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Chapter 264: The Week

The victory against Manchester City was a seismic shockwave that reverberated throughout the world of youth football. We had gone into the lion’s den, faced down a team of future superstars, and erged with a victory that was as ugly as it was beautiful.

The bus journey back to London was a joyous, boisterous affair, a stark contrast to the tense, quiet journey north. The boys were heroes, and they knew it.

But as the celebrations faded and the exhaustion set in, a new challenge erged. The victory had been a defensive masterclass, a triumph of tactical discipline and collective will. But it had co at a cost. And the cost was Connor Blake.

I woke on Monday morning not to the jarring blare of my alarm, but to the soft, gentle touch of a kiss on my forehead.

I blinked, my eyes slowly adjusting to the soft morning light filtering through the curtains, and saw Emma, already dressed in her work clothes, a warm, gentle smile on her face.

"Morning, sleepyhead," she whispered, her voice a soothing balm to my weary soul.

"I was going to let you sleep, but I made breakfast. And I know you have a big week ahead." She leaned in and kissed

again, a slow, lingering kiss that spoke of a growing intimacy, a comfortable, easy affection that had beco the anchor of my chaotic life.

We made breakfast together, a simple, dostic ritual that felt a world away from the high-stakes pressure of the football world. We moved around each other in the small kitchen with an easy, unspoken rhythm, our hands brushing as we reached for the coffee, our bodies fitting together as if they were made for each other.

She scrambled the eggs while I toasted the bread, and we talked about everything and nothing. "How’s the blog going?" I asked, pouring her a cup of coffee, rembering to add the exact amount of milk she liked.

She lit up, her eyes sparkling with excitent. "It’s insane, Danny. Absolutely insane. My article on the City ga has had over fifty thousand views. Fifty thousand! People are actually reading what I write. They’re comnting, they’re sharing, they’re asking

questions about the team, about the tactics, about you."

She paused, a shy, almost embarrassed smile on her face. "I think I’m becoming a proper football journalist. Who would have thought?"

I pulled her into a hug, my heart swelling with pride. "You’re brilliant, Em. You always have been. People are just finally realizing it."

When we’d first t in Manchester, she’d been running "The Grassroots Gazette," covering local football with a passion and insight that had imdiately impressed .

When I’d moved to London for the Palace job, she’d made the leap with , transitioning her focus from Manchester’s Sunday leagues to the academy system at Selhurst Park. Her blog, now rebranded as "The Academy Diaries," had beco a must-read for Palace fans, a window into a world that was usually hidden from view.

And now, with the FA Youth Cup win and the unbeaten run in Group 1 of the second league stage, her readership was exploding. She was getting ssages from other journalists, from scouts, from fans all over the country. She was making a na for herself. And I couldn’t have been prouder.

"I have an interview with the South London Press this afternoon," she said, her voice a mixture of excitent and nerves. "They want to talk about the blog, about covering youth football, about being a woman in a male-dominated industry. It’s a big deal, Danny. A really big deal."

I kissed her forehead, my hands cupping her face. "You’re going to be amazing. Just be yourself. That’s all you need to be." We finished breakfast in a comfortable silence, the morning sun streaming through the window, the world outside fading away.

In these quiet, ordinary monts, I found my peace, my sanity. With Emma, I wasn’t Danny Walsh, the tactical genius, the rising star of the coaching world. I was just Danny. And that was a gift more precious than any trophy.

But the peace of the morning was shattered the mont I arrived at the training ground. The atmosphere was different. The joyous, celebratory mood of the previous week had been replaced by a tense, simring energy.

And at the center of it all was Connor Blake. He was a storm cloud in human form, his face a mask of thunderous fury, his every movent radiating a barely suppressed rage.

He had been a ghost against City, a selfless, sacrificial lamb for the good of the team. He had done his job, and he had done it perfectly. But the striker’s ego, the primal need to be the hero, to score the goals, had been wounded. And the wound was festering.

He was a monster in training, a force of nature, his every touch a cannonball, his every shot a missile. He was channeling his anger, his frustration, into his performance, and it was both terrifying and magnificent to watch. But it was also different.

The old Connor, the volatile, self-destructive Connor, would have lashed out. He would have picked a fight, thrown a tantrum, stord off the pitch. But this Connor, the new Connor, the Connor I had spent months building, was different. He was channeling his rage into his football. He was using it. And it was beautiful.

I called him into my office after the morning session. He stord in, his body language a study in defiance, his eyes daring

to challenge him. I didn’t. I just sat there, in silence, and let him pace.

The System’s interface materialized before my eyes, a glowing, invisible screen that only I could see. I pulled up Connor’s player profile. His stats were a volatile cocktail of red and green. [Frustration: 19. Aggression: 18. Determination: 18. Professionalism: 14.]

The frustration and aggression were dangerously high, but the professionalism, a stat that had been slowly, painstakingly increasing over the past few months, was holding them in check. Just.

"You’re angry," I said, my voice calm, asured. "Good."

He stopped pacing and looked at , surprised.

"You have every right to be angry. I asked you to sacrifice yourself for the team, and you did it. You were magnificent. But it hurt. It hurt your pride. It hurt your ego. And now, you want to make soone pay."

He didn’t say anything, but his eyes told

everything I needed to know.

"Good," I repeated. "Because on Saturday, you’re going to get your chance."

***

Thank you to nayelus for the continued support.

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