
He Cheated, I Overtook, He Crashed.
He Cheated, I Overtook, He Crashed. Chapter 1
“I need some air.”
The words slipped out before I could stop them. I didn’t wait for anyone to respond. The music, the laughter, the champagne haze—it was all pressing in too tightly.
I stepped onto the balcony. The Monaco breeze stung my eyes, but not enough to explain the burn. Below, the harbor lights danced on black water, expensive yachts rocking like toys for the rich.
Inside, they were still toasting him.
This was the after-party for the Monaco Grand Prix—Formula 1’s crown jewel. Luca, my boyfriend of three years, had just taken the win. And me? I was his race strategist. The one who fed him data, crafted the perfect pit call, saved him seconds he could barely pronounce when drunk.
But all they saw was the girlfriend. The lucky charm.
“Ayla is my lucky charm,” Luca had said earlier, laughing too loudly, his arm draped over some sponsor’s shoulder. “She looks good in photos, no?”
They all laughed. I didn’t.
I’d helped build his career, but in this crowd, I was just something glossy beside him. Another prize on his shelf. I clenched the balcony railing, steadying my breath.
Inside, Luca’s voice still rose above the others, like he owned the night. Owned me.
And suddenly—gone.
I turned, frowning, as my eyes scanned the room. No Luca. No sign of him by the bar, the terrace, the dance floor. Just more smoke, more lights, more people who didn’t see me.
Where did he go?
I moved, slipping past champagne flutes and fake smiles. Something was off.
I searched every corner.
Terrace? Empty. Hallway? Silent.
Until finally, I reached the private team lounge—and saw its door ajar.
A strip of warm light spilled into the dark corridor.
I stopped, fingers hovering above the handle for a second before I pushed the door open, almost sensing the wrongness in the air.
And I saw him. No. Them.
Luca’s hands in Claudia’s hair, her legs wrapped around his waist, her mouth smeared against his neck like a signature on something stolen. She gasped, stumbling back. He turned slowly, like I was a nuisance instead of a woman whose heart he’d just split open.
“Ayla,” he said, like he’d forgotten my name until that moment. “We were just talking through tomorrow’s press release.”
My breath caught.
Talking? Like, talking with their bodies tangled up?
My voice didn’t work. My body didn’t move.
Only when Claudia ducked her head and tried to fix her skirt did the full weight of it slam into me.
I turned.
I walked away.
Fast.
He didn’t follow immediately. Maybe he thought I’d cool down. That I’d be reasonable. Like I always was.
But I made it halfway to the elevator before his voice rang out behind me.
“Ayla, seriously? Come on. Don’t be dramatic.”
I kept walking.
He chased up and caught me up in the marble corridor, grabbing my arm.
“Let go,” I said, voice hardened.
He didn’t. “You’re blowing this out of proportion. It was just a bit of fun.”
I looked at him, truly looked—and saw someone I didn’t recognize. Eyes glazed with alcohol, mouth curled in disbelief that I wasn’t rolling over like I always did.
“What did you expect?” he snapped. “This is F1. I’m at the top, Ayla. These things happen.”
I felt the silence before I saw it—guests pausing, glancing over, drawn in by the tension.
He didn’t care.
“You should be grateful,” he went on, voice rising. “Do you think you'd even be here without me? Just a data analyst from nowhere. I gave you relevance.”
I stared at him, stunned.
Is that how he saw me? Not a strategist. Not a partner. Just some nobody he’d dragged into the spotlight.
But he wasn’t done. He didn’t even wait for me to respond before driving the knife deeper.
“Look at this party! Look around you!” he barked. “Why can’t you get it? You’re nothing without me. I’m the one who hurled you up!”
The words hit like oil on fire.
Around us, the party members stilled. Conversations cut off mid-sentence. Glasses frozen halfway to lips.
My humiliation had become a public spectacle.
And something in me broke.
Not the heart—that had shattered in the lounge. This was deeper. Older. The part of me that had swallowed every insult, every dismissal, every time I was called beautiful but never brilliant.
“I assume you had finished speaking. Excuse me, then. I need to leave.” I pulled my arm away. Straightened.
“Goodbye, Luca.”
I walked out.
The Monaco night was colder now. Harsher. But it was real. And it was mine.
***
The next morning, the paddock buzzed like a hive stirred up by a storm.
Eyes followed me. Whispers darted behind my back like mosquitoes.
I kept walking.
Three years, packed into two suitcases. The garage that had once felt like home now looked like a crime scene—every corner holding a memory I wanted to burn.
“Ayla,” someone sneered.
I turned.
Luca stood at the entrance, arm around a new accessory that wasn’t even Claudia—Isabelle, from Team Avora. She smiled like a knife.
“Meet my girlfriend,” Luca said, loud enough for everyone to hear. “A real professional.”
Isabelle gave a soft laugh. “I’ve heard so much about you,” she said sweetly. “Such a shame.”
I didn’t respond.
He stepped closer. “Need help with those bags? Oh—right. You’re on your own now.”
More laughter. Snide. Ugly.
I picked up my suitcase and rolled past him without flinching.
That, at least, I could control.
I was almost to the gates when someone called out.
“Ms. Mills?”
I turned.
The man approaching moved with quiet confidence. Dark hair, olive skin, eyes that didn’t skim or leer—they studied. They saw.
Matteo Ricci.
I knew him. Former driver. A famous one. Now team principal at Vulcan GP.
He nodded in greeting. “I heard about… what happened.”
I braced.
But there was no pity in his voice. Just steel.
“We’re building something at Vulcan,” he said. “We need someone with your mind. Tactical director. It’s yours, if you want it.”
I blinked.
“Are you offering me a job?”
He smiled faintly. “I’m offering you a clean start. One where you don’t stand in anyone’s shadow.”
Behind me, Luca’s voice echoed across the garage. More laughter. More noise.
Ahead, something unfamiliar: possibility.
I met Matteo’s gaze.
“I’m interested.”
And just like that, the wind changed.
He Cheated, I Overtook, He Crashed. of Contents
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