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Leon stood at the edge of the cracked pavent, gazing up at the modest two-story building before him.

It wasn't much.

A pale brick facade with chipping paint around the window fras. A rusted mailbox that always jamd. A tall sycamore tree arched over the yard like an guardian, its branches rustling gently in the breeze. Clotheslines swayed on the upstairs balcony, shirts dancing in the wind.

But sothing about it… settled in his chest.

"Looks nice," he murmured under his breath, shifting his duffel bag higher on his shoulder. Then a dry smirk tugged at his lips. "But we only live on the second floor."

Byon, who had walked him ho, stood a few paces back. His hoodie was half-zipped, curls damp with sweat from training.

"Alright then, superstar," Leon said, glancing over his shoulder with a lopsided grin. "Try not to oversleep."

Byon gave an exaggerated gasp. "Oversleep? ? Never!"

He pointed a dramatic finger. "Seven a.m. ans six-thirty wake-up. That's thirty minutes of stretching, visualizing, and brushing your teeth while doing lunges."

Leon chuckled. "Sounds intense."

"It is." Byon struck a pose. "Champions don't snooze."

Leon gave him a playful salute and turned toward the gate. The hinges squeaked just like he rembered. Or rather—like Leon rembered.

As the gate clicked shut behind him, the weight of the day pressed down all at once. He climbed the short set of stairs slowly, letting the air wrap around him, carrying traces of car exhaust, fried food, and sothing sweet from a nearby flat—maybe cinnamon.

The front door opened before he could reach for the knob.

A warm, familiar voice drifted out. "Leon?"

She stood in the narrow hallway, apron dusted with flour, a dish towel slung carelessly over one shoulder. Her brown hair was tied into a ssy bun, a few strands falling around her face. The mont she saw him, her expression softened—and then cracked into sothing fierce, loving, urgent.

"My heart!" she gasped, rushing forward. "Why didn't you text when you were heading ho?"

Leon froze for half a second. Then she pulled him into a hug—tight, grounding, real.

For a long, breathless mont, he just stood there. In her arms.

Her scent—lavender, flour, sothing faintly citrus—wrapped around him like a mory he'd never had. Danein Blake had never known this. He'd been raised by silence and stadiums. He'd co ho to empty flats, to the glow of late-night football replays and cold leftovers.

But this?

This was warmth.

This was ho.

"Did you take care of yourself today?" she murmured into his hair. "The coach's not pushing you too hard, is he? You've been out there since morning!"

Leon swallowed hard. "I'm good," he said softly. "I… missed you."

She pulled back, eyebrows raised in surprised delight. "Since when do you say things like that?"

He gave a small smile. "Maybe I'm growing up."

"Oh, don't say that yet." She ruffled his hair. "You've still got your baby face."

He laughed, and it felt—honest.

"Co on," she said. "Dinner's almost done. You must be starving."

The flat was small but lived-in. The walls bore faint marks from moving furniture too many tis. A shelf beside the TV sagged with old DVDs, most of them football docuntaries or children's animation. A cracked photo fra sat on the mantle—Leon, age five, grinning with two missing teeth, hoisted up on his father's shoulders.

Leon caught his breath when he saw it.

The man had soft eyes and a boyish smile. The kind that lingered.

So that's him… he thought.

Danein Blake had never known his father. But Leon Fischer had. And now those mories—his mories—trickled in with gentle precision. Fishing trips. Ice cream after gas. The grief that ca after the crash, too vast for a five-year-old to carry alone.

He turned away from the photo gently and sank into the couch.

His mother joined him a few minutes later with two steaming plates balanced on a tray—roast chicken, mash, and gravy thick enough to coat the edges.

They ate in silence for a while. The television murmured softly in the background, so ho renovation show neither of them really watched. She absentmindedly reached over and ran her fingers through his hair—slow, rhythmic, like she'd done since he was a toddler.

Leon leaned into it, letting his eyes drift half-closed.

This mont. This peace.

It was so ordinary… and so rare.

Danein Blake had chased greatness his whole life. He'd lived in hotels, chased transfers, played through pain and scandal and heartbreak. And what did it all amount to? A sudden collapse under stadium lights. The sound of his heartbeat thudding louder than the crowd. The whispers in his ear as darkness crept in.

And now?

This.

This second chance.

This new na. This new family. This second floor above a simple life.

"This life," he murmured, eyes flickering to his mother beside him, "it's different."

She didn't hear him. Or maybe she did, and chose not to answer.

He looked around the room—at the mismatched cushions, the faded wallpaper, the slight creak in the coffee table when she set her tea down.

"It's different," he repeated inwardly. "But it's… precious."

He hadn't earned this. Not yet. But he would.

He had to.

Not just for himself. But for the boy whose life he now carried. For the mother who waited every night with dinner on the table. For the father he'd lost—twice.

This ti, I won't waste it.

Later that night, long after the dishes were done and the lights dimd, Leon stood by the window.

The streets were quiet.

For now, it was enough to feel human.

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