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Chapter 299: The Mountain I

They descended on the pizza like a pack of wolves, the air filled with the easy, boisterous laughter of teenagers. They were thrilled to see , their faces alight with a mixture of hero-worship and genuine affection. They peppered

with questions, not about tactics or formations, but about the things that mattered to them.

"Gaffer, what’s Benteke really like?" asked Tyrick Mitchell, our rock-solid left-back. "Does he have, like, a solid gold car?"

"No, Tyrick, he does not have a solid gold car," I said, laughing. "And he’s a professional, just like you guys."

"Did you really tell Zaha what to do?" laughed Reece Hannam. "Like, did you shout at him?"

"I don’t shout," I said, handing him a slice of pepperoni. "I explain. Very, very calmly."

"What did Klopp say to you? Did he say you were a genius?" asked Antoine Senyo, his eyes wide. "Did he offer you his job?"

"He said ’well played’ and that we deserved it," I replied, ruffling his hair. "And no, he did not offer

his job. I think he’s quite happy with it."

I laughed, batting away their questions, feeling the imnse pressure of the last few weeks lift for a precious hour.

I saw the whole squad: Michael Olise, his left foot a weapon even at this age; Lewis Grant and Tyler Webb, two of our three centre-backs, deep in conversation with Reece Hannam, their captain; Ryan Fletcher, our goalkeeper, already stealing pizza from Jake Morrison’s plate; Jake swatting him away with the weary authority of a man who had been doing it all season.

Brandon Aviero was at the end of the table, laughing at sothing on his phone. These were the boys who had believed in

when no one else did, who had run through walls for . This was for them.

In a quiet corner of the canteen, I saw Gary Issott, the Academy Director, watching the scene with a warm, paternal smile. I walked over to him, grabbing a slice of pizza on the way.

"Thanks for doing this, Gary," I said, gesturing to the happy chaos.

"Are you kidding?" he replied, his eyes twinkling. "They’ve talked about nothing else all week. You’re a hero to these lads, Danny. You’ve shown them that there’s a path. That if they work hard and trust the process, the first team isn’t just a dream."

"How are they?" I asked, my voice softer. "Really?"

"They miss you," he said simply. "I’m keeping the seat warm, running the sessions, but it’s not the sa. They’re your team. They respond to you." He took a bite of his pizza. "Which brings

to my next point. The board wants to talk about a permanent replacent for you. For the U18s."

I felt a pang of sothing I couldn’t quite na. Sadness? Jealousy? "Right," I said, my voice neutral.

Gary held up a hand. "And I told them, in no uncertain terms, that no decision gets made without your full approval. This is your team, Danny. You built it. You know what they need. We’ll just be keeping the seat warm for whoever you choose. Whenever you’re ready."

I looked at him, and then back at the room full of young n who had given

everything. It was a quiet, profound mont of power. I wasn’t just the interim first-team manager anymore. I was a figure of influence at this club. I had a voice. And I had earned it.

"Thank you, Gary," I said, my voice thick with a gratitude that went beyond words. "That ans a lot."

The mont of warmth was fleeting. The next morning, I was back in my office, the weight of the world on my shoulders, and the cold, hard reality of professional bureaucracy slapped

in the face.

An email sat in my inbox from the UEFA course administrators. I had written to them after the Anfield ga, formally requesting an accelerated, intensive schedule for my A Licence. I needed to get it done, to remove the ’interim’ tag from my title and the asterisk next to my na. Their reply was a masterpiece of polite, unhelpful corporate-speak.

"Dear Mr. Walsh, Thank you for your correspondence. We have reviewed your request. In light of your recent, impressive results with Crystal Palace, and as a gesture of goodwill, we are pleased to offer you two additional part-ti course days per week, bringing your total to four. We trust this will be satisfactory. Congratulations on your success."

I stared at the email, a cold fury building in my chest. Four part-ti days? It was a joke. A bureaucratic half-asure that completely missed the point. I wasn’t a Sunday league coach looking to climb the ladder over five years.

I was a Premier League manager in the most intense, high-stakes environnt in world football. I needed to learn, to grow, to absorb everything I could, as fast as I could. December was too late.

I needed to be fully qualified by August, before the new season began. I picked up the phone and dialled the number for the head administrator. No more emails. No more polite requests.

"Good morning, this is Danny Walsh."

There was a mont of surprised silence on the other end of the line. "Mr. Walsh! What a surprise. Congratulations on the result yesterday. We were just discussing it."

"Thank you," I said, my voice polite but firm. "I’m calling about your email. I appreciate the offer of two extra days, but it’s not going to work for ."

"I see," the administrator said, his tone shifting from friendly to cautious. "Well, as I’m sure you can appreciate, our schedules are set well in advance..."

"I appreciate that," I cut in, "but my situation is not typical. I am managing a Premier League football club. The demands on my ti are... unique. I need to complete this course by the end of August. I am prepared to dedicate my entire sumr to it. A fully imrsive, intensive, one-on-one schedule. Whatever it takes."

He was taken aback. "Mr. Walsh, that’s... that’s highly irregular. It’s simply not how the program is structured."

"Then change the structure," I said, my voice dropping, the frustration I had been suppressing finally breaking through. "I am not a typical candidate. I need this qualification to do my job at the highest level. Your job is to provide that qualification. December is too late. Find a way to make it happen."

There was a long, tense silence on the other end of the line. I had been disrespectful. I had been demanding. I had probably just torpedoed my own career. But I didn’t care. I was fighting for my future, and I wasn’t going to be held back by red tape.

Finally, the administrator spoke, his voice strained. "I... I will take your proposal to the board. But I can make no promises, Mr. Walsh. This is, as you say, highly irregular."

"I look forward to hearing from them," I said, and hung up. I leaned back in my chair, my heart pounding. Another battle, another front in the war I seed to be constantly fighting.

The System, ever-present, flashed a notification in my vision. [Attribute Update: Confrontation

1]. I let out a bitter laugh. At this rate, I’d be a master of it by the end of the season.

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