Let Him See - Oscar Piastri x Reader One-Shot
❝ He kisses you like he’s waited for permission. And that’s what makes you break. ❞
[oscar piastri x reader]
~8.2k words | rated: E
tw: 18+, emotional neglect, infidelity, porn with plot, smut, possessive behavior, complicated breakup dynamics
lando stopped seeing you. oscar never missed a thing. now the whole paddock knows.
notes: i tried writing in present tense for this, which really isn't in my ballpark. not sure if i loved it, but maybe i'll do more of it later on. i’m sorry i made lando out to be such a dick. i promise ill make up for it!! enjoy! <3
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The McLaren party is elegant in that vaguely overstated way team events always are—polished chrome fixtures, dim gold lighting, and drinks served in glasses that clink too delicately for the kind of tension simmering beneath the surface.
You walk in on Lando’s arm. A black strapless dress hugging you like it was tailored in vengeance. The ruffled ruching along the bottom cascades like spilled ink with every step you take. You planned everything—the heels, the bold red lipstick, the subtle shimmer in the inner corners of your eyes. All for him.
He barely glances down at you.
Lando says something to a passing engineer, nods at a sponsor, then slips out of your grasp as naturally as water slipping through your fingers. No one notices the slight shift in your balance when he lets go. But you do.
You’re left standing beside a bar you didn’t want to be near, surrounded by people who smile too brightly and ask questions you don’t want to answer.
You’re his girlfriend—the public face of a dying relationship neither of you have the courage to end. He doesn’t even try to hide it anymore. He’s across the room within minutes, grinning down at a woman in a red backless dress, hand resting low on her spine. It’s a familiar stance. You’ve seen it before. You’ve even been on the receiving end of it—back when he still bothered.
Your chest aches, but you don’t flinch. Not here. Not while people are watching.
Someone asks you if you want champagne. You decline with a polite smile, then excuse yourself—something about needing to take a call, voice breezy, unbothered.
You step out of the ballroom like you’re slipping out of a skin that doesn’t fit anymore.
The hallway is dim and mercifully empty. You exhale, back against the cool wall, and pull your phone out of your clutch—blank screen. No missed messages. No excuses to stay outside longer than you should.
You open WhatsApp. You type a few words. Delete them. Start again. Then stop. You let your head tip back until it rests against the cool wall, eyes fluttering closed for a second.
You wore this dress for him.
You practically starved yourself all day, got your makeup done by the same artist who preps you for photoshoots, shaved every inch of your body until your skin ached—and he didn’t even look at you.
A sharp sting pricks behind your eyes, but you blink it back. Your mascara is too good to waste on someone who hasn’t kissed you in public in weeks.
You shift your weight in your heels. They’re taller than you usually wear—he once said he liked when you looked just a little out of balance, like he had to catch you. He hasn’t caught you in a long time.
The hallway feels like limbo. You’re not sure if you want to scream or vanish. The silence settles over you like a second skin—until it breaks.
“Hey.”
You look up.
Oscar stands a few feet away. Hands in his pockets. Brows knit with something like concern—or maybe anger, but not at you.
You straighten up instinctively, “Hey.”
His gaze flicks toward the ballroom, then back to you, “He didn’t even notice you left.”
Your voice catches before it comes out, “He never does.”
Oscar doesn’t speak. He just stays there, watching you like you’re not crazy for feeling the way you do.
For a few seconds, that’s enough.
You look away first. Not because you’re embarrassed—but because his eyes are too steady, too full of something that burns beneath the surface. Like if you look too long, you’ll start crying or say something you can’t take back.
Your gaze falls to the floor, to the veins in the marble tile, to the perfectly manicured hand holding your clutch like it’s the only thing holding you together.
Then, softly—like the truth finally scraping its way up your throat—you speak.
“He does this a lot,” you murmur, “Leaves me at these things. Flirts with whatever blonde he hasn’t slept with yet. Sometimes it’s just talking. Usually it’s not.”
You swallow. The bitterness coats your tongue.
“And I’m supposed to smile through it. Pretend I don’t care. Because we’re McLaren’s golden couple, right? I look good enough on his arm, and he looks better in the photos. Win-win.”
Oscar doesn’t interrupt. He stays where he is, still but attentive, like if he moves too fast you might break.
You don’t stop. It’s pouring out now.
“I tell myself it’s fine. That I knew what I was signing up for. That it’s just how he is. But then I see the way he touches them—like they’re interesting. Like they matter.”
Your voice drops, quiet and sharp:
“He hasn’t looked at me like that in a long time.”
The silence after that is loud. Heavy.
You take a shaky breath and force out a dry laugh. “God. I sound pathetic.”
“No,” Oscar says immediately, “You sound hurt.”
You blink. His voice is too honest. Too kind.
It cracks something wide open.
“Of course I’m hurt,” you whisper, “I feel disposable. And maybe I am. Maybe that’s why I don’t leave. Maybe I’m scared if I do, no one else will want me.”
Oscar moves then.
Just a step. Slow. Controlled. Like he’s grounding himself.
“That’s not true,” he says, sincerity and care laced in his voice.
You lift your eyes to his. His tone doesn't match how furious he looks. Not at you—never at you—but at everything you just said. At every bruise Lando left behind that didn’t show up on your skin.
“I’m tired of watching him hurt you,” he says, voice like steel wrapped in silk.
The breath catches in your throat. You didn’t expect that. Didn’t expect him to say it. Not so simply. Not so seriously.
You fold your arms across your chest, trying to find a shield in sarcasm. It’s the only armor you have left.
“What, you want to make him jealous or something?” A laugh, light and mocking. A shrug, “Go ahead.”
You don’t mean it. It’s a deflection, a defense. Something to push him back before he gets too close to the bleeding parts.
But Oscar doesn’t laugh.
He steps in.
Close.
Too close.
You feel his hand brush the side of your face, gentle fingers slipping behind your ear. He pauses—waits for you to stop him—and when you don’t, he tilts your chin just enough.
And then he kisses you.
Your body locks. Every muscle goes taut.
Your lips are frozen against his, breath caught somewhere in your chest.
But his mouth is soft. Steady. Patient.
He kisses you like he’s waited for permission.
And that’s what makes you break.
You melt.
Fingers tangling in the collar of his shirt, you kiss him back. Rough. Desperate. Furious with yourself for how good it feels. For how long you’ve wanted this, buried it, pushed it down under years of Lando’s carelessness.
Oscar groans when your hips tip into his.
The kiss deepens. His hands grip your waist—hard, grounding. Yours slide up his chest, grabbing fistfuls of cotton like you need to hold on or you’ll collapse.
You hit the wall with a soft thud. He doesn’t stop. You don’t want him to. One of his hands finds your bare thigh where your dress has shifted, the other cradling your jaw.
He kisses you like he needs to prove something. Like he’s making up for every second Lando didn’t touch you.
You moan into his mouth—too soft, too shocked at yourself.
He pulls back just enough to breathe against your lips.
You’re both breathing heavily; you more than him.
Your lipstick’s ruined. His pupils are blown. His chest is rising and falling like he’s just come off a cooldown lap.
Then—voice low, rough, shaking with restraint—he says,
“Room 321. If you mean it.”
And he steps back. Hands still curled like he wants to reach for you again.
But he doesn’t.
He leaves you standing there in a dim hotel hallway, breathless, shaking, lips tingling, with your heart slamming against your ribs and your mind screaming that something just changed forever.
Room 321.
You stare at the number plaque for a moment.
You knock once, and the door opens like he was already standing behind it—waiting.
Oscar stands in the soft glow of the hotel room, still in his suit pants, white shirt rumpled with the top two buttons undone. His jacket’s folded neatly over the back of a chair. His hair’s a little mussed like he’s been running his hands through it since he left you.
His eyes land on your lips first. Then your throat.
Your lipstick is smudged from the hallway kiss. You didn’t fix it. You didn’t want to.
He doesn’t say anything at first. Just stands there. Chest rising slowly. Eyes locked on yours. There’s something sharp in his silence—not anger, not regret. Restraint.
You step into the room slowly. The door closes behind you with a dull thud that feels heavier than it should.
He still doesn’t move.
Neither do you.
The tension crackles between you like a tripwire no one wants to step on first.
“You shouldn’t be here,” he says quietly, eyes dark.
Your chest lifts, lips parted slightly as you look at him across the room, “Then tell me to leave.”
He doesn’t.
Instead, he takes a slow step forward.
You mirror him.
Another step. Closer. Breath catching.
Until there’s no more distance between you.
He reaches out—hesitantly—fingers brushing your chin, then trailing along the line of your smudged lipstick.
“You look like you’ve already been kissed,” he says.
You breathe, “You did that.”
“Yeah,” he murmurs, “I did.”
That’s when the tension snaps.
The second his mouth meets yours again, everything else dissolves.
It’s rougher this time. Starved. Less like a kiss and more like a confession torn from his chest. His hands cradle your jaw, fingers pressing just beneath your ears like he’s grounding himself in the feel of you. Your arms loop around his neck instantly, your body melting into his like it always belonged there.
His tongue slips past your lips, hot and slow, as your backs bump blindly into the desk behind you. A McLaren cap falls to the floor unnoticed. You gasp softly into the kiss, and he groans into your mouth like it’s killing him not to take more.
His hands slide down your arms, then to your waist, where he grips you tightly—not to push, not to rush. Just to hold. Just to feel.
You don’t pull away when he reaches behind you and finds the zipper of your dress. It comes down slowly, the sound impossibly loud in the quiet of the room. His knuckles brush your spine as he guides the fabric off your shoulders.
You’re still kissing when it falls to your ankles.
Still kissing when you push his shirt off, fingers slipping under the undone buttons, palms brushing warm skin. He shrugs it down his arms and lets it fall with a soft rustle to the carpet. His pants follow soon after, as you blindly undo his belt and unbutton them.
His hands don’t leave your body. Not once.
You walk backward together, mouths fused, breath short, until the backs of your knees hit the bed.
He breaks the kiss just long enough to look at you.
Then he bends slightly and lifts you—carefully, like you might shatter in his arms—and lays you down on the sheets as if it’s an offering.
Your hair fans out against the pillows. Your chest rises and falls quickly. Oscar stands over you for a second, chest heaving, jaw tight, eyes moving across every inch of your skin.
Then he climbs onto the bed and kneels between your thighs.
You watch him watch you, lips parted, body burning.
He leans in and kisses your neck—softly at first.
Then lower.
And lower.
Down the column of your throat, over the swell of your chest. He shifts the fabric of your bra aside, reaching beneath you and removing it gently, with trembling fingers, and kisses the curve of your breast, then bites gently.
You gasp, fingers grasping at the sheets.
He sucks gently—and when he pulls back, there’s a blooming red mark just beneath your collarbone.
Then another. Between your breasts.
Then one lower, over the swell of your ribcage.
He takes his time. His mouth moves down, and you lose count of how many places he claims with his lips and teeth.
You squirm as he shifts, adjusting on his knees to reach lower, pushing the edge of your panties aside so he can press another kiss just above your hipbone—then right at the inner curve of your thigh.
He sucks there, too. A long, slow draw that makes your fingers fist the sheets.
“Oscar—”
“Shh,” he murmurs, voice husky, “Let me leave them.”
Another bite. Another mark, just shy of the place where you’re already aching for him.
“I want him to see every single one of these.”
Your eyes flutter shut.
You’ve never been kissed like this—not for show, not for ownership, but for the sheer need to leave a piece of himself behind on your skin.
By the time his mouth trails back up your thighs, your panties are damp with heat and your breathing’s gone shaky.
Oscar leans up, one hand bracing beside your waist. His other hand finds the waistband of your panties and begins to ease them down—slowly. Carefully. Like unwrapping something delicate.
He watches your face the entire time.
They slide down your legs with ease, and he tosses them aside.
You’re bare for him now—fully, completely—and you’ve never felt so seen.
He kisses your knee. Then the inside of your thigh again. Then finally, finally, his mouth hovers over where you need him most.
You’re already soaked. He groans when he sees it.
“Fuck. Look at you. I’ve thought about this,” he says softly, eyes fixed on where you’re already wet for him. “So many times.”
You can’t answer. You can barely think.
His hands spread you open gently—reverently—and then his mouth is on you.
Warm. Wet. Soft.
The first stroke of his tongue is unhurried, a slow drag from bottom to top that makes your spine arch off the mattress. You gasp, hips twitching, but his grip is firm on your thighs.
“I’ve got you,” he whispers against you.
He licks again—long and deliberate—then presses soft kisses to your clit, switching between his tongue and his lips like he’s tasting something he wants to savor.
You moan—high and broken—and he groans back like he feels it.
His hands hold your thighs open, thumbs stroking slow circles into your skin. You’re writhing now, overwhelmed, the tension coiling tighter and tighter in your belly with every passing second.
Your fingers claw at the sheets. You feel it coming, your body locking up—
Until he pulls back.
Your hips lift off the bed, chasing the loss, but his hands still you.
He leans in, kisses the inside of your thigh again—slow and deep—a soft, open-mouthed press that lingers just long enough to leave another blooming bruise.
Then he hovers over you, mouth wet, eyes locked on yours.
“You’re close,” he murmurs, “I can feel it. You’re shaking.”
You nod, lips parted, breath stuttering.
His hands slide up your thighs, grounding you—but instead of returning to where you’re desperate for him, he pulls back more.
“Don’t come yet.”
Your brows draw together, lips twitching in protest, “What—why—?”
Oscar leans in again, hand wrapping around your thigh to hold you open as he presses a kiss just above your aching heat.
His voice is low, but firm, “Because I want to be inside you when you fall apart.”
The authority in his tone makes you clench around nothing. You whimper as he sits back on his heels, rubbing his palms over your thighs in soothing strokes.
“Please…” you whisper.
His mouth tilts into the faintest smirk—not smug. Hungry.
Then he crawls back up your body, leaving another trail of slow kisses across the bruises he’s left down your chest.
“You don’t come without me tonight,” he says quietly against your skin. “You understand?”
You nod, barely breathing.
“Say it,” his tone is demanding, but not impatient.
“I—I won’t come until you’re inside me,” you surrender.
He moves back up to kiss you—soft at first, then deeper, longer—as he reaches over to the nightstand. You hear the foil tear, the familiar sound grounding the moment in something real. His body shifts against yours as he sits back briefly to roll the condom on, his breath catching as his hand moves.
Then he’s back above you—one forearm braced beside your head, the other hand sliding down to guide himself to your entrance. His cock brushes against you, hot and thick and so ready.
But still, he pauses.
“Are you sure? You won’t regret this later?” he asks, voice quieter now. Not demanding. Not coaxing. Just open.
You reach up, cup his jaw, thumb brushing his cheek.
“Yes. I’m sure. I want this. I want you.”
Oscar exhales—one soft, shuddering breath—and presses his forehead to yours for a moment, like he’s soaking those words in.
He sinks into you slowly—not teasing, just careful, controlled, like he’s doing something sacred. His hips press forward inch by inch, stretching you open, filling you fully until your thighs tremble against his sides.
You gasp, clutching his biceps, head tipping back into the pillows, “Oscar…”
“I know,” he breathes. “Fuck, I know. You feel—”
He cuts himself off with a groan, jaw tightening as he bottoms out, “So fucking tight. Like you were made for me.”
He stills inside you for a moment, forehead pressed to yours, both of you shaking with the effort of not losing it too soon. He brushes your hair away from your face with the gentlest touch, his palm cupping your cheek like he’s afraid you might break if he lets go.
“You okay?”
“Yes,” you whisper, “Move. Please.”
So he does.
The first thrust is slow and deep, rolling through your whole body. His hips pull back and push forward in a smooth rhythm that feels like worship. Each time he fills you, you feel more of yourself unravel, like he’s stripping you bare with every stroke.
He kisses you through it—long, lingering kisses against your mouth, your cheek, your jaw, your throat.
“You’re mine now,” he murmurs, “Say it. Say you’re mine.”
You breathe it against his lips, broken and honest:
“I’m yours.”
He groans, burying himself deeper.
His pace stays steady, grounding—not brutal, not rushed, but deliberate. Like he wants to make this last. Like he needs you to feel it for hours after.
His hand slides down your side to grip your thigh, pulling your leg up around his waist to angle you just right—and when he thrusts again, you choke on a moan.
“Right there?” he pants.
You nod frantically, eyes wide and wet.
“Yeah, baby. That’s it,” He stumbles through his words, deep within his own pleasure, “You take me so well.”
You cling to him like he’s the only real thing in the world, his name slipping from your lips between soft gasps, your body clenching around him, slick and pulsing and completely his.
When your orgasm hits, it’s not sharp—it’s deep. A wave that rolls through you, full-body and consuming. You cry out, and he swallows the sound in a kiss, fucking you through it with soft praise and steady hands.
“That’s it, sweetheart. Let go. I’ve got you.”
You don’t even realize you’re crying until he kisses the corner of your eye.
“I’ve got you,” he whispers, “You’re safe.”
He comes only seconds later, thrusts stuttering, mouth falling open against your neck. You feel him groan into your skin as he grips your thigh and spills into the condom, his whole body shaking with the effort.
And when it’s over, he doesn’t pull away.
He just collapses into you—gently—his chest pressed to yours, his arms wrapping around your waist like he’s afraid you’ll disappear if he loosens his hold.
You lie there tangled in each other, your fingers brushing through the damp hair at the nape of his neck, your thighs still parted around his hips.
Neither of you speaks.
You don’t have to.
You’re both suspended in that quiet stillness—the kind that only comes after something real, something that changes the shape of you.
After a long moment, he shifts slightly, careful not to crush you. His hand strokes your thigh where it’s still curled around his waist. He places a soft kiss on your cheek, then another on your jaw. Then he pulls out gently, drawing a small whimper from your throat.
“Sorry,” he murmurs, brushing his hand down your hip, “You okay?”
You nod. Your voice is still trapped somewhere in your chest, so you let your hand answer for you, fingers curling around his bicep. He disposes of the condom quickly, then returns to the bed without hesitation, lying beside you and immediately pulling you into his arms.
He doesn’t ask if it was good.
He doesn’t need to.
Instead, he cradles you, one arm wrapped tightly around your waist, the other brushing soft fingers through your hair.
“You’re shaking,” he whispers.
“I’m fine,” you murmur. “Just… a lot.”
You feel his smile against your forehead. His hand slides up and down your back, slow and steady, grounding.
“Hey,” he says gently after a pause. “You don’t… regret this, do you?”
You shift slightly to look at him. His eyes are wide, open, vulnerable—stripped of all the heat and control from earlier. He’s just Oscar now. Soft-spoken and careful with your heart.
You shake your head slowly, “No. I don’t.”
His shoulders relax.
“Okay,” he says, “Good. I just—I need you to know…”
He hesitates, thumb brushing your side, “This doesn’t have to mean anything. If it was just about him—if it was just something you needed to do — that’s okay.”
You blink. His voice is steady, but there’s a hint of sadness tucked into it. Like he means what he’s saying, but part of him hopes it isn’t just that.
You slide your hand up his chest, over the steady beat of his heart, “It wasn’t just about him.”
His brows lift slightly. You lean in and press a soft kiss to the corner of his mouth.
“I wouldn’t be here if it didn’t mean anything.”
Oscar exhales—slow and shaky—and you see the tension leave his body like someone just untied a knot that’s been there for months.
He pulls you in tighter. You tuck your head beneath his chin, leg slipping between his, arms around his torso, his scent already warm on your skin.
“Okay,” he murmurs, “Stay?”
You nod against his chest, “I want to.”
You fall asleep like that—in his arms, his fingers tangled in your hair, your body marked with proof of what happened.
Not revenge.
Not just sex.
Something.
The first thing you feel is warmth.
Oscar’s chest beneath your cheek. His arm still slung around your waist. The faint hum of city life beyond the hotel windows. You blink slowly into the early light, your lashes brushing the skin of his collarbone.
He’s already awake.
You can feel it in the way his fingers trace lazy, absentminded shapes along your back. He’s not in a rush. Not trying to move you. Just… there, soaking the moment in.
You shift slightly, stretch, and wince a little—your thighs ache, in the best way. Oscar immediately pauses.
“Sore?” he says, voice still rough with sleep.
“A little,’ you respond quietly.
He kisses your forehead, “Good sore or… need-an-ice-pack sore?”
You snort, hiding your smile in his chest, “Good sore.”
He hums, content. His hand returns to your back. You both stay still for a few more seconds—not talking, not overthinking—just breathing together.
Then, softly, “You don’t have to sneak out,” he says, “You can walk out like you belong here.”
You glance up at him, “I kind of do belong now… don’t I?”
His lips lift into a tired smile, “Yeah. You do.”
You press a soft kiss to his jaw before finally sitting up, the sheets slipping down your body, baring the constellation of love bites he left down your chest. His eyes flick to them, and his smile shifts—pride, possession, a little satisfaction.
“He’s gonna see those,” he says.
“Good,” you echo, voice quiet but sharp.
You find your underwear, pull on your clothes from the night before — everything still wrinkled from the floor. You go to the mirror, fix your hair just enough, and borrow his hoodie. He watches you do it all in silence.
Before you leave, he stands, cups your face in both hands, and kisses you slow. Sweet.
“See you down there?”
You nod, “Yeah. I’ll be around.”
You open the door.
Step out.
And you’re not five steps down the hall before you hear the elevator ding.
You hear the sound of footsteps before you register anything else—then the shift in atmosphere. Heavy. Cold. Unwelcoming/
You turn.
Lando steps into the hallway off of the elevator, coffee in hand, hoodie tied low around his hips, damp curls falling over his forehead like he just stepped out of the shower.
He doesn’t speak right away.
He just stops—eyes locked on you—and stares.
At the heels.
At the wrinkled black dress from last night.
At the hoodie hanging off your shoulders—Oscar’s '81' hoodie.
Then his gaze lands on your neck.
The bruises.
The silence stretches, thick and venomous.
“Wow,” he mutters, taking a slow sip of his coffee, “Didn’t think you’d stoop that low.”
You raise an eyebrow, heartbeat steady, “Funny. I was thinking the same about you for the last six months.”
His eyes flicker—a flash of guilt, gone in an instant.
“So what, then?” he snaps. “You fuck my teammate to even the score?”
You shrug one shoulder, “I didn’t realize we were still keeping score.”
“You really let him leave those on you?” His voice cuts sharper now, bitter, “Is that what you’re doing now? Walking around marked up like a fucking trophy?”
“He didn’t do it to prove a point,’ You step closer, just enough, “He did it because he wanted to touch me. Because he actually looked at me.”
Lando’s jaw clenches,
"You’re still mine.”
That’s when you laugh—not cruel, but quiet. Final.
“No, Lando. I was never yours,” you say with a confidence you didn’t know you possessed, “I just played the part.”
His lips part like he wants to fire back, but no words come.
You walk past him without another glance, heels echoing softly against the hotel carpet. His coffee hand twitches like he wants to stop you—to say something that could undo what he just saw.
But he doesn’t.
He can’t.
The bruises on your neck do all the talking.
The tension hits before you even step onto the concrete.
You’d heard whispers all morning—something about a joint media pen meltdown, Lando snapping mid-question, storming off, Oscar handling it with trademark calm. Nobody quite knows why. No one’s saying anything aloud. But everyone feels the shift.
Especially in the McLaren garage.
The energy is tight. Controlled. Like an engine revving just a little too high.
You move through it like a blade through silk.
Sunglasses on, McLaren pass hanging low on your chest. Hair neatly pulled back, hoodie zipped halfway. You tried to cover the hickeys— light foundation along your collarbone, you hadn't expected to need color corrector on this trip—but Monaco’s heat is unforgiving. The bruises are starting to bleed through the coverage, soft and red and obvious.
You don’t adjust your zipper.
Let them wonder.
As you step through the divider into the team area, a few heads turn. You're familiar enough to them. People don’t stare—not directly—but eyes flick. Conversations pause. It’s subtle, but you’re used to it by now.
Oscar’s standing just to the side of the media tent, debrief notes in one hand. He looks up the second you appear—and though his expression doesn’t change much, you catch the tiny lift at the corner of his mouth. Just for you.
He doesn’t come to you.
You don’t go to him.
Not yet.
You pass close enough that your arm brushes his, and the heat between you sizzles like something private. He doesn’t look, doesn’t touch.
But he says, quiet enough for only you to hear, “He cracked.”
You smile faintly, “I heard.”
“They asked about quali, he said something about ‘teammates knowing their place.’”
You raise a brow, amused, “Classy.”
“Zak pulled him out. Press has no idea what the fuck he meant,” Oscar says, with a hint of boyish triumph laced in his voice.
“But you do.”
He doesn’t answer that—just smiles again, a little wider this time.
You walk past him and take your place in the viewing area beside one of the engineers. From across the garage, you feel Lando’s eyes land on you. Just a flicker.
Just long enough.
He sees the bruise peeking above the collar of your hoodie. The faint outline of teeth just beneath your jaw.
He looks away.
You don’t need to say a word.
Oscar already said it for you—with his mouth on your skin, with his name on your lips, with every mark he left behind.
Qualifying starts, and Monaco doesn’t give anyone room to hide — not on track, and definitely not off it.
From the team pit wall, you watch it unfold through tinted lenses, headset perched loosely around your neck.
Oscar’s smooth. Fast. Calm through Sector 1, surgical through the hairpin. Lando’s twitchier. Overcorrecting. Radio sharp. He goes wide into Turn 12 and mutters something that gets bleeped on the live feed.
The garage knows.
Everyone knows.
Even the engineers are glancing at each other between data runs. The tension hasn’t lifted—it’s just gone quieter. Deeper.
Zak walks past you once, then again, and doesn’t say anything.
You don’t move.
Oscar finishes P3. Lando P7.
When Oscar’s lap time flashes on the board, there’s a flicker of something like satisfaction in the way he lifts his visor. He doesn’t celebrate. Doesn’t gloat. Just pulls back into the garage like he’s done his job—and knows you were watching.
You head toward the back hallway after the session ends. Quiet space behind hospitality, where the drivers come through before facing the press.
You’re leaning against a wall when you hear the voices before you see them.
Lando’s.
“Why don’t you tell them what you were really thinking on that last lap?”
Oscar’s.
“Excuse me?”
Lando’s.
“You wanted to beat me. You needed to. Don’t act like this was just another quali for you.”
Oscar’s voice is quieter, cooler, “Every quali, I want to beat the guy next to me. That’s the point.”
Lando laughs, sharp and joyless, “You think you’ve won something, don’t you? Some prize of a woman?”
You step into view.
They both go quiet.
Oscar’s eyes flick to you first—not surprised, not smug. Just aware. Present.
Lando sees the faint hickey blooming again, the one the foundation couldn’t fully hide, and his jaw ticks. He doesn’t say anything. Doesn’t have to.
You tilt your head, “Everything alright?”
Oscar looks at Lando for half a second longer, then turns to you.
“Yeah,” he says, calm and even. “We were just clearing the air.”
This earns him a glare from Lando.
You smile at Oscar, brush your hand lightly along his arm as you pass.
Lando stays frozen.
It’s dark when you find Oscar again—rooftop level, away from the noise. He’s leaning on the railing in his McLaren hoodie, watching the city lights flicker over the water.
You slip in beside him.
He doesn’t look away from the skyline.
“He’s pissed,” Oscar says.
“He’ll stay pissed,” you admit quietly.
“He’s not just mad about it being me,” a beat, “He’s mad because he never thought you would leave him.”
You nod, fingers grazing the edge of the railing, “He never thought I’d let anyone else touch me.”
Oscar turns to you then. The tension’s gone now, burned out somewhere between the lap and the hallway. He notices you shivering and removes his hoodie, handing it to you without a word.
“Do you regret it?”
“No,” you respond, more assurance in your voice than the last time he asked. You turn fully toward him, “Do you?”
He just looks at you—steady, thoughtful, something softer than anything he’s shown all day.
Then he shrugs one shoulder and smiles faintly, “Not even a little.”
You lean in.
Kiss him.
The kiss is soft—nothing like the one in the hallway, or the ones from last night, hot and breathless with desperation. This one is calm. Confident.
Yours.
Oscar’s hands rest lightly on your waist, the cool night breeze lifting strands of your hair between you. Monaco glitters below, impossibly golden. You kiss him once. Then again. Slow. Unrushed. Like no one’s watching.
Except someone is.
You don’t notice it at first—the small mechanical click behind you. Subtle. A shutter. A camera lens adjusting to the low light.
By the time you pull back, it’s already done.
Oscar’s head lifts just slightly, eyes narrowing toward a corner of the rooftop—barely visible through a line of glass. Not press-official. Paparazzi freelance. The ones who sell exclusives when the media team’s off-duty.
“Shit,” Oscar mutters under his breath.
You turn, eyes locking on the shadowed figure just as they duck behind cover.
Too late.
“Think they got it?” you ask, already knowing the answer.
Oscar nods slowly, expression unreadable, “Yeah. They got it.”
You exhale—not panicked. Just… bracing.
Because the image will drop. Maybe tonight, maybe tomorrow morning. You in his arms, mouth on his, Oscar’s hoodie on your shoulders, his fingers curled around your waist like he’s holding something that matters.
It’s not a rumor anymore.
It’s not a whisper in the paddock hallway or a locker room assumption or something Lando only suspects.
It’s proof.
The photo drops sometime after 2 a.m.
It’s soft. Intimate. The Monaco skyline blurred behind you, Oscar’s hands gentle on your hips, your lips brushing his in a kiss too tender to be casual. You’re wearing his hoodie, your body leaning into his like you belong there. The headline spins fast, and the image spins faster.
“Piastri and mystery girl— late-night kiss confirms more than paddock rumors.” #MonacoGP #OP81 #McLaren #F1WeekendRomance
By the time the sun rises over the harbor, the image has circled the globe. Instagram reels. Reddit threads. Private group chats with McLaren team tags.
Some know who you are. Others ask. Everyone guesses.
No one’s surprised.
Not even Lando.
He sees it around 6 a.m. His phone buzzes with the notification, a WhatsApp ping from someone in media: “Bro…?”
He clicks it, thumb slow, still groggy from a half-slept night.
The image fills his screen in just about a second flat.
And for a second, he doesn’t feel anything at all.
Then it hits—slow and thick, like cold water spreading under his ribs. He stares at the photo, eyes scanning over the curve of your smile, the way your fingers curl into the back of Oscar’s shirt, the undeniable ease in your body.
You look happy.
He hasn't seen that look on you in months.
The worst part is how quiet the fury is—how it doesn’t come out loud, how it just sits there in his chest.
He doesn’t throw the phone.
He just stares, jaw tight, thumb hovering above the screen like he could rewind the moment and undo it.
But it’s already out.
And nothing will unsee it.
The paddock is different that morning. The kind of quiet that’s not actually quiet—just loaded.
Oscar walks in calm. Doesn’t rush. Doesn’t shrink. He gives one quick nod to Zak, another to the comms lead. Then walks into the garage like he hasn’t just become the most searched man in F1.
Lando’s already in the back, zipped into his fireproofs, eyes locked on the telemetry like it might give him something to hit. When Oscar appears beside him in the media pen, the tension is immediate—even before the interviews start.
“Oscar,” one reporter says, half-laughing, “you’ve been trending all morning. Surprised by the attention?”
Oscar’s lips tug into a polite half-smile, “Not particularly.”
“Balancing a fast lap and a fast… personal life?” someone else jokes.
He doesn’t miss a beat, “One lap at a time.”
Lando laughs then—too sharp, too loud, “He’s got more than enough time to focus on everything else, clearly.”
The PR handler stiffens. The reporters go quiet. One camera clicks. Someone tries to move the topic on, but the moment lands.
Oscar doesn’t react. Just folds his arms across his chest, gives a small smile, and looks straight ahead.
You hear about it an hour later.
And when you enter the garage, it’s like parting smoke. The space tenses. Heads turn. No one quite meets your eyes, except for Lando —a glance, sharp and quick, from across the space.
He looks away.
Oscar doesn’t.
You find him standing near the screens, headset tucked around his neck, one hand in his pocket. He sees you and offers the smallest, softest smile.
You pass close. Don’t touch. Don’t stop.
But your fingers graze his as you go.
He breathes like it’s the first time all day he’s been allowed to.
Later, after the final briefings wrap, you find him alone behind the paddock—tucked into a quiet service alley, the marina glittering beyond the concrete walls.
He doesn’t hear you approach. Just stands with his back to you, hands braced on the railing, still in his gear. His shoulders rise and fall in slow rhythm.
You stop beside him.
For a moment, neither of you says anything.
Then, “So,” you murmur, “that’s one way to go public.”
He huffs a laugh. “Guess we don’t get to control the timing.”
You glance sideways at him. “Regret it yet?”
He finally looks at you — eyes soft, voice quieter than it was all day, “Not even a little.”
You nod slowly, “Me either.”
He exhales, like that’s what he was waiting for.
“It’s going to be loud,” He warns
“I know.”
“He’s not going to take it quietly,” Oscar adds.
“He’s not my responsibility anymore.”
Oscar studies your face — the calm in your expression, the steadiness in your voice — then lifts a hand to your jaw, thumb brushing gently beneath your cheekbone.
“If it gets messy—” Oscar starts.
“We’ll deal with it,” you reassure him with a confidence foreign to you.
He nods once.
"Good luck out there."
The Monaco sun glints harshly off the harbor, but the air inside the McLaren garage is colder than it should be. Everyone’s already seen the photo. The photographers couldn’t have asked for a cleaner shot.
No one says a word about it — not to your face. But there’s something in the silence. The way engineers glance between Lando and Oscar before looking away. The way a strategist clears his throat before relaying sector data like he’s afraid it might ignite something.
You stay quiet. Poised. Present in the garage like you’ve always been. Just another figure with a headset and a McLaren pass. Except now, yesterday's bruises aren’t just hickeys—they’re headlines.
Oscar’s composed during formation laps, fully in the zone. Lando, on the other hand, can’t seem to keep still. His fingers twitch on the wheel. His visor drops early. And when he lines up behind Oscar on the grid, his car nose to the back of the #81, the message is clear:
He’s not racing for position.
He’s racing him.
The lights go out at the start, and the tension snaps taut.
Oscar gets off the line clean. Fast. Aggressive, but composed—the kind of driver who cuts through chaos like he’s above it. He settles into P3 behind Leclerc and Max, calm radio calls rolling through your headset.
“Tyres feel stable. Brakes coming up nicely.” His tone is smooth. Professional. Locked in.
“Copy that, Oscar. You’re looking good. Just manage the gap.”
Lando, meanwhile, is chewing through the field from P7, but he’s not driving—he’s fighting. And it shows. He’s too heavy into the Nouvelle Chicane. Nearly clips the barrier at Mirabeau. Gets squeezed by Hamilton going into the tunnel and screams down the radio like it’s personal.
“Is anyone actually gonna call shit today, or should I just punt him off the fucking track?”
“Lando, stay focused.”
“Oh, now you want focus. Should’ve told golden boy to stay out of my way in quali.”
Twenty laps in, Oscar’s holding steady in third with tire wear perfectly balanced. Lando’s muscling his way up to P5, then P4 after a gutsy dive into Sainte Devote. It’s impressive. Chaotic. Pure Lando.
“Tell him if he’s going to block me, he better commit to it. This half-ass defending doesn’t help anyone.”
The pit wall tries to smooth it over.
“Copy, Lando. Maintain focus. Oscar’s running clean.”
There’s a beat of static. Then Lando again.
“If he wants to play team leader, he better drive like it.”
In Oscar’s car, there’s only quiet. Steady updates. Clean cornering. No rise. No reaction.
Just sector after sector of control.
But it’s Oscar who makes it look effortless.
Final laps tick down. Lando’s close—closer than he’s been all weekend—but not enough.
You watch the checkered flag fall from the garage viewing area, headset still clutched in one hand, heart thudding in your chest. Oscar crosses the line second—a solid, beautiful finish. No mistakes. No drama.
Lando follows in fourth.
The crowd roars. The team celebrates.
But inside the garage, the energy is split.
Half the crew glances toward the monitors. The other half glances toward you.
No one says anything.
But the silence speaks volumes.
The garage claps for Oscar’s podium. It’s not dramatic. No confetti. But the applause is sincere. You stay tucked to the side as he peels off his gloves and helmet, curls damp and jaw clenched with adrenaline.
He doesn’t look for you.
He knows you’re there.
The podium happens in a flash champagne, interviews, cameras. Oscar is graceful. Deflecting the kiss photo with a shrug:
”I try to keep focus on track. Everything else…” He shrugs. “That’s not what wins points. I let the track speak louder than the tabloids.”
Clean. Cool. Unbothered.
Lando’s post-race media scrum doesn’t go as smoothly.
His smile is too tight. His answers too short.
“Happy with your pace today?”
“No.”
“Anything you’d like to say about team dynamics?”
“I think a few people need to remember who they were before the cameras showed up.”
You’re not sure if it’s coincidence or fate. Lando's leaning against the wall near the back of the hospitality area, arms crossed over his chest, fire suit still half-zipped, sweat drying on his neck. The air between you tightens instantly.
He sees you before you speak.
“So that’s it?” he says, voice low, mocking, “You get your moment? Photo hits the press and suddenly you’re Piastri’s girl now?”
You keep your voice even. “It’s not about the photo.”
“No?” His eyebrows lift, “Looked like it. Looked like perfect timing, actually. Right before race day. You really going for the full storybook arc, huh?”
You cross your arms, matching his stance, “You think I planned that? You think I wanted to be caught?”
He snorts. “Certainly didn't stop.”
You step closer.
“You didn’t stop sleeping around. You didn’t stop ignoring me. You didn’t stop until I was already gone.”
His mouth twitches—not a smile. Something bitter.
“And you think Oscar’s different?”
“I know he is.”
He studies you then. Really looks. Like he’s trying to find the part of you that still belongs to him. The part he can poke and prod and control like he used to.
But it’s not there.
His breath stutters. He looks away—jaw tight, hands clenched.
There’s movement behind you.
Lando glances past your shoulder—posture tensing.
Oscar stands just beyond the corner. Silent. Watching.
But he doesn’t step in.
He meets your eyes—not Lando’s—and with one subtle nod, he turns to go.
Because he trusts you to handle this.
Because you needed to take this one yourself.
You find Oscar later by the hospitality coffee station, half-dressed down from his suit, fingers curled around a water bottle, his race boots unlaced. The crowds have thinned. The crew’s winding down. But he’s still here—waiting.
“You okay?” he asks, voice low.
“Yeah.”
A pause.
“You saw?”
“I heard,” he says. “Then I saw.”
He studies you.
“You handled him.”
You nod, then smile faintly. “So did you.”
Oscar lifts his water bottle and takes a sip.
You step closer. Not rushed. Just enough.
“Thank you,” you say quietly.
“For what?”
“Not stepping in.”
“Didn’t need to,” he replies, “I knew you could handle him.”
You lean into his side, your hand resting on his chest. His arm slips around your back like it’s instinct.
There are still cameras around.
Still whispers.
Still fallout coming.
But for now, it’s just the two of you.
Still standing.
FROM PADDOCK DARLING TO PIASTRI’S MYSTERY GIRL: MONACO GP’S MOST TALKED-ABOUT WOMAN
Well, well, well. Things are heating up in more ways than one at McLaren—and this time, it’s not just on track.
In case you missed it (though how could you?), Oscar Piastri made headlines this weekend for more than just his flawless P2 finish in Monaco. The 23-year-old Aussie was spotted sharing a kiss with a woman who—until recently—had been very publicly linked to his teammate, Lando Norris.
Yes. You read that right.
The viral photo, snapped late Saturday night on a rooftop terrace above the Monaco paddock, shows Piastri in what can only be described as a very cozy moment with a mystery girl who fans quickly identified as Lando’s longtime (but reportedly estranged) girlfriend.
Wearing his hoodie. With his hands around her waist. And what appear to be love bites peeking out from beneath her collar.
(We zoomed in. Don’t act like you didn’t.)
The woman once seen at every race on Lando Norris’ arm is no longer just a grid-side accessory—she’s made it very clear whose garage she’s in now. And it’s not Norris’.
Neither Oscar nor the woman in question have made an official statement, but the body language has said plenty. The pair has been spotted multiple times, hand-in-hand, unabashed.
While reps for McLaren offered no official comment on the photo, the tension in the garage during Saturday qualifying spoke volumes. Sources inside the paddock describe Norris as “visibly short-tempered,” with one engineer claiming he was “racing like he had something to prove.” As for Piastri? Calm, composed—and, if we may, focused.
He brought home P2.
Norris? P4—and reportedly less than thrilled.
Let’s not forget: this isn’t the first time Lando’s off-track antics have made waves—rumors of infidelity have followed the Brit through the past few seasons, though they were often brushed aside by his ever-loyal girlfriend. Until now.
While nothing has been confirmed (yet), it would certainly appear that she’s Oscar’s now.
Whether this unexpected romance will fuel drama or just give Oscar a boost on track remains to be seen, but one thing’s for sure: we’ll be watching.
Very closely.
Stay tuned. The summer break’s never felt so far away.

















