Training ended with a whistle sharp enough to pierce the clouds. Cleats dragged across the turf, chatter spilled in waves, and sweat-streaked kids peeled off their bibs as they trudged toward the changing rooms.
But Leon didn't move.
He stayed on the pitch.
Alone.
The afternoon sun hovered in the sky, a dull orange disc veiled by drifting clouds. Its glow cast long shadows across the grass. The scent of fresh earth lingered in the air, cut only by the faint musk of effort—the kind that stuck to your shirt after a hard day's work.
Leon lay on his back, hands behind his head, eyes fixed on the sky. His chest rose and fell slowly, as if the very act of breathing needed patience.
The high of that pass—the assist that split five players—had faded. What remained was sothing quieter.
Still , he thought. But not just anymore.
He flexed his fingers in the grass. Ten-year-old hands. Unscarred. No calluses from years of league play. No fractures taped and hidden before a match. These were a child's hands, not the worn tools of Danein Blake.
And yet…
He could still feel the final mont.
Flashback.
The roar of the crowd had blurred into static. The cold floodlights cut down like celestial eyes. Mud stained his jersey, blood painted his lip. Danein's chest had felt tight, his legs heavy. But he kept running.
The ball had been his.
His mont. His na in lights, even if for just one night.
Then crack—a knee to his back. His ribs snapped like brittle sticks. He'd gasped, spun mid-air, then collided with the earth like a broken puppet.
Silence.
Then a whisper.
"This is your chance. Don't waste it… like I did."
Leon blinked.
The clouds above drifted lazily. The sa ones he used to stare at from the benches during his off days as Danein, too old to dream but too stubborn to quit.
He sat up slowly, brushing grass off his shirt. His body still felt foreign. The muscles were raw material—fast-twitch, sharp, untapped. But there was no power yet. No polish.
Just potential.
He rembered the way the other kids looked at him after that pass. Not with awe. Not yet. But. Interest.
"Fischer's never played like that before…"
Of course not.
Because Fischer had never been Danein Blake.
But now… I'm both.
He pressed a hand to his chest, feeling the beat of a new heart, younger but sohow carrying the weight of two lives.
"I'm… I'm not just Leon," he whispered. "I'm Danein Blake too."
It hit him like a thunderclap.
The mories. The regrets. The twenty-eight years of scraped knees, empty changing rooms, goals that never made the highlight reel.
It wasn't a clean slate.
It was a second chance.
And that changed everything.
He stood slowly, legs stiff from lying in the cool grass. A breeze caught his shirt, making the fabric ripple slightly. In the distance, the academy buildings stood like silent sentinels—brick, glass, and promise.
The other boys were gone. Even the staff had started to pack up.
Leon walked toward the edge of the pitch where a storage mirror hung crooked off the side of the old utility shed. The glass was cracked slightly at the edge, but still good enough for reflection.
He stepped up to it.
A child stared back at him. Blue eyes. Fair hair tousled by the wind. The face was soft, young—but sothing flickered behind the eyes. A sharpness. A knowing.
The wind quieted for a mont.
Then it happened.
[NA: Leon Fischer (Danein Blake)]
[Level: 37 | Potential: 92 | Trait: Reincarnated Prodigy]
The text hung above his head in soft gold light, as if the world had acknowledged what he already knew.
He stared at it, unmoving.
A long breath escaped his lips. Not heavy. Not sad.
"This ti…" he murmured, voice barely louder than the wind, "I won't be forgotten."
He turned away from the mirror and walked back toward the academy with the long shadows at his back and the quiet, rising fire of ambition in his step.
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