Leo understood this the way he understood tyre temperatures and brake bias and sector ti distribution — as information that changed the shape of every decision in the frawork.
He stood up from the equipnt case.
’Pole position,’ he thought. ’And then the race. And then the units. And then the next round.’
One step. Always one step.
He reached for his helt.
---
The Q3 pit lane was the quietest space Leo had occupied all day.
Ten cars. The gaps between them on the timing board. The paddock on both sides of the lane stripped of most of its traffic — chanics moving but fewer of them, journalists staying back from the lane boundary with a deference that hadn’t been there in Q1, the sense that what was about to happen was contained and precise and not to be interrupted.
He rolled to the exit behind Oscar Dubois’s DAMS car.
The Australian was on his out-lap with the focused economy of a driver who had already used two-thirds of his available tyre sets and was managing what remained.
Dubois didn’t look in his mirrors as Leo fell in behind. He didn’t need to. He was concentrating on building his own temperature, running his own sequence.
Albert Park had changed since Q1.
The late afternoon sun had shifted. The shadows on the circuit were longer now — the kind that fell at angles across braking zones and changed the visual reference points that a driver relying on sight used to identify markers.
At Turn 6, the shadow of the grandstand cut across the apex marker at exactly the angle that made the painted kerb hard to see from inside a cockpit at 240 kilotres per hour.
Leo noted it.
He didn’t rely on sight for braking markers. He relied on the column and the tyres and the Auditory Mapping and the Racing Instinct that had been building across every lap of the session. But so part of the Auditory Mapping used ambient sound, and ambient sound changed with shadow.
He added the adjustnt to the frawork. Changed the Turn 6 reference point from the painted kerb to the texture change in the asphalt that preceded it by four tres.
Done.
The out-lap continued.
---
He saw Rossi’s Prema car in the far section of the circuit.
The Italian was on his own out-lap, forty seconds ahead, the scarlet bodywork catching the long late-afternoon light and turning it a shade darker. Rossi ran his warm-up inputs with the sa efficiency he had shown all session. Precise. Unhurried.
The specific quiet confidence of a driver who had been in Q3 so many tis that the atmosphere of the session — the thinned field, the silence, the weight of pole position sitting above every lap — had stopped feeling like pressure and started feeling like a familiar environnt.
Leo watched him through the Turn 11 complex.
Rossi’s line through Turn 11 was different from his Q1 line. Marginally. The entry was the sa. The apex was the sa. But the exit — the throttle application point on the exit — was two tres earlier than he had run in Q1.
Soone had adjusted his rear downforce between sessions. The car was rotating more freely on exit. It would make him faster through the back section.
Leo filed it.
’He’s been managing the rear all session,’ he thought. ’The setup change ans he was understeering on exit earlier. They’ve corrected it. His Sector 2 ceiling just went up by one to two-tenths.’
He factored it into the projection.
Rossi’s maximum Q3 lap, with the corrected setup and clean air and the rubbered-in racing line that was now at its peak: sowhere between 1:26.7 and 1:26.5.
Leo’s maximum Q3 lap, with fresh compound and the full frawork running and a clean Sector 2 and no front-left spike on the final corner: sowhere between 1:26.5 and 1:26.3.
The window existed.
He crossed the start-finish line.
---
The first Q3 push lap arrived like a controlled detonation.
Sector 1 was imdiate. He drove Turn 1 at the depth he had found on Q2’s second run — the 296 kilotre per hour entry that his hands had discovered rather than planned — and the fresh compound grabbed the rubbered-in tarmac with a ferocity that was different from Q2.
More grip. More response. The racing line had another session’s worth of transferred rubber on it and the car simply bit harder through the apex.
He ca off Turn 3 at 4 kilotres per hour faster than Q2 run two.
Not planned. The circuit had given it.
"Sector 1," Elias said. "27.2. Purple. Personal best by two-tenths."
Leo was at the Turn 9 braking zone.
Sector 2 was clean. No Moreau. No Vega. Ten cars and enough space between them that the track opened up through the sweepers without the geotry-forcing chaos of the previous sessions.
He ran the Turn 7 racing line — the actual racing line, not the compressed version he had used when Moreau was fifteen tres ahead — and the G-load was 6.8G. The full load. The number the simulation had flagged as available but that the previous laps hadn’t allowed.
His vision dimd at the margins for two-tenths of a second.
He held the throttle open and let it dim.
The car held.
He ca off Turn 7 with the cleanest exit of the afternoon.
"Sector 2," Elias said. "40.6. Purple."
27.2 plus 40.6. Combined 1:07.8.
He entered Sector 3.
The chicane. Both elents clean. The front-left stayed below 93 degrees. The final corner arrived and he drove it exactly as the frawork had built it — delayed throttle on a line that protected the tyre and sacrificed nothing on exit.
He crossed the line.
[2. L. Kaito (Arcadia) — 1:26.6 🟣]
P1 provisional.
He drove the cool-down curve and the timing board updated behind him.
He didn’t see the board update. He knew what was on it.
He knew because thirty seconds later, Elias’s voice ca through the radio with the specific, asured tone of a man delivering information that was almost exactly what had been expected.
"Rossi has just crossed the line," Elias said. "1:26.4. He goes P1. You’re P2. Gap is two-tenths."
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