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July 11, 2016 — Sowhere Over London Airspace

.

The plane began its descent.

Seatbelts clicked. Window shades slid open. Conversations died mid‑sentence.

Outside, the clouds thinned and the world appeared.

Red.

White.

Endless.

Roads packed shoulder to shoulder. Flares bleeding smoke into the morning sky. Flags draped from rooftops. Cars abandoned on the hard shoulder, people standing through sunroofs, phones raised like offerings.

Tristan pressed his forehead to the glass.

For a second, his chest forgot how to work.

It was bigger than the crowd in Leicester when they won. Bigger than anything he'd ever imagined and this was just the country welcoming them back.

His mind flickered through mories of two lifetis.

Watching Spain lift trophies on TV. Germany celebrating their World Cup. France dancing in the rain of confetti.

He rembered thinking back then: What would it look like if it was us?

He'd never let himself finish the thought. Now he didn't have to.

This was it.

This—this impossible flood of people, noise, of belonging, of love.

For him. For the team. For the entire country.

The realization settled heavy and quiet, like gravity.

Not pride.

Responsibility.

A lump rose in his throat. He swallowed hard, eyes burning.

All this, he thought. All these people.

He closed his eyes for half a second.

Praying to the god who let him have this second chance.

When he opened them again, the crowd was still there.

Waiting.

.

Barbara leaned into him, curled neatly at his side, her fingers woven through his. Biscuit lay tucked in her lap, snoring faintly, one paw twitching with each rumble of the engines.

Across the aisle, Julia dabbed her eyes with a tissue that had long since given up. Ling sat stiff beside her, arms folded, lips tight, eyes locked out the window—just like his son.

The plane buzzed around them. Laughter. Gasps. Cell phones filming through glass. Dele's mum was halfway across her row with an iPad raised above her head. Rooney's boys pressed their faces against the glass. Sterling cradled his baby girl with one arm while pointing outside with the other.

Behind them, Rashford let out a low whistle.

"This is crazy," he muttered.

On the opposite side, Vardy twisted around in his seat.

"Oi, boys—fire trucks. Is that the water salute thing?"

"Looks like it," said Henderson, leaning in. "They're already spraying."

Sure enough—two fire engines flanked the runway, casting twin arcs of silver mist across the tarmac. Like a cathedral of smoke and noise and jet fuel.

Barbara turned slightly against Tristan's shoulder. "What are you thinking right now?" she asked, voice soft.

He took a breath, eyes still on the glass.

"I used to watch other countries win. Spain. Germany. France. I used to wonder what it'd look like… if it was us."

She rested her head beneath his jaw, saying nothing.

Tristan blinked once, slow.

"Now I know," he whispered.

The plane touched down.

Applause burst through the cabin. Hands slapped overhead bins. Soone pounded the seatback like a bass drum.

"CHAMPIONES, CHAMPIONES—OLE OLE OLE!"

The chant swept through like a wave. Even the cockpit cracked open with joy.

"Ladies and gentlen," said the pilot through the intercom, barely holding his emotion,

"welco ho… to the champions of Europe."

The wheels rolled beneath them—slow, steady—through the twin curtains of water.

As the jet coasted forward, Tristan looked down again, still overwheld by the weight of it all.

Then he leaned closer to Barbara, kept his voice low.

"After we land… I think we should go to the hospital. I'm still worried about you."

Barbara lifted her head slightly, brow furrowed.

"Tristan," she said, brushing his cheek with her thumb. "Relax. Celebrate. You're allowed to celebrate, you know."

"I know," he said quietly. "But I want to be sure your okay."

Barbara smiled, touched his lips with hers.

"I've been feeling better. You know that."

He didn't argue, just kissed her once more and nodded.

"Tomorrow then," she said. "We've got two days before the parade."

He smiled back tired, "Okay" he agreed.

.

The cabin doors hissed open.

Rooney stepped into the doorway first and froze.

"Oh my God," he muttered.

Henderson crowded in behind him. Then Vardy. Then Rashford.

Even seasoned veterans didn't speak.

Below, on the tarmac, it looked like a festival had collided with a war parade. Security lines strained against surging fans. Flags waved like wildfire. A brass band was playing Three Lions—completely drowned out by the sound of people screaming.

Thousands had gathered just outside the secured zones. They lined the fences, climbed onto car rooftops, stood shoulder to shoulder behind barricades and police lines.

And through the static roar, one chant broke above the rest.

"TRISTAN! TRISTAN! TRISTAN!"

Inside the plane, soone whistled.

"Oi!" Vardy yelled, turning around. "Captain's got the trophy. Get him out here already!"

A wave of laughter and shouts followed.

"Get your arse up, Hale!"

"England's waiting!"

Tristan stood slowly. He picked up the Henri Delaunay Trophy from its velvet-lined case.

Rashford appeared beside him, half-grinning. "Ready?"

"No," Tristan said. Then smiled. "But let's do it anyway."

The two of them stepped into the aisle. Teammates patted him as he passed—so laughing, so too emotional to speak. Rooney gave his shoulder a firm squeeze.

Then he was at the door.

The noise hit full force.

Deafening. Shattering. Like the whole of England had co alive.

A staircase had been wheeled up to the plane. The Union Jack was draped along the railings. TV caras circled from every angle. Drones buzzed in the sky.

Signs were everywhere.

Held up by kids on shoulders. Grandads with scarves knotted tight around their necks. Young won waving flags in one hand, cardboard slogans in the other. Painted bedsheets hung from balcony railings. Posterboards taped to sticks. Handwritten ssages scrawled on pizza boxes.

"FOOTBALL'S HO."

"THANK YOU, TRISTAN."

"THE MAN OF MIRACLES."

"CAPTAIN. KING. HALE."

"WE BELIEVED."

He stood there for a mont, frad by the sky and the jet behind him. Wind tugged at his collar. The trophy was heavy in his hands but it didn't matter.

Then, without a word, Tristan Hale raised it above his head.

And the country exploded.

It was thunder. It was release.

It was fifty years of heartbreak cracked wide open.

Football was ho.

.

Sorry for the short chapter but I just had a busy day going back to work as well.

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