There was a moment, about three quarters of the way up the Mur de Huy on Wednesday's La Flèche Wallonne Féminine, where it looked like Demi Vollering had attacked too early.
The Dutch SD Worx rider, irrepressible so far this Spring, the winner of Strade Bianche, Dwars door Vlaanderen and the Amstel Gold Race, essentially rolled off the front of the bunch - perhaps more ground, considering the incline - and looked like she would simply glide off.
While others behind her gritted their teeth and weaved across the road, Vollering seemed to be on another course altogether. However, with 300m to go, Lianne Lippert (Movistar) arrived on her back wheel, and alarm bells must have started ringing in the SD Worx team car; incidentally, not for Vollering, as she was staring dead-ahead.
Was it too much, to attack right from the bottom of one of the fearsome final climbs in cycling? Was the Dutchwoman overconfident? Was Lippert really that close, or was it classic foreshortening from the camera?
In the end, it turned out it was the perfect attack, as Vollering simply kept to her pace, kept riding her own rhythm, and had enough time to look back, take off her sunglasses and celebrate at the top of the Mur. What looked like heartbreak at 300m to go soon turned to ease 150m later.
Lippert finished second, five seconds behind the winner, with 21-year-old Gaia Realini (Trek-Segafredo) clinching third, ahead of a fading Mavi García (Liv Racing TeqFind).
There was a shake of the head from Vollering, seemingly unable to comprehend what she had achieved, but she is currently the best rider in the world.
"Before the last time I tried to split the group, I just went at my own pace and I couldn’t believe there was a gap," the 26-year-old said in her post-race interview. "I saw it very late and the gap was pretty big and I was really surprised by that so I’m really happy."