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theferrarieffect · 2 days
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never forget me – yuki
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theferrarieffect · 3 days
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do tell do tell!!
tag list!! lmk if you want to be added/removed!@97leclrc @ineedassistance28 @beebeebee2224 @33milian @mclarenyaoi (FOR YOU SIMON) @toppamplemousse @rubywritten @fleshmouth @aliassimes @formulanni @fopzaferrari
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theferrarieffect · 4 days
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💕 or 💘 with galex pretty please?
send a heart and a ship for a brief snippet!
💕 kissing somewhere other than lips 💘 fake relationship / mutual pining / dared to kiss
Alex stares at George. He's getting good at it, gazing at him as if he can be seen staring. There are people in the room, there is a girl sitting on his lap and her arm is warm as it sits around his shoulders, he's a bit tipsy and a bit tired. It's 3am, he wants to go home. But he's supposed to drive George home too, so he stays.
The girl on his lap, Laura he thinks her name is, asks if he's ok, he hasn't finished his beer. Alex nods, takes a sip just to please, and she's back to chatting about something he doesn't care about. His eyes haven't left the back of George's head, the place above his nape where hair has begun to grow just a bit wilder than usual.
He's cropped his hair short before the summer began, homecoming for the king studying in Scotland. Why Scotland? No one knows. George says he was looking for a challenge. Lando says he is running away. 'From what?' Alex asked and Lando shook his head muttering 'nevermind' and changing the subject.
He has a semester to go before graduation. He's trying new things, like letting his hair grow and flirting with that girl with the cute spanish accent they met when they went to Jack's house last night. Alex tries to look away but he can't.
George is leaning on the wall, hand just above her shoulder, and she's looking up at him, Alex can tell from the glimpses of her face he gets when George swaddles, side to side, taking the weight from one foot to the other, trying to ease his nerves. George is nervous by nature, an obsessive character bothered by every imperfection of his own making. He seldom allows himself to fail, to be a centimetre out of line. It's strange watching him be so... casual, rolled up sleeves and gel-less hair.
Someone lowers the music and makes the lights brighter. There are just a few scattered people in the room, Alex and the girl on his lap, George and the girl under his arm, Lando, two girls he knows from the paddel club and two guys Alex doesn't know. Lando tells them all to gather at the foot of the couch he's got 'big plans'.
It turns out he wants to play spin the bottle. Classic Lando shenanigans learnt from a movie he watched when he was twelve and first saw silicone boobs on a screen. One of the girls from the paddel club goes first and it lands on one of the guys Alex doesn't know. They kiss, open mouthed but quick. Not enough room for saliva and shit.
Lando claps and says 'your turn Alex!'.
He is nowhere near the girl who last spun it but... Fuck it. The girl who was on his lap, Laura or Lauryn or something, is by his side so it's not like he'll kiss her this round. He takes a deep breath and spins it. The green Heineken bottle turns and turns until the open mouth stops right at George's feet.
"Oh," it's all he says.
Alex hiccups and makes a joke about having had too many bubbles tonight, you know what I mean? No one laughs, but George snorts, clearly artificial.
"We can just... not do it," he says and George hums, not meeting his eyes.
"Come on man, don't be a coward," Lando spurs and the rest of the little group of people he doesn't care about joins in, chanting 'kiss, kiss, kiss!'
George takes a deep breath and, with his hands pressed palms down against his thighs, he leans in. Alex can only narrow his eyes and meet him in the middle. When he sees George has closed his eyes, Alex dives in... and kisses his cheek.
With eyes open and Lando's protests in the background, Alex sees a flash of hurt across George's eyes become glossy and wet. He excuses himself to go to the bathroom, someone makes a joke that he must be really horny and Alex watches him go with a knot tied around his throat.
This is going to hurt for a lifetime.
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theferrarieffect · 5 days
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new chapter :oOoOooO
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snickerdoodles - an oscar piastri x reader fic
One fateful day in Home Ec, you and Oscar are tasked with making something edible for class. Neither of you have ever baked in your life. Neither of you have any idea that a cookie will change your lives forever...
send me a message or an ask for taglist!
tim tams and meringues - best friend butterflies, and a daunting assignment turns into quite the baking adventure
cinnamon goodbyes - a hard day's work, meet the drivers, and a lesson about taking someone for granted learned the hard way
(new!!) let them eat macarons (or cake) - drifting apart, keeping in touch, a bar near-miss and a senior year surprise
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theferrarieffect · 5 days
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snickerdoodles, chapter 3: drifting apart, keeping in touch, a bar near-miss and a senior year surprise (4.9k words)
previous chapter here!
warnings: a bit more angst followed by fluff, the slowest burn (sorry)
chapter 3: let them eat macarons (or cake)
The cookies sit heavy in your bag, straps digging into your shoulder, while the foam of the orange headphones that have been on your head for more than an hour now squeeze your temples uncomfortably. But you don’t notice either of those things, because your eyes are glued to the monitors showing everyone’s track position, and your heart hammers in your chest not unlike the way it does when the anesthetist announces there’s five minutes to go before rewarming.
Oscar tries to negotiate Lewis in Turn 15, but even you can see that Hamilton pulls a dirty defensive move, squeezing Oscar dangerously close to the wall. The radio beeps.
“Man, Hamilton is trying to kill someone today.”
A chill runs down your spine. When you streamed the races from the comfort of your own couch, you hadn’t realized, really, exactly how fast these drivers go. But watching and hearing them take sharp corners at the speeds you take your car on the motorway when you’re hurrying to the hospital…Oscar’s right. He could kill someone. Literally.
There’s no way you could work for motorsport, at least not in a capacity where you have to come to all the races. But then, you feel a crazy compulsion to come, as if you need to be there, need to make sure nothing bad happens to him.
Lewis attempts to chase Lando down, but Lando, daring and hot-headed, doesn’t budge, and you cheer internally for the papaya team. Look at yourself. Already biased, already fangirling.
“Okay, Oscar,” Tom says into the radio. “You are within DRS, you can push, last lap.”
Your nails dig crescents into your palms.
Oscar edges the car near Lewis, tries to take the inside line…
…and Lewis swings wide, retaining his lead. Oscar crosses the line not half a second behind, P4.
You sigh with relief as he slows on his way into the pit lane.
“Okay, good job Oscar, P4, P4,” Tom tells him.
“Fuck,” Oscar’s voice crackles through the radio. “I’m sorry guys. Fuck.” True to Oscar form, even in rage, he sounds downright placid.
“No worries, Oscar, it was a tight race. Good drive. Lando P2.”
A heavy sigh. “Well, congrats to Lando at least. Good for the team.”
When Oscar extricates himself from the car and walks over into the paddock, you’re waiting for him. He pulls off his helmet, then the balaclava underneath. His brown waves point in every direction, matted with sweat, but his frown melts as soon as he sees you.
“I’m gross—” he warns, but you’ve already pulled him into a tight hug.
“Congrats,” you whisper into the rough fabric of his suit.
“This wasn’t the race I wanted you to see,” Oscar says, dully.
You pull away, but move your hands from his back, holding him by his biceps. “It was the one I got to see. You’re incredible. It’s like you become a different person out there, you know that? You’re just so…in your element.”
Oscar chuckles. “Too bad the second the suit comes off, I’m the dorky bloke who likes cookies way too much.”
“Funny you should mention,” you say, reaching into your bag, producing the snickerdoodles you’d gotten up to bake at the crack of dawn with a flourish.
You swear Oscar’s eyes just light up, and he pulls you close to him again.
The paddock is much more relaxed after the race, more disorganized. Papaya mixes with navy which mixes with scarlet, green, pink; you shake many hands attached to many people you’ll never remember, all the while searching for Oscar, even though you know he’s probably tied up with press. Luckily, Logan makes a beeline for you and herds you around, introducing you to more of the guys on the grid.
“Oscar’s being held hostage by Sky Sports,” he says with a grimace.
You grin. “I figured.”
Charles, equally as beautiful as his teammate—does Ferrari hire drivers or models?—presents you with a tiny, squirming golden puppy. “His name is Leo,” he beams, waving a diminutive paw. “Say hi, Leo.”
You nearly melt, stroking Leo’s head gently with two fingers, which is about the most you’re willing to do with a creature that miniscule.
“Ay, cabrón,” Carlos practically shoves Charles out of the way. “That dog is just his excuse to flirt.”
Logan rolls his eyes, stunningly reminiscent of Oscar.
Fortunately, only the Ferrari boys seem hungry for your attention. Pierre actually apologizes for Charles’ antics—”he ees so desperate”—oblivious to Yuki yanking one of his shoelaces and bounding away. Fernando fulfills your plea to witness one of his famous celebratory dances as Checo and Max roar with laughter. And you’re pleased to be able to tesitfy that Danny Ric’s smile is as blinding as they say it is.
“How’s trauma service treating you?” Logan asks conversationally as you walk back towards the McLaren motorhome.
You shrug. “It’s alright—” Huh. “Wait, how do you know I’m in surgery?”
Logan reddens, as if he’s accidentally revealed classified information. “Ah—well, I mean, Oscar talks about you a lot.”
Talks about you so much that Logan knows what department you’re currently rotating through?
As if he read your mind, Logan straightens up, clears his throat. “Suppose you weren’t aware.”
“Aware of what?”
“Of how…invested Oscar is. In your life. In you.”
Your heart begins to pound. “I mean, we’re good friends.”
Logan raises his eyebrows. “Nothing more?”
You shake your head, lips pursed.
He looks thoughtful. “What?” you demand.
“Well…nothing.” He notices your suspicious frown. “Okay, well, the way he talks about you, you’d think the guy’s a little nuts about you. Like, he’s not exactly the most chatty dude on the grid, but I swear if someone mentions a TV show, it’s suddenly your favorite show. And we’ve all learned not to ever bring up anything medical, or else we’re about to hear a whole ass lecture on how cool you are, how you’re a real doctor. And don’t even get me started on cookies, or cakes, or come to think of it, baking in general…”
You don’t know whether to laugh, or cry, or crawl into a cave and never come out. But now it’s Logan’s turn to appraise you shrewdly. “So…are you interested in him?”
Well, the cave option sounds pretty good now.
“No! I mean—I don’t—we’re just not like that,” you stumble clumsily. Is Logan Sargeant really interrogating you about your love life right now? “We’re friends. We’ve known each other for ages—”
Before you can continue to dig yourself an even deeper grave, Oscar mercifully emerges from the motorhome’s front doors. “Hey.” He nods at Logan. “Thanks for babysitting her.”
“Hey, I didn’t need babysitting—” you say, and then see the faintest whisper of a smirk on his face. You give him a playful jab in the side with your elbow.
“I don’t know,” Logan says innocently, “by the way you were wandering around, looking like a lost sheep…”
Oscar laughs, really laughs, and then you know Logan’s actually his friend, even off the track. That laugh is sunshine. That laugh is the crest of a wave on the Australian beach.
“Let me guess,” Logan says. “Lando’s already drunk.”
“He’s halfway to the bars in London,” Oscar chuckles.
“When are you heading to?”
Oscar glances at you, then back at Logan. “Actually, I was thinking of sitting this one out?”
“What?” you say. “Why? You should go celebrate. It’s an off week next week too.”
“You on nights this week?” Oscar turns to face you.
“Yeah, although I don’t see how that’s relevant,” you retort.
Oscar hums. “Welllllll…hypothetically, it’d be good for you to be staying up late, right? To prepare.”
You have to laugh at that. “Are you saying you want me to go to your team’s afterparty?”
Logan says nothing, eyes flickering back and forth between the two of you, an infuriatingly knowing smile plastered on his face.
You imagine taking a few tequila shots—something you haven’t done since uni, really—and jumping up and down on the dance floor with a bunch of strangers. Logan’s eyes search your face imploringly.
“I guess I could go,” you say hesitantly. Oscar brightens. “But I’m not staying late, or going crazy. That’s all on you.”
“Deal,” Oscar says.
“Deal,” Logan smirks.
You’re not sure what you’ve just signed up for.
~
“Sweetie,” your mom says one day, “the almond flour’s about to go bad. Weren’t you going to make macarons?”
Yeah, with him, you think bitterly. “I guess so. Haven’t been baking much recently.”
“Not as fun without Oscar, huh?” your mom’s voice softens. You try hard to fight back tears, even though it’s been nearly a year since he packed his bags and left for London. You shake your head.
“Well…Nicole was asking about you. I think she misses seeing you too, honestly.”
Nicole? Oh. Mrs. Piastri—Oscar’s mom. You sigh, remembering all the times you’d walked over to his house together, balancing plates wrapped loosely in clingfilm, Tupperwares full of baked goods. Oscar’s little sisters crowding around you while you watched TV on the couch, begging you to let them braid your long, thick hair, which had reached nearly to your waist. You tug on the newly short, barely-skimming-the-collarbone ends now—another thing, you think, Oscar wouldn’t recognize.
“S’pose I could bring her some macarons,” you mumble, and your mom smiles.
It’s not as fun without Oscar, of course, but you get the job done, and forego the drive in favor of a walk. A perfect March day in Melbourne—crisp, cool, and dripping in autumn foliage. London must be cold and rainy. It certainly is today; you check the weather there before here every morning without fail.
Oscar’s mom answers the door almost right away—your mom must have given her a heads-up about your impending arrival—and immediately scoops you up into a hug. “You’re all grown up!” she cries, and you feel a wave of guilt, remembering your mom telling you that she’d noticed your relative disappearance. But Mrs. Piastri waves you through the door as if no time has passed at all. A picture of Oscar, no more than ten or eleven, beaming in a tiny racing suit and perched on top of a kart, stands on the mantle. It’s been there forever. You realize why you’ve been avoiding baking, avoiding going to see Oscar’s family—because they’re just more reminders of the fact that Oscar himself isn’t here.
Mrs. Piastri gushes over the macarons, calls Oscar’s sisters down to enjoy the bounty, and your chest aches a bit at how much you’d missed this.
“What happened to your hair?” the youngest one whines. You smile apologetically, tell her you’d chopped it off for track.
Then Oscar’s mom asks about your senior year, college applications, and you swallow. Actually, you’d applied in Year 11, having frontloaded an obscene number of classes, done pretty much nothing but study and build up your résumé and get applications together. Honestly, it’d been a pretty good distraction from…well, other things.
You remember how, right at the beginning of term this year, you’d squeezed your eyes shut as you clicked the button to open your decision, read “Congratulations! University of Oxford is offering you a place for Medicine in the 2017 term”, heard your parents shout jubilantly, felt your mom’s tears on your neck as she whispered how proud she was of you.
“Actually,” you say, “I’m graduating a bit early, and writing medicine at Oxford in the fall.”
Mrs. Piastri’s mouth forms a tiny O, which quickly morphs into a beaming smile. “Oh honey, congratulations!”
“If anyone could do it, it’s you,” she continues, and you blush at the compliment. “Oscar always said you were going to be a doctor, no, the best doctor—”
You freeze at his name, and she’s definitely noticed, because then she asks if he knows. You remember how you’d immediately reached for your phone, realized the only person who you wanted to tell was currently halfway across the globe, no doubt too busy with karting and his new school and his new friends for you to be so much as a blip on his radar. You’d called a few times, texted back and forth when he’d first moved, but they’d gotten sparser and sparser, until by the end of Year 11, there were hardly any messages at all.
You shake your head apologetically. “We’ve been pretty bad at keeping in touch.”
“I wouldn’t worry about it—he hardly even calls me,” she laughs. “He misses you, though, he always makes it a point to ask about you when he does call.”
Mrs. Piastri’s probably being diplomatic, so you just nod. But when you finally stand up from the dining table to leave, she tells you in earnest, “Give him a call, will you? I think it would really, really make his day.”
At home that night, you stare at his contact photo. In it, Oscar’s wearing one of your mom’s aprons, brandishing a piping bag like it’s medieval weaponry, looking goofy as hell. Maybe he’ll think you’re weird for calling. Maybe he won’t pick up.
Here goes nothing, you think, and click on the Facetime button.
One ring, two rings, and Oscar’s face suddenly fills your laptop screen.
Your hands immediately start to tremble.
“Whoa,” he breathes.
His voice is almost unrecognizable, no longer the reedy drone of a teenager’s, and his hair, no longer so cropped, dips in a smooth wave over his forehead. You had no idea his hair was wavy.
“Hi.” Your voice cracks; you clear your throat. “Been a while.”
“You cut your hair,” Oscar observes, his eyes darting around the screen, taking you in as you did him.
“Yeah. It was getting too hot for track.”
Oscar’s eyebrows fly up. “Since when do you run track?”
You shrug. “Since Year 11, I guess.”
“You hate running,” he says softly, and you feel a pang at the fact he remembered, and another at the realization that you’d joined the team because you needed something to take up your time on your newly vacant evenings. Then, louder, “I like it. You look…older.”
“Thanks. And I don’t hate running anym—well, I’m trying to like it,” you correct yourself, and both of you chuckle awkwardly.
“So,” Oscar says abruptly, all business. You feel a little prickle snake up your arms as he crosses his. “I heard something from a little birdie.”
“Whaddya hear?”
“I just—is it true you got into Oxford? For medicine?” His voice rises about two octaves on the last word.
“I—ah, yeah,” you stammer. Clearly, Mrs. Piastri had wasted no time in exposing you.
“Oh my god,” Oscar all but shrieks. You’ve never heard him this worked up before. “Congratulations!”
“Thanks,” you say, feeling suddenly shy.
“You’re excited, right? Why don’t you sound more excited?” he demands.
You swallow. “I am. Excited.”
“And why didn’t you tell me about it? I can’t believe I had to hear it from Mum.”
“I wasn’t sure if,” you take a deep breath. “I wasn’t sure if you’d care,” you finish, lamely.
Shit, you think, as the smile fades from Oscar’s face.
“Oscar—I’m sorry, I didn’t mean to say you don’t care, or that you’re a bad friend—”
Oscar looks down. You see him chewing on his lower lip, and for a second you think he’s going to yell, or cry, or cuss you out.
But he just hangs his head. “I’m sorry,” he says quietly.
“Why are you apologizing?” you demand, horrified.
“Because…it’s true. I’ve been a shitty friend.”
“No you haven’t,” you plead. “I could’ve—should’ve—told you myself. I just assumed you were busy, and that you had better things going on—”
“Exactly.”
“What do you mean, exactly?”
“If you assumed I was busy…” Oscar says slowly, “I was the one who should’ve reached out.”
You shake your head.
“I thought you were too busy,” he blurts out suddenly. “All I do is race. But you…you have so much. Top of the class, every club under the sun…you don’t have time to sleep. How could you have time for me?”
And even though Oscar’s face is marred by the pixelation of the screen, the red that rims his eyes isn’t lost on you. Too quickly, the screen isn’t the only thing blurring your view.
“But I—” Your voice cracks; you swallow, resolute. “Oscar. I’ll always have time for you.”
You think that in another universe, one where Oscar stands a few meters and not oceans away, you’d show him how much you mean it. Pull him close and breathe him in and hang on for dear life.
Maybe Oscar hears you anyway.
He drags his forearm across his nose, tries to disguise his sniffle in a laugh. “Do you still bake?”
“Not without you…but hey, I did today,” you quickly amend, as he quirks an eyebrow.
“You should start again,” Oscar says. “I’m gonna call you next week and you can tell me what you’ve baked.”
You open your mouth to protest, then realize what he’s said, how there’s going to be a call next week, and think it’ll be the longest week of your life. Might as well bake something to pass the time.
~
Oscar’s drunk. You’ve had a beer together, maybe a glass of wine with a cheese board, but you’ve never seen this Oscar, his hair sweaty and matted against his forehead, cheeks flushed from dancing and yelling over the thumping bass, his eyes a little glassy. You’ve been nursing a cocktail he’d bought you for the last hour, pleasantly tipsy, taking it all in.
Logan bounds over and plants himself on the stool next to you. “Why aren’t you dancing?” he gestures exaggeratedly to the mass of bodies undulating to the music.
“I’m old,” you grin, knowing full well Logan has you beat by a few months. His eye roll tells you he’s all too aware. “And I have a real job, remember?”
“But Oscarrrrr,” Logan drawls.
Your heart does a little lurch.
“What about Oscar?” you ask carefully.
“He wants you to daaaance,” he singsongs.
No way. Boy’s making stuff up. “I was gonna leave soon, anyway.”
As if summoned, Oscar shoves his way past a small throng gathered near the bar, stumbles up to you and Logan. You stick out an arm to steady him.
“Whoa there, cowboy,” you tease. “I’ve never seen you so gone before.”
Oscar grimaces. “Not that gone.”
“Good thing you showed up, though. I was just telling Logan I’m about to head out.”
He blinks slowly, as if you’d just woken him from a nap. “You’re…leaving?”
“I’m working tomorrow,” you remind him.
Out of the corner of your eye, you see Logan wink, slide out of his chair, then slink away to the mosh pit.
Oscar shakes his head, pushes his damp hair up his forehead. One strand remains stubbornly stuck above his right eyebrow. You resist the urge to brush it out of the way. “I’ll go too.”
“What?” you say, alarmed. “No. This is your party. Come on, Osc.”
“Then I’ll walk you out,” he says, and something in his voice tells you he won’t take no for an answer.
So you let him lead you out of the bar—although maybe you’re the one doing most of the leading, Oscar leaning on you, an arm wrapped around your waist. You try not to pay too much attention to the way his hand feels, gripping your side firmly.
The night air is cool, and you feel little bumps prick on your arms. You shiver involuntarily.
“Cold?” Oscar asks. Before you can respond, the arm around your waist moves up, wrapping itself around your shoulder. Another arm joins it around the other shoulder, two hands clasping together around your chest. Oscar rests his chin on your head, and you feel the heat radiating from his chest onto your back.
You giggle, a little giddy, maybe from the drink, maybe from him. “You make a great jacket. But I need my arms to call a cab, ya know.”
Oscar’s grip slackens, and you think he’s freeing you, but then he spins you around and suddenly, your face is buried in his chest. He smells like his cologne, intensified by the dampness of his shirt. “Thanks for coming.”
Your chest feels tight. “Of course,” you manage.
His eyes roam over yours, your cheeks, finally settling on your lips, and your heart hammers a painful staccato against your ribs. He slowly brings up a hand to your face, thumb lightly brushing the corner of your lips, index tilting your chin up. Your faces are mere centimeters apart.
He’s going to do it, you think.
But his shoulders sag, and his hand drops. You search his face desperately, wondering what he’s thinking, try to hide your disappointment.
“I’m drunk,” he says quietly. “And stupid. I’m sorry.”
You shake your head. Not ten seconds ago, you’d felt like you were suspended in the air, before everything came crashing back down. Now you just want to…run. “You’re not. Stupid, I mean.”
Stupid. Kissing you would be stupid of him. He is drunk; anyone could be standing in front of him right now. Maybe he wishes someone else was.
Oscar’s lips disappear in a thin line. A shiny black cab rolls up to the curb.
The last thing you see before you turn the corner is Oscar’s stricken face. You bury your face in your palms, still slick with his sweat.
~
“A cake?”
“It was Nate’s birthday,” you retort.
“Oh yeah, and I bet Nate was so much happier to get your girly-ass flower cake over peanut butter cookies. I know they’re his favorite.”
You can’t help but chuckle at the pride in his voice at knowing your brother’s favorite cookie. “I’ll have you know he ate three slices at dinner last night.”
Oscar’s face softens. “In all seriousness, that cake looked pretty fire.”
“Thanks,” you say, blushing a little at the validation. You had to admit you were pretty proud of the orchids you’d painstakingly piped over the bottom of the cake—no cheating with fondant in your kitchen.
“How’s formal stuff? I saw some schools already had theirs. You’re going, right?”
“Nah,” you say, “it just wouldn’t be the same without—” You catch yourself just in time.
“Sorry, I think you cut out,” Oscar says. “It wouldn’t be the same what?”
“Nothing,” you reply hastily. “I just don’t really feel like going.” You picture him frowning on the other end of the line. “Do you have a formal at your school?” you attempt to change the subject.
He’s quiet for a second. “Yeah,” he says. “Same weekend as yours.”
Somehow, an image of him dancing with a pretty British girl materializes in your mind, and it prickles at your chest. Oscar would have no trouble getting a date to his formal—you remember the picture he sent you of him on holiday, tall, tanned, broad-shouldered, with the same grin that had so endeared you years ago.
Rustling on the other end. “Hey. Still there?”
You force yourself to snap out of it. “Yeah, sorry, got distracted.” Then, in as casual of a voice as you can muster, “Are you taking a date?”
“I dunno,” Oscar replies, his tone blasé. “Some of my mates are. I haven’t really thought about it.”
There it is again, Oscar asking the imaginary girl to be his date, her blushing and nodding yes.
“You should,” you say despite yourself. “Anyone would say yes to you.”
Your mom’s voice faintly echoes up the stairs, calling you down for dinner.
“Gotta go, Osc.”
“Okay,” he says. “I’ll talk to you later.”
You tap the button to end the call, feeling a little like you’d just made a terrible mistake.
You tie the satin laces of your dress together behind your back in what you hope is a proper bow, fasten the straps of your heels around your ankles, and slick on a layer of lip gloss before inspecting yourself in the mirror. Not too shabby for someone who would rather be doing pretty much anything else than going to Year 12 formal with some strange boy and friends who are a lot more excited about it than you.
In the end, it was Jessica who had relentlessly begged and wheedled you to come, and you’d acquiesced, mostly to stop her from yapping your ear off.
But two days before formal, she told you at lunch that she’d found you a date.
“What?” you’d snapped. “Jess, I don’t want a date.”
“Please?” Jess widened her eyes. “I just think it’d be so much better for pictures, you know, if we all had a partner.”
You shook your head in exasperation. It wasn’t like you could do anything to change her mind. “Well?” you said, irritated. “Who is it, then?”
Jess smiled, a tad apologetically, mostly not. “I can’t tell you.”
“Jess! I swear to God—”
“Sorry, sorry,” she waved your words away. “I promise he’s not ugly and I promise you won’t hate him...you’ll just have to wait and see.”
You aim your phone at your mirror, and snap a selfie for Oscar, just like he’d asked. He was probably just waking up now...if he was actually awake. It was a Saturday, after all. And Oscar Piastri was not one to ever wake up earlier than 10am by his own will.
But this time, your phone pings right away.
Oscar  You look great!! :)
And that’s all you need to feel a little better about this entire formal situation.
You descend the stairs cautiously. You can already hear your friends chattering downstairs with each other, interspersed with a few unfamiliar voices you assume are some of their dates and all of your parents. One of them sounds vaguely like Oscar, and you wrench your thoughts away from him. Nope. Not tonight. You know you’re just going to be miserable if you keep thinking about him like that.
Jess notices you first, and squeals. “You look so good!”
The other girls crowd around you, complimenting your hair, your makeup, your dress. You think to yourself that it’s fun to dress up every once in a while. Be something other than your everyday self, forget about physics finals and the looming threat of college and boys who are going to other formals a thousand kilometers away.
“Jess is right,” a voice says behind you.
You whirl around.
Oscar is standing there, dressed in a black suit, the blush pink of his tie matching your dress, grinning from ear to ear. He’s holding a little box with a corsage inside of it.
You open your mouth, but nothing comes out.
So you just launch yourself at him instead.
Oscar drops the box, picks you up by the waist as easily as if he was picking up his backpack, and spins around once, twice. Some of the guys whoop, and you can’t help but giggle, even though you feel tears on your face.
“What can I say?” he says, gently putting you back down. “Someone told me I should go...and that anyone would say yes to me.”
You press the heels of your hands into your eyes, knowing your mascara is probably ruined for good.
“So,” Oscar continues softly. He bends down, picks up the corsage. “Does that apply to you too?”
Your heart feels like it’s about to burst. “Yes, Oscar,” you laugh, “yes it does.”
Oscar beams, takes your hand, sliding a little bouquet of creamy orchids up your wrist. Jess takes picture after picture of the two of you.
The smile doesn’t leave his face for the rest of the night, not as you cram into the backseat of one of your friends’ minivans, not as you jump up and down to the music at formal, not even as he passes out from the travel-induced exhaustion on the ride back.
You’re pretty sure it doesn’t leave yours, either.
--
taglist: @sideboobrry11 @helloooobroo @fangirl125reader
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theferrarieffect · 12 days
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And not in the adopt me way…bro’s taking the Leclerc name through full matrimony
Don‘t tell Max he could have become Verstappen-Leclerc simply by asking nicely
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theferrarieffect · 15 days
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Fashion n' Cars
Pairings: F1 Grid x Verstappen!Supermodel!Reader Summary: Max Verstappen has a sister who is a famous supermodel but what happens when other F1 drivers start taking interest in her? Warnings: None! fc: Emily Ratajkwoski Proofread!! A/N: Happy 150 followerssss, this is a special post for celebrating our 150 followers. I js wanna say thank you so much for all the support and appreciation. I really do appreciate it, your feedbacks and comments makes my heart flutter. I promise to always give you the best i can and here's to many more <3 and again if u want to be added on my taglist u can input ur user on this form ^^ https://forms.gle/4Pk1HSDjTEg51Xo79
part two part three
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ynverstappen
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liked by maxverstappen1, charles_leclerc, and 56,347,232 others
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maxverstappen1 beautiful but 4th pic was not necessary schat
ynverstappen im a model. It's my job. 😁
maxverstappen1 i'm sorry?? actually no im not sorry, why are you in my sister's instagram??? @charles_leclerc
charles_leclerc magnifique
ynverstappen thank you cha ^_^
maxverstappen1 stay away from my sister.
user not max being protective HAHAHAHAH
user GRAAAA MILANO FASHION WEEK + YN = FIREEEE
user omg did charles js comment :000
f1 can't wait to see you back on track Y/N
maxverstappen1 to see me win 😎
ynverstappen 😂🫡
ynverstappen
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liked by carlossainz55, landonorris, and 48,987,743 others
ynverstappen me n' fashion n' cars p.s a big congrats to my brother and to uncle nando and to pierre for a great race <3
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maxverstappen1 dank je schat but where's my picture?
ynverstappen graag gedaan and no <3
fernandoalo_official muchas gracias ☺
pierregasly merci ma belle, c'est merveilleux de te voir à la course
maxverstappen1 back off second french guy
pierregasly you don't speak french.
maxverstappen1 google translate exists.
landonorris was nice seeing you Y/N 🤗
maxverstappen1 stop flirting with my sister kid.
lewishamilton if you're ever looking for a new last name, Hamilton will suit you darling 😍
maxverstappen1 i will crash into you the next race.
carlossainz55 Te ves perfecta en rojo mi amor
maxverstappen1 you're second on my list of "drivers to crash" 😊
user SHUT UP I CAN'T MAX REPLYING TO THE DRIVERS COMMENTS IS SO FUNNY HAHHAHAHA
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ynverstappen
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liked by carlossainz55, pierregasly, and 60,834,765
ynverstappen he's handsome af
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part two??? :3
TAGLIST
@euphoricchills @charlesleclerx @Inchident-jgp @amethyst-bitch @dr4g0ngirl @likedbygaslyy @pansexualwitchwhoneedstherapy @httpstoyosi @evermore555 @bibissparkles @lokideservesahug @emmy626 @hiireadstuff @urfavouriteanon @darleneslane @anon555xxx @shelbyteller @spookystitchery @bearryyy
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theferrarieffect · 20 days
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spot the difference
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theferrarieffect · 20 days
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The way the helmet "crushes" Osc's cheeks completely is so adorable. 🥹🧡
You know, when someone grabs your cheeks and crushes them and you look more or less like this 😗
Gif @blueballsracing
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theferrarieffect · 21 days
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Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri participate in St. Louis Cardinal's batting practice
MLB London Series Workout Day 6-23-23 (via ESPN)
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theferrarieffect · 22 days
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🐥 baby oscar in parc fermé (eurocup → f3 → f2)
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theferrarieffect · 23 days
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snickerdoodles, chapter 2: a hard day's work, meeting the drivers, a lesson about taking someone for granted (4.1k words)
previous chapter here!
warnings: stupid sexy sainz glazing, potentially inaccurate descriptions of medical training in the UK, a bit of angst
chapter 2: cinnamon goodbyes
Beep. Beep. Beeeeeeep.
You could hear that damn pager every day for the rest of your life, and you’d still never get used to the way it just grates on your eardrums. Forcing your eyelids open, you blearily scrabble around the nightstand for your glasses—unfortunately, you’re blind as a bat without them.
“Hullo, this is the junior doctor on trauma call,” you mumble into the speaker.
The emergency med consultant on the line informs you that there’s a few traumas about to start rolling into the hospital. If you weren’t awake before, you’re alert now. You yank on a pair of clean scrubs and the first jacket you can find in the heap of clothes on your couch—the laundry may have gotten done, but that didn’t mean you got around to folding it. Only on the drive to the hospital do you realize it has the McLaren logo embroidered on your left chest.
You shake your head, smiling to yourself. Every time Oscar comes and goes, he seems to forget something at your flat. A cap, a sweatshirt, a pair of socks. The forgetfulness is cute…until you spy a piece of abandoned orange gear during a moment of particular weakness, and feel a pang of longing that promptly needs to be tamped down.
But today is a good day. The jacket makes you smile instead of filling your eyes with bitter tears. You and Oscar had polished off the pavlova, agreed to attempt lemon bars the next time he was around (despite the fact neither of you knew when exactly that would be), and parted with the usual hug and jaunty waves two weeks ago now.
A part of you felt guilty at the tiny bit of relief you’d felt watching the cab take him away to the airport. Of course you’d been excited to see him—he’s Oscar, your best friend, the person who knows you inside and out, the person you’d go running to at a moment’s notice if he needed you, the person who makes you feel utterly comfortable. Made. Unfortunately, nothing about this last visit felt comfortable.
Get a grip, you tell yourself firmly. You’ve done this before, you can move past it again.
This being the completely unreasonable, completely irrational crush you seem to be developing on Oscar. You’d say developing again, but if you thought about it hard enough—which, admittedly, you tried to avoid at all costs—you’d have to say it was just one long crush that just came and went.
A flash of plasma splits the dark sky in two, jerking you out of your reverie, followed almost immediately by the roar of thunder. You’d put money on the traumas being a result of accidents on the slick motorways, careless drivers skidding along the roads, thinking nobody else would be driving at that hour. You’re being extra careful yourself as you gingerly pull into the car park and slot yourself into the closest spot you can find. You pull the hood of Oscar’s jacket over your head as you run into the doors of the A&E, jumping puddles and sending up the same prayer you do before every shift.
Please let all of the cases go well today.
And thankfully, despite the veritable typhoon outside, you get your wish. Today is a good day. You scrub in on a patient in pretty bad shape after a motor vehicle accident, but the trauma consultant’s nimble fingers track down the source of the bleed swiftly, and your team’s able to patch him up and send him to the recovery wards before noon. Then you walk into a different OR—this one working on a fall patient—but the table is crowded with other junior doctors, and the consultant waves you away.
It’s not until you step outside and the bright midday sun sears your eyeballs that the wall of post-call fatigue hits you. You stagger into your car, not caring really that your hair is matted from being in a scrub cap since two in the morning, or that the bridge of your glasses dig painful grooves into your nose. Miraculously, you make it home in one piece.
The hot water of your shower pounding your back is the only thing you can think about as you wearily open your mailbox and grab the sheaf of envelopes within. Then how good your pillow’s going to feel, as you toss the mail carelessly onto your coffee table and head into the promised land of your shower.
Towel secured around your dripping hair, you walk into the kitchen to drug yourself with melatonin—an unfortunate necessity to cope with the utter lack of circadian rhythm medical training has cursed you with—and flip aimlessly through your mail as you wait for it to kick in. Bills, adverts, more bills.
Then you notice a creamy white envelope with your name and address scrawled on it. You’d recognize the little hook of the y's, the c's that seem to quit before they finish their curve upwards, anywhere.
Wide awake for the second time today, you tear it open gingerly.
I know we agreed to do lemon bars, but George just told me about his mum’s shortbread cookies. So maybe you can give it a try while I’m gone. Let me know how you like it!! -Oscar
Written below, in the same penmanship, is presumably George Russell’s mother’s cookie recipe.
Oh, Oscar. Even when he’s a million miles away—well, however far from the UK Qatar happens to be, anyway—he never fails to make your day.
You bring the card into your bedroom and prop it up on your nightstand. It’s the last thing you see before you mercifully sink into a deep, dreamless slumber.
~
“Hey, Oscar’s here!” your brother’s shout echoes up the stairs.
Instantaneously, you drop the pencil and straightedge you’d been using to painstakingly graph a titration curve on your chemistry homework, wasting no time in racing downstairs.
“Hey, man,” you hear Oscar’s voice say, and the sound of two palms crisply colliding.
When you reach the foyer, your brother’s staring up at Oscar with naked adoration. But Oscar’s smile is directed straight at you. “So what are we baking today?”
“Well, we just bought a boatload of cinnamon,” you inform him. “So I was thinking…snickerdoodles?”
Oscar’s eyes widen. “No way,” he exclaims.
“Yes way,” you laugh. “Are you a fan?”
“They’re, like, my favorite cookie of all time.”
“Perfect,” you respond, feeling a bit pleased with yourself as you lead the way into the kitchen. “So you won’t mind putting them in and taking them out of the oven.”
His eyes crinkle at the corners. “You really don’t like the heat, do you?”
“It’s hot,” you complain. “And knowing me, I’d just find a way to burn myself really bad.”
It’s been maybe two months, give or take, since the first time you baked together. Since then, not a single Friday has gone by without ending in something sugary and delicious, courtesy of you and Oscar’s toils. Last week, it was peanut butter cookies. This week, snickerdoodles. Needless to say, you’ve become quite popular with your families, friends, and the occasional fortunate Home Ec classmate.
Now, you have it down to a science. The recipe’s already pinned to the fridge with a cookie-shaped magnet. Without having to say a word, Oscar hits the button to preheat the oven as you dump butter and sugar into a bowl and feed it to the stand mixer.
“It gets really hot in the karts, too,” Oscar says, almost under his breath.
“Huh?” You’re not sure if you heard him correctly. Did he mean car?
“The karts,” he repeats quietly. “You’re basically sitting on top of the engine. So it gets hot.”
You knit your brows. “Karts? Like, go-karts?”
And that’s all it takes to open the floodgates; Oscar launches into an explanation of the racing categories, the formats of the races, even the components of the kart itself. You’ve never heard so many consecutive words come out of his mouth, and you’re pretty sure yours hangs ajar, just slightly. Clearly, it’s something he lives and breathes—and you would never have guessed it from the perpetually bored boy sitting next to you every day, too young even to have a real driver’s permit.
It’s pretty incredible.
“You think so?” Oscar asks, a smile creeping onto his face. You blush. Didn’t mean to say that out loud.
“Yeah,” you squeak. “Is this something you could, like, do for the rest of your life?”
Oscar’s face suddenly goes serious, but a dreamy look takes over his pupils. “If you’re good enough…” he trails off. He clears his throat, and his voice fills with steely resolve. “I’m working on it.”
Impressed by his determination, you nod. “Well, it sounds like you’re committed. So there’s no reason you won’t make it.” You’re rewarded with the sight of a dimple on his left cheek.
He turns to the countertop, starts tearing off pieces of dough, rolls them methodically between his palms. A golden brown ball forms in his hands, and he places it onto the greased baking sheet.
“Your turn,” he says casually, as he shapes another cookie.
You reach over him to start rolling your own dough. “My turn for what?”
Oscar keeps churning out cookies, but fixes his gaze on you. “To tell me what you want to do for the rest of your life.”
Oh.
It’s not like you don’t have an answer. In fact, for most of your life, it’s been the only answer. But suddenly, faced with such a direct request to share, you hesitate.
“You don’t have to tell me if—” Oscar starts.
“No,” you say quickly. “I just—I don’t know.” You stare down at the overworked ball of dough in your hands. “Maybe it feels like I’m jinxing something if I say it.”
You think that maybe Oscar would find you silly, but he doesn’t laugh.
“I get it,” he says simply.
“But that’s dumb,” you continue, a little forcibly. You shake your head. “I want to go to medical school. At Oxford. Or maybe somewhere in the States.”
Oscar’s eyes widen. “Wow. So you want to be a doctor.”
“Not just any doctor,” you carry on blindly. “A neurosurgeon. I’ve wanted to be one for as long as I can remember. That’s why I want to study in the UK, or the US…they have the best ones in the world over there.”
He laughs. You want to kick yourself for telling this random boy about the dream you’ve kept secret your entire life, not even your parents privy to it yet. And he laughs. You flush angrily, but Oscar continues to chuckle as he says—
“And I thought the Formula One thing was badass. A brain surgeon? I should’ve known—you’re just…built different.”
“Stop it,” you protest weakly. Your cheeks still burn, but now just with embarrassment at your presumptiveness. “I mean, who knows if I’ll change my mind. Or even make it to that point.”
Oscar shakes his head so emphatically, you’re afraid his chunk of dough will go flying across the kitchen. “No.”
“What?”
“No,” he repeats. His eyes are warm. “I’ve seen you in class…you know everything. I dunno a single person smarter than you, and there’s a lot of nerds in our grade.”
You laugh, ask him if he’s accusing you of being a nerd. Now it’s Oscar’s turn to blush.
“I’ll make you a deal,” you say, pushing the baking sheet towards Oscar, who seamlessly slides it into the oven. “If you make it to Formula One, you invite me to a race. And I…”
Oscar’s lips curl in a smirk. “Don’t you dare say you’ll operate on my brain!”
You burst out laughing. “Alright, alright, no free brain surgery.”
“Sounds like a deal,” he says, and holds out his hand, slick with oil.
You giggle as you take it, like two executives shaking on a crucial business deal. 
When the smell of cinnamon perfumes the air, Oscar spares you from having to take the snickerdoodles out of the oven. Through mouthfuls of cookie, he tells you about driving in the rain.
~
It’s sunny at Silverstone, a rare occurrence. Only a few fluffy white clouds interrupt the expanse of the bluest sky. But there’s no opportunity to admire the sky, because it’s taking all the concentration you can muster not to bump into someone—especially someone rich or important, who you weren’t aware was rich or important—as you follow Oscar through the bustling paddock. A guest pass dangles around your neck, and you marvel at the fact that despite having lived in Oxford for six years and London for one, it’s your first time watching a race in the flesh.
Oscar brings you to a throng of people, dressed in the same orange—excuse me, papaya, Oscar had made sure to inform you—polos as him. “This is McLaren,” he gestures.
A chorus of “welcome”s and “nice to meet you”s greets you. You recognize Lando Norris, his curly brown hair poking through the opening of his cap, brim facing backwards, of course.
“You’re Lando, right?”
Lando smiles at you widely. His eyes are icy blue. “Yep. And you’re Oscar’s…friend.” He might as well have winked, smirked, and nudged you in the side for good measure, he’s that tactless.
F1 drivers, you sigh in your head. They’re no better than the boys in uni. You suppose then that some of them are, in fact, about as old as the boys in uni.
“Nice to meet you.” You accept his outstretched hand.
“Oh hello, who is this?” Two more guys materialize behind Lando. One’s tall—too tall, honestly, to be a driver—and one you can only describe as looking utterly, well, American. They’re wearing navy shirts, emblazoned with a sky blue W on the chest.
Lando smirks. “Ask Osc. It’s his guest.”
A look of surprise flashes across the tall one’s face. “Really now?” He smiles politely at you. “Pleasure to meet you. My name’s Alex.”
Alex…Alex. Oh yes—Alex Albon. He’s missing the bleached hair, but then again, that was last season’s headshot. So what if you’d studied up on the drivers’ faces, what if you might even have made a few flashcards? You wouldn’t want to embarrass yourself in front of Oscar’s colleagues.
“Logan,” the blond one says, and you think that the name Logan Sargeant could not be a more stereotypical name for the sole American driver.
“What do you do? Like as a job?” Lando butts in. Alex chuckles.
You glance at Oscar, but he seems unbothered by the interrogation. Lando sure is nosy.
“Well,” you say a little awkwardly, only recently having gotten used to the title, “I’m a junior doctor. I work at Imperial College in London.”
Lando lets out a low whistle; Alex raises an eyebrow. Logan’s the only one who seems unfazed, and it occurs to you that he’s probably never heard of Imperial.
“It’s, like, Harvard in the UK,” Oscar clarifies, surprising you, and Logan’s eyes widen.
“Beauty and brains,” Lando says. “Where can I get one too, Osc?”
Oscar rolls his eyes.
Logan smirks. “Do you have any hot friends?” he adds.
Well, two could play at that game. “I don’t know,” you grin back at him. “Do you?” You cast a casual glance around the crowds, until—
You stop short.
“Who is that?”
Oscar follows your gaze across the paddock, through the scarlet-clad engineers and pit crew milling around the Ferrari garage, to a man in a matching red shirt and slightly atrocious light wash skinny jeans. He gestures to another guy in headphones, and they both tilt their head back in laughter. He runs a hand through a head full of Disney prince hair.
“Ugh,” Oscar mutters almost imperceptibly, under his breath.
“What?” you demand.
The beautiful stranger catches you staring, flashes you a smile that you didn’t realize normal humans could conjure. You just know your cheeks are as red as the Ferrari livery as he strides over, out of place yet oddly familiar among the McLaren staff.
Lando grins at you, cuffs you lightly on the shoulder as if you’ve been friends your whole life, instead of having met not even ten minutes ago. “Looks like there’s another Carlos groupie in the paddock today.”
“I like my groupies, Lando,” Carlos replies teasingly. His voice is gravelly and deep. Melodic. He extends a hand connected to a deeply tanned arm, and despite your brain short-circuiting at the worst possible time, you manage to reach out and shake it.
“Nice to meet you,” you force yourself to say. “I’m Oscar’s friend.”
“Carlos Sainz,” he says, his brown eyes boring into yours. He has the longest eyelashes you’ve ever seen. That headshot of his had done him so dirty. Hell, he looked like a normal person in it. Handsome, sure. But you’re not entirely sure the man standing in front of you right now isn’t some kind of mirage your horny mind has cooked up…
“Alright then,” Oscar cuts in, his voice suddenly having taken on an edge that definitely wasn’t there moments ago. “I wanna show you around the motorhome. Good seeing you, Carlos.”
“Always,” Carlos responds smoothly, but his gaze remains stubbornly trained on you. You can’t help but giggle.
As Oscar leads you through the doors of the motorhome, you glance back to see Lando and Carlos whispering conspiratorially like a bunch of schoolgirls. You remember watching a video on Youtube of them screeching as they reached blindly into a mystery box, and you can see why people like to pretend they’re a couple.
“What’s gotten into you?” you prod Oscar.
Oscar huffs, lips set in an annoyed line. “Just because he looks like—like—”
“A Disney prince?” you supply helpfully.
“Fine, whatever, a Disney prince,” he grumbles, clearly refusing to lend any personal credence to the words. “He’s bad news. You should stay away.”
You chuckle at his uncharacteristic animosity. “Are you salty because he forced you off the track that one race?”
“No,” he snaps. “You know I’m not the kind of guy to be stupid overprotective. But Sainz…well, he likes women way too much. And you’re basically guaranteed to get your heart broken if you fall for him.”
“Damn, is everyone on Ferrari just a red flag then?” you quip.
Oscar visibly relaxes. “I knew you’d get it,” he says, obviously relieved. “Yeah. Let’s just say Charles and Carlos…not the best track record with girls on the grid.”
“No pun intended.” And Oscar holds open the door as you giggle your way into the motorhome.
~
Sometimes, one isn’t sure of when the significance, or perception, of someone shifts from one thing to another. When you realize you no longer recognize the girl you used to ride your scooter down the street with, donned in matching pigtails, when your parents aren’t infallible gods, when your young English teacher shows up tired on a Monday and you realize they were, in fact, hungover.
But with Oscar...you could pinpoint the exact moment it happened.
It’s any other Friday. Instead of listening to your teacher talk about the extreme value theorem, your pencil dances curlicues around your paper. You and Oscar are baking cinnamon rolls tonight from scratch, and your mouth already waters at the thought of warm cinnamon and the drizzle of white glaze atop the rolls.
When class ends, you walk out the double doors where Oscar is leaning against the wall, waiting for you like he always does. His buddies nudge him with their elbows when they see you, and you’re all too aware of their smirks. You roll your eyes.
To be fair, it’s not like your friends are any better about it—and no amount of you (or Oscar) insisting that there’s nothing going on between you two will convince them otherwise.
“Ready to go?” he asks, jingling his keys in front of your nose. Oscar just got his license, and until you turn 17 he’s going to waste no opportunities lording it over you. You always make a big show of being afraid for your life, even though he’s the best karter in Australia.
You walk together to his car in the parking lot. Oscar seems quiet, so you chatter on about your friends’ latest woes, the chemistry test you’re pretty sure you’re going to fail (whoever invented acid-base titration deserves to go to hell, honestly), whether you two should cough up the cash to buy almond flour for notoriously finicky macarons.
It isn’t until he sticks the keys in the ignition that you realize he hasn’t said more than five words.
“Hey,” you say. “You good?”
Oscar’s eyes are unfocused. “Yeah...” He clears his throat. “Actually...I don’t know.”
You raise your eyebrows. “Wanna talk about it?”
“Maybe we should go home first.” Oscar’s voice is gentle, but something is definitely up.
“You’re scaring me,” you tell him in what you hope is a lighthearted tone, as he pulls out of the parking spot, staring directly ahead the entire way to your house.
He only tells you after he’s removed the steaming rolls from the oven. Something about Formula 4 and a sponsorship from HP Tuners and moving to the UK, except you really only hear the last part.
Your insides turn to ice.
Oscar looks down at your feet, as if he’s afraid to meet your eyes, afraid to see your reaction.
The smell of cinnamon wafts from the counter. It makes you feel sick.
“I’m sorry,” he mumbles.
“When?”
Oscar tilts his head.
“When—when do you go?” you ask again, hating the way your voice shakes.
He closes his eyes.
“In a month.”
One month. In four weeks, this boy who you had to sit next to in Home Ec will walk out of your life as abruptly as he walked into it. In thirty days, this boy who you’ve baked for as many Fridays with, who’s become your best friend and then some, will be ten thousand miles away.
And then you think about Oscar. How he’s leaving behind not only you, but everything he’s ever known in Australia. You’re losing him. He’s losing his entire world.
So you only nod, choking back the sob building in your throat.
“I’ll miss you,” you say evenly. You wipe your clammy palms, surreptitiously, on your jeans. His eyes flare in surprise, probably at how calm you appear. “But you should know—I’m really, really proud of you, and you’re going to make all of your dreams come—”
Oscar cuts you off mid-sentence, wrapping his arms tightly around you.
He smells like cinnamon and flour, and only then do you realize that you’d never really hugged before. He’s taller than me now, you think, as your hands slide below his armpits. And when he’ll undoubtedly grow enough to tower over you, you won’t be there to see it.
You drop your arms, and Oscar tenses up, releasing you too. He clears his throat just as you cough, almost simultaneously. Both of you laugh awkwardly.
“Well,” you say.
“Well,” he echoes. “We’ll keep in touch, right?”
“Right,” you say, but it comes out barely a whisper.
Oscar picks his backpack up off the floor, slowly sliding the straps onto his shoulders, as if dragging it out would prevent him from having to leave your house.
You wave at him as he walks down your driveway and climbs into his car, but as soon as he turns the corner and disappears, tears prick at the corners of your eyes. You wipe them away with a sleeve.
Then you turn and go back to the kitchen, to clean up the mess you two made. You slowly flick the cinnamon rolls into the trash, one after another, listening to the hollow thunks they make against its aluminum walls.
Oscar was never just Oscar. But people tend not to know what they have.
Until it’s gone.
--
next chapter!
taglist: @sideboobrry11
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theferrarieffect · 25 days
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snickerdoodles - an oscar piastri x reader fic
One fateful day in Home Ec, you and Oscar are tasked with making something edible for class. Neither of you have ever baked in your life. Neither of you have any idea that a cookie will change your lives forever...
send me a message or an ask for taglist!
tim tams and meringues - best friend butterflies, and a daunting assignment turns into quite the baking adventure
(coming wed, 5/15!!) cinnamon goodbyes - a hard day's work, meeting the drivers, and not knowing what you have until it's gone
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theferrarieffect · 28 days
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the slip up l lando norris x reader
request/summary – lando and reader are in a secret established relationship, until lando accidentally slips up on stream
author's notes – first piece of writing, feedback appreciated!!! this is just my thoughts written down honestly, i didn’t have much idea where i was going with it so enjoy.
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Max was streaming with Lando at his place. Lando drags his feet over to the stream room, sitting on a chair next to Max. He was scrolling on his phone, trying to pass the time. 
“Mate, I’m gonna leave, you’re being so boring,” Lando joked under his breath as he ran a hand through his hair. 
“I’ll make things more interesting then. Chat, wanna know something really interesting about Lando?” Max asked with a mischievous smile as he looked back at Lando. Lando watched with suspicion of what max could say next. 
“Lando’s got a secret girlfriend,” Max sings to annoy Lando. Lando’s eyes shot up, his heart pounding as he turned off his phone, the same phone he was using to text you, his girlfriend. “I don’t, chat, don’t listen to him. He’s just trying to piss me off,” Lando says as he shoots Max a glare. 
—————
A few months later, everyone has chalked up that interaction to Max simply trying to annoy and rile up Lando, and no one thought much of it. On a miracle of a night in spring, Lando was in Monaco and decided to stream. He had a hoodie on, his hair all messy, but a smile on his face. About an hour into the stream, I knock on the door of his stream room quietly. Lando immediately turned off his video and mic, telling chat to give him a minute. 
I walk in, a black slip dress on with a cropped white cardigan, my hair and makeup done all fancy. “Hi, baby,” Lando says as he pulls me in by the waist, onto his lap. “Girls night tonight, right?” He says with a soft smile. He always makes sure to pay attention to anything I’ve mentioned to him, including my plans to hang out with Lily and Carmen tonight, Alex and George’s girlfriends. 
I hum in response. “Yeah, we’re gonna get dinner and then take some Instagram photos,” I say as I stand up from his lap, “you like the dress? It’s new.” I give him a little twirl to show off the dress. 
Lando smiles brightly. “I love it, baby, you look gorgeous. Like always,” he says as he leans in for a kiss. “Text me when you’re done and need me to pick you up, yeah?” I nod and smile. 
Once I leave, Lando puts his headset back on, turning his mic and camera back on. He scrunches up his face as he’s met by shouting from Max into his headset. “What’s your problem, man?” Lando asks with confusion. Max sighs. “Lando, you had your mic on the whole time. People heard that whole conversation and I was trying to tell you but as always, you ignored me,” Max says with some frustration in his voice, but mostly amusement. 
“Oh,” Lando says as he realizes what has happened. Not knowing what to do, Lando panics and ends stream. 
When my friends and I reach the restaurant, we find it pouring rain, which was the most of our worries since the restaurant was outdoor. With frowns, we all pile back into the car and drive ourselves home. I arrive home only twenty minutes after I left, my dress soaked. My brows furrow in confusion to see Lando on the couch on his phone when i come back, and not on stream. 
I slip off my shoes. “I thought you were streaming?” I ask softly as I make my way over to him. “What happened to you? You’re all soaked! Here, let me get you a towel and you can get dressed into some of my hoodie and sweats to get comfy,” Lando says, trying to avoid the fact that he had just live streamed his whole conversation with his girlfriend. 
I saw the panic in Lando’s eyes. “Stop,” I say as I stood in front of him, “what did you do?” Lando shoots me a bright grin. “I love you, babe. So so much. And you know I’d do anything for you.” This made me even more suspicious. “Lan,” I say as my eyes narrowed.
“Okay, okay. I might have forgotten to mute my mic when we were talking right before you left. I swear I thought I had turned it off!” He says as he panics before beginning to ramble. “And I called you baby, and gorgeous, and your voice was heard too. And Max was telling me the whole time through my headset, but it was off and even if it were on, you know I don’t think about anything else when I’m with you. And there were thousands of people on the stream and you specifically told me you wanted to keep it private because you didn’t want to get hate crimed by the fans and you wouldn’t be able to handle it and I mean, I wanted to but it just slipped and im so so sorry but-“ He stops in confusion when a giggle escapes my lips. “Why aren’t you upset?” He asks slowly.
I smile as I slip my arms around his neck, his hands instinctively wrapping around my waist. “Well. Number one, you’re cute when you panic. Number two, no one saw me, so it’s okay. I mean, considering how in love you are with me, they were bound to find out at some point that you had a girlfriend,” I tease with a smile tugging at my lips. 
He scoffs and rolls his eyes playfully at me. “Okay, yeah. I am absolutely in love with you. Still, you’re not bothered by this?” he asks slowly, hesitation lacing his voice.
“I promise I’m not. It was a mistake. Plus, that just means it’s gonna be all the more fun trying to watch them figure out who it is you’re dating,” I say playfully with a giggle. 
“That’s true,” Lando says softly with a hum, “I love you.”
“I love you too. Although, don’t make me have to have you on adult supervision every time you stream now to make sure nothing else slips out of your mouth,” I tease as I playfully poke his side. 
“Ah! Okay okay, promise,” he says with a giggle as he leans in for a gentle and loving kiss.
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theferrarieffect · 29 days
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snickerdoodles, chapter 1: best friend butterflies, and a daunting assignment turns into quite the baking adventure (3.6k words)
warnings: bit of pining, the slowest burn, ✨friend tension✨
chapter 1: tim tams and meringues
The kitchen is chaos. Bowls and spatulas are strewn all over the messy counter, a timer shaped like a cow chirps angrily for your attention, and you’re pretty sure there’s flour on your chin. You open the oven door, grimacing at the heat—once upon a time, you never had to be the one to do that—precariously move a tray of cookies from a sheet pan to a wire rack, and top them off with a dusting of cinnamon and sugar. Another tray beside it boasts row after row of perfectly piped meringues.
Three slight taps on the door, and your heart leaps. Your taste tester has arrived, just in time.
Abandoning the still-hot cookies on the counter, you saunter your way to the door. Not too quickly—too eagerly—but not too slowly, keeping your guest waiting. Deep breath in, deep breath out. You turn the handle.
As soon as you see each other, Oscar’s stoic face breaks out into a cheeky grin. You meet his outstretched arms halfway, bury your face in his soft hoodie.
“Long time, no see,” you murmur into his chest.
“I could say the same for you.” He rests his chin on top of your head. Then he sniffs your hair. “Let me guess,” he says, and you can hear the smirk in his voice. “Snickerdoodles?”
You break apart, and finally you can take all of Oscar in, his normally cropped hair starting to curl over his ears, the Lando Norris hoodie he has on—supportive teammate, huh—the little mole under his left ear, a constant presence for as long as you can remember.
“That’s cheating,” you say. “I always make snickerdoodles.”
Snickerdoodles are Oscar’s favorite.
Oscar steps into the living room, takes his shoes off without you having to ask. “Hmmm...can’t you give me a hint?”
“Fine.” You get up on your tippy toes and cup his eyes with your hands. “I’ll let you smell them. And no cheating!”
“Okay, okay,” he laughs, taking your wrists gently and lowering them to your sides. He closes his eyes obediently.
You take the opportunity to run into the kitchen, scoop a small pile of meringues into your hands, and return to the living room. You hold your cupped hands up to Oscar’s nose.
He inhales deeply. Thoughtful twin dimples appear above his eyebrows. “Are you even giving me anything to smell?”
You stifle a giggle, because in fact, you were just the tiniest bit cruel with your hint. As far as cookies go, meringues don’t smell like much at all, given that they’re mostly egg whites and sugar.
“Maybe you need a taste test,” you tease.
Oscar opens his mouth and sticks his tongue out, just far enough for it to look comical. You don’t try to fight the laughter anymore as you place a single meringue on his tongue.
“What the?” Oscar says as the cookie starts to dissolve in his mouth. His eyes fly open. “Are these—are these?—these taste like the world’s most boring pavlova.”
“Hey!” you say indignantly. “The meringue is the best part of the pavlova.”
“Hard disagree. Hard. It’s the whipped cream and the fruit that carry it.” The comment earns him an eye roll.
“Well,” you huff, feigning irritation, “then you won’t mind helping me finish it up.”
Oscar’s eyes light up. “You’re not done yet?”
“No, dummy. If I’d put the fruit and the cream on top it'd just melt the cookie underneath. And I wasn’t sure exactly when you were gonna get here.” You turn and head back into the kitchen, Oscar trailing close behind.
Neat rows of small meringues are arranged on one baking sheet, a larger one piped in a sort of flat nest on the other. “I already sliced up the fruit, if you want to get it out of the fridge,” you nudge, and Oscar retrieves the cold metal bowl, draped loosely in plastic wrap. When he thinks you’re not looking, he swipes a snickerdoodle from the wire cooling rack and stuffs it in his mouth whole.
“I saw that,” you say, loading a dollop of freshly whipped cream into a piping bag.
“Saw what?” Oscar asks innocently, mouth full of crumbs.
You drag your pointer finger through what’s left of the whipped cream in the bowl. You turn to him slowly, and in a flash, dot a tiny bit of it on the tip of Oscar’s nose.
Oscar lunges for the bowl, arms his own finger, and drags a streak of fluffy white cream down your cheek.
“Hey!”
He giggles, pointing at your face. “You look like a kid wearing face paint.”
You attempt to retaliate, but then Oscar grabs your wrist. You become acutely aware of a little lurch your stomach does as he looks you directly in the eye. He raises his other hand, slowly wipes the whipped cream off your face with his thumb. He’s still holding your wrist. Your cheeks burn.
“No playing with your food,” he lilts, and then his hands are gone, as quickly as they came.
You roll your eyes, if only to disguise the fact that your face is probably the color of the raspberries in the fruit bowl. “You’ve lost whipped cream privileges.” You pipe a layer down onto the bed of meringue, and step aside for Oscar to crown the whole affair with the fruit.
He furrows his eyebrows in concentration as he carefully arranges the slices of kiwi, spears of strawberry, raspberries, and blueberries one by one within the crevices of the whipped cream.
Watching him, you feel a rush of nostalgia. It’s just like old times.
Almost.
~
You and Oscar met in Year 9, when you were assigned to sit next to each other in Home Ec. You wouldn’t have been caught dead in the Textiles section of the class—needles, even the sewing kind, made your head start to spin—but you reasoned that you did like food. Even though your scatterbrained self probably shouldn’t have been trusted around stoves or ovens either.
Oscar looked like he’d rather be anywhere else. After exchanging a perfunctory hello at the beginning of each class, he seemed to mentally launch himself into outer space. You had no idea a pair of eyes could go that blank.
One day, the teacher tells you to pair up for a group project. The assignment? Make a homemade version of a common processed snack.
You glance over at your seatmate, and for better or worse, he looks just as much at a loss as you feel.
He shifts uncomfortably in his chair, clears his throat. “Um,” he says quietly. “Any ideas?”
You just shake your head.
He sighs. “I’ll think about it some when I go home.” He reaches into his pocket and pulls out his phone. “If you give me your number we can text about ideas.”
You oblige, tapping your name and cell phone number into his contacts.
But judging by the radio silence that night, neither of you experience any bursts of creative inspiration.
The next class period, Oscar’s eyelids droop halfway closed and you’re absentmindedly filling in every other square on your gridded paper like a checkerboard, when the teacher’s voice jerks you both awake.
“Ryan,” she admonishes your classmate. “Put those Tim Tams away. No eating during class.”
Almost telepathically, your heads whip around to face each other, and your eyes lock in agreement. Tim Tams it is.
You invite Oscar to your house for your endeavor to replicate the Tim Tams from the comfort of your own kitchen. Your younger brother had grinned evilly at you when you’d warned him to stay out of the way.
“Oooooooh,” he singsonged. “You’re having a boy over?”
“No, shut up,” you snapped. “It’s for a group project. And besides,” you said wryly, conjuring up in your mind Oscar’s skinny legs, unkempt hair, eternally languid expression and distinct lack of willingness to talk during class, “he’s not even cute.”
And really, he wasn’t.
Oscar knocks timidly on the door, and when you open it, you’re greeted by the sight of him cradling an enormous bag of sugar. It must have weighed at least ten kilos.
“Oscar—” you gasp. “Why on earth, do we need that much sugar?”
Clearly, Oscar hadn’t thought too much about portion sizes when you’d asked him to pick up a bag of sugar on his way to your place. Poor kid. These were the people who needed Home Ec, you supposed.
He turns beet red. “Um,” he stumbles.
You will yourself not to laugh at him; you have a feeling that if you did, he might just never speak to you—or anyone else—ever again.
“Never mind,” you say, waving him through the door. “It’s a lot better to have extra than not enough.”
To your relief, some of the tension leaves Oscar’s shoulders, and he lets the heavy sack of sugar drop to the floor next to your counter.
“So...you know how to bake?” Oscar asks, his eyes roaming curiously over the sheet trays and measuring cups lined up on the counter, the large bag of baking chocolate you’d bought for the project, the gleaming white KitchenAid you’d sweet-talked your mom into letting you use.
“No,” you admit. “My mom’s fantastic, though. I dunno what I’m gonna do when I go to uni and I won’t have a constant supply of her banana bread anymore...”
“We should just have her do the project, then.”
Surprised at his brazen comment, you turn to face Oscar, and there’s a mischievous glint in his eyes. Huh. Oscar Piastri has a sense of humor, you think. “I wish,” you chuckle.
You pull up an online recipe for homemade Tim Tams on your laptop. “It doesn’t look too bad. Tim Tams are basically two biscuits with icing between them.”
“Dipped in chocolate,” Oscar finishes.
“Yep, dipped in chocolate. Should be simple,” you say, and Oscar nods in assent.
Alas, it was not simple at all.
The first batch of biscuits comes out looking, well, a lot like charcoal. Your eyes sting with the veritable cloud of smoke that billows out of the oven. You and Oscar fan at it frantically, trying to disperse it before it sets off the fire alarm.
On the second attempt, the biscuits look edible enough, but something goes horribly wrong with the chocolate coating. Instead of a smooth, homogenous mixture of chocolate and oil, great dark lumps settle below a thick layer of clear liquid.
“Shit,” you say, staring at the bowl. Oscar peers over your shoulder.
“Oh. Oh no.”
“Yeah, oh no. What did we do this time?”
Oscar pulls out his phone. “Troubleshooting...polar...emulsion,” he mutters as he taps away on the keyboard.
“Emulsion?” you say. “That’s the nerdiest thing someone could possibly say.”
Silence.
When you look up from the sad bowl of chocolate, Oscar’s face is flushed. “Oh—Oscar,” you say, embarrassed. “You know—I was just joking, right?”
Oscar’s lips disappear, leaving only a thin line where his mouth was. “Yeah,” he says, tightly.
“No, seriously,” you fumble, a little desperately. “I wouldn’t have made fun of you if I didn’t think it was actually cool. I swear.” Your words sound hollow to you, and you feel like a top tier ass.
He just shrugs. “I’m used to it. I’ve always been the nerd.”
“Please. Until about two seconds ago I thought you were the literal opposite.” You pause, then press forward recklessly. What’s there to lose? “Don’t think I haven’t seen you go practically unconscious every day in Home Ec.”
Oscar stares at you mutely, and you’re sure you’ve now permanently fucked up any chance of you getting along for the foreseeable future, but then—Oscar laughs. His face changes entirely when he does—tiny lines appear at the corners of his eyes, as does a dimple by the crease of his right lip. Like the Australian sun peeking out from behind a passing cloud. It makes you think...something. You’re unsure how to put it into words. But it makes you feel buoyant.
You work much more companionably than before from that point on, and finally, emerge with a batch of chocolate-covered biscuits that to be honest, you’re pretty proud of. Dusk has started to fall outside.
“Will you do the honors?” You hold the plate of cookies out to Oscar.
He grins, and again you’re struck by how sunny his face is, and how reluctant he seemed to hand that smile out. He pinches a Tim Tam between his thumb and index finger and brings it up to his mouth in an exaggerated fashion. You watch his face as he chews thoughtfully.
“Honestly,” he says, “not bad.”
“Not bad?” you pout, slightly miffed. “We worked for hours on this! And all you give me is not bad?”
He chuckles at your annoyance. “Well, look at it this way. We worked on it for a day. The makers of this bad boy—” he fingers the plastic packaging of the original fondly—“have been optimizing the recipe for years.”
“Touché.”
“But really,” he says, suddenly serious, “I think we did great. You did great. I would’ve been totally sunk without you.”
You feel a little bashful at his words. “You too. Thanks for...well, doing this with me.” As if he hadn’t been assigned to.
“I had fun,” Oscar replies simply. And you believe him.
In Home Ec the next morning, as your classmates crowd around your homemade Tim Tams, Oscar meets your eyes, and you both smile.
~
You sit on the couch, ensconced in an unnecessarily fluffy blanket with Oscar beside you, but you’re freezing. Anyone But You plays on the TV—Oscar, of course, missed it while it was in theaters.
Every so often when he leans forward to grab another handful of crisps, his sleeve brushes your bare forearm, and you shiver. The air feels so tense, you feel like it could snap like a rubber band at any time. But Oscar seems blissfully unaware of your rigidness the entire movie, chuckling at the comical moments between Bea and Ben, poking you excitedly in the side at the dramatic shot of the Opera House.
“Can I stay over?” he asks when the end credits play, even though his duffel, complete with a change of clothes, sits ready in the hall. Even though he knows as well as you do that there’s only one answer.
You pretend to consider his question, tapping your chin thoughtfully. “Hmmm…”
Oscar rolls his eyes and gives you a playful shove. Tingles spread through your body; you grit your teeth against them.
“Okay, fine,” you pretend to relent. “But I’m making you sleep on the couch. I’ve gotten zero sleep this week, and you snore like a lawnmower.”
“What?!” Oscar yelps.
“Kidding,” you smirk, and Oscar shoves you again, sending you toppling into the cushions.
In the bathroom, you’re fully preoccupied brushing your teeth while you replay over and over the scene from earlier in the afternoon, when Oscar grabbed your wrist as you decorated the pavlova. The way he said, No playing with your food, in a way you would have sworn was nothing but filthy—if you didn’t know any better.
“Boo,” someone says in your ear.
You almost jump onto the counter.
“Oscar!” you say, the name coming out muffled through a mouthful of toothpaste. You spit into the sink, turn to face him indignantly. “Jesus, you’re gonna give me a heart attack.”
Oscar nonchalantly squeezes toothpaste onto his own toothbrush, and the two of you continue the evening ministrations side by side, the silence having long since become familiar. He watches you wash your face twice, pat all manner of potions and lotions on your skin. He’s one of the few people who’s ever seen you go through your entire skincare routine, and probably the only one who didn’t immediately get bored, or make some kind of snide comment about it being extra.
“I tried the sunscreen you sent me,” he informs you, and the tinge of pride in his voice warms your heart.
“Oh? It’s about time,” you tease. “Skin’s never looked better.”
“Wait, are you being serious?”
You were mostly joking. But how could you say no to those eyes, suddenly filled with genuine hope? “Yep,” you quickly nod.
“Hey, guess what,” Oscar says suddenly.
“What?”
“Last one to the bed sleeps on the floor!” he says as he sprints out of the bathroom.
You fall for this every time.
“HEY!” You race after him, but Oscar’s already dive-bombed into your duvet. “Ahhhhhh,” he says, stretching out all four limbs luxuriously. “I’ve definitely told you this before, but you have great taste in mattresses.”
You just stand at the foot of the bed, arms crossed in mock anger, doing your best to affix a glare onto your face.
“Okay, okay,” Oscar holds his palms up, but makes no move to arise. Then he extends an arm across the other—empty—side of the bed.
It takes you a full thirty seconds to realize what he’s suggesting. Your jaw drops.
“What—we can’t just sleep in the same bed!” you sputter, feeling what has to be misplaced panic rise in your chest.
“Why not?” Oscar asks.
Then his eyes narrow.
“Oh.”
You tilt your head quizzically.
“Is…is there someone who might be upset that you did?” Oscar asks flatly, his voice no longer blithe.
“No!” you blurt out, even more flustered at the misunderstanding. “No. I’m not seeing anyone or anything. It’s just—”
If you weren’t so frazzled by the entire situation, maybe you would’ve noticed the twinkle return to his eyes at the rather emphatic denial. “Just what?”
“Just—I mean, isn’t it a little bit weird?”
Oscar shrugs. “Not like we’re going to do anything.”
The thought of doing things with Oscar—nope, nope, bad. Begone, thoughts.
“Um.” You chew on your lower lip. “So you’re serious?”
“If you’re not gonna be weird about it, yeah. What’s the point of sleeping on the floor when there’s literally room for both of us here?”
The point is, Oscar, that even you brushing up against me makes me feel weird. So how do you think my brain’s gonna take sleeping in the same bed together? And how are you so freaking calm about it?
But now you know that if you say no, it’s as good as admitting that you are, in fact, being weird about it. You shake your head. “Using my words against me, huh? Fine. You’re right, there’s plenty of room for both of us.”
And to prove it to Oscar, but actually mostly to yourself, that you see him as nothing more than your best friend, you climb into the empty half of the bed, silently willing your heart to stop pounding in your chest.
~
The day of the glorious Tim Tam show-and-tell, you come home only to realize that Oscar had left his massive bag of sugar in your kitchen.
“That’s some pretty nice sugar, too,” your mom had observed. “Might want to ask him if he wants that back.”
Too bad you gave him your number instead of the other way around. You figure you’ll tell him in Home Ec tomorrow. Hopefully he’ll be awake.
But your phone buzzes with a text as you’re doing the dishes after dinner.
Unknown  Hey, it’s Oscar I think I left my sugar at your house, lol
You remember him staggering under the weight of the bag, and grin as you add him to your contacts.
Me  Haha yeah you did, I can bring it to Home Ec tomorrow?
Oscar  Well actually Wait are you busy rn?
Me  I’m doing the dishes lol but should be done in 5
Oscar  Okay sounds good
Just as you stick the last of the silverware into the drying rack, your phone rings.
“Hello?”
“Hey,” Oscar says. He sounds a little hesitant. “Uh yeah, so, basically I let my sisters try the Tim Tams, and they’re obsessed.”
“Really?” you can’t help but squeal.
“Yeah. So uh, if you didn’t hate baking too much, they would like us to make another batch of them.”
You giggle. “Damn, we could start a business.”
Oscar chuckles on the other end, and you picture his shoulders relaxing, just like they did that first day. “I can come get the sugar,” he says. “We don’t have to use your house this time, I feel bad.”
Your mom’s sitting on the couch in the living room, watching TV next to your dad. She raises an eyebrow at you as you stroll out of the kitchen with your phone pressed to your ear.
“Wait just a sec,” you tell Oscar, and cover the mic with a palm. “Mom. Do you mind us using the kitchen to bake?”
“I heard that!” Oscar’s voice sounds faintly through the speakers.
“Not at all,” your mom says. “Honestly, that KitchenAid hasn’t seen enough of the light for a while now.”
“We’ve got her blessing,” you announce to Oscar triumphantly. “That stand mixer is our oyster.”
When Oscar comes over the next week, you do indeed replicate the Tim Tams, but you also decide to make chocolate chip cookies since you’ve already got everything you need for them. You get into a spirited argument over your preferred consistency—you’ll die on the hill of crispy edges, Oscar refusing to budge an inch on his stance that cookies so underbaked they’re practically liquid are superior.
The perfume emanating from the oven is almost intoxicating. Oscar prematurely yanks the sheet tray out of the oven despite your protests, and proceeds to immediately scald the roof of his mouth on the flaming hot cookies.
“Gooey!” he manages to say in delight, despite the tears forming in his eyes.
You laugh until your sides hurt.
Thus began the odyssey that you two eventually dubbed Piastry of the Week.
next chapter here!
~
taglist: @sideboobrry11
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theferrarieffect · 1 month
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snickerdoodles - an oscar piastri x reader fic
One fateful day in Home Ec, you and Oscar are tasked with making something edible for class. Neither of you have ever baked in your life. Neither of you have any idea that a cookie will change your lives forever...
send me a message or an ask for taglist!
tim tams and meringues - best friend butterflies, and a daunting assignment turns into quite the baking adventure
cinnamon goodbyes - a hard day's work, meet the drivers, and a lesson about taking someone for granted learned the hard way
(new!!) let them eat macarons (or cake) - drifting apart, keeping in touch, a bar near-miss and a senior year surprise
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theferrarieffect · 1 month
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