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There was only one word to describe my life and that word was: chaotic. That being said, I still wouldn't change it for the world.

The family calendar on the fridge was completely full and colour coded so we could all see where we were needed on any given day. Even so, I still lost track of my husband or our kids at least once a week.

"Sydney, honey, have you seen your father?" I asked the spitting image of Pierre who was in the race simulator. He was always in the machine, practising for his upcoming debut into Formula 4 now that he had turned 15 and could move up from karting.

"Picking up Addie from the airport." He barely looked away from the triplet of screens in front of him as he answered with all the attitude of a teenage boy being interrupted in life. "It's on the fridge."

I looked at the calendar and realised I was looking at the completely wrong day. "Shit."

"Ha," he laughed loudly as he navigated the virtual track of the Red Bull Ring. "You forgot."

"I didn't forget," I said as I scanned over the correct day and saw I had a board meeting to prepare for tomorrow. "I just thought it was Tuesday today."

"Whatever you say, maman. You can tell me I'm your favourite, I won't say anything."

"I don't have a favourite, I love you all equally. Now, can you finish that game and go do your homework? You also need to pack for the weekend."

Addie was coming home from London for the week, taking a little break from her own busy schedule, to watch Sydney's first race with us in Austria.

It had been difficult to let her leave home at 18 but she had worked hard to get a place in the Arsenal Women's Under 21 team. I had left home at the same age and Pierre had left even earlier, so we were hardly the exemplary figures to deny her. All we could do was make sure she stayed safe and she knew she could call either of us 24/7 if she needed help. It was also never that long between visits, making plenty of stopovers in England as we travelled.

The travelling for work was tiresome but so far we had yet to miss a football match on Saturday or a karting race on Sunday. It did help being our own bosses so Pierre and I could manage our schedule around the kids. He had been running Strauss Fashion for the better part of the last ten years, after Granny finally retired properly, while I had been the Chief Technical Officer at Alpine, which Grandpa had purchased.

When Harry passed away three years ago I found myself suddenly thrust into the ownership of the team and though there were plenty of offers to sell it, I decided to take the leap of faith and see where the journey would take me. I hadn't looked back and so far we had two Constructors' Championship wins with our seasoned pilots, Gabriele Minì and Oliver Bearman.

We had come so far, it was hard to believe until I saw the wisps of grey hairs among the dark strands.

"Maman!" I was pulled from my reminiscence and looked at my watch to realise how quickly the afternoon had gotten away from me as Clare bounded through the front door and leapt into my arms. "Maman, look!"

Clare had been a wonderful surprise that completed our family two years ago. After Sydney's unexpected and frightening early arrival Pierre had been reluctant to try for another child, though he had always wanted three. I thought maybe he would change his mind after the terrifying memory faded with time but then a few years passed, we both got caught up in work, and after that it seemed too hard to imagine returning to sleepless nights with a newborn.

But, the universe had other plans for us. What I thought was a long-enduring hangover, after celebrating the rebranding of Alpine into Gasly Racing, actually turned out to be morning sickness. Those final weeks before her birth were stressful enough to send Pierre to his doctor for a vasectomy but thankfully her arrival went exactly to plan and he could breathe calmly once again.

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