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76908 – Pink Slips at Midnight

White brick-built Lamborghini Countach races through downtown streets at night alongside muscle cars, driven by a minifigure.

Detroit didn’t sleep—it waited.

Streetlights hummed above empty lanes, casting long reflections across rain-dark pavement. Old brick buildings rose like silent witnesses, their windows black, their murals half-lit and watching. Somewhere in the distance, a train horn echoed low and lonely, threading through the city like a warning.

At the edge of an abandoned plaza, cars gathered.

Most were loud even at rest—wide American muscle machines crouched low on fat tires, engines rumbling impatiently, paint glowing in deep reds, blues, and blacks. They looked heavy. Powerful. Built to win through force.

Then there was the white car.

It sat slightly apart from the others, sharp-edged and unmistakable, its shape all angles and confidence. Clean. Low. Almost unreal under the streetlights, like it didn’t belong to this city at all.

Inside, the driver rested both hands on the wheel and stared straight ahead.

Tonight wasn’t about money.

Tonight was about slips.

The driver stepped out, door swinging upward, and the conversations nearby dipped just enough to notice. He wasn’t from Detroit. Everyone could tell. His jacket was clean. His car even cleaner.

A man with a thick jacket and a scarred grin approached, holding a stack of folded papers.

“Winner keeps driving,” he said. “Loser walks.”

No one laughed.

One by one, drivers pulled documents from pockets and glove boxes. Titles. Ownership papers. Futures, folded thin enough to fit in a hand.

The white car’s driver hesitated for half a second—just long enough to feel it—then added his slip to the pile.

The papers were sealed in an envelope and handed off to someone no one argued with.

Engines fired.

The muscle cars thundered awake, their sound filling the plaza, shaking windows and nerves alike. The white car answered differently—higher, sharper, slicing clean through the noise instead of adding to it.

The race route wasn’t marked.

Everyone knew it anyway.

Down Jefferson. Past the river. Through the warehouse district. A hard left under the old overpass. Finish somewhere only the lead car would recognize.

The starter raised one hand.

Dropped it.

Tires screamed.

The pack launched forward, metal surging into motion as the city rushed up to meet them. The white car slipped between two muscle cars instantly, its acceleration clean and effortless, engine singing where the others roared.

Detroit blurred.

Streetlights streaked overhead. Painted lines vanished beneath spinning wheels. The road tightened, narrowed, challenged. The muscle cars fought the turns, weight shifting hard as they muscled through corners with brute strength.

The white car danced.

It cut clean lines through intersections, braking late, accelerating early, trusting precision over power. A red muscle car surged beside it on a straight, engine bellowing, forcing the white car toward the curb.

The driver didn’t flinch.

He waited.

At the next corner, he turned in smoothly, letting the heavier car overshoot. Tires chirped. Sparks flew as metal scraped concrete. The white car slipped through untouched.

Warehouse walls rose on both sides now, close enough to feel. Shadows swallowed headlights. The sound of engines echoed wildly, making distance impossible to judge.

A blue muscle car took the lead.

For now.

The white car tucked in behind it, close enough to read the reflection of its own headlights off the other car’s bumper. Wind tore across the windshield. The driver’s focus narrowed until there was nothing else—no city, no crowd, no consequences.

Just the line.

The overpass loomed ahead, massive and dark, concrete pillars flashing past like a countdown. The road split beyond it—two possible routes, only one correct.

The blue muscle car swerved left.

The driver of the white car smiled.

He dropped a gear and surged forward, engine screaming as he pulled alongside, the city exploding into motion around them.

Headlights vanished into the darkness beyond the overpass.

And somewhere behind them, an envelope waited to decide who would still have a car when the night ended.

This is an original work of fiction created by Brick Crossing, inspired by the design themes of LEGO® set 76908.
LEGO® is a trademark of the LEGO Group, which does not sponsor, authorize, or endorse Brick Crossing.

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76924 – The Road That Keeps Its Secrets

Yellow brick-built convertible race car and black brick-built SUV driven by minifigures on an Italian mountain road.

The mountain road rose out of the village like a dare.

It twisted upward through stone and shadow, cutting across cliffs where the drop vanished into mist. Old buildings clustered far below, their tiled roofs glowing softly in the early light. The road above them was narrow, unforgiving—lined with guardrails, rock walls, and nothing else.

At the start line, a low silver convertible waited, engine humming with barely contained energy. Its shape was tight and sharp, built to attack corners and vanish into the next turn before anyone could blink.

Behind the barriers stood its driver, helmet tucked under one arm, eyes fixed on the climb ahead. This was Luca’s race. He knew every bend, every shift point, every place the mountain tried to trick you.

A short distance away, parked near the team trucks, stood a very different machine.

Tall. Black. Solid.

Beside it leaned Sofia, arms crossed, sunglasses catching the light. She wasn’t racing today. She was watching. Waiting. The SUV behind her looked ready for anything the mountain could throw at it—and everything that came after.

Luca climbed into the racer and pulled the harness tight. The engine answered instantly, sharp and eager, echoing off the stone walls like a challenge shouted into the valley.

The crowd pressed closer. Flags waved. Someone counted down with raised fingers.

The lights changed.

The racer launched forward, tires biting hard as the road narrowed almost immediately. The first corner came fast—blind and uphill. Luca turned in without hesitation, trusting memory and instinct more than sight.

The mountain demanded precision.

Left. Right. Brake. Accelerate.

Stone walls flashed past inches from the wheels. The open cockpit filled with wind and sound, the engine’s note bouncing back from the cliffs. This wasn’t about straight-line speed. It was about choosing the perfect line and never letting go.

Higher up, the air cooled. Shadows stretched across the road. The racer surged out of corners, engine singing, every movement sharp and deliberate.

Below, Sofia watched the timing screens flicker. She followed Luca’s progress corner by corner, her expression calm but focused. She knew this mountain too—just in a different way.

She knew where the road went after the race ended.

The racer burst into view near the summit and crossed the finish line in a flash of silver and sound. The crowd erupted, cheers rolling down the mountain like thunder.

Luca eased off the throttle, heart still racing, hands buzzing with leftover energy. He guided the car down a narrow service road toward the paddock, brakes ticking as they cooled.

That’s when he saw it.

The black SUV waited near a stone wall overlooking the valley, engine off, stance confident. Sofia stood beside it now, helmetless, smiling as the racer rolled in.

“Still standing,” she said.

“Barely,” Luca replied, climbing out of the cockpit.

The mountain stretched behind them, silent again, as if nothing had happened. Luca pulled off his gloves and looked back up the road he’d just conquered. Speed had ruled up there—but only for a while.

He walked toward the SUV.

Sofia handed him a bottle of water, then climbed into the passenger seat. Luca took the driver’s side. The door closed with a solid, reassuring sound—nothing like the light snap of the racer.

The engine started low and steady.

Different kind of power.

The SUV rolled away from the paddock and into the village streets below. Stone buildings slipped past. The road widened. The mountain loosened its grip.

Ahead lay winding roads, fading sunlight, and the long drive home.

Luca adjusted the steering with ease. Sofia leaned back, watching the cliffs slide by.

The race was over.

The road, however, was just beginning.

This is an original work of fiction created by Brick Crossing, inspired by the design themes of LEGO® set 76924.
LEGO® is a trademark of the LEGO Group, which does not sponsor, authorize, or endorse Brick Crossing.