Ivy Wolfe High Speed Fun -

Nevada, three in the morning. The salt flats stretched like a bone-white ocean under a bruised sky. She’d stripped a ‘69 Dodge Charger down to its skeleton—supercharged Hemi, nitrous injection, a roll cage she’d welded herself. No speedometer. No distractions. Just her, a bucket seat, and a throttle that begged to be buried.

Ivy Wolfe had one rule for herself: never let the silence settle. Silence meant thinking, and thinking meant remembering the life she’d left behind—the one with the desk job, the beige cubicle, the clock that ticked louder than her dreams. ivy wolfe high speed fun

Back in the motel room, with gravel still in her hair, Ivy opened a new notebook. Page one: “Build something faster. Something that flies.” Nevada, three in the morning

No time to think. That was the point, wasn’t it? No speedometer

It started small. A midnight Kawasaki down the Pacific Coast Highway, wind clawing at her helmet, the ocean a black mirror to her left. Then came the jet skis, cutting white gashes into Lake Havasu at dawn. Then rock climbing without ropes—just chalk and nerve and the whisper of gravity below her boots.

And then she saw it. A jackrabbit, frozen in her high beams, ears flat, eyes wide as moons.