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By the ti morning rolled into afternoon, the academy felt like it had been placed under a silent do. Conversations were quieter. Staff walked with clipped steps. Even the training fields looked different, like the colors had dulled.

Word hadn't spread yet, not officially. But people sensed sothing. They always did.

Blaze felt it too.

He'd finished his second rehab session for the day and was trying to focus on breathing patterns, but his head was a ss. His ribs weren't what hurt. It was everything else.

Every ti he replayed the morning, the representative's cold smile, the man's voice saying We'll speak soon, his chest tightened a little more.

He returned to the analysis room and dropped onto the couch.

He didn't even get a chance to breathe before the room lights flickered.

A holo-notification appeared in the center of the room.

Incoming Transmission: Aurion Capital

Recipient: Blaze Titan

Priority Level: Ultra

Blaze froze.

He didn't click it. He didn't blink. He sat there like his body had turned to stone.

Because he knew this wasn't a coincidence.

They knew where he was.

They knew how to reach him.

And they weren't pretending anymore.

A knock snapped him out of it.

The door slid open and Jason stepped in.

His eyes landed on the floating notification imdiately.

His entire body went rigid.

Blaze stood. "I didn't open it."

"I know." Jason walked closer, every step sharp, controlled. "But they sent it."

"Jason…" Blaze swallowed. "They used my academy channel. Isn't that..."

"Illegal," Jason said. "And bold. Which tells us exactly what kind of people we're dealing with."

He walked right up to the projection, jaw clenched.

Blaze watched the muscles in his face tighten. Jason wasn't soone who angered easily. He was too controlled. Too strategic. But this, this was different.

"This is harassnt," Jason muttered. "They're moving fast on purpose."

"To pressure ?"

"To corner you." Jason turned to him. "They want you off balance. They want you scared. It makes people sign things they don't understand."

Blaze rubbed his palms together slowly.

"What do we do?" he asked.

Jason didn't answer imdiately. He tapped the notification. The holo expanded, showing a sleek golden emblem and a ssage:

"Elite Developnt Program – Contract Delivery.

Review and sign within 72 hours to secure your placent and full investnt package."

Then a digital file loaded.

Blaze took half a step back.

Jason exhaled through his nose. "Sit."

Blaze sat.

Jason opened the file.

Pages upon pages of clauses flooded the air.

At first glance, it looked clean. Professional. Generous, even. Guaranteed monthly pay. Customized training staff. Housing for Blaze and his family. Sponsored gear. Travel privileges. A private physician.

But Blaze's eyes caught sothing small. A line buried near the bottom.

"Athlete agrees to exclusive performance ownership rights, inclusive of all branding, likeness, strategic deploynt, and competitive usage."

Blaze frowned. "What does that an?"

Jason gave him a grim look. "It ans once you sign this, they decide when and where you play. They own everything, your na, your face, your highlights, your career decisions. If they want to move you to another academy, they will. If they want to loan you out to another team, they don't need your permission."

Blaze's stomach dropped.

He kept reading, eyes narrowing further.

"Athlete agrees to prioritize Aurion Capital representatives' evaluations over all academy directives."

Jason tapped that line.

"That ans you are no longer fully a mber of Titans. They can pull you from matches. From training. From the team."

Blaze's fingers curled into fists.

He didn't speak for several seconds.

Then he said, quietly, "They want to separate ."

"Yes." Jason's voice was fire under ice. "And they're not subtle about it."

Blaze stared at the projected contract, anger and confusion swirling in his chest.

"Why ?" he whispered.

Jason sighed. "Because you're a star. And stars make money."

Blaze shook his head. "That's not good enough."

Jason hesitated… then told him the truth.

"Because you're young. Marketable. Easy to mold. You've got natural talent but not enough infrastructure or family backing to shield you. In other words… you're a dream target."

Blaze looked away, teeth clenched.

He felt exposed. Too visible. Too easy to reach.

"Jason," he said softly, "I don't want this."

"I know."

"And I don't want them near the team."

Jason held his gaze.

"That's why I'm going to fight this. But Blaze… you need to be ready. This won't be clean."

Blaze nodded slowly, but the tension in his shoulders didn't ease.

And that was the mont Jason noticed it.

Sothing he almost never saw in Blaze.

Hesitation.

THE FIRST CRACK

Jason closed the contract but didn't dismiss the projection.

"Blaze," he said, voice low, "talk to ."

Blaze looked like he wanted to. His mouth opened. Then he shut it again.

Jason stepped closer. "What's going on in your head?"

Blaze dragged a hand through his hair. "I don't know."

"That's not true."

Blaze flinched.

Jason didn't raise his voice. He didn't snap. He just looked at him with a mix of concern and quiet frustration.

"Sothing changed in you this morning," Jason said. "You're distant. You're tense. And now you're hesitating." His eyes softened. "That's not you."

Blaze stared at the wall.

Finally, he muttered, "What if I drag the team down with ?"

Jason blinked.

"Where is that coming from?"

"Everywhere," Blaze said, voice cracking slightly. "The rep showed up today. The academy already feels weird. Everyone's acting different. And the team, they keep pretending everything's fine, but I can feel it, Jason. They're worried. And it's because of ."

Jason shook his head. "No. It's because of Aurion."

Blaze didn't look convinced.

Jason stepped right in front of him. "You're not the burden here."

Blaze didn't respond.

So Jason tried again, more firmly. "Blaze, look at ."

He did.

"You're the reason this team got to the Galactic Cup final. You're the reason investors even noticed Titans in the first place. Without you, half this academy wouldn't even know the aning of pressure."

Blaze let out a weak laugh. "That's not exactly comforting."

"You know what I an." Jason's voice softened. "You lifted this team. Now you think you're hurting it. But you're not. You're being targeted. There's a difference."

Blaze nodded, barely.

But Jason saw it, the doubt hadn't cleared.

The first real crack in Blaze's confidence since the day he joined Titans.

And Jason hated it.

THE TEAM FEELS THE SHIFT

Later that evening, training resud.

Blaze stayed in the analysis gallery above the field, but the entire team could feel his energy from below.

Scarlet glanced up every few minutes, worry etched into her brow.

Aya kept checking the stairs as if expecting Blaze to suddenly join them.

Lionel felt the tension so sharply he started barking stricter instructions than usual.

Diego tried cracking jokes, but they fell flat.

Grim and Anatastia exchanged quiet looks.

Zara muttered, "Sothing's off," under her breath every few minutes.

And Kenji was the first to say it plainly.

During a water break, he whispered to Lionel, "He's pulling away from us."

Lionel's jaw tightened. "No. Sothing's pulling him."

Aya approached them, overhearing. "Aurion?"

Scarlet joined, eyes narrowed. "It has to be. Blaze doesn't push people out."

Lionel crossed his arms. "Whatever it is… we're not letting it divide us."

Aya nodded. "We'll stay close. No matter what."

But despite their words, the truth sat heavy between them.

Sothing was changing.

And none of them knew how to stop it.

THE BACKLASH BEGINS

As the team finished for the night, the academy comm system activated.

Attention all head coaches and departnt leads.

An ergency eting will be held at 8pm regarding recent investor activity and contract disputes.

Attendance is mandatory.

The ssage echoed through the halls.

Conversations erupted instantly.

"What investors?"

"What happened?"

"Why are they calling a eting at night?"

"Contract disputes? With who?"

"Is this about the Galactic Cup?"

"Is soone transferring?"

Whispers built into speculation.

Speculation built into rumors.

Rumors built into tension.

And Blaze felt the eyes.

Students. Trainers. Other teams.

They weren't hostile.

But they weren't neutral either.

They were curious.

Hungry.

Watching.

Jason appeared beside Blaze without warning.

"Go back to your dorm," he said quietly. "No detours. No talking to anyone until I update you after the eting."

"Jason..."

"I'm not asking."

Blaze swallowed and nodded.

As he turned to leave, Jason added, "And Blaze?"

"Yeah?"

"Whatever they say tonight… whatever rumors start spreading… you don't carry them alone."

Blaze gave him a tired smile. "I know."

But he didn't know. Not really.

Not with the questions swirling in his head.

Not with the academy watching.

Not with the contract echoing in his mind.

By the ti he walked out of the training hall, one truth settled in his chest like a weight:

Aurion hadn't just sent a contract.

They'd declared a war.

Hmmm

And Blaze, injured and uncertain, was standing right in the center of it. Hnmm

You are reading SSS Alpha Ranking: Limitless Soccer Cultivation After A Century Chapter 107 107: The Contract That Shook the Academy on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
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