Chapter 268: The Mid-Point II
Wednesday evening, I took Emma to a small Italian restaurant in Croydon, a quiet, cozy place with candlelit tables and a nu that was handwritten in chalk on a blackboard.
It was the kind of place where you could talk without shouting, where the world outside faded away, where it was just the two of us. She looked stunning, her red hair falling in soft waves over her shoulders, her eyes bright and alive, her smile the most beautiful thing I had ever seen.
I had always thought she was beautiful, from the mont I had first seen her at that muddy pitch in Manchester, scribbling notes in her battered notebook, her passion for the ga shining through every word she wrote. But tonight, in the soft glow of the candlelight, she was radiant. She was the most beautiful woman in the world, and she was mine.
We ordered wine, we ordered food, and we talked. About everything. About the team, about her blog, about the craziness of the past few weeks.
She told
about the interview with the South London Press, about how they had offered her a regular weekly column, about how her readership was exploding, about how she was finally, truly, making a na for herself in the world of football journalism. And I listened, my heart swelling with pride, my hand reaching across the table to hold hers.
"I’m so proud of you, Em," I said, my voice thick with emotion. "You’re brilliant. You’ve always been brilliant. And now everyone else is seeing it too."
She blushed, her fingers squeezing mine. "I couldn’t have done it without you, Danny. You gave
the story. You gave
access. You gave
a reason to believe that this crazy dream of mine could actually work."
I shook my head. "No. You did this. You’re the one with the talent, the passion, the drive. I just gave you a team to write about."
We ate, we laughed, we shared stories, and then, as the waiter cleared our plates and brought us coffee, she looked at
with a serious, searching expression. "Danny, what happens after you win?"
I blinked, surprised by the question. "What do you an?"
"I an, what happens after you win the Group 1 playoffs? After you qualify for the UEFA Youth League? What’s next? What’s the dream after this dream?"
I sat back, my mind suddenly blank. I had been so focused on the imdiate goal, on the next ga, on the next win, that I hadn’t thought beyond it. "I... I don’t know, Em. I honestly don’t know."
She leaned forward, her eyes intense, her voice soft but firm. "Then dream bigger, Danny. You’ve done sothing incredible here. You’ve built sothing special. But don’t let this be the end. Don’t let this be the peak. You’re capable of so much more. And I want to see you reach for it."
Her words hit
like a punch to the gut, a wake-up call that I hadn’t known I needed. She was right. I had been so consud by the present that I had forgotten to think about the future. But what was the future? The senior team? A bigger club? A different country? I didn’t know. But I knew that I wanted to find out.
"Thank you," I said, my voice barely above a whisper. "I needed to hear that."
She smiled, and then I reached into my jacket pocket and pulled out a small, wrapped box. "I have sothing for you."
Her eyes widened, her hand flying to her mouth. "Danny, what is this?"
"Open it."
She unwrapped it slowly, her fingers trembling slightly, and then she opened the box. Inside was a watch, a beautiful, elegant watch with a silver face and a leather strap. It wasn’t extravagant, it wasn’t flashy, but it was perfect.
She had ntioned, weeks ago, that her old watch had broken, that she needed a new one but hadn’t had the ti or the money to get it. And when the FA Youth Cup bonus had co in, a modest but aningful sum, I had known exactly what I wanted to do with it.
"Danny," she breathed, her eyes filling with tears. "It’s beautiful. It’s perfect. But you didn’t have to..."
"I wanted to," I interrupted, taking the watch from the box and fastening it around her wrist. "You’ve been there for
through everything. You’ve supported , you’ve believed in , you’ve been my anchor. And I wanted to give you sothing to show you how much that ans to . How much you an to ."
She looked at the watch, and then she looked at , and then she leaned across the table and kissed , a slow, deep, lingering kiss that tasted of wine and love and promise. "I love you, Danny Walsh," she whispered against my lips.
"I love you too, Emma," I whispered back. And in that mont, in that quiet Italian restaurant in Croydon, with the woman I loved in my arms and the future stretching out before us, I felt truly, completely happy.
Thursday morning, I was back in my office, the romantic haze of the previous evening replaced by the cold, hard focus of preparation. I pulled up the UEFA Youth League qualification criteria on my laptop, the docunt I had bookmarked months ago, the goal that had seed so impossibly distant when I had first arrived at this club.
The rules were simple: the winner of Group 1 in the second league in England would qualify for the UEFA Youth League, Europe’s premier youth competition, a chance to test ourselves against the best academies on the continent.
We were top of the table with twelve points. We had three gas left: Chelsea away, West Ham at ho, and a final, decisive match against whoever was still in contention. Three more wins. That was all we needed. Three more wins, and we would be playing in Europe. Three more wins, and the dream would beco reality.
I leaned back in my chair, the weight of the challenge settling on my shoulders. Chelsea. West Ham. And then the final match. Each one is a battle. Each one is a test. But we were ready. We had proven we could win in different ways: defensively against City, offensively against Blackburn and Tottenham, tactically against Arsenal. We were a complete team. And we were hungry.
The System’s interface materialized before my eyes, invisible to the world, a glowing, translucent screen that only I could see. I pulled up the scouting report on Chelsea, our next opponents.
They were a formidable team, sitting in fifth place in the Group 1 table, their season inconsistent but their talent undeniable. They had pace, they had power, and they had a striker who was scoring goals for fun.
I spent the next two hours watching footage, analyzing their patterns, identifying their weaknesses, and formulating a plan. The System fed
data, heat maps, passing networks, and defensive vulnerabilities. And slowly, piece by piece, the puzzle began to co together.
By the ti I looked up, the sun was setting outside my window, the training ground quiet and empty. I saved my notes, closed my laptop, and allowed myself a small, satisfied smile.
Chelsea didn’t know it yet, but they were about to walk into a trap. And we were going to spring it with ruthless, beautiful efficiency. Three more gas. Three more wins to go. The dream was within reach. And I was going to grab it with both hands.
***
Thank you to nayelus and chisum_lane for the continued support.
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