I'm really glad you guys are enjoying yourself, because so am I

This race technically doesn't take place for another 17 hours or so, but I'm presenting it in two parts so you can digest it easier (read: get stuck on the cliffhanger lololol), and also, well, quite keen to move on!
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Eleven o’clock and the night air hung heavy, laden with moisture uncharacteristic of the barren expanse of salt that stretched out far further than the eye could see. It clung to the skin, soaking the flesh, chilling to the bone.
All the way through the evening, Strop regretted not packing his long johns, normally reserved for such destinations as the UK in December (wait, wasn’t he going to the UK in like five days? Shit.) It was even worse, that he had neglected to realise that since his wonderful colleagues at Gryphon Gear had completely stripped his Peapod out and replaced all the panels with carbon fiber (without his permission), he, of course, had no air conditioner. So sure enough, it was literally icy in the car, to the point Strop could see frost forming on his fur coat, which, of course, he had just trimmed in preparation for the comparatively hellish Australian Summer. His puffy duck down trucker jacket just wasn’t cutting it.
Clutching his arms to his body, he gingerly stepped out of the car, alongside where the Mephisto, Sleipnir and the Gryphon Gear truck (all equipped with air conditioning), were parked at the end of the Bonneville Speedway road, where it gave way to the salt. The rest of the crew was there, all dressed in their winter gear, Tesla in her ski suit (that she never used), Hannah in her polar fleece, Noah in his overcoat, and… Kai wearing a t-shirt and shorts. Where was Sam? Swaddled in just about every item he could find in his suitcase, he nonetheless staunchly refused to leave the relative comfort of Sleipnir, eyes bugging out in disbelief at Kai’s lack of winterwear, or apparently, hypothermia.
“Come on, Sam,” Kai gloated, “It’s not that bad, it’s only minus eight out here!”
“Don’t you dare open my window you freak!” Sam gasped, voice slightly muffled by the Lexan.
“Kai, if you’re not going to wear your jacket, could I borrow it?” Strop asked, looking hopeful.
Kai promptly went to his car, fetched his jacket, and slipped it on with a cheeky grin. “Oh, I am cold, but it was fun seeing Sam flip out.”
Strop glared at Kai. “Give me that jacket.”
Kai shrank back, feigning horror. “Why!? It’s MY jacket.”
“I let you hog the entire bed when you were moping over-“
“Okay okay already!” Kai hastily shrugged off his jacket before Strop could finish his sentence and, more importantly, let Sam overhear. Strop didn’t even bother adjusting his own clothes, just crammed it on over, and breathed a sigh of relief. A little too short, but only a little because it was a bit too large for Kai.

“Better. Now you have fun with
Sanka-mon over there,” Strop grinned, drawing a “Hey! It’s actually cold!” of recognition from inside Sleipnir, and stalked off to join Noah, Hannah and Tesla. Tesla prodded the salt with her foot, shaking her head.
“Still too wet and icy.”
“But reason enough to stop us from racing on it?”
Everybody looked at Strop with that are-you-serious look he recognised even in the dark.
“It’s not good to cancel an entire event because of this though,” he moaned, grinding his palm into his head. “So we won’t cancel it.”
“Hey numbnuts,” Hannah poked Strop in the hip (because she was too short to conveniently poke him in the head), “Is it so cold your brain froze too? You want the Barely Street Legal League to turn into the Formerly Street Legal League?”
“Yeah but…” Strop scratched his chin, a smile slowly spreading on his face. “We don’t have to run on the Salt Flats.”
“Don't you dare.” Noah snapped pre-emptively.

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A strange atmosphere accompanied the throng that gathered in dribs and drabs on the otherwise deserted roads leading to the Bonneville Salt Flats. Niall arrived by himself from god-knows-where, looking content in his own little headspace. Rayyan and Riley arrived together from the east, as did Matt, Enry, and Seba Machado from the West. 8bs, Kristina, Pleb, and Tom all turned up at the same time from the same place, but not together, and while Pleb seemed perfectly normal, Kristina and Tom clearly exuded some healthy glow about them. But 8bs, man he looked like shit. And the multinational multispecies trio of the Raggari Mutant had somehow managed to collect a lot of dust on their way up. Clearly it had been an interesting three days for many of them, but here they were, and ready to race. All except Normandy nutjob, Vos. He’d sent notice withdrawing from this round so he could fix his car for the remaining rounds, and probably for the better at that, given just what happened to the brakes in Japan.
Explaining to the gathered participants, arms all folded in front of them in various poses, that wet salty sand at sub-zero temperatures makes for a huge reservoir of mud with patches of ice on top did not seem to convince many. Explaining that the only racing they would do were two hundred mile an hour tank slappers or getting bogged and leaving lots of lovely evidence for the cops to examine come the morning was only marginally better. But the suggestion that the forty-three mile stretch of Lincoln Highway that lay just beyond the onramp from the Bonneville Speedway road was in fact, perfectly straight, deserted at this time of the night and much much longer than the measly seven miles of wet sand they could have condemned their cars to rust in for eternity was a far stronger argument.
“Only, of course, this does cross the line from Barely Street Legal to Rather Illegal,” Strop hastened to mention. “Not that some of you seem too bothered by this, or so I’m told,” he added as he imagined Hannah shooting him a meaningful glare from their truck some twenty miles up the road.
“So we’re going to do this quickly, and blast on out of here, and I expect everybody to be discreet until you reach Tulsa and we finish renegotiating the track hire.”
This was arguably the simplest stage. All they needed to do was floor it, in an all-out race. They weren’t even going to bother with a staggered start, it was come as you please and go as you please, though of course, please, no bumping. Any and every means to keep the engine cool or to eke out that bit of extra speed by drafting was permitted. The only reference point was the laser guided timers that Noah had been (reluctantly) tasked with planting exactly one mile apart, in the middle of the highway. Just like the way the Bonneville Land Speed Record runs were timed.
One by one they lined up on the road, ready to set off, engines all revving as they started the warmup. “Alright guys,” Strop shouted, “Keep it clean!” He tapped each car on the bonnet, and they set off, slowly at first, easing their joints and stretching their limbs in the frigid Autumn air. Strop took his place at the back of the pack, knowing full well his car had the lowest top speed, but he didn’t care. It was back in the wheel and back in the race and it sent a thrill through his body to anticipate the roaring and thunder and the road passing by in a blur, trading places bumper to bumper amidst the night lights, where one wrong move was death.
The megacar convoy snaked its way onto the on-ramp and onto the highway in single file, where they proceeded at precisely on the speed limit, each and every one of them, daring each other to pull the trigger first. It was a matter of calculation, of thinking of the condition of the tyres, of fuel, of engine temperatures and a million shifting operations was going through each of the minds of every racer, while trying to predict the move of the others.
Everything changed in a single moment. Maybe it was the Annihilator, maybe it was the Debrauna. Or maybe Tom was the one who snapped first, nobody could tell. A burble turned into full throated roaring and baying and the cars leapt forward, slithering around on the damp road as they jockeyed for position. But top speed was king, and as the road thundered by beneath them, the surrounding expanse of darkness seemingly in suspended animation, the order was established. As the odometer flicked by, the hundred meters ticking by almost every second, the Hulk had muscled its way to the front, almost barging the cars it passed off the road, before squatting and blasting away. The Ultra X was next, its lack of downforce and drag allowing it to soar higher than even the superlative company it kept. An eclectic pack of cars followed close behind, a mix of the hyper-powered all wheel drives and coupes, chased by the bumper to bumper pack of the Vindicator, the oversized Elegance, the hatchbacks Brimstone and Achernar, and parked right on the tailgate of the Achernar, Kristina’s E30. While Sam insisted on flooring it early, the track spec of Sleipnir left his top speed lacking, and he was passed first by the other front wheel drive cars, then the other aggressive track tuned cars, and finally, even the ancient Testis. This was the straw that broke the camel’s back, and he snuck in onto the tail of the next car, the Debrauna, and sped off. The two dozen pairs of headlights all progressively vanished into the distance as they left Strop in his Peapod, not even yet doing a measly three hundred, far far behind. Last place indeed.
This was when Strop noticed something very wrong. There was a pair of headlights in his rear mirrors. Flashing red, white and blue. And, unless he was hallucinating, they were growing larger.