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Chapter 253: The New Dawn I

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ACT 5 OF VOLU 2

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The silence was the first thing I noticed. After the deafening, soul-shaking roar of Wembley, the quiet of my apartnt felt like a physical presence, a thick blanket muffling the world.

It was Sunday morning, less than twenty-four hours since we had lifted the FA Youth Cup, and the adrenaline was finally, slowly, beginning to recede, leaving in its wake a profound sense of exhaustion and a strange, hollow ache.

The trophy, a gleaming silver testant to our impossible dream, sat on the coffee table, catching the morning light. It looked smaller than it had on the pitch, less mythical, more real. I had polished it three tis already, a nervous, repetitive action, as if I was afraid it might just disappear if I didn’t keep touching it.

Emma was still asleep, her fiery red hair a chaotic splash of colour against the white pillows, her breathing a soft, steady rhythm in the quiet room. I had watched her for a long ti after we got ho, her face peaceful in the dim light, and I had felt a surge of gratitude so intense it almost brought

to my knees.

She had been my anchor through the storm, my confidante, my beautiful, chaotic, unstoppable everything. And now, on the other side of the storm, in the calm of this new dawn, I felt a sense of peace that had been a stranger to

for so long.

I made coffee, the familiar ritual a comfort in the stillness, and stepped out onto the balcony. The city was waking up, the distant hum of traffic a familiar soundtrack to my life. But sothing had shifted.

The air felt different, charged with a new kind of energy. My phone had been a relentless torrent of notifications since the final whistle, a digital tidal wave of congratulations, news articles, and social dia ntions.

I had scrolled through it all in a daze, my mind struggling to process the scale of what we had accomplished. The back pages of the newspapers were filled with pictures of my boys, of Lewis Grant lifting the trophy, of Eze and Olise celebrating, of Connor Blake, the Golden Boot winner, being mobbed by his teammates.

The headlines were a blur of superlatives: "Palace’s Golden Generation," "The Forty-Year Wait is Over," "Walsh’s Wonders Conquer Wembley." It was surreal, like reading about soone else’s life.

But it was our life. It was our story. My plan, the one I had formulated in the depths of my despair back in January, had worked. Phase one was complete. The FA Youth Cup run, culminating in that glorious, televised triumph at Wembley, had made my players heroes.

They weren’t just anonymous academy kids anymore. They were household nas, their faces plastered across the internet, their goals replayed on a loop. The fans had fallen in love with them, had taken them into their hearts, had made them their own.

The board couldn’t just sell them now. Not without a riot. But I knew, with a cold, hard certainty, that it wasn’t enough. The love of the fans was a powerful shield, but it wasn’t impenetrable.

The vultures would still be circling, the big clubs with their bottomless pockets and their seductive promises.

To make my plan foolproof, to truly secure the future of this team, we had to do more. We had to prove that Wembley wasn’t a fluke. We had to prove that we belonged among the elite. And that ant conquering the final frontier of our dostic season: the Group 1 of the second league stage with 8 teams and 7 gas to play.

"You’re thinking again," a soft voice murmured from the doorway. I turned to see Emma, wrapped in my oversized dressing gown, a sleepy smile on her face. She ca and stood beside , leaning her head on my shoulder as we looked out at the sprawling expanse of South London.

"I can practically hear the gears turning from the bedroom. What is it this ti? World domination? Or just figuring out how to get that trophy to fit on the mantelpiece?" I chuckled, the sound a little rough.

"Sothing like that." I told her about the Group 1 of the Second League stage, the final eight-team mini-league that would crown the undisputed champion of English youth football.

I told her about the prize that mattered more than the title itself: a spot in next season’s UEFA Youth League. I told her about the promise I’d made to myself months ago, a secret ambition that now felt tantalizingly close.

She listened patiently, her presence a calming balm on my frayed nerves. When I finished, she was quiet for a mont.

"So, it’s not over, then," she said, not as a question, but as a statent of fact. "Winning the cup was just the end of the beginning." I nodded. "Seven more gas. Against the best of the best. Arsenal, Chelsea, City, United... all of them."

She squeezed my hand. "You’ll do it. I know you will." Her faith in

was a constant source of wonder, a bright, unwavering light in the darkness of my own self-doubt. Then her expression changed, a mischievous glint in her eye.

"Speaking of the best of the best," she said, "Gary Issott called yesterday while you were in the shower. He’s left two tickets for us. For the big one. Palace versus Arsenal. Today."

It had been a long ti since I’d been to Selhurst Park as a simple spectator. Two years ago, I visited the stadium with Raj... the only tickets we could afford in the whole Premier League if we didn’t want to splurge too much and lose all our little savings.

A lifeti ago, it felt like... before the System, before railway arms, before Moss Side, before the Crystal Palace U18s, before my life had been turned upside down and inside out.

A lot has happened in such a short amount of ti.

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Thank you to nayelus, chisum_lane and to Gambick23 for the support.

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