I underlined the number in my notebook hard enough to tear the page. This was the moment championships died, not in crashes or engine failures, but in decisions that looked clever on paper and catastrophic in real time.
Jonathan didn’t say anything over the radio. That scared me more than anger would have.
Dirty air. Traffic. Thirty laps to go.
If Shep had miscalculated tire life by even a handful of laps, if the pace advantage wasn’t there, Jonathan wouldn’t climb back through the field, he’d be trapped in it, watching the win bleed away one overtake at a time.
I wrote four words in the margin, smaller than the rest:
This is where it breaks.
By lap twenty-four, he was bottled in traffic, his frustration spilling into the radio. Dirty air through Parabolica, impossible to close. Shep’s voice came back calm, almost cold: patience, six kph advantage with DRS, set it up for the main straight, use the tow.
A lap later, Jonathan slingshotted past two cars at once, drafting behind one before darting out just before Turn 1. Thetifosihowled, and the floor of the media center seemed to vibrate with their roar. I scribbled furiously. Shep was right. Again. And yet my palms were damp. Because if he was wrong, just once, Jonathan would tumble down the order with nothing to show for it.
Lap forty. Jonathan’s voice cracked with disbelief. If he boxed now, he’d fall to sixth. Shep overrode him: box, box, mediums to the flag, rivals’ tires would be thirty laps old by the finish, he’d slice through them.
The media center erupted. Rival radios buzzing, commentators calling it madness. I felt Jonathan’s silence in my ears before he finally muttered assent. The car darted in, the stop quick and clean, the rejoin lower than I wanted to see on the timing board. My heart hammered.
The final laps blurred into adrenaline. Jonathan’s voice carried desperation now. Two cars ahead, running on canvas. Could he do it? Shep’s certainty was unshaken: long straights, dead tires, take Ascari clean, open the DRS, they’re yours.
And they were. He surged past one, then the other, slipstream and fresh grip carrying him down the main straight,across the line, P1. Thetifosiroared their approval, a cathedral choir of speed and devotion.
The media center exploded. Reporters swearing, cheering, already typing feverishly. I pulled the headset off, my own heartbeat deafening. Jonathan had trusted Shep, and Shep had been right, every time that mattered.
So far.
I wrote the words in my notebook, underlined them twice.So far.
Because in Baku, or Singapore, or any race after, Shep could gamble wrong, and then Jonathan wouldn’t just lose the win. He could lose the career that bound us together.
And me? I had to ask myself the question I didn’t dare write down: if Jonathan trusted Shep more than he trusted himself… where did that leave me?
“Nice call, Shep,” Jonathan said, voice crackling through static.
“Wouldn’t have worked if you’d hesitated in Turn Six,” Shep replied. “Half a second slower and we’d be explaining ourselves to the press instead of celebrating.”
Jonathan laughed. The kind of laugh that sounded like relief more than triumph.
The grandstands were still shaking as Jonathan climbed from the car, helmet tucked under one arm, his grin breaking wide as thetifosiroared his name. Red flags whipped like fire in the smoke-filled air. He looked like he’d been born for this moment. The champion anointed at the Temple of Speed.
I watched the screens, catching the moment Jonathan spotted his father at the pit wall. For all the years of distance between them, they came together now, Jonathan throwing his arms around him, both faces alight with joy. The cameras loved it, of course. The triumphant prodigy and the proud patriarch, framed by chaos.
I should have been hammering the keys like everyone else. Instead, I sat still for a moment, watching the embrace. The story of the day was already writing itself: Jonathan Hirsch victorious, Shep Stevens vindicated, Meridian reborn as a team that could gamble and win. But I wasn’t just watching a headline. I was watching Jonathan. The man who’d whispered his fear to me, the man who had staked everything on trust.
I opened my laptop and let the words come.
Under the fiercest pressure, Jonathan Hirsch delivered a career-defining drive at Monza, and behind him, Shep Stevens’s bold two-stop strategy proved decisive. Where rivals clung to aging tires, Hirsch surged forward on fresh rubber, overtaking with ease on the long straights that make Monza the Temple of Speed. It was a victory of trust as much as talent: trust between driver and strategist, forged in risk and rewarded at the flag.
Hirsch and Stevens pulled off the kind of strategy that makes legends, or, with a gust of bad timing, scapegoats. The margin between genius and folly was less than two laps.
The clatter of the room pressed in as I typed, every journalist chasing their own angle, every outlet hungry for instant analysis. My dispatch would be just one among dozens. And yet, for me, it carried more weight than any of them could guess.
I paused, staring at the screen. The official story was simple: Shep’s strategy won Monza. But beneath it was the story only I could see. Jonathan celebrating with his father, Jonathan leaning on Shep’s judgment, Jonathan relying on me when the lights went off and the cameras weren’t looking.
I hit send.
With Thea’s approval, the piece would be live in minutes. Out there, Jonathan was the victor.