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As warm as glowing coal, the sun rose over the Autodromo Hermanos. Qualifying Day had arrived in xico, the Saturday that defines the rest of the weekend. The stakes were as high as the altitude. The entire world understood just how important the latter races were.

Before sunrise, the paddock was already awake in preparations. The majority were still in their respective team locations, while the minority—the officials—had the circuit open. It was their job to drape the track with nothing less than safety and order, regulating every elent that made up the concept of racing, to ensure a successful weekend.

Qualifying in xico was more about adapting to the circuit's versatility than fighting for position. As a circuit known from the previous era, it was no surprise that Autodromo Hermanos had character. It might be difficult for drivers of this era, who were accustod to "push it and do it," to seamlessly adapt their racecraft to its personality.

One clean lap could define an entire weekend.

One mistake could bury it.

The difference between glory and disaster is thinner than air. And ironically, that had ever earned the ga its reputation.

A certain marshal would agree with that 100%

Rogelio adjusted the brim of his cap and squinted against the glare reflecting off the long stretch of the main straight. He wasn't wearing a fireproof racing suit or a headset linked to a billionaire's pit wall. Instead, he wore heavy-duty work pants and a high-vis vest that had seen better days.

xico's track wasn't like the European's.

It didn't stay race-ready on its own.

Over ti, the surface collected a thin layer of dust, oils from road use, and fine debris carried in by wind and city air. If left untouched, the track would behave incorrectly. Unpredictable braking zones. Random snap oversteer. Cars sliding like they were running on a film of glass.

That's where marshals like Rogelio ca in.

They are specifically referred to as the Track Preparation Crew, and their na gives it away. Their job was to take a road that had spent months collecting city filth and turn it back into a palatable racing track, using machines and specialized equipnt.

So, very early in the morning, all their trucks rolled out, and Rogelio's was among them.

It was a wide, modified track-cleaning vehicle, fitted with rotating scrubbers and high-pressure jets that humd steadily as it moved. Behind it, a faint mist of water and cleaning solution spread across the asphalt before being vacuud back up almost instantly.

Rogelio kept one hand on the wheel, the other occasionally adjusting the spray settings on the control panel.

Hipo, the third man, hopped down from the side step of the truck and peered into the control area. Kicking the heavy bristles, he nodded to himself. "Pressure is good, boss. But this track… man, it's like it's sweating. I've never seen it this oily."

"It's the heat," Rogelio said, splitting his focus with the rest of the cab. "The track is rarely used for real racing. It sits here all year, soaking up the sun, and the oils in the bitun just rise to the surface like a bad habit. Drat."

The truck began its slow, thodical crawl down the circuit. If they missed a spot, a perfect lap might just be impossible to achieve.

Beside Rogelio, sitting on the passenger seat, was Hector, another colleague.

"You see this straight every year," Hector said, glancing ahead. "The worst ever. In fact, the track is. No one uses it. They give the sa complaints. We dive in at the last minute to fix it. hhhh."

"Not fix," Rogelio corrected calmly. "Prepare."

Hector smirked. "Call it whatever you want. If we don't do this, they're all over the radio in five minutes. I wish I were in the UK. The Stadhaven is a walk in the park… and they pay them more. Sigh."

Rogelio smirked, imagining himself working at that glorious circuit instead.

The cab of the truck was cramped and slled like old coffee and industrial degreaser. As they crept along at a walking pace, Rogelio reached into a small cooler and pulled out a sandwich wrapped in foil.

"You want half?" he asked, tearing into the bread. "My wife made it. Extra mayonnaise today. She says I'm getting too skinny."

Hector laughed, taking the offered half. anwhile, Hipo returned again, his forehead baked with sweat. He seed to be the only one eager to wrap things up quickly. Rogelio offered him a sandwich, too, which he accepted.

"Grip's worse this year."

"You can feel it?"

"Always can. Too much dust buildup after the concerts last month. See that sheen?"

Hector squinted out the window. "That? That's nothing."

"That 'nothing' makes drivers complain on lap one."

They continued slowly, following the racing line.

Suddenly, the truck jolted.

"Ahhh...damnit."

A high-pitched whine that definitely wasn't part of the normal operating procedure followed.

Rogelio frowned, his eyes darting to the control panel as a red light began to blink rhythmically.

"Great. Just great," he muttered, pulling the truck to a halt right on the apex of the Peraltada. "The spray nozzle is jamd. If we don't fix this, the second sector is going to be like an ice rink."

The two n hopped out into the quiet heat of the circuit, followed by Hipo, who'd been working alone at the rear.

It was a strange feeling—standing on one of the corners that would soon be broadcast to millions around the world. Yet, the turn was completely silent now. No engines, no screaming fans yet, just the wind whistling through the grandstands.

Rogelio crawled under the side of the truck, his boots sticking out as he poked around at the plumbing.

"Hand the wrench, Hector. The small one."

As Hector reached into the toolbox, he looked toward the near-empty pit lane still in premature preparations.

"You think the big teams know we're out here fixing the slide with a rusty wrench and a bit of spit?" He asked.

"They don't know we exist until sothing goes wrong," Raúl's muffled voice ca from under the chassis. "Then they scream like babies. There. Fixed."

Sliding out, he wiped his hands with a rag. Hipo had climbed into the cockpit and confird the red light on the dashboard going dark, drawing a satisfied smile from Rogelio.

"You know," Hector said as they all climbed back in, and started the crawl again, "we've got it easy compared to Diego. He's the one handling the drainage clearing over by the stadium section today."

Rogelio winced. "Poor guy. That area is a ss. If it rains even a drop, that whole section becos a lake. Diego's probably up to his elbows in old leaves and gods-know-what right now, trying to make sure the Vips don't get their shoes wet."

"Haha! I'd rather be scrubbing oil all day than dealing with what he's finding in those pipes. He's the real hero here!"

Rogelio turned the wheel, the brushes humming a steady tune as they headed toward the final sector.

**************

anwhile… behind them.

The truck had moved on, brushes spinning, water hissing, leaving behind a darkened strip of treated asphalt that traced the racing line with near-perfect discipline.

Near-perfect.

To the casual observer or even a marshal standing just feet away, the circuit looked like a pristine ribbon of dark grey, ready for the world's fastest cars. But if you looked closer—at just the right angle against the harsh xican sun—you could see it.

The truck's earlier interruption had slightly offset the timing of one brush cycle, and when Rogelio resud pace, the machine rejoined a fraction too late. It still covered most of the corner, but not all of it.

Just beyond the normal apex exit line, no wider than half a car's footprint, remained a duller patch of surface untouched by the scrubbing pass.

Many might think it's one portion of asphalt slightly greyer than the blackened lane around it. But grip in Formula 1 did not care about appearances.

Turn 7 itself was not the most famous corner in xico. It did not hold the glamour of the stadium section or the violence of Turn 1. Yet it mattered because of what ca after.

Drivers wanted a clean exit there.

They wanted early throttle, stable rear traction, confidence through steering release—because the next sequence demanded montum and commitnt. A poor run through Turn 7 bled speed all the way into the flowing sector ahead.

And that untouched patch offered none of those things.

Dust still sat in its pores. Fine oil still glazed parts of it. The rubber that should have been laid down by the truck's scrub pass wasn't there.

If a car placed its loaded rear tire on that exact strip while accelerating, the tire could spin unexpectedly.

If a front tire touched it while turning, the steering could wash wider than expected.

Not enough to alarm a road car.

More than enough to punish a Formula 1 car balanced on edges.

The circuit looked ready.

Mostly, it was.

But hidden in plain sight, one narrow piece of Turn 7, a ticking ti bomb.

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