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Chapter 307: The First Move II

I let the celebrations continue for a few more minutes, then I clapped my hands for silence. The music was cut, and all eyes turned to . I wasn’t going to give a long speech. The ti for words was over. The ti for feeling was now.

"I have nothing to say," I began, my voice thick with emotion, "except this. I have never, ever been prouder of a group of players in my entire life. You went out there today, and you fought. You suffered. You bled. You played with courage and a discipline that was awe-inspiring. You did it for yourselves, you did it for each other, and you did it for those three thousand magnificent fans who never stopped singing for you. You are not just a team. You are a family. And you are Premier League. Now, let’s go ho."

The roar that greeted my words was even louder than the one for Wayne’s award. The party continued all the way to the team bus, a joyous, chaotic procession of red and blue.

My own final duty of the day was the press conference. I walked into the room, and the atmosphere was electric. The journalists, who had been so skeptical, so condescending, so certain of our demise, were now looking at

with a mixture of awe and disbelief. They didn’t just want a story; they wanted to know the secret. They wanted to know how the boy wonder had pulled off the impossible.

"Danny, a performance of tactical genius. How did you do it?"

"It wasn’t genius," I said, my voice calm and asured. "It was discipline. The players were magnificent. They followed the ga plan to the letter, even when it was painful, even when it was exhausting. All the credit belongs to them."

"But the 5-2-3 formation... nobody saw that coming. It was a masterstroke."

"It was a plan," I said simply. "One of many we considered. We have a brilliant coaching staff who work tirelessly to find any advantage we can. Today, it worked."

"You’ve secured Premier League safety with two gas to spare. An incredible achievent. What does the future hold for you, Danny? Will you be the permanent manager of this club?"

It was the question I knew was coming. The question the whole world wanted an answer to. I looked at the journalist, a man who had written a particularly scathing article about my appointnt just a few weeks ago, and I allowed myself a small, knowing smile.

"My only focus," I said, my voice clear and steady, "was on the five gas I was given. The mission was to keep this club in the Premier League. We’ve done that. The future will take care of itself."

I left them with that, a tantalizing, non-committal answer that would fuel the back pages for days. I walked out of the press conference, the flashbulbs popping, the questions still ringing in my ears, and I felt a sense of profound, quiet satisfaction. I had not just won a football match. I had won the ga.

Before we boarded the bus, there was one final thing to do. The players, still buzzing, still giddy, made their way around the periter of the Etihad to the away end, where the three thousand Palace fans were still there, still singing, still refusing to leave.

It was a beautiful, defiant act of loyalty. These were the people who had driven up the motorway on a Sunday afternoon, who had paid their money and given their voices and their hearts, and they deserved this mont as much as any player on that pitch.

The players lined up in front of them, and the roar that greeted them was sothing I will carry with

for the rest of my life. Not the polished, orchestrated noise of a stadium full of corporate seats and half-interested spectators, but the raw, pure, overwhelming sound of three thousand people who had believed when nobody else had.

I saw a man in the front row, grey-haired and wearing a scarf that looked like it had been through a decade of winters, with tears streaming openly down his face, his arms raised to the sky.

I saw a young boy, no older than eight or nine, perched on his father’s shoulders, his little face a picture of pure, wide-eyed wonder, as if he was watching a fairy tale co to life. I saw a group of young won in the second row, their faces painted red and blue, singing their hearts out, their voices already gone but their mouths still moving, still giving everything they had.

I stood at the edge of the pitch and watched my players... my players clapping, bowing, pointing to the fans, sharing the mont with them. Zaha was blowing kisses. Benteke was doing a little dance that made the crowd laugh and roar in equal asure.

Scott Dann, the captain, the warrior, was just standing there with his arms outstretched, soaking it all in, a look of pure, quiet gratitude on his face. Even Wayne Hennessey, the Man of the Match, the hero of the hour, had co out of his shell, holding the small silver trophy aloft to a deafening reception.

I felt a hand on my shoulder. It was Kevin Bray, my set-piece coach, a man who had spent the last week drawing diagrams and running drills, who had contributed to this victory in a hundred small, invisible ways. He was not a man given to sentintality, but his eyes were bright. "Not bad for a bunch of lads from South London," he said, his voice gruff but warm.

"Not bad at all," I agreed.

The journey ho on the team bus was a world away from the tense, silent trip to Anfield. The music was still playing, but it was softer now, a soundtrack to a quiet, happy exhaustion.

The players were on their phones, their faces illuminated by the screens, sharing the news with their families, their loved ones, the people who had lived every mont of this journey with them.

I saw Benteke showing his phone to Zaha, a picture of his smiling child, and I saw Zaha, the superstar, the icon, just looking at it with a soft, gentle smile.

I was sitting at the front of the bus, next to Sarah. The city lights of Manchester streaked past the window, a blur of color in the rainy night. She didn’t say anything, just handed

her tablet. On the screen was a file, already compiled, already organized. The title was simple:

Jesús Navas. Initial Report.

I opened the file. Contract details. Agent information. A summary of his season, his assists, and his chances created. A list of his strengths: pace, crossing, work rate, professionalism. A list of his weaknesses: lack of goals, declining physical stats, and a tendency to be predictable. It was all there, a cold, hard, analytical breakdown of a human being.

I looked out of the window at the rain-streaked streets of my ho city, a place I had left as a boy with a dream and had returned to as a man who had achieved the impossible. The battle for survival was over. The war for the future had just begun. And as I scrolled through the file on Jesús Navas, a small, determined smile touched my lips. I had made my first move.

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