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Now reading: Chapter 87: Friday; Qualifying XIII from Formula 1: Infinite Simulation Mode, a Sports novel by ChaosInk.

’He’s been racing here before,’ Leo thought. ’He knows this surface. He’ll be fast in Sector 2 on cold tyres because he builds the temperature where it’s needed first.’

He noted it. Filed it.

Nakamura had a weakness. He was consistent, but his Sector 1 ceiling was lower than the frontrunners. His qualifying pace lived in Sector 2 and Sector 3, where precision and tyre managent paid dividends. In Sector 1, where raw commitnt into Turn 1 and the high-speed exit of Turn 3 rewarded pure pace, he gave up two to three-tenths every ti.

Leo’s Sector 1 was where the gap lived.

---

The green light appeared above the pit lane exit.

Q2 began.

The fifteen cars spread across the circuit in a pattern that looked like chaos from above but followed the precise logic of tyre temperatures and timing windows. Three teams sent their drivers out imdiately on push pace — Prema, DAMS, and Hitech. The rest opted for a longer out-lap to bring the rubber to full temperature.

Leo took the middle path.

He ran the out-lap at 85 percent pace through the first sector. Enough to build front tyre temperature through the lateral load of Turns 1 and 3. Enough to get the rears into the window through the sustained left-handers of Sector 2. Not enough to waste the compound edge that the fresh tyres were carrying.

The track was different.

He felt it imdiately through the steering. The additional rubber laid down from Q1 had changed the surface. The dark tyre marks on the racing line were not just visual. They were grip.

The Albert Park asphalt had been relatively clean at the start of the afternoon session — now it was coated in a thin layer of transferred rubber that changed the friction coefficient of the track surface in ways the pre-session model hadn’t fully accounted for.

The car turned in sharper. The rear felt more planted.

’Track evolution is higher than Elias projected,’ Leo thought. ’The compound is going to work harder than expected. The tyre window will be shorter.’

He reached for the radio switch.

"Elias. Track is grippier than the model. The compound is going to heat faster. I’ll be at the ceiling by the end of Sector 2."

A brief pause.

"Understood," Elias said. "We’re adjusting the temperature targets now. Can you manage the front-left through Sector 2 if we know it’s going to run hot?"

"Yes. But I need to be on my push lap by the ti I cross the line. No second out-lap."

"One push lap only. Copy."

Leo ca through Turn 14 and felt the fronts at 88 degrees. Already. He was still on the out-lap. In Q1, the sa point in the sa lap had given him 78 degrees.

Twelve degrees hotter. Sa input. Different surface.

’The second run will be complicated if the front-left spikes again. But the first run—’ He felt the car rotate through Turn 15. Precise. Sharp. Ready. ’The first run is going to be the fastest lap of this session so far.’

He crossed the start-finish line.

The flying lap began.

---

Sector 1 was imdiate and violent.

He hit Turn 1 at a speed he hadn’t carried all session. The fresh compound bit into the rubber-coated tarmac with a ferocity that was physically different from the Q1 laps — a hard, loading sensation through the front axle that pushed the car into the corner instead of letting it drift to the apex. The steering felt heavy and direct and absolutely precise.

He used it all.

He drove the Turn 1 entry two tres deeper than his Q1 benchmark. Not a planned adjustnt. A real-ti reading of what the tyres were telling him they could handle and a decision made in the braking zone that the information was correct.

The car responded.

The nose buried into the apex. The rear loaded on the exit. He pulled the throttle open at a point that was earlier than any lap he had run all afternoon.

He ca off Turn 3 with exit speed that the simulation’s maximum load scenario had flagged as achievable but had never confird in the pod because the haptic system’s G-force ceiling had prevented the test.

He was confirming it now. At Albert Park. On real tarmac. With real forces and a real car and every muscle in his neck working to keep his head pointed at Turn 4.

"Sector 1," Elias said. Then nothing for a full second. Then: "27.7. Purple. By three-tenths."

Three-tenths faster than Rossi’s Q1 benchmark. In Sector 1 alone.

The radio went quiet.

Leo was already in Sector 2.

---

Theo Moreau’s Prema car appeared on the long run after Turn 6. On a push lap — a full commitnt run, the scarlet Prema machine carrying speed that put it in the sa performance tier as anything Leo had seen all session.

Moreau had found sothing in Q2 that Q1 hadn’t shown. His line through Turn 6 was tighter than his Q1 lap. His rear was more settled on the exit. Soone at Prema had adjusted the rear wing between sessions and the balance of the car had shifted.

Leo hit the Turn 7 entry with Moreau fifteen tres ahead of him.

Fifteen tres. At the closing speed they were both carrying, that was approximately one second of racing ti before contact beca a conversation rather than an abstraction.

He had two options.

Back off and lose the sector. Or go around.

He went around.

The right side of the circuit was two tres of asphalt between Moreau’s car and the white line. Leo moved right without lifting, the Arcadia #24 dropping to the inside edge of the track and running the outer boundary of the grip envelope through the Turn 7 left-hander.

The G-load through the corner increased by half a G because the geotric radius of the line he was running was tighter than the racing line.

6.6G.

He felt his vision dim at the very edge. Not blackout. The grey wash that arrived at the margins when the blood pressure in the brain worked against the G-forces and the body started managing the conflict.

He held the throttle open.

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