comparing every guy in your life with Charles, but you couldn’t help it. But this felt different. It was sweet but at the same time it felt so wrong.
But you couldn’t stop.
And you didn’t want to.
⋆˚࿔ TO BE CONTINUED 𝜗𝜚˚⋆
chapter fiver: coming soon.
author's note: things are getting complicated around here!!!
what could happen next? who knows
tag list: : @a-beaverhausen , @priniya , @annaluna12 , @thehoplessromanticclub , @emryb , @hadids-world , @kaztheemyth , @freyathehuntress , @diorbrxtz , @theseerbetweenus , @sie17136 , @leila-030304 , @charlesgirl16 , @ricciardosheart , @weekendlusting
Past the Finish Line: Into the Chicane [MV1]
Amidst the glitz and chaos of the F1 world and a very tense 2024 season, Max Verstappen and (Y/N) Sainz relationship faces a pivotal challenge. As racing pressures mount and emotions run wild, a moment of heartbreak leaves them questioning if love and ambition can coexist.
Pairings: Max Verstappen x Sainz! Female Reader
Warnings: Angst, So much Angst. Commitment Issues. Allusions to sex but nothing explicit. No happy ending.
A/N: Hi, Xim here. This is my first published fic and I hope you enjoy it. English is not my first language so apologies in advance for any mistake. This is pt. 1 of a three part mini series but can be read as a standalone.
Part 2. | Part 3.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
How did we end up here?
It was a question without an answer, one that lingered in the silence between them, thick and suffocating like the humid Budapest air pressing against the hotel windows. The suite was bathed in golden light from the city outside, reflecting the neon glow of the Hungarian Grand Prix weekend, but inside, the atmosphere was anything but warm.
Max stood with his hands on his hips, his jaw clenched so tightly that the veins in his neck were visible. (Y/N), across from him, arms crossed over her chest, blinking back the sting of tears that she refused to let fall.
Love was supposed to be a partnership.
It was supposed to be about growing together, supporting each other, facing life’s uncertainties as a unit. But sometimes, love wasn’t enough. Sometimes, no matter how much history two people shared, no matter how deeply they had intertwined their lives, love alone couldn’t bridge the gaps that formed between them.
It had started with something small. It always did.
A simple question, an offhand comment.
She had been scrolling through her phone at the hotel, the post-race adrenaline still pulsing through her veins. The results had been disappointing, and she knew Max was frustrated—knew the weight of the season was pressing down on him more than ever.
But then she saw the article.
Verstappen Focused on Career, No Interest in Settling Down Yet.
She laughed. Not because it was funny, but because of how absurd it was. The media speculated all the time, twisting words, exaggerating things—but this? This wasn’t an exaggeration. This was him, in his own words, saying everything she had feared.
“You could’ve at least warned me before telling the world you have ‘no interest’ in a future with me,” she had said, tossing her phone onto the coffee table.
Max had barely looked up from where he was unlacing his shoes. “What are you talking about?”
She grabbed her phone again, shoving it toward him. “This.”
He skimmed the article, expression unreadable. “It’s just media nonsense.”
“Max.” She crossed her arms, pressing her lips together. “It’s your quote.”
He exhaled sharply, tossing his shoes aside before leaning back against the couch. “I told them what I’ve been saying for years. My focus is on racing. Everything else can wait.”
Her stomach twisted. “Everything else?”
He looked at her then, brows furrowed. “You know what I mean.”
Did she?
Because standing here, listening to him say it like that—like their future was something to be indefinitely postponed, something unimportant—it didn’t feel like she knew anything at all.
“Do I?” she asked, voice sharp. “Because from where I’m standing, it sounds like I’m just supposed to keep waiting while you decide if I fit into your perfect little plan.”
Max ran a hand down his face, already exasperated. “Why are you making this a big deal? You know how important this season is.”
Her hands curled into fists at her sides. “I know how important racing is to you, Max. I’ve always known.”
It was the unspoken part that stung.
But do you know how important I am?
His silence answered that question for her.
φ
AUSTRALIA, 2015
The first time she met Max, he was just a boy with sharp blue eyes and a cocky grin, standing next to her older brother in the paddock. She had been fifteen, barely old enough to understand the world she had grown up in, but something about him had intrigued her.
Carlos had been the one to introduce them, laughing when Max—seventeen and already making a name for himself—had barely glanced at her before shaking her hand with a distracted nod.
She had rolled her eyes, unimpressed, and muttered something in Spanish under her breath. Whatever it was, it had caught Max’s attention, and for the first time, he had really looked at her.
“You speak Spanish?” he had asked.
“She’s my sister,” Carlos deadpanned. “Of course she does.”
Max now had a flirty smirk. Carlos had groaned, but (Y/N) just laughed, not knowing then that this arrogant Dutch boy would become the love of her life.
φ
They had fought before. God, they had fought. Stubbornness was ingrained in both of them, but this wasn’t like before. This wasn’t an argument that would end in tangled limbs and whispered apologies in the dark. This was something breaking—cracking apart at the seams, and no matter how hard she tried, she couldn’t hold it together.
“Do you even hear yourself?” Max’s voice was sharp, edged with frustration, exhaustion, and something deeper—something that made her stomach twist painfully. “You think now is the time for this? Right now, when everything is going to shit?”
(Y/N) inhaled sharply, nails digging into her palms. “I think now is the time because I can’t keep waiting for a ‘right’ moment that never comes.”
Max scoffed, running a hand through his disheveled hair, already damp from the heat. “So what? You want me to deflect from the championship with this? With fucking marriage and kids?”
The words were a slap.
She staggered under the weight of them, blinking as if that would somehow make them disappear. He didn’t mean it, she told herself. He was angry. Stressed. But the way he was looking at her—like she was asking for something outrageous, something unreasonable—made her chest ache in a way she hadn’t felt before.
“I’ve been with you for eight years,” she whispered, voice shaking despite herself. “Through everything. I have given you everything, Max. And you act like I’m some… inconvenience?”
His lips parted slightly, but no words came out. He just stared at her, expression unreadable, and suddenly she was drowning in memories.
φ
The energy at Silverstone was electric, the summer air thick with heat and anticipation. The race had been brutal—wheel-to-wheel battles, aggressive overtakes, and tensions running high.
(Y/N) had been in the paddock, watching the post-race interviews, still grinning from the chaos on track. Max had fought like hell against Charles, the two nearly colliding more times than she could count.
Carlos, standing beside her, let out a low whistle. “That was some proper racing.”
“Some proper reckless racing,” Lando chimed in, shaking his head with a smirk. “I swear, those two act like they have a personal vendetta.”
(Y/N) laughed, arms crossed as she watched Max approach from the media pen, Charles a few steps behind him. The Monegasque caught her eye first, giving her a knowing look. “You should keep your boyfriend in check. He drives like a lunatic.”
Max, overhearing, scoffed. “And you don’t?”
She stepped between them, rolling her eyes. “Are you two seriously arguing again? You just got out of the car.”
Charles smirked. “It’s called passion, Dolcezza.”
She shook her head but smiled, glancing at Lando, who was already pulling out his phone to film whatever chaos was about to unfold.
Then she felt Max’s arm loop around her waist, pulling her into his side. It was natural, instinctive—like muscle memory.
She looked up at him, arching a brow. “What are you doing?”
“Reminding Charles that you’re mine,” he said, smirking.
She rolled her eyes, but her heart fluttered anyway.
Lando, never missing an opportunity, pointed his phone at them. “Aww, look at you two. So cute.”
Carlos clapped Max on the back. “Alright, lover boy. Let’s go debrief before you and Charles start throwing punches.”
As the group walked off, she stayed behind for a second, looking back at the track. The adrenaline, the heat, the pure joy of racing—it was everything Max loved.
And she loved him.
Back then, she had believed that was enough.
φ
“Do you remember Silverstone?” she asked suddenly, voice thick with emotion breaking the silence.
Max blinked, caught off guard. “What?”
“2019. After the race.”
His brows furrowed. “Yeah, of course. Why?”
She let out a shaky breath. “Because back then, you wanted me by your side. You wanted a future with me. And now…” She gestured helplessly between them. “Now I don’t even know if I fit into your life anymore.”
Max stepped forward, frustration flashing in his eyes. “That’s not fair, Schatje. You know I want you with me.”
She let out a bitter laugh. “Do I? Because from where I’m standing, all I see is a man who only prioritizes me when it’s convenient.”
His jaw clenched. “That’s not true.”
“Isn’t it?” Her voice cracked. “You’ve built your entire life around racing, Max. And I’ve let you. I’ve supported you through everything, sacrificed parts of myself just to be what you needed. But when do I get to be a priority? Do you even think about a future with me anymore?”
The silence stretched between them, heavy and suffocating.
Finally, Max exhaled, shaking his head. “I can’t do this right now.”
She flinched.
Not I don’t want to lose you.
Not We can figure this out.
Just I can’t do this right now.
And that was all she needed to hear.
She looked out the window as the sun set, trying to hold on to the remaining pieces of their relationship.
φ
It happened in Barcelona, after the race. It wasn’t anything grand or cinematic. No fireworks, no dramatic declarations of love—just two teenagers who had spent months circling each other, neither willing to admit what had been obvious to everyone around them.
They had been walking through the Red Bull hospitality area late at night, the paddock nearly empty. (Y/N) had teased him about his race start, and he had nudged her shoulder in response, grumbling about how she and Carlos always ganged up on him.
Then, suddenly, the air shifted.
She had looked up at him, at those sharp blue eyes, and for the first time, there had been no hesitation. No fear.
He had kissed her like he had been waiting to do it forever.
And maybe he had.
φ
Max exhaled harshly, shaking his head as if trying to take back his last words.
She let out a bitter laugh, stepping away from him, away from the suffocating weight of this argument. Her hands trembled as she wiped at her face, furious with herself for letting the tears slip free.
“I was there when you won your first race,” she said, voice quiet now, laced with pain. “I was there for your first pole, your first championship. I put my career—my life—on hold for you because I believed in us. I believed in you.”
Max flinched, just barely, but it was enough. Enough for her to see that he knew—deep down—she was right.
And yet, when he spoke again, his voice was cold. “I can’t afford distractions right now. Not with the way this season is going.”
φ
She had been in the garage, hands clasped together so tightly that her knuckles had turned white. The final lap. The final chance.
And then—Max had done it. He was an F1 World Champion.
She had barely had time to react before he was running toward her, before she was in his arms, laughter and tears mixing as he spun her around.
“You did it,” she whispered against his shoulder.
He had pulled back just enough to press his forehead against hers, grinning like a madman. “We did it Schatje.”
At that moment (Y/N) felt as if they were in heaven, as if with Max everything was possible. Nothing indicated otherwise, she was in heaven and nothing could have prepared her for the fall.
φ
Now she felt like a fool.
His words echoed in his head like torment.
Distraction.
That was all she was to him.
She had loved Max since she was sixteen. Supported him through every win, every loss, every moment of doubt. And now, when she was finally asking for something in return, he was acting like she was asking for the impossible.
“I’m not saying we have to get married and start having kids tomorrow,” she said, voice tight. “I’m saying that after eight years, I need to know if there’s a future here. If I even matter to you beyond being someone who follows you around from race to race.”
Max exhaled harshly, shaking his head. “You know you matter to me.”
“Do I?” she challenged. “Because it doesn’t feel like it, Max. It feels like I’m just another part of your career, like I exist to be there for you but never the other way around.”
His jaw tightened. “That’s not fair.”
“Isn’t it?”
(Y/N) stared at him, her chest rising and falling with uneven breaths, and suddenly it was so clear. There was no answer to the question that had haunted her since the fight started.
How did we end up here?
She took a step back, then another, and Max didn’t move. Didn’t reach for her.
And that was it. That was all she needed to know.
“I hope you win,” she said, her voice hollow. “I really do. Because if you don’t, then you’ve lost everything for nothing.”
Then she turned and walked away, leaving behind the man she had loved for eight years and the life she had built around him.
As the door clicked shut behind her, leaving nothing but the ghost of her presence and the sharp scent of her perfume in its wake, Max remained motionless. The silence in the hotel room felt suffocating now, pressing against his ribs with the weight of unsaid things. I hope you win. The words rang in his ears, curling around his thoughts like a vice, and for the first time in his life, victory felt like a consolation prize rather than a triumph.
He exhaled, slow and measured, running a hand through his hair as if to steady himself, but the ache in his chest remained—something raw, something unresolved. He should have stopped her. He should have said something. But all that remained was the quiet hum of the city outside and the space where she had stood, her absence louder than any of the words they had spoken. What had he just done?
φ
MONACO, 2024 – ONE WEEK LATER.
(Y/N) moved through their apartment with practiced efficiency, collecting the last of her things. The space was eerily silent without Max’s presence—no sound of him pacing while on the phone with his agent, no distant hum of the simulator running late into the night.
She had always loved this apartment. It had been their home together, the place where they had grown from teenagers in love to adults navigating life side by side. Every corner held a memory—a lazy morning spent tangled in bed, a quiet evening watching the sunset from their balcony, a passionate night lost in each other's bodies, the scent of Max’s cologne lingering in the hallway.
But now, all those memories felt like ghosts.
She moved to the dresser, opening the top drawer. His shirts were still there, neatly folded. She hesitated before picking one up, pressing the fabric between her fingers.
It smelled like him. Like home.
Her breath hitched.
She had fought for them. She had given everything.
And Max… he had let her.
She placed the shirt back, smoothing it down with trembling fingers before shutting the drawer.
There was nothing left for her here.
Her clothes were gone from the closet. The photos of them that had once decorated the walls had been packed away. It was as if she had never been there.
And maybe that was fitting.
Maybe, in the end, she had always been a ghost in his life—something present but never permanent.
She exhaled shakily, picking up her bags. The apartment door loomed before her, the final threshold between the life she had built and the unknown future waiting beyond it.
As (Y/N) stood in the doorway one last time, she hesitated—just for a second.
φ
MONACO, 2020
The apartment smelled of fresh paint and new beginnings. The floor-to-ceiling windows bathed the living room in golden afternoon light, the Mediterranean stretching endlessly beyond the balcony. (Y/N) stood in the middle of the half-unpacked chaos, a cardboard box in her hands, watching as Max struggled with assembling a bookshelf. His brows were furrowed in frustration, lips pressed into a thin line as he fumbled with the instructions.
"You know, for someone who drives at 300 kilometers per hour, you’re really bad at putting things together," she teased, biting back a laugh.
Max shot her a glare before tossing the manual aside. "I don’t need instructions," he huffed.
(Y/N) arched her brow. "That’s exactly what someone who definitely needs instructions would say."
With a sigh, Max slumped onto the floor, running a hand through his hair. "I hate this already."
She set the box down and moved to sit beside him, nudging his shoulder with hers. "Maybe if you let me help—"
He turned his head slightly, eyes softening as he looked at her. "You’re really here," he murmured, as if the reality of it was only just sinking in.
She tilted her head, amusement fading into something more tender. "Of course, I’m here. I wouldn’t be anywhere else."
The pandemic had changed everything. Racing was postponed, the world had slowed down, and in the stillness of it all, they had found themselves craving something more permanent. She had just finished her literature degree, unsure of what came next, but when Max asked her to move in, the answer had been easy.
"Are you sure about this?" he had asked her a week before, voice hesitant over the phone.
She had smiled, even though he couldn’t see it. "Max, I’ve basically lived in airports and hotel rooms with you for years. At least this way, I finally get a closet of my own. Besides, I can't spend another minute with my brother and Dad while on lockdown." She said with a laugh, Carlos protests could be heard in the Background.
Now, sitting in their new apartment, surrounded by boxes of their intertwined lives, she reached for his hand. "I think we’re going to be really happy here," she said, squeezing his fingers.
Max exhaled, leaning his forehead against hers. "Yeah," he murmured. "Me too Shatje. Me too."
And for a long time, they were.
φ
How did we end up here?
The truth was simple. She already knew.
She had loved him more than she had loved herself.
Love wasn’t always enough.
People grew, evolved, sometimes in different directions. Some fights were worth having, but others—others only proved how much two people had already lost.
Love wasn’t enough for them. No matter how much they had tried, no matter how much she had wanted to fight for them, it wasn’t enough.
And with that final thought and one last breath, she stepped forward, closing the door behind her, and walked away.
Max Verstappen x Reader
Summary: in which it starts with Max insisting that you borrow one of his many cars while yours is in the shop and somehow turns into you being dragged away in handcuffs because (according to your jealous housemates) the only way you could ever afford a car like that is by having stolen it … suffice to say, your protective boyfriend is less than amused
Warnings: law enforcement abuse of power
The thing is, you know it’s a gamble the moment you put the key in the ignition. Your little car, a 2004 Fiat Panda with a chipped paint job and a suspiciously rattling exhaust, has been teetering on the edge for months. But it’s all you have, and it’s gotten you this far.
Except now, as you sit in Max’s driveway, the dashboard flickers ominously, a banner of orange warning lights. You groan, lean your head against the steering wheel, and curse under your breath. Maybe it’s the alternator. Or the battery. Or the car’s just finally decided it’s had enough.
Max is at his kitchen window, a mug of coffee in hand, his eyes narrowing as he watches you. He steps out, still in his Red Bull Racing hoodie, hair a mess, and jogs over. You don’t even get the chance to open your mouth before he’s leaning down, peering through your open window.
“Car trouble?” He asks, but it’s more of a statement than a question.
“Take a wild guess,” you mutter, throwing your hands up.
He chuckles, low and warm. “Let me have a look.”
He gestures for you to pop the hood, and you do, reluctantly. Max circles around, lifting it with a practiced ease, his brow furrowing as he inspects the engine. You know he’s not a mechanic, but he knows enough to recognize that it’s bad news.
“I think it’s, um, all of it,” he says, voice laced with amusement. He looks up at you. “You really drove all the way here like this?”
“I didn’t have a choice,” you say defensively. “It was fine when I left. Mostly.”
Max gives you a pointed look but lets it slide. He straightens up, wiping his hands on his jeans, and nods toward the house. “Come on. I’ll call someone to get it towed.”
You hesitate. “Max, I can-”
“I know you can,” he interrupts gently, eyes locking with yours. “But why should you?”
He has this way of cutting through your defenses with a single look, and it’s infuriating. You sigh, climbing out of the car and slamming the door shut. Max winces, raising an eyebrow.
“Easy. I think she’s suffered enough,” he teases.
You glare at him, but he’s already dialing a number, one hand braced on his hip, the other holding the phone to his ear. He’s so calm, so unbothered, like this is just another Friday, and your car isn’t smoking in his driveway. It makes you feel small, somehow, and a little embarrassed.
“Hey, mate. Got a Fiat here that needs towing. Yeah, looks pretty bad. Can you get someone here today?” Max pauses, glancing at you, then back to the ground. “Nah, it’s not mine. It’s my girlfriend’s.”
The word hangs in the air, filling the space between you. It’s not the first time he’s called you that, but every time he does, it sends a little thrill through you. You shove your hands into your pockets, kicking at the gravel with the toe of your shoe as he finishes up the call.
“Right,” he says, slipping the phone back into his pocket. “They’ll be here in an hour or so. Want to come inside?”
You nod, following him up the steps and into the house. It’s quiet, save for the faint hum of the fridge and the creak of the floorboards beneath your feet. Max leads you to the kitchen, where the smell of freshly brewed coffee lingers in the air. He pours you a cup without asking, handing it to you as you sink into a chair.
“So,” he begins, leaning against the counter, arms crossed over his chest. “What’s your plan?”
You shrug. “Get it fixed, I guess. If it’s even worth fixing.”
“It’s not,” he says bluntly. “That thing’s a death trap.”
You know he’s right, but hearing it out loud stings. “I can’t just buy a new car, Max.”
“I’m not saying you should,” he replies, voice softening. “But you can’t keep driving that. It’s not safe.”
There’s a beat of silence, the kind that makes you feel like you should say something, but you don’t know what. Max watches you carefully, like he’s trying to figure out what’s going on in your head. He always does that — wants to fix everything, make it all better. And it’s sweet, but sometimes, it’s exhausting.
“Look, I have an idea,” he says finally, pushing off the counter and walking over to you. “You can use one of my cars until yours is sorted.”
You blink up at him. “Max, I can’t-”
“You can,” he insists, a determined edge to his voice. “And you will. You need a car, and I have plenty. It makes sense.”
“It’s too much,” you protest, shaking your head. “I can’t just borrow one of your cars like it’s no big deal.”
“It is no big deal,” he counters, his gaze steady and unwavering. “It’s a car. I have, like, a dozen of them. And I want you to be safe.”
The logic is sound, but it still feels wrong. You open your mouth to argue, but Max holds up a hand.
“Let me finish,” he says, his tone gentle but firm. “You’re here for the weekend, right? We’ll get your car towed to a shop, see what they say. In the meantime, you use one of mine. If they can’t fix it, we’ll figure something else out.”
“Max-”
“No arguments,” he interrupts again, smiling faintly. “Please. For me.”
You huff, staring down at your coffee like it might provide some kind of answer. When you look up, Max is still watching you, his expression soft and earnest. He’s not going to let this go, you realize. And maybe, just maybe, he’s right.
“Which one?” You ask, finally relenting.
A slow grin spreads across his face. “The DBS.”
Your eyes widen. “The Aston Martin?”
He nods, looking entirely too pleased with himself. “Yep.”
“You’re insane,” you say flatly. “I can’t drive that.”
“Sure, you can. I’ll teach you.”
“That’s not the point.”
“What is the point, then?” He steps closer, dropping to a crouch in front of you so you’re eye to eye. “That you don’t want to accept help from your boyfriend? Because, if that’s it, we’re going to have a problem.”
His words catch you off guard, and you can’t help the small smile that tugs at your lips. “You’re really not going to let this go, are you?”
“Not a chance,” he murmurs, reaching out to tuck a strand of hair behind your ear. “I want you to have it. Just until you’re sorted.”
You let out a long breath, your shoulders sagging as the fight leaves you. “Fine. But I’m not keeping it.”
“Deal,” he says instantly, a triumphant gleam in his eyes.
There’s a beat of quiet as he stands, pulling out his phone again. He’s about to dial when you speak up.
“Wait.”
He pauses, glancing at you. “Yeah?”
You chew on your bottom lip, considering your next words carefully. “Are you sure? I don’t want to scratch it or-”
“Hey,” he cuts you off, voice gentle. “It’s a car not a piece of priceless china. It’ll be fine.”
His nonchalance is almost infuriating, but you can’t help the way your heart swells at his unwavering confidence in you. He believes in you, even when you don’t.
“Okay,” you whisper, and it’s like something shifts in the air between you. Max’s gaze softens, and he reaches out, squeezing your hand.
“Good. Now, let’s go get the keys.”
***
It’s raining, and the house smells like damp clothes and stale toast. Chloe stands by the living room window, holding her cup of tea, her gaze idly drifting over the dreary street. The drizzling rain matches her mood, which is sour on a good day and worse now that she’s been stuck inside with a mountain of uni work she has no interest in.
A sigh escapes her lips, louder than she means it to, but no one’s around to hear. Her housemates — well, most of them — are scattered across campus, probably doing something useful with their lives. And then there’s you. Always flitting in and out with your head held high, like you’re too good for this dump of a house.
Chloe rolls her eyes at the thought of you. She’s been harboring this quiet disdain ever since you moved in. It’s irrational, she knows that. You haven’t done anything to her, not really. But there’s something about the way you carry yourself, always so composed, so put together, that grates on her nerves. And lately, you’ve been acting … different. Happier, even. Chloe’s seen you, the way you disappear for the weekends, only to return with that smug smile. It’s not hard to guess why.
Chloe knows you have a boyfriend, though you’ve been annoyingly tight-lipped about it. She’s overheard snippets of conversation, seen the texts you try to hide when someone else walks into the room. But still, she can’t figure out why you’re with someone who clearly has money. A lot of money. The kind of money girls like you — girls like them — don’t get near unless there’s some major luck involved.
As she stares out the window, she suddenly sees something that makes her pause. Her tea sloshes dangerously close to the rim of the mug as her hand freezes. There, pulling into the lot, is an Aston Martin. Glossy, sleek, and roaring like a mechanical beast as it glides through the rain. The headlights cut through the fog, and the car comes to a slow, calculated stop directly in front of their house.
Chloe’s brow furrows, her pulse quickening. What in the world …
She watches, transfixed, as the driver’s door opens, and you step out, closing the door behind you like it’s no big deal. You glance around the street, pulling the collar of your jacket higher against the rain, completely oblivious to the fact that Chloe is practically burning a hole through the window with her gaze.
“What the hell?” Chloe breathes, her voice sharp in the stillness of the room.
Her eyes narrow as you cross the street, keys jingling in your hand, moving with an air of confidence that has no right to belong to someone pulling up in a car like that. Chloe watches every step, every casual flick of your wrist as you lock the car and walk toward the front door.
She should turn away, pretend she didn’t see anything, but her brain is spinning, trying to process the absurdity of the situation. That’s a three-hundred-thousand-pound car. You can barely afford rent, let alone something like that. Her mind races with the only plausible explanation — there’s no way in hell that car belongs to you.
Chloe slams her cup down on the coffee table, not caring that it splashes tea everywhere, and darts toward the stairs. She takes them two at a time, bursting into her flatmate Amelia’s room without knocking.
“Amelia! You won’t believe this.”
Amelia looks up from her laptop, startled. “Chloe, what the-”
“Come here. Now.”
She doesn’t wait for a response, spinning on her heel and rushing back down the stairs, Amelia reluctantly trailing after her. Chloe pulls her toward the window, jabbing a finger in the direction of the car still parked outside.
“Look,” she says breathlessly, her words tumbling out too fast. “Look at that.”
Amelia leans closer to the window, blinking at the car through the rain-streaked glass. “Is that an Aston Martin?”
“Exactly.” Chloe’s voice is a mix of disbelief and something darker. “And guess who just stepped out of it?”
Amelia frowns, her brow creasing. “No way. You’re joking.”
“I’m dead serious. She just parked it like she owns the place. What the hell is going on?”
Amelia lets out a low whistle, leaning back against the couch. “I mean, that’s … that’s not normal.”
Chloe folds her arms, pacing the length of the room now. “She’s probably stolen it. I mean, there’s no way she could afford something like that. Do you know how much that car’s worth?”
Amelia shakes her head slowly, eyes still glued to the car outside. “I don’t know. Maybe it’s her boyfriend’s?”
“That’s what I thought,” Chloe snaps, “but come on, who does she know that has that kind of money? I don’t care who her boyfriend is, something’s off.”
They both fall silent for a moment, the only sound the rain tapping against the window. Chloe’s mind races, jumping to conclusions faster than she can keep up. Everything about this feels wrong. She’s always suspected there was something up with you, but this? This is something else entirely.
Amelia breaks the silence, her voice hesitant. “Maybe she’s just lucky? I mean, maybe he’s, like, rich-rich. You know?”
Chloe scoffs. “No one gets that lucky. And she’s been acting so secretive lately. What if she’s involved in something shady? I mean, who just pulls up in a car like that?”
Amelia shrugs, clearly unsure how to respond. But Chloe’s not done. There’s a fire in her now, a burning need to know what’s going on. You’ve always been too quiet, too private, and now it’s all starting to make sense. There’s no way you’re as innocent as you pretend to be.
She whirls back around to Amelia, eyes blazing. “You know what? I’m going to call the police.”
“What?” Amelia’s eyes widen in shock. “Chloe, are you serious? You can’t just-”
“Yes, I can,” Chloe cuts her off, already reaching for her phone. “She’s clearly up to something, and I’m not going to sit here and let her get away with it.”
Amelia tries to protest, but Chloe’s mind is already made up. Her fingers fly across her phone screen, dialing the non-emergency number. Her heart pounds in her chest as the call connects, and she presses the phone to her ear, pacing as she waits for someone to pick up.
“Chloe, this is crazy,” Amelia says again, her voice laced with anxiety. “You don’t even know-”
“Shh!” Chloe hisses, waving a hand to silence her.
Finally, the line clicks, and a calm voice greets her. “Thames Valley Police, how can I help you?”
Chloe takes a deep breath, her voice steady as she launches into her story. “Hi, I’m calling to report a suspicious vehicle. It’s parked outside my house, and I’m pretty sure it’s been stolen.”
The operator asks for details, and Chloe rattles off the make and model of the car, her eyes never leaving the Aston Martin still parked outside. She glances at Amelia, who’s biting her lip, clearly uncomfortable with the whole situation, but Chloe’s too far gone to care.
“I just … I know the girl who’s driving it, and there’s no way she could afford a car like that,” Chloe explains, her tone sharp. “I think she might have stolen it.”
The operator asks a few more questions, and Chloe answers each one with growing confidence. She can feel it in her bones — something’s off, and she’s not about to let it slide.
When the call ends, Chloe lets out a breath she didn’t realize she’d been holding, her hands shaking slightly as she lowers her phone.
“Chloe, you didn’t have to do that,” Amelia says quietly, her voice full of worry. “What if you’re wrong?”
“I’m not wrong,” Chloe insists, her jaw clenched. “You’ll see. The police will sort it out.”
She turns back to the window, her eyes narrowing as she watches the car, half-expecting something to happen. But nothing does. The car sits there, pristine and out of place, mocking her with its sheer audacity.
And you? You have no idea what’s coming.
***
It’s supposed to be a quiet afternoon — one of those rare breaks between classes when you can actually catch your breath. The rain’s let up, and a misty sun filters through the clouds, casting a soft glow over the pavement outside. You’re halfway up the stairs to your room, your backpack slung over one shoulder, when there’s a loud knock on the door.
The sound is sharp, authoritative, and it echoes through the house, stopping you in your tracks. You glance down, frowning slightly. It’s not like you’re expecting anyone, and the others aren’t home yet. Maybe it’s just a delivery.
But then the knocking comes again — louder, more insistent. Your unease deepens as you drop your bag and head back down the stairs. By the time you reach the door, a faint prickle of anxiety is buzzing under your skin.
You pull the door open, and there they are — two uniformed officers standing on the doorstep. They look serious, their expressions neutral but firm, and you feel your heart sink. This isn’t a casual visit.
“Can I help you?” Your voice is steady, though confusion laces each word.
One of the officers, a tall woman with cropped brown hair and a no-nonsense gaze, steps forward. “Are you the owner of the Aston Martin parked outside?”
The question takes you by surprise. “Um, no,” you say, blinking at them. “It’s not mine, but-”
“We’re going to have to ask you to step outside, please,” the other officer, a man with a stern jawline and dark eyes, interrupts. He glances over your shoulder, as if assessing whether you’re alone.
“What’s this about?” You can hear the uncertainty in your voice now, a sharp edge creeping in. “The car belongs to my boyfriend. I’m just borrowing it-”
“Step outside, miss,” the woman repeats, her tone brooking no argument.
Swallowing hard, you do as you’re told, stepping out onto the front stoop. The chill of the autumn air hits you, and you wrap your arms around yourself instinctively. This isn’t making any sense.
“I don’t understand,” you say again, a little louder this time. “What’s going on?”
The officers exchange a look, and then the man speaks. “We received a report that the vehicle may have been stolen. We need to ask you a few questions.”
“Stolen?” The word feels foreign on your tongue. “No, it’s not stolen! I told you, it belongs to my boyfriend-”
“Do you have any proof of ownership?” the woman asks sharply, cutting you off. “Registration documents, anything like that?”
You open your mouth, then close it, frustration building. “The registration is in the glove compartment. If you just let me get it-”
“Stay where you are,” the man says firmly, holding up a hand to stop you. “We’ll check it ourselves.”
“Can’t you just let me show you?” You take a step forward, but both officers tense, their hands hovering near their belts. Your heart stutters in your chest, a cold trickle of fear sliding down your spine. “I’m telling the truth! I can unlock the car and show you. Please, just let me-”
“Miss, please calm down,” the woman says, her tone laced with a warning. “We’re following protocol here. If you cooperate, this will go much smoother.”
“But I am cooperating!” The words burst out, your voice rising despite yourself. “I’m not lying. It’s my boyfriend’s car, he let me borrow it while mine is in the shop-”
“Miss, we need you to step away from the vehicle,” the man says again, more forcefully this time. He pulls out a small notepad, flipping it open. “What’s your boyfriend’s name?”
You hesitate, caught off guard. “Max,” you say finally, your voice faltering slightly. “Max Verstappen.”
There’s a pause — one that stretches uncomfortably long. The officers exchange another look, something almost skeptical passing between them.
“Right,” the woman says slowly, like she’s testing the words in her mouth. “And you expect us to believe that Max Verstappen, the Formula 1 driver, lent you his Aston Martin?”
“Yes!” Your hands are shaking now, anger and disbelief mixing with fear in a volatile cocktail. “Why would I lie about that? Just let me-”
“Miss,” the man interrupts, his tone hardening. “We need you to turn around and place your hands behind your back.”
The words hit you like a slap, knocking the breath from your lungs. “What? No, you can’t-”
“Turn around and place your hands behind your back,” he repeats, each word clipped and precise.
You look from him to the woman, desperation clawing at your throat. “Please, just let me open the car. I can prove it’s not stolen. Please-”
But they’re not listening. Before you can say another word, the woman steps forward, reaching for your arm. You flinch back instinctively, panic flaring in your chest.
“Don’t-”
“Miss, don’t make this more difficult than it needs to be,” the woman says sharply, grabbing your wrist with practiced ease. She spins you around, her grip firm but not painful, and then you feel the cold, unforgiving bite of metal as she snaps a pair of handcuffs around your wrists.
“No, wait-” You twist, struggling against her hold, but it’s useless. The cuffs dig into your skin, and you can’t breathe, can’t think.
“Please, I didn’t do anything! You’re making a mistake!”
The man steps closer, his face impassive. “You do not have to say anything. But it may harm your defense if you do not mention when questioned something which you later rely on in court. Anything you do say may be given in evidence …”
His voice blurs, the words running together in a nauseating hum. You shake your head, tears stinging your eyes. “No, no, please, I didn’t steal anything! Just call Max, he’ll explain-”
“Miss, we’re taking you down to the station,” the woman says, steering you away from the house and toward their patrol car parked at the curb. “We’ll sort this out there.”
“Wait!” You stumble, the cuffs biting into your wrists as they push you forward. “You’re not listening! The car isn’t stolen! If you just let me get the registration-”
But they ignore you, their grips unyielding. The street seems to tilt and blur as they guide you toward the back of the car, your shoes scuffing against the wet pavement. Everything feels surreal, like you’ve been dropped into a nightmare you can’t wake up from.
The woman opens the back door, and the man gives you a gentle but firm shove. You fall into the seat, the leather cold against your legs. They close the door with a solid thunk, the sound reverberating through your bones.
“Please,” you whisper, leaning forward as much as the cuffs allow. “You’re making a mistake. I’m telling the truth …”
But they’re already walking away, their voices low as they talk to each other. You catch fragments of their conversation — words like “protocol” and “standard procedure” — but it all feels distant, unreal.
You slump back in the seat, staring blankly out the window as the patrol car starts up, the engine a low, steady hum. The world outside blurs into a swirl of gray and green as they pull away from the curb, and your mind races, panic and disbelief tangling together in a messy knot.
How did this happen? One minute you were heading to your room, and now you’re being carted off to a police station like some sort of criminal. It doesn’t make any sense.
You try to replay the last few minutes in your head, searching for something — anything — you could have said or done differently. But there’s nothing. They weren’t listening to you. They didn’t care about your explanation. They just saw a girl with an expensive car and decided you must be guilty of something.
Tears prick your eyes again, and you blink them back furiously. You can’t fall apart now. You have to think, to figure out what to do next.
Max. You need to call Max. He’ll sort this out. He’ll tell them the truth, and they’ll have to let you go. But how are you supposed to do that when they’ve got you locked up in the back of a patrol car?
The drive to the station feels like it takes forever, each second dragging out in painful clarity. You try to keep calm, to breathe through the panic tightening in your chest, but it’s hard when every bump in the road makes the cuffs dig deeper into your skin.
Finally, they pull up in front of the station, and the officers get out, coming around to your side. The door opens, and the woman leans down, her expression unreadable.
“Come on, miss. Let’s get this sorted out.”
You nod numbly, letting them help you out of the car. Your legs feel shaky, your whole body trembling with a mixture of fear and anger. They lead you up the steps, through the front doors, and into a small, sterile room that smells faintly of disinfectant.
“Please,” you say one last time, your voice breaking. “Please, just call him. He’ll explain everything.”
But they only exchange another glance, and the woman shakes her head slightly. “Let’s get your statement first, miss.”
And then they’re sitting you down, the lights glaring down from above, the cuffs still biting into your wrists. And all you can do is sit there, your heart pounding in your chest, as the nightmare continues to unfold around you.
***
The fluorescent lights above hum softly, the cold, sterile environment of the police station pressing down on you from every angle. It feels like you’ve been here for hours, your wrists still red from the handcuffs, a dull ache in your joints from sitting on the hard chair. Every second stretches, torturing you with the weight of waiting.
You're trying to stay calm, but your thoughts keep spiraling — back to the car, back to the police showing up at your doorstep, back to the way they refused to listen. Your voice shakes every time you try to explain, but it’s like they can’t hear you. It’s suffocating.
Across the room, the officer — her name’s Thompson, you think — sits at her desk, flipping through some paperwork. The sound of pages turning feels louder than it should. Every time you shift in your seat, she gives you this look, like she’s annoyed by your very presence. Like she’s waiting for you to break.
Finally, you can’t take it anymore.
“I want to make a phone call,” you say, your voice cutting through the stillness. You sit up straighter, your hands balled into fists on your lap.
Thompson doesn’t even look up. “You’ll get your chance,” she says dismissively, still flipping through the file.
“No,” you say, firmer this time. “I want to make it now. I have the right to make a phone call.”
This time, she looks up, her expression flat. “You’ll have to wait.”
“I’ve waited long enough,” you snap, surprising yourself with the force in your voice. Your patience is gone, the fear of being trapped in this nightmare pushing you into desperation. “I know my rights. I’m allowed one phone call, and I want to make it.”
Thompson raises an eyebrow, like she’s weighing whether or not you’re serious. After a beat, she sighs, pushing the stack of papers aside and standing. “Fine,” she says curtly. “One phone call.”
She leads you to a small side room — bare, with only a table, a chair, and a landline phone sitting in the middle. You sit down, and Thompson places the phone in front of you like it’s some kind of offering.
“One call,” she says again, her eyes narrowing. “Make it count.”
You don’t hesitate. You dial Max’s number, your fingers trembling slightly as you press the buttons. The ring tone fills the room, each ring stretching out the time between your breaths. You press the phone closer to your ear, your heart pounding.
It rings once. Twice. And then-
“Hello?”
Max’s voice comes through the line, smooth and steady, as if he’s just woken up from a nap and isn’t even remotely phased by the sudden call. But you know him better than that — there’s a sharp edge beneath the surface, a protective tension that’s always there when it comes to you.
You swallow hard, fighting back the lump in your throat. “Max …”
There’s a pause, and when he speaks again, his tone shifts — serious, focused. “What’s wrong?”
“They arrested me,” you say, the words rushing out before you can stop them. “The police — they think I stole your car.”
There’s silence on the other end, just for a second. Then his voice drops, low and dangerous. “What?”
You feel the weight of his anger through the phone, and for the first time since this nightmare began, you feel a flicker of relief. He’s going to fix this. He’s not going to let them treat you like this.
“They showed up at the house,” you explain, your voice trembling slightly. “They wouldn’t let me get the registration. They didn’t believe me when I said the car was yours. They just-”
“Where are you?” His voice cuts through your explanation, sharp and commanding. “Which station?”
You glance around the room. “Bedfordshire Police Station. They won’t let me-”
“Stay where you are,” he says, his voice brooking no argument. “Don’t talk to anyone else. I’m on my way.”
The line goes dead before you can respond, the dial tone ringing in your ears. You stare at the phone for a moment, your heart racing. You know Max is angry — no, furious — but that anger isn’t directed at you. It’s for them, the people who put you in this position.
Thompson steps back into the room, her expression unreadable. “Finished?”
You nod, handing the phone back. She doesn’t say anything as she leads you back to the main room, but you can feel her eyes on you, judging, assessing.
You sit down again, your legs shaky, but now there’s a quiet fire burning in your chest. Max is coming. He’s going to make this right.
The minutes tick by, painfully slow. Thompson goes back to her paperwork, the other officers moving around the station like it’s just another day. But for you, every second is excruciating, the tension building in your chest like a storm.
Then, finally, the door to the station swings open with a heavy thud, and you hear the low murmur of voices — followed by a voice you’d recognize anywhere.
Max.
You can’t see him from where you’re sitting, but you can feel the shift in the room. There’s a sudden stillness, the officers glancing up from their desks, their postures stiffening. Even Thompson’s face changes, a flicker of surprise crossing her features before she composes herself.
You strain to hear the conversation at the front desk, but it’s muffled. Still, you catch bits and pieces — his name, the car, your name. And then there’s the sharp, unmistakable edge of authority in Max’s voice as he says something that makes the desk officer sit up a little straighter.
Moments later, the door to the holding area swings open, and there he is. Max strides in, every movement purposeful, his eyes locking onto you immediately. There’s a fire in his gaze — controlled, but fierce — and the tension in his jaw tells you everything you need to know.
He’s not just angry. He’s livid.
“Max …” Your voice is small, a mixture of relief and shame. You hadn’t wanted to drag him into this mess, but you also know that no one else could’ve handled it the way he can.
He crosses the room in a few quick strides, his hand reaching for yours. “Are you okay?” His voice is low, steady, but you can hear the tightness underneath it.
You nod, but tears prick at your eyes. “I-I didn’t know what to do. They wouldn’t listen to me …”
He squeezes your hand, his thumb brushing over your knuckles. “I’ve got it from here.” His tone is resolute, his eyes never leaving yours.
Then, without another word to you, Max turns to face the officers. His entire demeanor shifts, his posture straightening, his presence filling the room with an air of control that demands respect.
“Who’s in charge here?” He asks, his voice calm but unmistakably authoritative.
Thompson steps forward, though there’s a flicker of hesitation in her movements. “I am,” she says, trying to keep her voice steady. “Officer Thompson.”
Max doesn’t waste time with pleasantries. “You arrested my girlfriend under suspicion of theft. I’d like to see the evidence you have for that.”
Thompson falters, her eyes flicking over to the other officers. “We … we received a report of a stolen vehicle, and-”
“And instead of verifying the ownership, you decided to arrest her?” Max’s voice is cold, each word measured. “Did you even check the registration in the glove compartment?”
Thompson’s jaw tightens. “We were following standard procedure. She became agitated and-”
“She was agitated because you were treating her like a criminal,” Max cuts in, his tone sharp. “You had no reason to arrest her. If you had checked the registration, you would’ve seen my name on it.”
He takes a step closer, his presence towering over Thompson, making her shift uneasily on her feet. “Do you know who I am?”
There’s a beat of silence. The room feels like it’s holding its breath.
Thompson nods slowly. “Yes. Mr. Verstappen, we-”
“Then you know how much trouble you’re in,” Max says, his voice dropping to a dangerously low tone. “You’re going to release her. Now. And then you’re going to issue a formal apology.”
Thompson blinks, clearly taken aback by his bluntness. “Mr. Verstappen, I understand your frustration, but we were simply-”
“Don’t patronize me,” Max interrupts, his voice sharp enough to cut through the tension in the room. “You’ve already made a mess of this situation. Don’t make it worse by pretending this was some kind of mistake. You arrested her because you assumed she didn’t belong in that car. Because you didn’t bother to listen.”
Thompson opens her mouth to argue, but Max doesn’t give her the chance. “I’ll be contacting my legal team,” he says, his tone firm. “And if you don’t release her immediately, I’ll make sure this becomes a very public issue.”
The threat hangs in the air, thick and heavy. Thompson hesitates for a moment longer, and then — finally — she nods.
“Release her,” she says quietly, signaling to one of the other officers.
The relief that washes over you is immediate, your heart pounding in your chest as the handcuffs are removed. Max’s hand is on your shoulder in an instant, grounding you, his touch warm and reassuring.
“Let’s go,” he murmurs, his voice softening as he looks down at you. “We’re getting out of here.”
You nod, letting him guide you out of the station. But before you step through the door, you glance back at Thompson, who’s still standing there, her expression strained.
Max pauses, following your gaze. He meets Thompson’s eyes, his expression unreadable. “Don’t ever treat her like that again,” he says quietly, the words carrying more weight than any threat could.
And with that, he leads you out into the cool night air, his arm wrapped protectively around you as you step outside.
***
Max’s fingers are wrapped tightly around your wrist, his grip firm but not painful, as he guides you toward his car in the station’s dimly lit parking lot. It’s quieter out here, the cool air thick with the scent of autumn leaves and something sharper — the lingering smell of petrol. The night is still, almost peaceful, a stark contrast to the whirlwind of chaos you’ve just been dragged through.
But Max’s silence is unnerving. He’s holding onto your hand like it’s the only thing tethering him to reality, and you can feel the tension radiating off him in waves.
He stops in front of a sleek, black Porsche 911 GT3 RS, the kind of car that turns heads and raises eyebrows. It’s an aggressive machine, all sharp edges and raw power — just like Max right now.
“Get in,” he says, his voice low and controlled, as if he’s holding back a storm. He opens the passenger side door for you, his eyes fixed on you with an intensity that makes your breath catch.
You hesitate for a second, looking up at him, trying to gauge his mood. “Max-”
“Get. In,” he repeats, enunciating each word with a finality that leaves no room for argument.
You slip into the passenger seat without another word, the leather cool against your skin. The car’s interior is immaculate, everything in its place, the faint smell of new leather lingering in the air. Max rounds the front of the car and slides into the driver’s seat, his movements tight and controlled. He doesn’t say anything as he starts the engine, the car roaring to life with a low, throaty growl.
He peels out of the parking lot with a precision that feels almost surgical, his eyes locked on the road ahead, his jaw clenched. The silence between you is heavy, charged with an emotion you can’t quite name.
“Max-”
“Why didn’t you tell me sooner?” His voice cuts through the quiet like a blade, sharp and accusing. His knuckles are white against the steering wheel.
You blink, taken aback by the question. “Tell you what?”
“That they arrested you,” he says, each word bitten off like it’s leaving a bad taste in his mouth. “That they-” He breaks off, shaking his head like he can’t even bring himself to say it. “Why didn’t you call me immediately?”
You swallow hard, your gaze dropping to your lap. “I-I didn’t want to worry you. You were probably busy, and-”
“Busy?” He lets out a short, humorless laugh, his eyes flashing as he glances at you. “You think I care about being busy when something like this happens? When you’re involved?”
“Max, I didn’t want you to-”
“To what? Be pissed off? Too late for that,” he snaps, his voice tight with barely restrained anger. He takes a deep breath, his grip on the steering wheel loosening slightly. “What happened, exactly?”
You tell him, your voice halting at first but gaining strength as you recount every detail — the officers showing up, the handcuffs, the questions, the disbelief when you tried to explain the car belonged to him. Max’s expression darkens with each word, his jaw set in a hard line.
“They just … wouldn’t listen,” you finish softly, staring down at your hands. “I told them it was yours. I even tried to show them the registration, but they didn’t care.”
“They didn’t care because they had already made up their minds,” Max growls, his voice a dangerous rumble. “They saw you and assumed you didn’t belong in that car.”
He exhales slowly, trying to steady himself. You can see the struggle in his eyes, the way he’s fighting to keep his temper in check.
“Why would they think the car was stolen in the first place?” He mutters, more to himself than to you. His fingers tap restlessly against the steering wheel, his mind clearly racing.
You hesitate, chewing on your bottom lip. “Someone must have reported it,” you say slowly, the realization dawning on you as you speak. “Someone must have seen me with it and assumed …”
Max’s gaze snaps to you, sharp and focused. “Who would do that?”
“I-I don’t know.” You shake your head, frustration bubbling up inside you. “It could’ve been anyone. The car … it stands out. Maybe someone thought it looked out of place at the house.”
Max’s frown deepens. “No,” he says firmly, his eyes narrowing. “No, it wasn’t just anyone. It was someone who knows you. Someone who knew that wasn’t your car.”
The words hang in the air between you, heavy and damning. Someone who knew you. Someone who saw you with the Aston Martin. Someone who-
“One of your housemates,” Max says, his voice dropping to a low, dangerous murmur.
You open your mouth to protest, but then you stop, the pieces falling into place in your mind. One of your housemates. One of the people who knows you can’t afford a car like that, who might have thought — wrongly, jealously — that you had gotten your hands on it through some shady means.
Max’s eyes are hard, unyielding. “It has to be,” he says, his tone leaving no room for doubt. “Someone saw you with the car and called the police. There’s no other explanation.”
You take a deep breath, the realization settling in your chest like a lead weight. “But … why would they do that? Why would they assume I stole it?”
“Because people are idiots,” Max mutters, his gaze flicking back to the road. “Because people are jealous. And because they didn’t like seeing you with something they thought you shouldn’t have.”
There’s a bitter edge to his words, and it makes your heart ache. Max has dealt with his share of jealousy, of people looking at him like he doesn’t deserve what he’s earned. He knows what it’s like to be judged, to have assumptions made about him based on nothing but surface impressions.
But this is different. This is personal.
“Whoever did this,” Max says, his voice low and controlled, “is going to regret it.”
Your eyes widen, a pang of fear and something else — something almost like excitement — flaring in your chest. “Max, wait-”
“We’re going to your house,” he continues, his tone brooking no argument. “We’re going to find out who made that call, and I’m going to make sure they understand exactly what kind of trouble they’ve caused.”
“Max, no,” you protest, your voice rising. “You don’t have to do that. I-I can handle it. I’ll talk to them, I’ll-”
“No, you won’t.” He glances at you, his eyes blazing. “You’ve been through enough tonight. I’m handling this.”
You open your mouth to argue, but the look on his face stops you cold. There’s a steely determination in his eyes, an unshakeable resolve that tells you there’s no point in fighting him on this.
He’s already made up his mind.
“Max, please-”
“Enough,” he says softly, but there’s no gentleness in his tone. “I’m not letting them get away with this.”
You fall silent, your heart racing as the car speeds down the quiet, empty streets. The tension in the car is suffocating, but there’s also a strange sense of relief. Relief that he’s here, that he’s taking control, that he’s going to make this right.
You know you should feel bad, should feel guilty for dragging him into this mess. But right now, all you feel is a fierce, overwhelming sense of gratitude.
Max’s hand finds yours again, his fingers lacing through yours, squeezing gently. “It’s going to be okay,” he murmurs, his voice softening just a fraction. “I’m going to take care of it.”
You nod, swallowing back the words you want to say — the apologies, the pleas for him not to do anything reckless. Because you know it won’t make a difference. Max is stubborn, determined, protective to a fault. And when it comes to you, he’s willing to do whatever it takes.
The drive to your house feels both too long and too short, every second charged with anticipation. When Max finally pulls up outside your shared house, he cuts the engine and turns to you, his expression unreadable.
“Stay in the car,” he says firmly.
You blink, surprised. “What?”
“Stay. In. The. Car.” He enunciates each word with that same controlled intensity, his eyes boring into yours. “I’m going inside.”
“Max, you can’t-”
“I can and I will,” he interrupts, his voice leaving no room for argument. “I’m not letting you go in there and face them after everything that’s happened tonight.”
He reaches out, his hand cupping your cheek gently, his thumb brushing over your skin in a soft, soothing gesture. “Just stay here, okay? Let me handle it.”
You want to argue, to tell him it’s not necessary, but the look in his eyes stops you. There’s a fierce protectiveness there, a determination that makes your chest tighten.
“Max …”
“Please,” he murmurs, his voice softening. “Just this once. Let me take care of it.”
You hesitate, then nod slowly. “Okay.”
He leans forward, pressing a quick, firm kiss to your forehead before pulling back. “Good.”
And with that, he steps out of the car, the door closing with a soft thud behind him. You watch as he strides toward the front door of your house, his shoulders squared, his posture radiating confidence and control.
But the second he disappears from view, you find yourself reaching for the door handle. You know he told you to stay in the car. You know he wants to protect you.
But you can’t just sit here and let him fight your battles for you.
Taking a deep breath, you push the door open and step out into the cool night air, following him up the path toward the house.
***
The door swings open with a resounding bang, ricocheting with enough force to make the picture frames on the adjacent wall rattle. Every head in the common room snaps up, eyes wide and startled as they turn toward the unexpected intrusion.
Max stands in the doorway, the very picture of barely restrained fury, his presence so commanding it seems to suck the air out of the room. His gaze sweeps over the small group of people lounging on the mismatched sofas, taking in their shocked expressions and slack-jawed stares with a level of disdain that’s almost palpable.
“What the hell is going on?” He demands, his voice a low, dangerous growl that reverberates through the room.
No one answers immediately. They’re all too stunned, too caught off guard by the sudden appearance of the tall, broad-shouldered stranger radiating aggression. It’s Chloe who finally finds her voice, pushing herself up from her seat on the sofa and taking a hesitant step forward.
“Um, excuse me, but who are you?” Her voice wavers slightly, but she lifts her chin defiantly, trying to project an air of authority. “You can’t just barge in here like this.”
Max’s eyes lock onto her, and something in his gaze makes her flinch back, the confidence in her stance faltering. He doesn’t bother answering her question. Instead, he turns his head slightly, calling out over his shoulder.
“Come in here,” he says, his tone softer but no less commanding.
You step into the doorway behind him, hesitant and unsure, your gaze flicking nervously between Max and your housemates. You don’t miss the way their expressions shift when they see you — surprise, confusion, and something darker, more judgmental, flickering across their faces.
“Y/N?” It’s Amelia who speaks this time, her brows furrowed in confusion. “What’s going on? Who is this guy?”
Max’s jaw tightens, his gaze still fixed on Chloe. “I’m Max,” he says curtly, as if the name alone should explain everything.
It clearly doesn’t. The blank stares from around the room make that abundantly clear.
“Max Verstappen,” he adds, impatience lacing his tone. Still no recognition. “Formula 1 driver? Y/N’s boyfriend?” He tries again, a hint of disbelief in his voice now.
A flicker of something like realization crosses a few faces, but Chloe just scoffs, folding her arms across her chest.
“Yeah, sure,” she mutters, rolling her eyes. “And I’m Lewis Hamilton.”
Max’s lips curl into a cold, humorless smile. “Trust me, I would never want to be him.”
The comment flies over Chloe’s head, but it’s enough to send a ripple of laughter through the room. Max’s smile fades as quickly as it came, his expression hardening once more.
“I’m her boyfriend,” he says again flatly, jerking his head in your direction. “And I’m here to find out which one of you decided it was a good idea to call the police and have her arrested.”
The laughter dies instantly. The air in the room thickens with tension, eyes darting from Max to you and back again.
“Arrested?” Amelia repeats, her voice rising in pitch. “What are you talking about?”
“Don’t play dumb,” Max snaps, his gaze still boring into Chloe, like he can see straight through her. “One of you called the cops and reported her for driving a stolen car. Don’t pretend you don’t know what I’m talking about.”
A murmur of confusion ripples through the group, genuine bewilderment on most faces. But Chloe’s eyes dart away, a flicker of guilt crossing her expression before she schools it back into one of indifference.
“What — no, that’s ridiculous!” She says, her voice a touch too high-pitched. “Why would any of us do that?”
Max’s gaze narrows, his eyes zeroing in on her like a hawk spotting prey. “I don’t know,” he says, his voice dangerously quiet. “You tell me.”
There’s a beat of silence, thick and heavy. Chloe shifts uncomfortably, her gaze flickering toward the others as if searching for support. But no one says anything. No one moves.
“Look,” Chloe finally says, trying for a breezy tone that falls flat. “If she got arrested, that’s … that’s not our fault, okay? Maybe there was a misunderstanding or something.”
Max’s eyes flash, and you feel a shiver run down your spine at the barely restrained fury simmering beneath the surface.
“A misunderstanding?” He repeats, his voice deceptively calm. “Yeah, I’d say there was a huge misunderstanding. Like the fact that you assumed she couldn’t possibly be driving that car legitimately. Like the fact that you assumed she’d have to steal it to have something that nice.”
He takes a step closer to Chloe, and she instinctively steps back, her expression faltering. “Whoever made that call didn’t just cause a ‘misunderstanding.’ They caused a whole lot of trouble for no reason other than pettiness and jealousy.”
“Hey, wait a minute-” One of the other housemates tries to interject, but Max doesn’t even spare her a glance.
“Do you know what it’s like to get a phone call telling you the person you love is sitting in a cell?” He asks, his gaze never leaving Chloe’s face. “Do you know what it’s like to hear that they were treated like a criminal just because someone here,” — he practically spits the word — “decided to be a self-righteous, vindictive bitch?”
The room goes deathly silent. Chloe’s face has gone pale, her mouth opening and closing like a fish out of water, no words forthcoming.
“Max, maybe we should-” you start, reaching out to touch his arm.
He cuts you off with a quick shake of his head, his eyes still locked on Chloe. “No. She needs to hear this.”
You shrink back slightly, your stomach twisting with a mix of anxiety and something else — something like relief. Because as harsh as Max is being, there’s a part of you that’s grateful. Grateful that he’s standing up for you, that he’s putting words to all the anger and frustration you’ve been bottling up since this whole nightmare began.
“You don’t get to treat people like that,” Max continues, his voice low and cold. “You don’t get to make snap judgments about someone based on what you think they deserve. And you sure as hell don’t get to sic the cops on them just because you’re too insecure to handle seeing someone else with something you want.”
Chloe’s lips tremble, her eyes darting around the room as if looking for an escape route. “I … I didn’t …”
“Didn’t what?” Max demands, his voice rising. “Didn’t think it would matter? Didn’t think about the consequences? Or didn’t think you’d get caught?”
The accusation hangs in the air, thick and suffocating. No one moves. No one breathes.
“I didn’t think-” Chloe starts, but the words catch in her throat. She swallows hard, her gaze dropping to the floor. “I just — I thought …”
Max lets out a short, harsh laugh. “Yeah, you thought. That’s the problem.”
He takes a deep breath, running a hand through his hair as if trying to calm himself. When he speaks again, his voice is lower, steadier, but no less cutting.
“You know what? I don’t even care what your excuse is,” he says quietly. “Because there is no excuse. Nothing you say is going to change what you did. Nothing is going to make up for the fact that you had her dragged off in handcuffs for no reason other than your own messed-up assumptions.”
Chloe flinches at the words, her shoulders hunching as if she’s trying to make herself smaller. You almost feel a pang of sympathy for her — almost. But then you remember the cold metal of the handcuffs around your wrists, the humiliating feeling of being treated like a criminal, and the sympathy evaporates.
“So here’s what’s going to happen,” Max says, his tone brooking no argument. “You’re going to apologize. Right now. To her.”
He steps back slightly, giving Chloe a clear line of sight to you. She hesitates, her gaze flicking up to yours, and for a moment, she just stares at you, her eyes wide and fearful.
“I … I’m sorry,” she finally mutters, the words barely audible.
Max’s gaze hardens. “Louder.”
“I’m sorry,” Chloe repeats, her voice trembling. “I-I didn’t mean for things to get so out of hand. I just … I thought the car was … that it wasn’t …”
You raise an eyebrow, waiting for her to finish. But she trails off, her face crumpling with guilt and shame. It’s not much of an apology, but it’s more than you expected.
You take a deep breath, nodding slowly. “Okay,” you say quietly. “Thank you.”
Max nods once, satisfied. “Good. Now, if I ever hear about you pulling something like this again,” he says, his voice dropping to a deadly whisper, “you’ll regret it. Understand?”
Chloe nods frantically, her face ashen. “Y-Yes, I understand.”
“Great.” Max turns away from her, his gaze softening as it lands on you. “Come on,” he murmurs, reaching out to take your hand. “Let’s get out of here.”
***
The Porsche purrs along the quiet stretch of motorway, the engine’s deep growl a steady undercurrent to the conversation hanging in the air. It’s late — well past midnight — but neither of you seem in any hurry to get home. There’s a lingering tension, a heaviness that neither of you know quite how to disperse.
Max’s hand grips the steering wheel tightly, his knuckles stark against the leather. You watch him from the corner of your eye, the faint glow of the dashboard casting shadows across his face. His jaw is set, his gaze fixed firmly on the road ahead, but there’s a tightness around his eyes that betrays the frustration simmering beneath the surface.
He hasn’t said much since leaving your house. Just a few clipped sentences, terse reassurances that he’s not mad at you, that you didn’t do anything wrong. But the words feel hollow, inadequate against the weight of what happened tonight.
After a few more minutes of silence, Max finally speaks, his voice low and controlled. “I talked to the mechanics earlier today.”
You blink, taken aback by the abrupt shift in conversation. “The mechanics?”
“Yeah.” He glances at you briefly before returning his gaze to the road. “About your car.”
Oh. You feel a pang of anxiety, your stomach twisting unpleasantly. You’d almost forgotten about your poor, beat-up little car, abandoned at some garage in Milton Keynes. “What did they say?”
Max hesitates, his fingers drumming against the steering wheel. “It’s … not good.”
You swallow hard, your heart sinking. “What do you mean?”
“They think it’s beyond saving.” His voice is careful, as if he’s trying to break the news gently. “There’s too much damage. The engine’s shot, the transmission’s on its last legs … basically, it’d cost more to repair it than it’s worth.”
You stare at him, uncomprehending. “But … but I just had it serviced a few months ago,” you protest weakly. “It shouldn’t be that bad-”
“It’s not your fault,” Max interrupts gently. “That car’s been through hell. It’s a miracle it’s lasted as long as it has.”
“But I can’t just … give up on it,” you say, a note of desperation creeping into your voice. “It’s my car, Max. I need it.”
“You need a car,” Max corrects softly. “Not that car. There’s a difference.”
You shake your head, frustration bubbling up inside you. “I can’t afford a new one right now. I still have to pay for-”
“Hey, hey.” Max’s hand leaves the steering wheel to rest on your knee, squeezing gently. “I’m not saying you have to buy a new car.”
You narrow your eyes at him, suspicion flaring. “What are you saying, then?”
“I’m saying,” Max begins, his tone careful, measured, “that I’ll get you a new one.”
The words hang in the air between you, and for a moment, all you can do is stare at him, your mind struggling to process what he’s suggesting.
“No,” you say finally, shaking your head vehemently. “Absolutely not.”
Max’s brow furrows, his gaze flickering to yours. “Why not?”
“Because … because that’s ridiculous!” You sputter. “I’m not letting you buy me a car. That’s way too much.”
“It’s not too much if you need it,” he argues calmly.
“Yes, it is!” You insist, your voice rising. “It’s too much, and it’s not your responsibility. I’ll figure something out-”
“Like what?” Max challenges, his voice sharpening. “What are you going to do, keep borrowing cars you’re hesitant to actually use? Take public transport everywhere? What happens when you need to get somewhere and you don’t have a ride?”
“I’ll manage,” you say stubbornly, crossing your arms over your chest. “I always have.”
“Yeah, well, you don’t have to anymore,” Max snaps, his frustration breaking through. “Why won’t you just let me help you?”
“Because it’s not your problem to solve!” You shout back, the words bursting out before you can stop them.
Max goes silent, his gaze turning stony. For a few long moments, the only sound in the car is the steady thrum of the engine and your own harsh breathing.
When he finally speaks again, his voice is low and controlled, but there’s an edge to it that makes your stomach twist. “You’re my girlfriend. That means if you have a problem, it is my problem to solve.”
The certainty in his tone makes your breath catch in your throat. You look at him, really look at him, and see the determination blazing in his eyes, the stubborn set of his jaw.
“Max …” you begin softly, but he cuts you off with a quick shake of his head.
“No, listen to me.” He takes a deep breath, his hand tightening on your knee. “I know you’re independent. I know you’re used to handling things on your own. But this isn’t about money, or pride, or any of that. It’s about making sure you’re safe, that you have what you need to get around. And right now, that means getting you a new car.”
You open your mouth to argue, but he presses on, his gaze never wavering from yours.
“Let me do this for you,” he says quietly, almost pleadingly. “Please.”
His sincerity takes the wind out of your sails, your protests dying on your lips. You stare at him, the weight of his words settling heavily on your shoulders.
“But … it’s just … too much,” you say weakly, your resolve crumbling.
Max’s expression softens, a hint of a smile tugging at the corners of his mouth. “I don’t think so. And even if it is, I don’t care. You’re worth it.”
The simple, earnest declaration sends a rush of warmth flooding through you, your heart swelling in your chest. You feel tears prick at the corners of your eyes, and you blink them back furiously, refusing to let them fall.
“Why do you have to be so damn convincing?” You mutter, half exasperated, half amused.
Max’s smile widens slightly, his thumb brushing gently over your knee. “It’s a gift.”
You huff out a laugh, shaking your head in disbelief. “You’re impossible, you know that?”
“I’ve been told,” he says dryly, his eyes twinkling with a hint of humor. “So … you’ll let me do this?”
You hesitate, chewing on your bottom lip. It still feels like too much, like accepting would be crossing some invisible line. But there’s a part of you that knows he’s right — that trying to handle this on your own would be stubborn and impractical and would probably end up causing more problems than it’s worth.
And more than that, you can see how much it means to him. How much he wants to do this for you.
“Fine,” you say finally, letting out a long sigh. “But only because you’re so damn insistent.”
Max’s grin is dazzling, the relief and joy in his eyes almost overwhelming. “Good. I’ll start looking for something first thing tomorrow.”
You roll your eyes, but there’s no real annoyance behind the gesture. “You’re unbelievable.”
“Unbelievably in love with you,” he counters smoothly, his grin widening at your soft, exasperated laugh.
“Cheesy,” you accuse, but the smile tugging at your lips betrays you.
“Maybe,” he concedes with a shrug. “But it’s true.”
You shake your head, your heart feeling lighter than it has in days. “I’m still not letting you get me something ridiculously expensive,” you warn, trying to sound stern.
“We’ll see,” Max says noncommittally, a mischievous glint in his eyes.
“Max-”
“I’m kidding, I’m kidding,” he says quickly, holding up his free hand in mock surrender. “We’ll get something practical, okay? Something that’s safe and reliable and not … ridiculous.”
You narrow your eyes at him suspiciously. “Promise?”
Max’s smile softens, and he nods, his gaze holding yours steadily. “Promise.”
You let out a breath you didn’t realize you were holding, a sense of peace settling over you. Maybe it’s not ideal, accepting something so big from him, but … maybe it’s okay to let him take care of you, just this once.
“Okay,” you whisper, your voice barely audible over the hum of the engine.
Max’s smile is soft and warm and full of so much affection it makes your chest ache. He leans over, pressing a gentle kiss to your temple.
“Thank you,” he murmurs, his breath warm against your skin.
You close your eyes, leaning into his touch. “No, thank you.”
Pairing: Max Verstappen x Isabelle Leclerc (Original Character)
Summary:
Max Verstappen is a World Champion. Isabelle Leclerc is invisible.
She watched her family give up everything for Charles’ career—Arthur’s karting, their father’s savings, even her childhood horse. She understood. She never asked for more.
But Max does. He notices the things no one else does, listens when no one else will, and puts her first in ways she never imagined. With him, she isn’t an afterthought—she’s a choice. And for the first time, she realizes she doesn’t have to be invisible.
Warnings and Notes:
we have now moved on from Charles bashing to bashing his whole family, Discussions of toxic past relationships, talk about loosing a childhood pet, toxic families...I think that's it?
As always big thanks to @llirawolf , who listens to me ramble
The office was bright and quiet, the kind of designer-calm that was more aesthetic than practical. Polished concrete floors, oversized pendant lights, art books stacked just so. Everything looked effortless.
Except for Isabelle.
She sat at her desk, scrolling through final renderings for a residential project in Nice—light oak built-ins, linen upholstery, exposed stone. Her headphones were in, her tea long cold, her focus sharp.
And still, she could feel them.
The looks. The half-paused conversations. The way the room always seemed to hush just a little when she walked by.
It had started a few months back—right after she had started working on Max’s penthouse.
After “The Verstappen commission,”
Which, yes, was massive. Private penthouse in Monaco. Full control of design. The budget so generous it felt like cheating.
But it wasn’t why her colleagues looked at her like that.
No, that was because of the last name.
Leclerc.
At first, it was subtle.
“Oh, Max Verstappen, huh? Funny coincidence.”
Then came the lingering glances. The comments that weren’t really jokes.
“Must be nice to have connections.”
“Clients like that don’t just walk in the door.”
“I mean, your brother is in F1, right?”
They never said it outright.
But she heard it. Felt it.
The implication that she hadn’t earned it. That she hadn’t spent years working late, poring over lighting plans, chasing perfection in the grain of walnut veneer. That she hadn’t clawed her way into an industry where quiet women were often passed over for louder, flashier names.
She was good at her job. Isabelle knew that. She was good.
Good enough that her clients rarely asked for changes.
Max’s design brief had been short and to the point:
“Make it feel like home.”
And she had.
Still, the office couldn’t let it go.
Even now—months later—she could hear it in the voice of her coworker, Camille, who leaned against the edge of Isabelle’s desk with faux friendliness.
“Is that the Nice project?” Camille asked, eyeing her screen.
Isabelle slid off her headphones. “Yes. Final layout before the client walk-through.”
Camille hummed. “You’re getting all the high-end clients lately. It’s impressive. I guess once you do one Formula 1 driver’s penthouse…”
Isabelle smiled politely. “I still have to earn every brief.”
“Of course,” Camille said, all syrup and knives. “It just helps when people know your last name.”
Isabelle looked back at her screen. “Or your work.”
Camille blinked. “Sorry?”
“I said the client liked my work. He saw it before he saw my name.” She didn’t look up. “But thanks for the reminder.”
Camille stood there for a beat too long, clearly debating whether to keep the fight going.
Then she smiled, brittle and bright. “Anyway. Let me know if you need a second set of eyes.”
Isabelle nodded. “I will.”
She wouldn’t.
Camille walked away. Isabelle exhaled.
Never mind that she’d been designing clean, grounded spaces with layered textures and a focus on subtle light since she was twenty-one.
Never mind that she had graduated top of her class at Sorbonne. Never mind that she had won awards for her work.
Never mind that just last week, she’d redesigned the entire layout of an apartment, hand-sourced reclaimed timber from an antique dealer in Northern Italy, managed three contractors across two countries, and did it all on time and under budget.
None of it mattered.
Not to them.
They saw the name. They made their assumptions. They smiled, thin-lipped and cold, when she walked into a room.
No one said it outright, of course. That wasn’t how this studio worked.
It was in the “accidental” exclusion from meetings. The last-minute presentation changes that stripped her name from the credits. The way Léa always called her Charles Leclerc’s sister when speaking to clients, like that was more relevant than her entire résumé.
And Isabelle… she swallowed it. Like she always did.
Because fighting it felt worse. Like it would just confirm what they already believed: that she was here because of someone else. That she had something to prove.
So she nodded. She worked. She smiled.
There was such a gap between the life she had at home and the one she had at work.
One full of careful love and quiet safety. One where someone saw her, really saw her, and chose her without hesitation.
And one where people looked at her and saw an advantage. A connection. A shortcut they assumed she’d taken.
No one here knew she’d just moved in with Max Verstappen.
No one knew that the penthouse she designed now held her books. Her blankets. Her favorite brand of tea, tucked next to his energy drinks in the cupboard.
No one knew that she woke up on mornings that he was there to him pressing a kiss to her temple and mumbling, don’t forget your scarf, it’s windy today, like she was something precious he’d wrapped his life around.
Her private life was a dream.
It was slow breakfasts in a sunlit kitchen. Laughter tangled in late-night Netflix documentaries. Max standing behind her at the sink, arms around her waist, whispering that he loved the life they were building.
But her professional life?
It felt like it was crumbling beneath the weight of other people’s expectations.
Not good enough to be here on her own.
Too quiet to demand credit.
Too privileged to complain.
She clenched her teeth.
She wasn’t going to let them shrink her. Not again.
Not after all the ways she’d already been made small.
Because the truth was: her name had opened zero doors.
But her work?
That spoke for itself.
***
Victoria: Hey Isabelle—random question. You have a minute?
Isabelle: Of course. What’s up?
Victoria: I’m redoing the kids’ room, and I’m going to lose my mind.
Victoria: So, Luka wants a car-themed room.
Victoria: Lio wants a dinosaur room.
Victoria: And I love them, but if I let them pick everything, my house will look like a Hot Wheels museum and a Jurassic Park gift shop had a child.
Victoria: No one else I’ve talked to gets why I don’t want neon walls and tire-shaped beds.
Isabelle: Because you have taste. And also because you care about designing something they can grow into.
Victoria: Yes, exactly!! I don’t want to be a sad beige mom, but I don’t want three hundred Lightning McQueen stickers either.
Victoria: HOW do I make it nice? Like, actually nice. Not themed-party nice.
Victoria: Aesthetic. Calm. Maybe even cohesive??
Victoria: Is that possible??
Isabelle: It definitely is. The trick is color palette + subtle accents.
Isabelle: For Lio: a neutral base. Soft greens and sandy taupes for the walls. Dino Silhouettes, a custom mural, or maybe wallpaper. More storybook style than cartoon. Texture it up with wood shelves, natural materials, and some cute storage baskets that don’t scream plastic chaos.
Isabelle: For Luka: Think more along the lines of vintage race cars. Maybe white with some slate grey? More graphic than literal? Maybe we could find a tire print bedding… also vintage racing posters, or maybe wallpaper.
Victoria: You’re kidding. That sounds… beautiful. Isabelle. This is amazing.
Isabelle: It can be cute and timeless. Trust me.
Victoria: Can I actually hire you for this? Like, for real?
Isabelle: You don’t have to hire me. I’ll help because I want to. But thank you for asking.
Victoria: No, thank you. You’re brilliant. I’ve looked at a million Pinterest boards, and none of them had this.
Victoria: Max is a nightmare to impress, and even he won't stop bragging about how you designed the penthouse.
Isabelle: I’ll put together two mood boards for you—one for each theme: subtle, elevated, and adaptable. You can mix and match, and I’ll help make it look amazing.
Victoria: You’re amazing. Truly.
***
Isabelle was in the studio early—like always—finalizing fabric pulls for a coastal villa project when she opened the project file and found everything… gone.
Her digital mood boards? Wiped.
The CAD revisions she stayed up late fixing? Replaced with an earlier, incomplete draft.
At first, she thought it was a mistake. Maybe she’d forgotten to save her edits. Maybe the cloud hadn’t synced. Maybe—
“Hey, Isabelle,” said Léa, voice syrupy-sweet from her desk across the room. “Your name’s all over the drive this morning. Everything okay?”
Isabelle turned, trying to keep her voice steady. “Someone deleted my work.”
“Oh?” Léa blinked. “Maybe you just didn’t save it?”
“I did.”
“Well, these things happen. Tech is finicky. Or maybe it was a permissions issue?” She smiled, sharp and condescending. “You’re still getting used to the system, right?”
Isabelle said nothing.
It wasn’t the first time. Last week, someone had “accidentally” removed her name from a client presentation. The week before that, she'd been left out of a team brainstorming session for a luxury development she’d pitched.
Now this.
She wasn’t supposed to care.
But she did.
So, so much.
***
Max heard the door open and shut softly. He glanced at the clock—past midnight. Again.
Isabelle walked in, kicking off her heels and sighing as she dropped her bag on the floor. She looked exhausted, with dark circles under her eyes, shoulders slumped with fatigue.
Max crossed his arms, leaning against the counter. “You know,” he said, “there’s an easy solution to this.”
She raised an eyebrow, already knowing where this was going. “Oh?”
“You quit your job,” he said simply. “Become my incredibly spoiled, disgustingly pampered trophy wife. No more late nights, no more stress. Just you, spending my money and riding your horses.”
Isabelle snorted, shaking her head as she walked toward him. “Max.”
“I’m serious,” he said, watching her. “I don’t like seeing you like this. You work too much.”
She sighed, rubbing at her temples. “I know. But I don’t like depending on anybody.”
Max frowned. “It’s not depending on me, it’s—”
“It is,” she cut in gently. “I’ve spent my whole life making sure I can take care of myself. I never want to be in a position where I have to rely on someone else to be okay.”
His expression softened, and he reached for her hand, pulling her closer. “You wouldn’t have to. But you could if you wanted to.”
She exhaled, leaning into him slightly. “I know. And that’s why I love you. But I need this, Max. I need to know I can stand on my own two feet.”
Max sighed, pressing a kiss to her temple. “Fine. But at least let me buy you dinner when you come home too late to eat.”
She smiled, wrapping her arms around his waist. “That, I can agree to.”
***
Victoria: Do you still want to help with the final installation for the boys’ rooms?
Isabelle: Of course! Just say when.
Victoria: Next weekend?
Victoria: Luka’s been asking when “Tante Belle” is coming back to make his race cars zoomier.
Victoria: And I promised him wallpaper would happen soon, or I’d never hear the end of it.
Isabelle: I can fly in Friday night. Max has a race weekend, so I’ll be solo anyway.
Isabelle: Want me to bring anything?
Victoria: Your magic brain.
Victoria: And maybe the strength of ten men for this wallpaper. Think we can manage?
Isabelle: If you hold it straight, I’ll climb the ladder. We’ve got this.
Victoria: That’s the spirit.
Victoria: Also—want to do a decor run Saturday morning?
Victoria: I thought I had taste, but apparently, everything I pick is “too boring” or “not sparkly enough.”
Isabelle: Consider it a mission.
Isabelle: But honestly… I might just order half the internet to your house before I get there.
Victoria: Dangerous. I like it.
Isabelle: Just let me know what color Lio’s “not jungle but jungle” theme has become this week.
Victoria: I think we’ve settled on “treehouse with optional dinosaurs.”
Isabelle: That’s a mood.
Isabelle: Thank you for asking me to come. Really.
Victoria: Belle. You’re family.
Victoria: And you’re good at this. That combo is rare and very needed.
Isabelle: Now you’re going to make me cry over wallpaper.
Victoria: You’re allowed.
Victoria: Just not on the ladder.
***
Isabelle: Victoria invited me to come for the weekend.
Isabelle: To help with the boys’ rooms. Final install.
Max: That’s great! She loves your designs. I knew she’d want you there for it. You said yes, right?
Isabelle: Of course.
Isabelle: I mean… I think I did?
Isabelle: I panicked a little and offered to book a Friday evening flight and overnight half of Zara Home to her house.
Max: Sounds like a yes.
Isabelle: It’s the first time someone in your family’s invited me like that. Just… as me.
Max: That’s because they love you. I knew they would. You’re impossible not to love.
Isabelle: You’re biased.
Max: I’m correct.
Max: You’re going, right?
Isabelle: Yeah. I want to. You’ll be gone anyway. Race weekend.
Max: Good. I like it when you’re with them.
Isabelle: Thank you.
Max: For what?
Isabelle: For never making me feel like I’m just passing through.
Max: You’re not. You’re home.
***
Instagram Stories: @/victoriaverstappen
***
Max: Thanks again for inviting her this weekend.
Victoria: Don’t be ridiculous. She’s brilliant. And the boys adore her.
Victoria: Luka yelled, “ISABELLE’S HERE!” like she was Santa.
Max: I think she was really nervous. She hasn’t been… included like this much. Not by family.
Victoria: I picked up on that. She was so polite it almost broke my heart.
Max: Yeah. That’s kind of her default. Be small, be quiet, and don’t get in the way.
Victoria: Not in this house.
Max: Thank you.
Victoria: You don’t have to thank me for loving someone who clearly loves you.
Victoria: I see the way she looks at you, Max.
Victoria: Like she’s finally allowed to breathe.
Max: That’s how I feel when she walks in the room.
Victoria: Then we’re all exactly where we should be.
Victoria: I’ve got her. Go win your race.
Max: Trying. For both of you.
Victoria: We’ll be watching. Luka’s already decided that if you win, it’s because Isabelle helped pick the right snacks.
Max: He might be right.
Max: Thank you, Vic. Really.
Victoria: She’s family. I just hope one day her brothers realize what they’ve been blind to.
Max: I hope so, too. But until then—she’s got us.
Victoria: She always will.
***
@/gridwives: I’m gonna need someone to explain why Isabelle Leclerc is calmly shopping with Victoria Verstappen like it’s not news?!
↳@/softpitstop: I think Isabelle is helping Victoria with her sons’ rooms. ↳@/sleuthsinmonaco: Do you think Max gave Victoria an interior designer tip?!
@/lightsoutgirlies: This is my Roman empire: Victoria Verstappen and Isabelle leclerc
@/wagsandwhiplash: Wait, wait wait—are Luka and Lio getting room makeovers??? And Isabelle Leclerc is doing them?? Like designing them???
@/thepaddockprince: Okay, but I’m sorry, WHERE is Charles in all this? Isabelle’s out here designing Verstappen bedrooms, and he’s just... letting that happen?
@/f1fanficfuel: i need 4k behind-the-scenes content. I need the mood boards. I need the receipts. I NEED TO KNOW WHY ISABELLE LECLERC IS DECORATING THE VERSTAPPEN FAMILY HOME.
@/danielricchaos The funniest thing about all this is that none of them are explaining anything.Victoria just tagged her. Isabel didn’t repost. Max hasn’t said a word, and now I’m insane.
@/leclercstanaccount: me trying to figure out how Charles’s invisible sister ended up doing a home makeover with victoria verstappen: ?!?!
@softlaunchcentral: Ok, but why does Victoria’s entire weekend story arc feel like a soft launch of a new family member? Isabelle Leclerc walked in with a tape measure and iced coffee and took OVER
@/babyverstappens: No, but genuinely: How do Victoria Verstappen and Isabelle Leclerc know each other?! Who organized this crossover episode? Was it Fred Vasseur? Is this ferrari pr? Are we being gaslit?
@/plsnotanothersecretwedding: Isabelle Leclerc shopping for race car wallpaper and stuffed dinosaurs was not on my 2025 Paddock Bingo card. But I’m invested now.
@/wagsfc: are we… soft-launching Isabelle Leclerc as victoria’s best friend?? is this happening??
@/formulaclarles: Why is Charles Leclerc’s sister shopping for Victoria Verstappen’s kids’ rooms???
@/dinosanddrs: The Verstappen toddler has a Leclerc choosing his wallpaper. F1 lore has never been deeper.
@/paddockpoetry: Watching Victoria and Isabelle together today just made me realize that… they both have brothers who risk their lives every weekend. Not a lot of people understand what that does to you.
@/f1bloom: Victoria and Isabelle are from two different worlds but somehow the same one: like who else really understands that fear? Of watching the person you love fly at 300km/h and having to smile through it?
@/slowpitstoppoet: Victoria Verstappen and Isabelle Leclerc are watching the race together while wrangling toddlers like it’s a normal Sunday afternoon… There’s something really tender about that.
↳@/paddockthoughts It’s easy to forget sometimes that these guys are brothers and sons and uncles—not just drivers.
@/theracedaypoet: Two sisters. Two very different men behind the wheel. One Red Bull. One Ferrari. And somehow, they meet in the middle of a living room, with juice boxes, toy dinosaurs, and silent prayers. That’s what hit me about Victoria’s stories today.
@tracksideemotions: Charles Leclerc. Max Verstappen. Two of the most elite drivers in f1. Their sisters? Sat on a couch this afternoon, raising small kids and holding juice pouches and watching people they love do something terrifying. I don’t know. That’s kind of beautiful.
@/gridgirlsundays Not to get sentimental, but Victoria Verstappen and Isabelle Leclerc watching the race together? That’s actually so beautiful??? Two women who know exactly what it’s like to love someone who goes 300 kph for a living
@/gridgirlsunite: Seeing Victoria and Isabelle watching the race together, surrounded by kids and calm chaos… and realizing both of them have brothers in those cars. That hit.
@/chaoticenergyf1: We always talk about the WAGs. But the sisters? The ones who grew up with karting fumes in their hair and have to smile through every post-race debrief because no one really asks if they’re okay? Victoria and Isabelle deserve more credit.
***
(Members: Arthur, Isabelle, Charles and Lorenzo)
Isabelle: My car won’t start.
Isabelle: Can I borrow one of yours for a few days?
Charles: No.
Arthur: HAHAHAHAHAHA. No.
Lorenzo: Absolutely not.
Isabelle: …Are you kidding me? I have no way to get to work.
Arthur: Take the train?
Isabelle: It’s too far, and there’s no direct route.
Charles: The bus?
Isabelle: I’d have to leave in five minutes to even make it work.
Lorenzo: Taxi?
Isabelle: I can’t afford a taxi every day, Lorenzo.
Arthur: Maybe this is a sign you should finally buy a new car.
Isabelle: Oh yes, let me just manifest thousands of euros out of thin air.
Charles: You should have planned for this.
Isabelle: My car was fine yesterday, Charles! I didn’t exactly expect it to die overnight!
Arthur: Sounds like a you problem.
Isabelle: You problem?? My car just DIED. I didn’t plan for this!
Lorenzo: Maybe you should’ve.
Isabelle: HOW DOES ONE PLAN FOR THEIR CAR DYING OVERNIGHT?
Charles: By not driving something from 2010.
Arthur: Isabelle, your car was basically a tin can on wheels. It was only a matter of time.
Lorenzo: Yeah, at this point, it was a mercy killing.
Isabelle: Oh, I’m sorry, I didn’t realize we all had Ferrari sponsorships. Let me just drop six figures on a new car real quick.
Arthur: You don’t need six figures. You just need something that isn’t held together by hope and desperation.
Isabelle: I DON’T HAVE TIME FOR THIS.
Isabelle: One of you just lend me a car. For TWO DAYS. I promise I won’t even breathe near the paint.
Charles: Isabelle, you can’t just borrow a Ferrari like it’s a spare phone charger.
Isabelle: I wasn’t asking for your Ferrari specifically, Charles! Any of you must have something I can use.
Lorenzo: You’ll survive.
***
Max: Hey, you okay? Haven’t heard from you today.
Isabelle: Oh. Yeah. Just dealing with a disaster.
Max: …What kind of disaster?
Isabelle: My car is dead. Like fully dead. It made a noise that I’m pretty sure meant it was dying, started smoking, and then it wouldn’t start.
Max: That’s… not great. Did you have it towed?
Isabelle: It’s at the garage now. The mechanic basically said it’s on life support and not worth fixing.
Max: So take one of mine. You know where the car keys are.
Isabelle: Excuse me?
Max: So just take one of mine. You know where the car keys are. what’s the problem, schatje?
Isabelle: …You say that like it’s normal.
Max: It is normal? We live together? You need a car? I have cars? Just grab a key and take one?
Isabelle: …I asked my brothers if I could borrow one of their cars while I figure things out. Lorenzo ignored me. Arthur laughed. Charles said that I should have planned for this.
Max: Your brothers are useless.
Max: Take any one of the cars.
Isabelle: Max. Be serious.
Max: I am serious.
Isabelle: What if I crash it?!
Max: Then I worry more about you than the car.
Isabelle: What if I scratch something??
Max: Then it gets fixed.
Isabelle: Max.
Max: Isabelle.
Max: Just take one. I don’t want you dealing with this.
Isabelle: I cannot believe this. My own brothers wouldn’t even consider letting me borrow a car, and you—
Max: I’m your boyfriend. This is normal.
Isabelle: Is it???
Max: Yes. Now go pick a car before I get somebody to drive you everywhere.
Isabelle: You wouldn’t.
Max Verstappen: Schatje, they are just cars. You are making a big deal out of nothing. Pick whichever one you want.
Isabelle: I just… I can’t believe you’re okay with this.
Isabelle: You are actually insane.
Max: No, I’m practical. You need a car, I have cars. Problem solved.
Isabelle: Fine. Which one do you care about the least?
Max: None of them are as important as you.
Isabelle: That’s not what I—Max. Which one??
Max: …The Porsche?
Isabelle: I cannot take your Porsche.
Max: Okay, then take the Aston.
Isabelle: That is worse.sss
Max: Take the Audi, then. Or one of the Ferraris.
Isabelle: You are not helping.
Max: I’m literally giving you a solution, schatje. Just pick any of the cars. I don’t care which one you use. I have to get ready for qualifying. Take a car. Be safe. And text me when you’re home. Love you.
Isabelle: Love you too, you ridiculous man.
***
Isabelle: You are NOT going to believe the absolute nonsense I just went through.
Emilie: Oh, this is already promising. Go on.
Isabelle: My car? Dead. Like full-on smoking and now won’t start. So I asked my dear, wonderful brothers if I could borrow one of their cars.
Emilie: Oh, I know this isn’t going to end well.
Isabelle: Lorenzo said ABSOLUTELY NOT. Arthur laughed. Charles told me, and I QUOTE: “Isabelle, you can’t just borrow a Ferrari like it’s a spare phone charger.”
Emilie: I shouldn’t be surprised, and yet.
Isabelle: I was fuming.
Emilie: So what’s the solution? Are you getting a rental?
Isabelle: I WAS. And then Max texted me because I hadn’t answered him all day. I explained the whole thing, and do you know what he said??
Emilie: …I am both excited and terrified to find out.
Isabelle: “Just take one of mine.”
Emilie: …
Emilie: Of course he did.
Isabelle: I told him that was INSANE. Like, shouldn’t racing drivers be obsessed with their cars? Worried I’ll scratch them? Do you know what Charles would do if I so much as LOOKED at his Ferrari keys too long??
Emilie: Have a full-on cardiac episode.
Isabelle: EXACTLY.
Emilie: And Max?
Isabelle: Told me to just grab a key and drive whichever car I wanted.
Emilie: …He really just handed you the keys to the kingdom, huh?
Isabelle: I told him I could CRASH it, and do you know what he said??
Emilie: Oh, I cannot wait.
Isabelle: “Then I worry more about you than the car.”
Emilie: …
Emilie: This man is going to MARRY you.
Isabelle: SHUT UP.
Emilie: I WILL NOT. That was the most disgustingly romantic thing I’ve ever read.
***
Max: So… what are we thinking for a new car?
Isabelle: Something used. I don’t need anything fancy.
Max: Used?
Isabelle: Yes?? I’ll be throwing horse stuff in there anyway. No point in getting something new just to cover it in mud and hay.
Max: No.
Isabelle: …No?
Max: No. You’re getting something safe.
Isabelle: Max.
Max: Isabelle.
Isabelle: You are being ridiculous.
Max: For wanting you to be in a car that won’t fall apart if someone breathes on it? Yeah, I am so ridiculous, you wouldn’t believe it.
Isabelle: It’s not going to fall apart, Max. I’ve had my car for years.
Max: And look what happened to it.
Isabelle: …Okay, fair.
Max: So. Something safe. Think about the children.
Isabelle: …What.
Max: When we have kids, you’re going to be driving them around.
Isabelle: Excuse me???
Max: What?
Isabelle: WHEN we have kids???
Max: Yes??
Isabelle: You’re already thinking about that??
Max: Of course.
Isabelle: Oh my god.
Max: I thought you’d already thought about it.
Isabelle: I have, but you thinking about it is a whole different thing!!
Max: Why wouldn’t I? I want a family. With you.
Isabelle: …
Max: Schatje?
Isabelle: I need a minute.
Max: Okay. Take your minute. But after that, we’re getting back to the car discussion because you are not getting some half-broken used car.
Isabelle: You just casually dropped “when we have kids” into a conversation about cars like it was nothing.
Max: It’s just… something I’ve thought about. A lot.
Isabelle: A lot??
Max: Yes? I want to spend my life with you. So obviously, I think about that.
Isabelle: Oh my god.
Max: And you’ve thought about it too.
Isabelle: I— okay, maybe, but that’s different!
Max: How?
Isabelle: Because I didn’t expect you to think about it!!
Max: …Schatje.
Isabelle: What.
Max: I love you.
Isabelle: …I love you too.
Max: I want to build a future with you. A family. I don’t know when that will happen, but I know that when it does, I want you to be the mother of my children.
Isabelle: …
Max: You’re being very quiet.
Isabelle: …Just processing.
Max: Take your time.
***
Isabelle: Emilie. Emergency.
Emilie: What did Max do?
Isabelle: We were talking about CARS. Just cars. Like normal people.
Emilie: Uh-huh…
Isabelle: And then out of nowhere, he’s like, “Well, think about the children.”
Emilie: …WHAT.
Isabelle: EXACTLY.
Emilie: WHAT.
Emilie: And what did you say???
Isabelle: Nothing! My brain short-circuited! He just kept talking like it was totally normal!!!
Emilie: Belle. Be honest. Are you freaking out because it was unexpected or because you really liked hearing him say that?
Isabelle: …I met his nephews.
Isabelle: Emilie. They’re tiny Maxes. Like. Exact replicas. The genes in that family are scary.
Emilie: YOU’RE GONE.
Isabelle: I’M IN DANGER.
Emilie: No, you’re in love.
Emilie: Belle. I love you, but you’ve always been that girl. The type who had a secret wedding Pinterest board at sixteen and a list of baby names hidden in your notes app.
Isabelle: …Shut up.
Emilie: Am I wrong?
Isabelle: …No.
Emilie: EXACTLY. And now you have a boyfriend who also thinks about those things. I’m so happy for you.
Isabelle: But like. He said it so casually. Like he just knows it’s going to happen. No hesitation, no panic. Just “Think about the children.”
Emilie: He’s in love with you, Belle. Obviously, he’s thinking about the future.
Isabelle: Yeah, but. That far ahead?
Emilie: Let’s be real. You love that he’s thinking about it.
Isabelle: I do. I really do.
Emilie: So. What are we naming my future godchild?
Isabelle: EMILIE.
Emilie: Just saying, you should prepare. Because if you do have a kid with Max Verstappen, it’s definitely going to be a mini Max.
Isabelle: I KNOW. That’s the problem. His genes are terrifyingly strong.
Emilie: You’re already picturing it, aren’t you?
Isabelle: …Maybe.
Emilie: You’re so gone for this man.
Isabelle: I KNOW.
Isabelle: I mean, logically, I knew Max was serious about us. But hearing him say something like that so casually? Like it’s just… a fact?
Emilie: Because to him, it is a fact. Belle, you are it for him. You really think Max Verstappen does things halfway?
Isabelle: No…
Emilie: Exactly. This is a guy who commits fully to everything. You think he wouldn’t be the same about you? About your future together?
Isabelle: I guess I just never thought someone would… want that with me, you know?
Emilie: Oh, Belle.
Isabelle: Like, I love my brothers, but I’ve spent my whole life feeling like an afterthought. Charles, Lorenzo and Arthur had their thing, their path, their goals. I was just… there.
Emilie: You were never just there.
Isabelle: It felt like it. Like I was always waiting for someone to see me. And now here’s Max, just—knowing. No hesitation, no doubts. He just knows.
Emilie: And that scares you?
Isabelle: No. That’s the thing—it doesn’t. It should, right? I should be panicking because it’s too much, too soon. But I’m not.
Emilie: Because deep down, you’ve already thought about it too.
Isabelle: …Yeah.
Emilie: So what now?
Isabelle: I don’t know. I mean, what am I supposed to do? Text him like, “Hey, I’d love to ruin my body for you, let’s make a Verstappen baby”?
Emilie: STOP! I just choked on my drink.
Isabelle: You asked!
Emilie: Okay, but honestly—do you want that? Not just in theory. Not just someday. With him.
Isabelle: …Yeah. I do.
Emilie: Belle. That’s huge.
Isabelle: I know. But it’s also terrifying.
Emilie: Why?
Isabelle: Because what if I let myself want it too much? What if I start dreaming about it and then something happens? What if it doesn’t work out?
Emilie: Okay, but what if it does? What if you and Max get everything you’ve ever wanted?
Isabelle: …Then I think I’d be really, really happy.
Emilie: Then maybe it’s time to start letting yourself believe in it.
Isabelle: Yeah. Maybe it is.
***
Isabelle: Hypothetically, what would you name our baby?
Max: Really, hypothetically? Or are you testing me?
Isabelle: Just answer the question, Verstappen.
Max: Fine. I like names that sound strong. Nothing too complicated.
Isabelle: …That’s not an answer.
Max: You answer first.
Isabelle: No, because then you’ll just pick one of mine to agree with.
Max: That is not true.
Isabelle: Prove it.
Max: Okay. If it’s a boy… maybe Noah.
Isabelle: Huh.
Max: You don’t like it?
Isabelle: No, I do! I just didn’t expect that.
Max: What did you expect?
Isabelle: I don’t know… something more Dutch?
Max: Like what?
Isabelle: I don’t know, Willem.
Max: …That’s literally the king’s name.
Isabelle: And your name is literally Max Emilian, you’re acting like you don’t sound like a prince in a European history textbook.
Max: Says the girl with four names. I refuse to name our kid Willem, by the way.
Isabelle: Okay, fine. What about a girl?
Max: I always liked Zoe.
Isabelle: …
Max: Why are you silent?
Isabelle: I just. Didn’t expect that either.
Max: You’re testing me, aren’t you?
Isabelle: Maybe.
Max: Isabelle.
Isabelle: Okay, fine, I was curious.
Max: And?
Isabelle: And now I know that you’ve actually thought about this.
Max: Of course I have. I told you—I don’t do things halfway.
Isabelle: …
Max: What?
Isabelle: Nothing.
Max: Isabelle.
Isabelle: It’s just… I like Zoe.
Max: Yeah?
Isabelle: Yeah.
***
Max: Hey, I need car advice.
GP: For yourself?
Max: No, for Isabelle.
GP: What happened to her current car?
Max: It died. Fixing it would cost more than it's worth.
GP: That sounds about right. So, what are you thinking?
Max: Something safe for the kids.
GP:
GP:
GP: WHAT KIDS?
Max: ???
GP: MAX.
GP: ISABELLE IS PREGNANT???
Max: No??
GP: THEN WHY ARE YOU TALKING ABOUT "SOMETHING SAFE FOR THE KIDS"?
Max: Oh. I meant, like, future kids.
GP: Max.
GP: You nearly gave me a heart attack.
Max: Why would you immediately assume she's pregnant?
GP: BECAUSE YOU SAID "FOR THE KIDS."
Max: Yeah, but future ones. Obviously.
GP: Nothing about that was obvious, Max.
Max: …So do you have a car suggestion or not?
GP: Max. MAX. You’ve been dating for—what—five months?
Max: Almost six.
GP: AND YOU’RE ALREADY THINKING ABOUT KIDS??
Max: I mean, yeah? Why wouldn’t I?
GP: Because most people don’t plan future car safety for hypothetical children six months into a relationship??
Max: Well, when you know, you know.
Max: Anyway. I’m thinking of an SUV. Maybe a Mercedes. Isabelle wants something practical, but I don’t trust her to pick something actually safe.
GP: What does she want?
Max: “Something cheap that won’t make her cry if a horse destroys it.”
GP: And you?
Max: Something that won’t crumple in a crash. Something safe. Something that—
GP: Can carry future Verstappen babies, I got it.
Max: You’re catching on.
GP: You are so lucky I’ve known you this long because if anyone else told me this six months into dating, I’d assume they were insane.
Max: I am insane.
GP: … Fair.
GP: So, does Isabelle know you’re out here planning a future family car?
Max: Not exactly.
GP: Oh my god.
Max: We were just talking about what kind of car she should get, and I may have casually mentioned thinking about safety for future kids.
GP: And?
Max: She kind of short-circuited.
GP: No kidding.
GP: So, what’s the plan?
Max: I’m going to “help” her pick something.
GP: Meaning?
Max: Meaning she thinks we’re going car shopping, but really, I’m going to steer her toward something I already picked out.
GP: You are so manipulative.
Max: Smart. I’m smart.
GP: Does she know that you’re just going to buy it for her?
Max: No, and she’ll fight me on it, but I’ll win.
GP: How?
Max: I’ll just tell her it’s a gift, and if she doesn’t accept it, I’ll be very sad.
GP: Max, that only works because you have the face of a golden retriever.
Max: And I use it.
Max: So, what car should I buy her?
GP: You want me to help you pick a car for your girlfriend, who has no idea you’re about to buy her a car?
Max: Exactly.
GP: Do I look like a car salesman?
Max: You look like my race engineer, which means you’re good at analyzing data and helping me make smart decisions.
GP: That is such a stretch.
Max: Come on. What would you get if you were picking a car for your girlfriend?
GP: Something reliable. Safe. Not too flashy—
Max: Boring.
GP: Practical.
Max: I don’t want Isabelle driving something boring.
GP: Because you’re planning on borrowing it?
Max: No! Because she deserves something nice.
GP: But she doesn’t want nice, she wants practical.
Max: I can do both.
GP: Max—
Max: What?
GP: Just buy her a Volvo.
Max: A Volvo?
GP: Safe. Reliable. Built to last.
Max: But—
GP: Also one of the best crash-tested brands in the world. You did say you were thinking about kids, right?
Max: I hate that you know me this well.
GP: That’s my job.
Max: …Fine. I’ll look at Volvos.
GP: Good. Just… next time you text me something like that, lead with the fact that she’s not pregnant.
Max: I think it was funnier this way.
GP: I hate you.
***
"You’re being weird."
Max glanced at Isabelle as they walked into the dealership, his face a perfect mask of innocence. "I’m not being weird."
"You are," she insisted, narrowing her eyes. "You hate car dealerships. You said, and I quote, ‘Why would I subject myself to this when I can just order a car online and have it delivered like a normal person?’”
"Well," Max said smoothly, "this is different. This is your car."
Isabelle was still suspicious but let it go. For now. She’s just grateful he came with her. She might love shopping, but car shopping? Absolutely not.
A salesman approached, all too eager when he recognised who had just walked in. "Mr. Verstappen, it’s a pleasure! How can I help you today?"
Max didn’t even hesitate. "We’re looking at SUVs."
Isabelle stopped in her tracks. "We are?"
"Yes," Max said, completely unfazed. "Something safe. Reliable. Good for long drives and carrying things."
"Like hay and tack and muddy boots?" she deadpanned.
The salesman, sensing an easy sale, grinned. "I’ve got some great options! Any particular brands in mind?"
Max gave him a look. The look. The one that meant he already had one car in mind and would not be swayed.
"Show us the Volvo XC90, please."
Isabelle blinked. "A Volvo?"
Max nodded. "Volvos are the safest cars on the market."
"You sound like a commercial."
"It’s true."
"I thought you were going to make me test drive something ridiculous, like a Ferrari SUV."
"No," Max scoffed, as if the mere suggestion was offensive.
The salesman led them over to a sleek, black Volvo XC90. Isabelle, despite herself, was intrigued. It was nice. Comfortable. It had all the modern safety features Max has probably memorized.
She ran her hand over the hood. "This is… actually not bad."
Max gave her a satisfied look. "GP thought you would like it."
Isabelle frowned. "Wait. GP was involved in this?"
"Of course. He and I had a whole discussion."
"About my car?"
"Yes."
"Why?"
Max shrugged, playing innocent. "I wanted his opinion. He agreed it was a good choice for you."
Isabelle crossed her arms. "So you two picked this out before we even got here?"
"Not exactly—"
"Max."
"Okay, yes."
Isabelle gaped at him. "So this whole ‘shopping’ trip was just a performance? A setup?"
Max looked far too pleased with himself. "Well, I couldn’t just tell you to get this one. You’d have fought me on it."
"Of course I would have! You can’t just decide for me!"
"But you like it, don’t you?"
She hesitated. Damn him. She did like it. But that wasn’t the point.
"You’re insufferable."
Max grinned, leaning against the car. "Yet, here we are."
The salesman, wisely staying out of this, cleared his throat. "Would you like to test drive it?"
Isabelle sighed. "I guess."
Max nudged her. "You’re welcome."
"I didn’t thank you."
"You will," Max said smugly.
And annoyingly, she knew he was right.
***
Max had never been one for extravagant birthday celebrations. He much preferred a quiet evening, good food, and the company of someone he actually wanted to be around. Which was why, when Isabelle asked him what he wanted to do for his birthday, his answer was simple:
"Just dinner. At home. With you."
So that was exactly what they did.
Isabelle had insisted on cooking, despite his half-hearted protests that they could just order something. But she had shot him a look—one he knew well by now, the kind that dared him to argue—and so he had wisely backed off. Instead, he stood at the kitchen island, sipping a glass of wine as he watched her move around the kitchen with quiet efficiency.
"You know," he mused, "this is a pretty good birthday already."
She rolled her eyes, but he caught the small smile she tried to hide. "I haven't even finished cooking yet."
"Doesn't matter. You’re here. That’s enough."
Her hands stilled on the cutting board, her grip tightening slightly before she exhaled and resumed slicing the vegetables. She had never been great at accepting compliments, but Max had learned to give them anyway.
Dinner turned out perfect—simple, comforting, and exactly what he wanted. After they had eaten, they lingered at the table, talking about everything and nothing at all, her fingers occasionally brushing against his. When they finally moved to the couch, he pulled her close, letting out a content sigh.
"Happy birthday, Max," she murmured, pressing a kiss to his jaw.
He hummed in response, his arms tightening around her. "It is."
Max hadn’t wanted a big celebration. No parties, no cameras, no over-the-top surprises—just a quiet evening at home with Isabelle. And honestly, that was all he needed.
He smiled, tightening his hold on her. “It is.”
The quiet hum of the city outside their apartment barely registered as Max sat there, content with the warmth of Isabelle tucked against him. He had spent birthdays in Monaco, in fancy restaurants, surrounded by people who barely knew him beyond his racing. But this—just the two of them, no distractions—was his favorite.
She shifted slightly, tilting her head to look up at him. "You’re really that easy to please?"
Max smirked. "When it comes to you? Yeah."
A faint flush rose on her cheeks, and he resisted the urge to tease her for it. Instead, he traced a slow line along her arm, feeling the way she relaxed under his touch.
After a while, Isabelle sat up, reaching for something on the coffee table. It was a small, neatly wrapped box—he hadn’t even noticed it before. She hesitated before handing it to him.
"I know you said you didn’t want anything," she said, suddenly looking a little nervous. "But—well, I wanted to get you something anyway."
Max took the box, curiosity flickering in his eyes as he unwrapped it. Inside was a simple metal bracelet. But what caught his attention was the engraving on the inside—subtle, almost hidden.
"Vitesse et cœur."
Speed and heart.
His chest tightened.
"It’s nothing big," Isabelle said quickly. "I just—I know racing is everything to you, but I also know you drive with more than just skill. You drive with everything you have." She exhaled, fingers twisting together. "I just thought it fit."
Max stared at her for a long moment before carefully sliding the bracelet onto his wrist. It fit perfectly.
He didn’t say anything right away—just pulled her close, pressing a lingering kiss to her forehead.
"You know me too well," he murmured against her skin.
She huffed a quiet laugh. "I’d hope so, considering I’ve been secretly dating you for months."
Max chuckled, his grip on her tightening. "Best secret I’ve ever kept."
***
she's just a friend...right?
in which charles takes a while to pull his head out of his ass
liked by charlesleclerc, lorenzotl, and others
yourusername portofino with my favorites
tagged: arthur_leclerc, charlesleclerc, charlotte2304, leclerc_pascale
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leclerc_pascale ❤️❤️❤️
carmenmmundt ¡que hermosa! how beautiful!
→ yourusername ¡te quiero muchísimo! i love you a lot!
arthur_leclerc why did you not show my big plate of pasta
→ yourusername why *haven't you shown* my big plate of pasta
→ arthur_leclerc okay you did better in english but you cheated off my science tests
→ yourusername and somehow still got better notes than you 🤔
user1 who is this girl and why is charles on her post?
→ user2 she's arthur's best friend from childhood. her realtionship with the leclercs is acc so wholesome. pascale is like her mum
charlesleclerc i'm going to assume i'm the most favorite
→ yourusername why can neither of you do grammar? @arthur_leclerc?
→ charlesleclerc it's use grammar, not due grammar poupette
→ arthur_leclerc HAH
→ charlesleclerc you were close though poupette!
user3 eats every time
yourusername added to their story
liked by leclerc_pascale, charlesleclerc, and others
yourusername night out for maman
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arthur_leclerc night out for maman and yet no photos of maman 🤔
→ leclerc_pascale hush
→ yourusername 😝
user4 i would literally sell a kidney to have her closet
→ user5 lol same
charlotte2304 ragazza bella pretty girl
→ yourusername il mio fotografo personale <3 my personal photographer
charlesleclerc thank you for helping make the night wonderful for maman poupette
→ yourusername anything for my favorite leclerc
→ charlesleclerc what.
user6 her relationship with pascale is so cute omg
charlesleclerc added to their close friends story
yourusername added to their story
liked by arthur_leclerc, lorenzotl, and others
yourusername date night
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arthur_leclerc what man did you convince to take you out
→ yourusername 🖕
user6 noooooo not a man
charlotte2304 i'm stealing that top
→ yourusername i knew you'd like it 😂
charlesleclerc ❤️
leclerc_pascale ma belle fille my beautiful girl
→ yourusername merci maman thank you
user7 i don't know if i want to be her or the man
liked by user8, user9, and others
f1gossip charles leclerc spotted on thursday with a mystery woman. according to an anonymous submission, the two were talking about the track in preparation for practice tomorrow. leo was with them.
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user10 who is she
user11 guys that's y/n
→ user12 no it can't be
→ user13 wait it is
yourusername added to their story
liked by yourusername, scuderiaferrari and others
charlesleclerc i have dreamed of this day since i was a child. now that it has come, i can hardly believe it. all of the sacrifices made by my father, godfather, mother, brothers, and girlfriend have finally been worth it. thank you all ❤️
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arthur_leclerc well deserved brother. so proud
→ charlesleclerc 💪
carlossainz55 bravo mate!
leclerc_pascale je suis si fier de toi mon fils i'm so proud of you my son
→ charlesleclerc merci maman thank you
yourusername i still have chills. what you have done is everything you have worked for. years of hard work and discipline. if hervé and jules were here to see you now, cha, they would be so proud. je t'aime ❤️
→ charlesleclerc thank you for being here. i think our daily track walks are what put me over the edge.
pierregasly il a gagné sa course à domicile! 💪 he won his home race
liked by leclerc_pascale, charlesleclerc, and others
yourusername a la casa tua charles
tagged: charlesleclerc, arthur_leclerc
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leclerc_pascale that photo of you two is my favorite. you were always happy to be around each other
→ yourusername maman 🥹
arthur_leclerc @joris you owe me twenty euro
user14 awwww look at them
charlotte2304 have you stopped crying?
→ yourusername no 🫣
charlesleclerc my good luck charm
→ yourusername ❤️❤️❤️
lorenzotl 💪💪💪
user15 that one twitter girl called it didn't she
mona speaks:
i was trying to write a carlos fic, but for some reason il predestinato has a monopoly on my brain. i hope that you enjoyed this one. as always, please send me asks or feel free to chat with me in my inbox!
summary: you’re a youtuber. 5 times charles ended up in your videos, and one time you’re in his
warnings: none :)
wc: 1.4k
Continuar lendo
Hey girl, I love you and your stories <3
Can I maybe request an enemies to lovers with a female reader and Elijah, which leads to a threesome between her Elijah and Klaus. Maybe with a little punishment and very kinky maybe with a little light bondage and just light beds in general, I'll leave the details up to you
thank you already <333
{Elijah Mikaelson x Klaus Mikaelson x Vampire!Reader} You are being held captive by a group of nasty witches, being tortured, starved of blood and interrogated night and day... You've lost all hope, until two old enemies show up to save you, and you spend the evening reminiscing and making up for lost time.
♡♡ Thank you lovely anon! Its been so long since I did a ménage à trois with the boys & it's always so much fun to write! ♡♡
7.1k words {hehe} - Warnings: smut, lots of drinking, Klaus being a little shit, oral sex {m! and f! receiving}, a little bondage, praise kink, a little punishment, slight dom!Elijah and Klaus, blood sharing, rough sex, double penetration, overstimulation && aftercare ...
@gorgeouslydangerous @starkleila @lydia1369sworld @notleylaaa @vampiresluv
@myanmy @xflowerbombxo @maryvibess @always-and-forever-daydreaming
@spnaquakindgdom @amournoir @meeom @damienmorton @wickedmuse
@cs-please @complicatedandconfusing-25 @youcanhavemybuckanyday @akala6670229 @yeaiamme2
@itsjulzandmydiamonds @witch-of-letters @elijahstwink @rosecentury
@amanda08319 @starshipcookie @li-da-savage @veggie-eggrolls @spideybv28
@sunkissedebony97 @idk00sblog @savannaounana @sekaishell @b1tchy
@loving-and-dreaming @fancycassie-stayfancy @hcqwxrtss123 @iamawkwardandshy @ziayamikaelson
@absolutemarveltrash @darkened-writer @nina6708 @evasmlp
@madeinmyownmind-blog @lovelyy-moonlight @blacknightrises @poppet05
In the dark, dingy cell; there was no way to tell the passage of time. Not that you were in any condition to care about that.
It had been so long, you had forgotten the feeling of sunlight kissing you skin, the smell of flowers in the wind, the sound of birds chirping in the morning, the taste of rich red wine, the laughter of friends. The last few days- weeks? months?- were spent in a haze. Time had become a distant concept.
All you knew now was cold, stale, dirty water, and the constant pain of hunger, and the agony of torture.
At first you blamed your captors, with their unrelenting desire to grab at power. Then you blamed your stupidity, your lack of caution. But most of all you blamed the Mikaelsons, for they were who the witches had targeted. They were the ones you were being tortured for.
If only you had not made such enemies, if only you hadn't gotten involved, you could have lived your immortal life without consequence, without guilt. You would have avoided all the pain, all the torture. Indulging in men of that caliber always came with a price, you just didn't expect it to happen to you.
In a way, it was a mercy that your body had long since given out. That you had become too weak, too hungry, to do much more than lay against the dirty floor, staring blankly ahead. Soon your limbs would stop working, only dust left in your veins. You would desiccate and die a slow, painful death, the only relief would be your own insanity.
It was there, in that dark place, where you accepted your fate. The witch's spells kept you trapped, you were too weak to even crawl out the door, and there was no one who knew where you were, no one who would come for you.
That is, until you felt the cold chill of the witch's magic suddenly disappear, like a weight lifted from your shoulders. Then the sound of fighting outside, the screams of the witches and their death rattles, and the door creaking open. And a cold laugh you never thought you would hear again.
"Isn't this a sight?" Klaus said, crouching down outside of the cell, leaning close to the ground to meet your eyes, "I never thought I'd see you in such a state, little fox."
His tone was light, almost mocking, and his grin was as cold as ever. You blinked a few times, hoping you were imagining things, that the delirium had finally set in. You had experienced plenty of hallucinations since the witch's had captured you.
But he didn't disappear. He stayed, watching you, like a snake waiting to strike.
"She looks awful," He mused, looking you over.
"And she smell even worse," another voice chimed in, his soft lilting accent completely unfamiliar, and yet somehow familiar at the same time.
"You've let yourself go, sweetheart," Klaus teased.
"Are you going to sit and gawk, or are you going to rescue the poor girl," The second man said, his voice growing closer as he joined Klaus.
It was Elijah, his way with words unmistakable, even in the attempt at an American accent he spoke with now.
"I was actually thinking about killing her, would it be easier?" Klaus replied, his grin widening, "What do you think brother, is she a lost cause?"
Elijah peered through the bars, his dark eyes taking you in. You wanted to hide, or scream, or cry. His face bringing back a thousand buried memories, all the reasons why you had tried so hard to forget him.
"I'd say she's quite beyond salvation," he said, "but you know I could never resist a damsel in distress, even one as ugly as this."
That hurt, even though you certainly deserved it. Many great fables are written about the tragic love affairs of humans, but nothing compared to the heartbreaks between vampires.
Klaus laughed at the pain in your eyes, the way they watered ever so slightly, despite how weak and dehydrated you were. But he reached out and grabbed the iron gate, tearing it off the hinges with a grunt.
"I think we're past pleasantries, don't you agree, love?" He asked, striding into the cell and lifting you up.
The moment his hands touched your skin, you knew it was real. That by some divine miracle you were rescued and it was by the worst possible people.
"You should really take a bath, it's unbecoming for a lady to smell like a sewer." Elijah commented, watching the way you were limp in Klaus' arms.
You choked out a half laugh, half sob, every small movement felt like sandpaper rubbing against your skin. You swallowed hard and it felt like a knife had been forced down your throat.
"Fuck you," you wheezed.
"There she is!" Klaus said, holding you bridal style, "We were wondering if you had actually died."
Elijah reached out and placed a hand on your head, smoothing out your hair and giving you a gentle smile. You leaned into the touch, the first kindness you had felt in so long.
Klaus carried you out of the cell, and into the room above. He sat down in an old wooden chair, the same one you had been tortured in countless times. Your breathing hitched and you tried to struggle, but he held you tight, pressing his face into your neck.
"Relax," he said, "I'm not going to kill you … yet."
The threat hung in the air, and Elijah rolled his eyes at his brothers' dramatics. You felt the tip of his tongue lick up your neck, and his fangs graze your skin, before pulling away.
"Any of them still kickin'?" He asked Elijah, who was peering around the room.
"One, she's alive. Barely," he replied, his gaze falling on a witch laying face down on the floor, her neck was at a weird angle, no doubt snapped by Elijah.
He dragged her to the middle of the room, her body limp, but you could hear the faint beating of her heart, her blood still pumping. She was still clinging to the last threads of existence. Her blood smelled divine, the sound of her heartbeat was music to your ears.
"Here's a deal," Klaus said, pulling your attention back to him, "I give you her blood, and you answer our questions. Sound fair?"
Your lips were chapped and your throat was dry, but you forced out an answer, "Yes, please."
You hadn't begged for anything the entire time the witches had imprisoned you. Not for freedom, not for mercy, not for blood, not even for your own life. But in that moment, all of your pride had been stripped away, and there was nothing left but desperation.
Elijah lifted the witch up, biting down on her wrist and offering it to you. The taste of fresh blood filled your mouth, and you moaned, gulping down as much as you could. But the relief didn't last long, as he pulled away.
"Enough," he said, his grip tight, "can't have you drinking too much."
You felt life returning to your limbs, your bones tingling as you were able to wiggle them, your skin turning from a gray pallor to its usual color. It wasn't much, but it was more than enough to take the edge off.
"Now, let's start with the obvious," Elijah said, "Why are you here?"
"On vacation," you replied sarcastically, your voice hoarse, but not as quiet as before.
Elijah didn't say anything, instead he gave you a cold stare, daring you to make another joke. You shrunk away, but not much. It had been so long since you had been with them, but the way they made you feel, was ingrained into your bones.
"The witches, what do they want from you? I will not ask you again," He asked, the anger behind his words making you nervous.
"They wanted you two," you said, "they knew we had...history."
"History?" Klaus said, chuckling, "that's a very bland word for what we had."
You bit your tongue. He wasn't wrong, but you weren't willing to admit that to them.
"They thought I could get to you, so they tortured me," you explained.
"And could you? Get to us?" Elijah asked, his eyes narrowed.
You didn't respond, instead you looked down. The truth was, you had been avoiding them for centuries and to do that, you always kept tabs on them. So yes, if you wanted to, you could have gotten to them, but that would have meant reopening old wounds, and the last thing you wanted was to feel that pain all over again.
"We could always compel the answer out of you," Elijah mused.
You shook your head. It wasn't that they couldn't, but that they didn't need to. You were already at their mercy, and had no desire to fight them.
"I... I kept your secrets, no matter how much they tortured me," You said, "I never told them anything."
"How noble," Klaus replied, rolling his eyes, "your loyalty is truly inspiring, sweetheart."
His grip tightened on your body, his fingers digging into your skin. It was starting to make you angry. Yes, they had saved you, but the way they spoke to you, the way they were acting, it was too much.
"Fuck off," you snapped, "I could have given them anything, and yet, here I am, starving and tortured. So maybe a little respect would be nice, you prick."
Elijah let out a short, sharp laugh, while Klaus glared at you. But after a moment he grinned and chuckled, the sound sending a shiver up your spine.
"You were always so bold," Klaus said, "you never were afraid of me."
"She's a fool then," Elijah replied.
"Well, what is life without a few fools, brother?" Klaus asked.
"Boring," you replied, earning a smirk from both of them.
Elijah leaned down, grabbing the witch by the hair and placing her head on your lap. She was so close to dying, you could hear her heartbeat getting weaker and weaker. You looked down at her, the smell of her blood filling the air, and licked your lips.
"Drink up now, you've earned it," he said, stroking the back of her head.
You sank your teeth into her neck, the taste of her blood filling your mouth, as you greedily sucked up as much as you could. Nothing tasted better than draining the life out of a witch.
When you finished, you tossed the body aside, licking your lips and wiping your mouth. You were finally able to relax, your stomach full, your skin returning to a healthy color. You stood up, steady and sure on your feet for the first time in months.
"Where do you think you're going?" Klaus asked, reaching out and grabbing your wrist.
"A hotel, I'm thinking luxury suite, room service, a month long spa treatment, the works," you replied, "thanks for the save, I'm off."
You tried to pull your arm away, but his grip tightened, yanking you towards him.
"Such hubris, little fox," he said, his voice cold and menacing, "you don't really think we're going to just let you go, do you?"
You struggled in his grasp, but it was no use. He was too strong, and you were still too weak. You looked to Elijah, a silent plea, but he just shrugged, an amused smile on his lips.
"What the hell do you mean?" You asked.
"Well, there is the fact that you owe us a favor, but also," he said, leaning forward, his mouth brushing your ear, "I still think your lying,"
And with that, he reached for your neck and with one swift move he snapped it. You didn't even have a chance to react, and as you fell to the ground, the world fading away.
When you woke up, you were somewhere else, on a large, incredibly comfortable sofa, the smell of leather and wood in the air. The light was dim, and it took you a moment to get your bearings. You heard a crackling fire, the sounds of music playing from somewhere, and the voices of the Mikaelson's arguing.
"I don't believe she was lying," Elijah said.
"Really, I'm surprised at you brother," Klaus replied, "considering how she ended things with you,"
Elijah sighed and didn't respond. You couldn't see him, but you imagined him adjusting his suit, and the way his jaw twitched when he was annoyed.
"I'm not inclined to trust her either," Elijah said, "But I think holding her captive is pointless,"
"She's a risk," Klaus argued, "and she's not leaving till I'm sure she's not lying."
You sat up and glanced around, trying to see where they were. It was a large living room, the furniture was ornate and expensive, with antique looking paintings on the wall, and bookshelves lining every surface. There was a coffee table next to the sofa you were on, and your eyes landed on a fresh horror that was laying there.
You let out a blood curdling scream, one that echoed in the space and made Klaus and Elijah appear almost instantly. You were still staring, frozen in place, unable to look away.
A human head was sitting on the table, his skin pale and his eyes wide and lifeless. It was one of the witches that had tortured you, and it was sitting there, staring at you.
"Jesus Christ, is that necessary?" You snapped, pointing at the head.
Klaus grinned, looking down at the head, and shrugging, "I thought you would appreciate the gesture,"
"I don't!" You exclaimed.
"Perhaps you could have done something a little less barbaric," Elijah suggested.
"Oh come now brother, where's the fun in that," Klaus replied, and Elijah rolled his eyes.
"It's a peace offering," Klaus replied, walking over and lifting the head up, tossing it from one hand to the other, "do you like it?"
"No!" You yelled, covering your eyes and trying not to gag, "I want it gone, get rid of it,"
"Oh, come on little fox, don't be so uptight," He replied, his voice low and dangerous, "I remember when you used to enjoy this sort of thing,"
An awkward tension filled the room. Elijah cleared his throat and Klaus laughed.
"Too far?" He asked.
"Just a bit," Elijah replied.
"Sorry, my bad," he said, turning his attention back to you, "now, let's discuss how you're going to repay us."
"What, not even a hello, or how are you?" You asked, standing up.
Elijah gently pushed you back down onto the sofa. He sat down next to you, giving you a small smile, and placing a hand on your knee. You felt your heart skip a beat, and you cursed yourself for the reaction. You had been the one to ruin things with him, and yet, being near him again, it made you wish you hadn't.
"This happy reunion calls for wine!" Klaus called, he chucked the head somewhere out of sight and strided over to a mini bar, pulling out a bottle and glasses, "unfortunately I don't have anything fancy at this particular bar, but this is a decent 1990s vintage, which I think is passable,"
"I don't drink anything after the 1900s," Elijah replied, leaning back against the sofa.
Klaus scoffed, but didn't reply, instead he poured himself a glass and downed it in one gulp.
"Fine," he grumbled, "make me go to the cellar, like some sort of servant,"
"If the shoe fits," Elijah quipped.
You watched the exchange, trying to process everything that had happened. They were different now, their accents and mannerisms, not to mention their appearances. But the easy banter between them, and the way they were able to get under each other's skin, that hadn't changed one bit.
"Are you two ever not at each other's throats?" You asked, leaning back, "seriously, you are worse than an old married couple."
"Far worse," Klaus yelled, before disappearing down a hallway, off to retrieve the good wine.
"Don't mind him," Elijah said, turning to you, "he's never been very appreciative of fine cuisine."
"I know. He's a heathen," you replied, smiling.
Elijah didn't return the smile, his gaze fixed on you, a strange expression on his face. His eyes were dark and intense, and the longer he looked, the more uncomfortable you felt.
"You've changed," he said.
"So have you," you replied, "it's been centuries and I wasn't exactly eager to run into either of you again."
He didn't respond. The silence hung in the air, neither of you wanting to talk about the elephant in the room. What had happened, was painful, and neither of you had really moved on.
"Why did you do it?" He asked, his voice barely above a whisper.
You bit your lip. A million lies flashed through your mind. The truth was cruel, and you didn't want to admit it, but it was the only option.
"Because I was bored," you admitted, "and I didn't know any other way to handle it, so I turned it all off,"
"And found a far more vigorous lover in the process," Klaus said, suddenly appearing with an older bottle of wine.
He handed it to Elijah, who looked over the label and nodded. Klaus gave you a wink and sat down on the chair across from the two of you.
Elijah didn't speak, and you couldn't read his expression. He looked hurt, and his gaze turned away from you. Guilt was a feeling you spent a lot a time accepting back into your life, but to witness the consequences, that was far worse.
"Whoops, still a sore subject I see," Klaus teased.
"Niklaus, shut up," Elijah snapped.
Klaus threw his hands up in mock surrender, and didn't say anything, a satisfied smile on his face. He was just as much to blame as you, but clearly he had no remorse and was loving the awkwardness of the moment.
Elijah uncorked the wine and poured a glass for all three of you. The tension in the room was still palpable, and as much as you wanted to apologize, you knew that nothing would fix what you had done.
"To reunions, and bloody witches," Klaus said, raising his glass, "to past lovers and new enemies, to the future, whatever that may bring,"
He chuckled and took a long drink. You and Elijah didn't move, still looking away from each other.
"Oh, come on, I'm not doing this whole thing alone," Klaus said, glaring at the two of you, "let's play a game,"
"You know, I'm not really in the mood for a game," you said, crossing your arms.
"Well, lucky for you, I'm not asking," Klaus replied, his voice dripping with false kindness, "now, the rules are simple, tell the truth or take a drink,"
"We are not children," Elijah protested, "we don't need games to imbibe,"
"Oh, I beg to differ," Klaus said, "so, what shall we ask first? Hmmm... oh, how about, why were you in New Orleans?"
You stared at him, unsure if you should just answer, or try to get out of the game. He was looking at you, his eyes narrowed and his jaw set. You could feel his anger, and the last thing you wanted was to piss him off.
"I needed an answer to a question," you replied, "it's… important to me,"
Klaus and Elijah exchanged a glance, both of them curious about what you meant.
"How intriguing," Klaus said, leaning back, "and what was this question?"
"Doesn't work that way," you replied, a smile creeping onto your face, "it's your turn,"
"Clever girl," Klaus replied, grinning.
"My turn," Elijah said, turning to Klaus, "where did you find this bottle,"
"Why does that matter?" Klaus replied, annoyed.
"I don't remember seeing that year in the cellar," Elijah replied, taking a sip.
"Perhaps it was from your secret stash…" Klaus asked, smirking, "the one I'm not supposed to know about?"
Elijah glared at him, and you stifled a laugh. Their arguments were always funny, and this was no exception.
"Well, I was feeling sentimental, so I grabbed one of the better years," Klaus explained, "what's the harm in a little nostalgia,"
Elijah didn't say anything, his gaze turning back to the glass, swirling the wine around.
"My turn," you said, "how did you find me?"
"Simple," Klaus said, "we have spies everywhere, and witches are the most gossiping creatures on the planet. When I heard they were torturing a lovely little vampire that matched your description, well… we just had to see for ourselves,"
You were shocked, that they had gone out of their way to find you. You hadn't expected them to care, or even remember you, and to know they had saved you just because they could, it was a strange feeling.
"But, why bother saving me?" You asked, genuinely curious, "you don't owe me anything, not after how I left things,”
They both fell silent, exchanging a glance that seemed to have an entire conversation within it. After a moment, Elijah spoke.
"It's always better to know where our enemies stand," he said, "you are a useful asset, and a potential enemy,"
"And," Klaus added, "we love killing witches who get too big for their boots,"
Elijah glared at him and then sighed, "That too,"
You didn't say anything, their reasoning making perfect sense. You had a history with the two of them, but that didn't mean you were friends.
Elijah's arm stretched behind you, casually resting on the back of the couch. His fingers brushed your shoulder and you felt your breath catch. His hand was warm and you could feel his thumb stroke your shoulder.
"What did the witches ask you?" he said, his voice soft and low. “Tell us the whole truth,”
His hand moved subtly to the back of your neck, a quiet threat, one that didn't require words. You understood the unspoken message and knew that if you didn't give him an answer he was happy with, then you would end up the same way as the head that was somewhere in the house.
"They asked about your weaknesses, how to kill you," you admitted, "I told them to go fuck themselves and in return they upped to torture severely,”
Klaus snorted, clearly impressed. He poured himself another glass, while Elijah gave you a satisfied nod.
"Why the loyalty? We haven't spoken in centuries," Elijah asked, his fingers tracing the curve of your neck, "I seem to remember you hating us both,"
You picked up your glass and took a long drink, not saying anything.
"Not a fan of the question?" He asked.
"It's not loyalty, but self preservation," you said, shrugging, "the wrath of witches is one thing, but you two? That's a death wish,"
Klaus laughed and held up his glass, "well played, sweetheart,"
Elijah didn't remove his hand, his fingers lightly caressing the nape of your neck, his gaze never wavering from yours.
"My turn," you said, trying not to squirm under his touch, "why not kill me? You are clearly afraid I hold secrets you rather I didn't,"
"Call it … Nostalgia," Klaus said, a wicked grin on his face, "I do so love to reminisce, and if I am being honest, you are one of the more fun memories,"
"Ah yes, your one weakness, sentimental attachment to those you've slept with," you quipped, taking another drink, the alcohol warming your throat.
"I guess it's the one thread of our humanity we've never been able to shake," Klaus admitted.
You raised your glass and downed the rest of it, setting the glass down with a small clink. Elijah refilled it, his hand now resting on your lower back. You tried to ignore it, but every touch made you more aware of him, and less able to concentrate.
"Let's make a deal," Klaus said, his expression serious, "we will let you go, if you answer why you are in New Orleans,"
You bit your lip, wondering if they would even believe you.
"I'm here because..." you paused, looking down at the ground, "I heard a witch here can help with... Fertility,"
They both froze, a stunned look on their faces.
"A baby?" Elijah asked, his eyes wide.
"Is that what you've been chasing all these centuries?" Klaus asked, clearly surprised.
You looked up at both of them, two of the oldest beings to walk this earth. Them, of all people, you hoped would understand your reasons.
"I've experienced everything I've ever wanted too in my long life," you began, your hands twisting in your lap, "climbed the tallest mountains, swam in the deepest oceans, drank with Kings of long forgotten empires, fucked and fed from the greatest artists, poets, warriors and philosophers the world has ever known... but now I wish for only one thing,"
You stopped, swallowing a lump in your throat, blinking back the tears that were threatening to fall.
"To be a mother," you whispered, "to impart my wisdom on someone, and love them more than anything. To show them the beauty of the world and watch them grow up, have children of their own, and carry on a legacy. It's the one thing I haven't done, and the one thing I want most in the world,"
You thought that Klaus would laugh, perhaps even mock you, but he didn't, instead his expression was sympathetic, and Elijah's was one of understanding.
"You are not the wild, reckless creature that we used to know," Klaus said, "you have changed,"
"And so have you," you replied.
The three of you sat in silence for a few minutes, letting the weight of the conversation settle.
"Did you find what you were looking for?" Elijah asked, his arm now firmly around your waist.
"All I found was a chains and a cell," you replied, "I was a fool, blinded by hope. All that awaited me was pain,"
Klaus poured you another drink, they couldn't help you, but at least they could offer you a distraction.
The night quickly dissolved into a drunken revelry. The three of you laughing and drinking, the old days a source of amusement. Your belly was full of blood and wine, and the tension between the three of you had dissipated.
"Now that I have determined you aren't a threat, it's time to get down to the real questions," Klaus said, "who is the better lover? Me or my dear brother,"
"Seriously?" You exclaimed, rolling your eyes.
"What?" He replied, "I'm just curious, I promise I won't get jealous,"
"I'm not answering that," you said.
"Yes, well, I would rather not hear the answer," Elijah interjected.
"You are no fun," Klaus replied, and then leaned forward, his gaze intense, "I'm going to assume it's me,"
"Interesting assumption," you said, raising an eyebrow, "but if we're talking about skills, there is a clear winner,"
Elijah grinned, and Klaus shot you an offended look. You laughed and finished the rest of the wine, setting the glass on the table.
"And I've always preferred passion over... Enthusiasm," you said, a hint of teasing in your voice.
Elijah didn't look up from his drink, his face neutral, but you could tell he was smiling. Klaus huffed, and crossed his arms.
"I would be delighted to remind you," Klaus said, leaning forward and placing a hand on your thigh, "just say the word, and we can retire to a more comfortable location."
You grabbed his wrist and twisted, until you felt his bones shatter. He cried out in pain, then quickly recovered, the bones snapping back into place.
"That's not how this works," you replied, smiling sweetly.
He stared at you, his expression changing from shock to a pleased smile.
"Still the same fire, I see," he replied, "a good reminder of the past,"
"If I were to sleep with either of you again, it would be on my terms, certainly not when I'm held captive," you snapped.
"Who said anything about holding you captive," Klaus replied, "if we were, you would still be shackled to the wall,"
"Some might enjoy that sort of thing," Elijah remarked, his cheeks were a bit rosy from drink and you enjoyed how it made him seem less cold.
"Have you done that sort of thing Elijah?" You teased, "I never would have taken you for a deviant,"
He shrugged, a sly smile on his face, "I don't divulge such things,"
"Oh, please, you can tell us," Klaus said, "unless you haven't, and are simply trying to pretend like you have,"
"Or perhaps he has and is ashamed of the things he's done," you added, laughing.
Elijah glared at the two of you, the playful glint in his eyes giving him away. He simply stood up and held out his hand to you, the confidence in his stance and the way he looked at you sent a jolt of heat through your body.
"The only way to know for sure, is to experience it for yourself," he said, his tone seductive, "I'll leave the choice up to you,"
You stared at him, a sudden desire coursing through your veins. This was a terrible idea, but at the same time, a chance to have a night of freedom and pleasure after months of torture was an offer you couldn't resist.
"If I say no, am I free to go?" You challenged, meeting his gaze.
"You were never a prisoner," he replied, "the only person keeping you here is yourself,"
He was right. They hadn't chained you, or compelled you, and now that the threat of danger was gone, there was nothing stopping you from walking out the door. But that was not what you wanted, and the look in his eyes was too enticing.
"Alright, but I need a shower first, I still smell of dungeon and witch piss," you said, standing up and taking his hand, "and you better not disappoint,"
He smiled, his eyes dark with desire, and pulled you into his arms, his lips crashing into yours. The kiss was intense, and you clung to his shoulders, melting into his embrace.
Klaus scoffed, he loathed being left out.
"Really?" he grumbled, pouring himself another glass. "Can you keep the noise to a minimum, I would prefer to have a little sleep tonight,"
You let out a soft giggle, "oh, don't pout, you can come too,"
Klaus raised an eyebrow, looking to his brother for an answer. Elijah nodded, a smirk on his face.
"If she insists," Elijah said, his voice smooth, "you know I've never been good at denying her,"
Klaus immediately got to his feet, throwing his glass of wine into the fireplace. The flames leapt up, the red embers glowing, illuminating the room in a fiery light. He walked over and wrapped an arm around your waist, his lips brushing your ear, his hand cupping your ass.
"Do you have any idea how many times I've fantasized about having you in bed again?" He whispered, his breath hot against your neck.
You smiled and pushed him away, enjoying his expression of surprise.
"Well, then, why are we still standing here," you said, sauntering out of the room, "the night won't last forever,"
Elijah caught up with you in the hallway, wrapping his arms around your waist and pressing you up against the wall. He kissed you, his hands sliding down to your thighs and lifting you up. You wrapped your legs around his waist and ran your fingers through his hair, deepening the kiss.
He carried you all the way to his bedroom, never once breaking the kiss. The room was dark, and the bed was large and covered in dark silk sheets. He pointed to his bathroom, and you pulled your tattered clothes off, leaving them on the floor.
You went into the bathroom and turned on the shower, waiting for the water to get warm. You felt his arms wrap around you and turned around, letting him press you up against the tile. He kissed you again, his tongue slipping into your mouth. His hands roamed your body, exploring every inch of bare skin, his touch igniting a fire within you.
Klaus quickly joined you, he had undressed in the other room, and stood naked in the doorway. You smiled at him, enjoying the way his muscles flexed as he moved.
Elijah pulled away from you to undress and you watched as his shirt was unbuttoned and fell to the ground. His pants followed, and your eyes roamed his body, admiring his muscular frame. The two of them were opposites in many ways, but they both had a beauty to them, and right now you could hardly choose which one you wanted more.
You took both their hands and pulled them under the steamy water, running your hands across their skin. Their bodies were warm and firm, their skin soft under your fingertips. You kissed Elijah, while Klaus kissed and licked your breasts, his hands wandering between your legs.
You could feel his fingers brush against your wet core, his thumb pressing against your clit. He slowly circled the sensitive nub, sending a wave of pleasure through your body. Your hands wandered down to Elijah's cock, gently stroking the hard length.
Elijah kissed you, his lips trailing down your neck, his hand gently caressing your breasts. You moaned, enjoying the feeling of their hands on your body.
Their touch was overwhelming, hands and mouths everywhere, and it was only when the water started to turn cold that you all stepped out, laughing and breathless.
Elijah pulled you on to his bed, and you fell on to his chest. His lips found yours and you lost yourself in his kiss. You felt the bed dip and Klaus pressed his lips against your shoulder, his hands running along your thighs. He kissed his way down your spine, his hands pushing your ass up in the air.
His lips trailed along the curve of your lower back, his fingers tracing the line of your hip. He placed a soft kiss on your inner thigh and you moaned, anticipation coiling in your stomach.
You felt his tongue flick across your pussy and you gasped, arching your back. He chuckled and began licking and sucking, his tongue expertly teasing your clit.
Elijah's hands cupped your face and you turned your attention back to him. His eyes were blown wide with lust, his gaze fixed on yours. You kissed him, the taste of the wine still lingering on his lips. His cock was hard against your stomach and you could feel his desire pulsing through his veins.
Your hand trailed down his chest, and you wrapped your fingers around his cock, slowly stroking the thick shaft. His eyebrows arched in pleasure, and you could feel his muscles tighten.
You kissed your way down his chest until you were level with his cock. You ran your tongue along the underside of his shaft, enjoying the sound of his low moans. A gentle hum left your throat and you felt him shudder.
You took him in your mouth, gently sucking and swirling your tongue. He groaned, his hands tangling in your hair. His grip tightened and you increased your pace, taking his length deeper.
Klaus moved away for a moment, and you could see Elijah observing whatever he was doing, a dark smile spreading across his face. You felt the bed dip as Klaus returned, and he grabbed your wrists, pinning them behind your back.
A moment later, the soft leather of a belt wrapped around them, and he secured the belt, tight enough that you couldn't move, but not too tight that it hurt.
Elijah's eyes met yours, and a wicked smile played across his lips. "Do you enjoy being tied up? Being helpless and at our mercy?" He asked, his voice a deep growl.
You nodded eagerly, taking him further into your mouth. His eyes darkened, and he grabbed a fistful of your hair, his hips thrusting forward. You could feel him hit the back of your throat and gagged, your eyes watering.
Klaus kissed your lower back, then positioned himself at your entrance. You gasped as he slowly slid inside, the stretch sending waves of pleasure through your body. He held still for a moment, letting you adjust to his size, then slowly began to move.
You moaned, the sensation of being filled by both of them overwhelming. They began to move in a steady rhythm, Klaus thrusting into you while Elijah fucked your mouth. You were helpless, pinned between them, unable to do anything but submit.
The sound of their pleasure sent a shiver of delight through you, and you felt yourself getting closer and closer to release. Elijah's breathing became ragged, and his grip on your hair tightened. You knew he was close, so you focused on pleasuring him, moving all the way down and swallowing.
He let out a low groan and came, his hot release spilling into your mouth. You swallowed every drop, then pulled away, gasping for air. You smiled up at him, his expression one of bliss.
Klaus continued to thrust into you, his pace increasing. He leaned forward and bit into your shoulder, his fangs sinking deep. You cried out in pain and pleasure, your body shuddering. His bloodlust combined with his own pleasure, the feeling overwhelming, but just as you were about to cum, he stopped.
You let out a whine, and he chuckled, his hands squeezing your ass.
"I don't think I'm quite ready for this to end," he murmured, pulling out.
Elijah's hands moved down to your arms, pulling you forward and guiding you onto his lap. You straddled him, your hands still bound behind your back, and his cock brushed against your wet core.
"Do you remember how you used to love riding me?" He whispered, his lips brushing against yours.
You nodded, eager for him to fill you. He grinned and lifted your hips, slowly lowering you onto his cock. He gripped your hips and began to move you up and down. You moaned, resting your head on his shoulder and grinding your hips.
Klaus positioned himself behind you, and you felt his hand trail down your back. His fingers traced the line of your ass, and then he spread your cheeks, exposing your other hole.
"You are such a pretty little thing," he murmured, pressing a finger against your ass, "all tied up and at our mercy,"
He slid a finger inside, the tight ring of muscle giving way. You moaned, the feeling of being filled by both of them overwhelming.
Klaus coated his cock with a lubricant and pressed it against your ass. Elijah held you still, his lips claiming yours in a heated kiss. You could feel the tip of Klaus' cock pushing into your ass and whimpered, the stretch bordering on painful.
Klaus slowly sank into you, letting out a low groan. He began to thrust, his movements slow and deep. The feeling of both of them inside you was almost too much, and you moaned, your body trembling.
"Are you enjoying this, love?" Klaus asked, his voice low and dangerous.
"Yes," you whimpered, unable to form a coherent sentence.
Elijah kissed along your jaw, his fingers digging into your hips, guiding your movements, rocking you back and forth on their cocks.
You felt the heat of their bodies pressed against yours, and their hands were everywhere, stroking, caressing, and teasing. The smell of their sweat and desire was intoxicating, and you were lost in the pleasure, your mind spinning.
Klaus pulled on your wrists, his mouth colliding with the side of your neck. You cried out as he bit into you, his fangs piercing your skin. Elijah kissed the other side, mirroring his brother's bite.
The combination of the pleasure and pain was too much, and you came, your orgasm crashing through your body. You writhed in their arms, your body trembling, waves of ecstasy washing over you.
They kept you pinned between them, bouncing you up and down, their movements rough and animalistic. The belt came loose, and your hands came free.
You wrapped your arms around Elijah's neck as another orgasm hit, this one even more intense than the last. He smiled at the look of pure bliss on your face and kissed you, his hands tangled in your hair.
Klaus groaned, pressing himself deep as he came, then he slowly pulled out, kissing the nape of your neck.
Elijah soon followed, his eyes meeting yours as he shuddered, spilling into you. You collapsed against him, exhausted and sated. He gently stroked your hair, his gaze soft and loving.
"I forgot how good you are at that," you mumbled, your eyes drifting closed.
He chuckled, his fingers gently tracing patterns on your skin. You snuggled against his chest, enjoying the warmth of his embrace.
Klaus laid down next to the two of you, his eyes bright, and a smile on his face. "What about me? Any thoughts?" He asked, and you giggled, the alcohol still coursing through your system.
"You were pretty good, too," you replied, reaching out and patting his arm.
He grinned, his hand coming to rest on the top of your thigh. "I don't know why we didn't do this earlier, it would have saved us all a lot of trouble," he said.
Elijah nodded, a small smirk on his lips, "you may be right,"
"I'm sorry for leaving you the way I did," you said softly, running your hands through Elijah's hair, "and thank you for coming to save me,"
He nodded, pressing a soft kiss against your forehead, then helped you off his lap, and onto the bed, covering the three of you with a silk sheet.
"Do you mind if I stay here a while? It's been so long since I've had a good night's sleep," you mumbled, your fingers curling into Elijah's chest, holding him tight.
He didn't reply, just pulled you closer, his hand stroking your back, lulling you to sleep.
"We've got all the time in the world, love," Klaus said softly, his voice barely a whisper, "we'll make sure no more nasty witches get their hands on you,"
It had been so long since you had felt so content, you could feel the warmth of their skin, smell their cologne, hear the beat of their hearts. You could taste the blood and whiskey in the air, and it felt right, like you had come home.