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Chapter 314: The Future is Now I

I slept the deep, dreamless sleep of a man whose future had finally, blessedly, clicked into place. The chairman’s handshake, the promise of a permanent contract, the quiet, unwavering belief in Emma’s eyes; it was a foundation, solid and real, on which to build.

The fear of relegation, a constant, gnawing anxiety that had lived in the pit of my stomach for weeks, was gone. In its place was a new feeling, one I hadn’t allowed myself to truly experience until now: ambition. Not just to survive, but to build. Not just to win, but to create sothing beautiful, sothing lasting.

The buzz of my phone at 7 a.m. was the only alarm I needed. Hull City. Ho. 3 pm. Today.

I smiled. The real work begins now.

The drive to Selhurst Park was different. The streets of South London, usually a tense, humming backdrop to my pre-match nerves, felt alive with a new energy. Red and blue scarves hung from windows, and flags were draped over balconies.

A group of teenagers in full kit were kicking a ball against a wall on Whitehorse Lane, and one of them spotted my car and started banging on the roof with both palms, screaming sothing unintelligible but clearly ecstatic.

The closer I got to the stadium, the thicker the crowds beca, not with the grim determination of a relegation scrap, but with the joyous, festival-like atmosphere of a promotion party. We had survived. We were safe. And today was not a battle. It was a celebration.

I parked in my usual spot and walked towards the players’ entrance, the sound of the growing crowd already a dull roar in the distance. I saw him then, standing by the main entrance, a solitary figure in a sea of red and blue.

An old man, his face a roadmap of wrinkles, a Palace scarf from a bygone era tied neatly around his neck. He was just standing there, his eyes closed, a small, serene smile on his face, as if just breathing in the air of the place was enough.

I’d seen him before, in the sa spot before the Liverpool ga, his face etched with a lifeti of worry. The transformation was startling. He looked lighter, sohow. Like a man who had put down a heavy bag he’d been carrying for years.

I slowed my pace as I passed him. He opened his eyes and looked at . He didn’t say anything. He just nodded, once, slowly, with a look of profound gratitude that hit

sowhere deep in the chest. I nodded back. No words needed. This was what it ant. This was for him.

Inside, the dressing room was calm, but buzzing with a low, confident hum. The lads were laughing, and music was playing softly from a speaker in the corner. There was no tension, no fear.

I’d made the big call the previous evening, informing the squad that Christian Benteke was being rested entirely. I needed him fresh, sharp, and angry for the final day trip to Old Trafford. So of the senior players had looked surprised, but no one argued.

The trust was absolute now. Connor Blake, who had been told he was starting as the lone striker, looked like a man who had just been handed the keys to the kingdom. His eyes were wide, bright, and utterly focused. He was sitting alone in the corner, headphones on, staring at the floor, completely in his own world.

"Morning, gaffer," Sarah said, handing

the final pre-match data packet as I walked into my office. Her usual pre-match frown was gone, replaced by a look of quiet satisfaction. "Hull were mathematically relegated last night. Swansea won their ga. The away end will be a ghost town."

"Good," I said, scanning the report. "But that makes them dangerous. No pressure. Nothing to lose. They’ll want to play for their manager, for their own pride. Marco Silva is not the kind of man who lets his team lie down."

Marcus, my analyst, poked his head around the door, a tablet in one hand and a half-eaten croissant in the other. He had the slightly manic look of a man who had been up since five in the morning watching footage.

"Spot on, Danny. Silva set them up in a 4-4-2. Niasse and Hernández up front. They’ll sit in two compact banks of four and look to nick sothing on the counter. Maguire at the back will be absolutely desperate to perform. He’s had a brilliant season and every top-six club in the country is watching him."

"He can perform all he wants," I said. "He’ll have a busy afternoon."

"Robertson on the left is their biggest threat," Marcus continued, swiping through his tablet. "He’s had a brilliant season. Wan-Bissaka will have his work cut out."

"Aaron can handle him," I said, with a certainty that I genuinely felt. "What about their press? Will they try to play high?"

"Doubt it. They’re knackered, Danny. Physically and ntally. They’ll be compact and disciplined. They won’t co at us."

"Good. Then we’ll co at them." I stood up, straightening my jacket. "Get the board set up. I want the lads to see the shape one more ti before we go out."

I walked back into the main dressing room and signalled for the music to be cut. All eyes turned to . I looked around at the faces. Hennessey, a giant of a man, radiating calm. Tomkins and Dann, my battle-scarred warriors at the back.

Wan-Bissaka, a kid who looked like he was born to play on this stage. Milivojevi??, my captain for today, was sitting with his arms folded and his jaw set like granite. And in the midfield, the two boys who represented the future.

Nya Kirby, seventeen years old, about to start as the deepest-lying midfielder in a Premier League ga, looking as composed as if he were having a kickabout in the park. And on the bench, Eberechi Eze, a coiled spring of talent, his foot tapping impatiently, desperate to be let loose.

I stood in the centre of the room. The tactical board behind

showed the formation: a high-intensity 4-2-3-1. Nya as the single pivot, the anchor. McArthur and Cabaye ahead of him as the tireless engines. Townsend and Zaha as the wing wizards. And Connor Blake, leading the line.

***

Thank you to Sir nayelus and chisum_lane for the continued support and gifts.

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