Lap forty-one felt different from the mont the lights went out.
It was not a loud difference. It was not the sudden, blinding wall of fog that had characterized the earlier sessions, nor was it the violent sensory jamming that had nearly broken his mind on lap thirty-nine. This was a change in the internal architecture of Leo Kaito himself.
The Auditory Mapping Stage 2 integration had finished sowhere in the liminal space between the grid and the first corner, settling into his nervous system with the quiet finality of a software patch reaching one hundred percent.
He didn’t need to check his HUD to know it was active. He could hear it.
As he braked for Turn 1, the world beca a construction of sound. He heard the tire load shift in the drivetrain note. It was a fractional change in pitch, a tiny, tallic whine that told him the rear tires were working harder than the fronts for 0.2 seconds through the entry.
It was a signal that the brake balance was forward-biased for the current track temperature.
Leo didn’t pause to analyze the data. He didn’t weigh the pros and cons of an adjustnt. He simply adjusted. His right foot gave a fraction less pressure, easing the load on the front axle. The pitch of the drivetrain leveled out. The balance corrected.
He had never consciously thought about brake balance before. In the real world, engineers spent hours looking at teletry to find that specific sweet spot. Here, his hands had thought about it for him.
’8.2%,’ he thought, his eyes tracking the wet apex of Turn 2. ’What does the rest of it sound like?’
The answer ca in the form of a rhythmic, rolling hiss as he entered the S-Curves. Laps forty-one through fifty arrived and vanished in a rhythm he hadn’t experienced since the closing laps of the Monaco ranking race. It was a state of flow so deep that the car ceased to be a machine and beca a prosthetic.
Six did not make it easy. The system was a predator that lived on the edge of his failure, but the obstacles it deployed now felt different.
They were being thrown at a driver with SSS reaction speed and triple-channel sensory integration. The gap between what the simulation could throw and what Leo could absorb was asurably wider than it had been at lap thirty.
On lap forty-two, the system tried a physical disruption. As Leo exited the final chicane, the Casio Triangle, the track was suddenly littered with debris. These weren’t large blocks of carbon fiber, but irregular rubber fragnts, "marbles" that had shed from simulated tires.
To the naked eye in the spray, they were invisible. To Leo’s ears, they were a rough, uneven frequency in the Auditory Mapping data.
He identified the debris patches by the change in spray pitch, a sharp, staccato *clack-clack-clack* against the floorboard, and avoided each one on a line his hands generated in real ti. He didn’t swerve; he flowed around them, maintaining a 1:47.1.
Valid.
On lap forty-three, the wind beca the primary weapon. Suzuka’s figure-of-eight layout ant that a north wind could be a headwind in one sector and a crosswind in another. But Six went further.
It shifted the wind direction mid-S-Curves. Not at a corner boundary, but right between Turn 3 and Turn 4. The crosswind changed ninety degrees while the car was already loaded and committed to a high-speed arc.
In the Phase 1 Monaco simulation, a mid-corner variable of that magnitude would have ended the lap in a white-hot flash of x500 pain. Now, his hands caught it in the frawork window.
The steering wheel twitched, a correction so small and complete that the car didn’t move more than half a ter off the line.
Valid. 1:46.9.
By lap forty-five, the system was recycling old tricks, testing if his evolution was permanent or temporary. It ran the ghost shimr, the phantom car that appeared at the exit of the S-Curves to trigger an instinctive evasion into the wall.
Danger Sense fired the collision spike, a sharp needle of pressure at the base of his brain.
Leo’s hands didn’t move. He knew the ghost wasn’t real because he couldn’t *hear* it. There was no spray from its tires, no engine note, no displacent of air. He drove right through the shimr.
Valid. 1:46.7.
The most complex test ca on lap forty-seven. The track surface temperature dropped sharply across the entire circuit. It wasn’t a gradual cooling; it was an instantaneous plunge. The grip level fell four percent at every corner at the sa mont.
A driver running fixed lines, relying on muscle mory of where the limit ’used’ to be, would have found every corner suddenly outside the grip envelope. They would have slid off at the first turn.
But Leo had no fixed lines. He was no longer a driver of mory. Every corner was generated fresh from current conditions. The new temperature was simply the new reality.
He felt the tires go "cold" through the Auditory Mapping, the sound of the rubber on the track changed from a sticky hum to a dry, sliding hiss. He adjusted his entry speeds by three kiloters per hour across the board.
Valid. 1:47.3. The ti cost was four tenths of a second, the honest price of a grip reduction, paid cleanly without a crash.
When he crossed the line for lap fifty, the tir stopped at 1:46.4.
[PHASE 2, LEVEL 1:]
[Laps completed: 50 / 100]
[Consistency Score: 97.2%]
[Personal Best: 1:46.4]
[SIX SYSTEM:]
[Halfway through Level 1.]
[You’ve been in here for a while, Leo.]
[The real world is still there. Just so you know.]
[50 laps to go.]
Leo read the text, his chest heaving slightly. The ntion of the real world felt like a distant, faded mory. He thought of Anya, of his room, of the F2 seat waiting for him in Bahrain. It all felt like a dream Leo had once had.
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