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Chapter 56 - Chapter 56: I Don't Want to Lose Again

​Lap 4.

​The tension on the track was suffocating.

​Dominik Corvinus held P5, but he was the cork in the bottle. Behind him, a train of cars—Russell, Alonso, Ocon, Bottas—were nose-to-tail, separated by mere meters.

​His pace management had bunched the field up so tightly that one mistake would cause a multi-car pileup. But it had also helped Alex Albon and Lando Norris behind the train to gain track position on the strategy delta.

​"Watch your mirrors," Gaëtan Jego warned over the radio. "Russell is at 0.5. He is in the window."

​In Budapest, the M4 Sport commentators were analyzing the battle.

"Dominik is playing a dangerous game. If Russell gets a run into the final sector, the Williams won't have the grip to defend."

​"He won't pass," Dominik muttered to himself, adjusting his differential for the high-speed sweeps.

​He decided to stop managing. It was time to push.

​"What is George's pace?"

​"Mid 34s," Gaëtan replied.

​Dominik unleashed the FW44. The blue car surged forward, breaking the rhythm of the train. He pushed through the high-speed Sector 1, using the clean air to gap the Mercedes.

​But the Williams had an Achilles' heel: Turn 27. The final hairpin.

​As they approached the end of the lap, Dominik checked his mirrors. The silver Mercedes W13 was bouncing violently over the bumps, sparks showering from its floor, but it was close.

​Russell had timed it perfectly. He stayed just behind the DRS detection point entering the corner, ensuring he would have the advantage on the next straight.

​Dominik braked for the hairpin. The rear end of the Williams squirmed, the tires overheating from the high-speed pushing. He missed the apex by a fraction.

​That was all Russell needed.

​The Mercedes dove down the inside. The move was clinical. Russell took the line, forcing Dominik wide on the exit.

​"He's through!" Gaëtan shouted.

​They hit the main straight. Because Russell had been behind at the detection line, his rear wing snapped open. DRS Active.

​Dominik slammed his own throttle, chasing the silver car. He switched to Overtake Mode (SOC 3), draining the battery to stay in the fight.

​He pulled out of Russell's slipstream, feinting a move to the inside for Turn 1.

​Russell didn't even flinch. He knew the Williams didn't have the brakes or the low-speed grip to make it stick around the outside of the chicane. He claimed the racing line, shutting the door firmly.

​Dominik slotted back in. P6.

​"Damn it!" Dominik shouted, hitting the steering wheel.

​"Calm down, Dominik," Gaëtan's voice was soothing but firm. "Save the tires. Recharge the battery. Switch to SOC 7."

​"I had him," Dominik seethed.

​"Forget him. Focus behind. Alonso is coming. He is 0.4 seconds faster per lap."

​Dominik took a deep breath. He checked his mirrors. The silver Mercedes was gone, replaced by a menacing flash of pink and blue.

​Fernando Alonso. The double World Champion. The "Old Fox" of the grid.

​It was the youngest driver on the grid vs the oldest. The Rookie vs The Matador.

​Lap 6.

​Dominik gripped the steering wheel until his knuckles turned white. He had lost one position. He refused to lose another.

​"Alonso is in DRS range," Gaëtan warned. "He is very close."

​They rocketed down the main straight. The Alpine A522 was a missile in a straight line, and with DRS open, it was closing at a terrifying rate.

​In the mirrors, Dominik saw the pink nose cone growing larger. And larger.

​Alonso pulled out to the left, aiming for the inside line into Turn 1.

​Dominik made a choice.

​At 320 km/h, just as Alonso's front wing overlapped with his rear wheel, Dominik yanked the steering wheel to the left.

​It was a violent, aggressive chop. A "statement" move.

​The rear of the FW44 swung across the track, instantly closing the space.

​Alonso reacted with the reflexes of a twenty-year-old, swerving further left to avoid a collision. His tires kicked up a cloud of dust as he was forced onto the dirty line, inches from the concrete wall.

​The M4 Sport commentary booth erupted.

​"Istenem! Did you see that?!"Gábor Wéber shouted. "That was brutal! He just slammed the door in Fernando Alonso's face!"

​"That is on the limit!" his co-commentator gasped. "He forced a double world champion into the dust at 300 kph! The kid has no fear!"

​Alonso backed out, forced to lift. Dominik claimed the apex of Turn 1, keeping P6.

​"He tried to kill me!" Alonso shouted over the Alpine radio. "The Williams! Dangerous driving!"

​"Nice defense," Gaëtan said, though he sounded slightly shaken. "But... keep it clean, Dominik. That was very late."

​"I'm not losing this position," Dominik hissed through gritted teeth. "Not to him. Not to anyone."

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