The away section of Molineux Stadium was a tiny island of pure, unadulterated bedlam in a vast, silent sea of gold and black. The few hundred Apex United fans who had made the trip were singing, shouting, and hugging strangers, their voices hoarse with a joy so profound it bordered on disbelief.
On the pitch, the players in the all-black kits were a mirror image of their supporters.
They danced, they laughed, they embraced, a band of brothers who had just achieved the impossible.
Kenny McLean, the 32-year-old veteran and scorer of the winning goal, was being spun around in a circle by the two teenagers, Viktor and Emre, a look of giddy, childish delight on his face.
"I'm too old for this!" he wheezed, laughing.
"My heart can't take it!"
"That's what you get for making a 70-yard run in extra time, you old lunatic!" Ben Gibson shouted, clapping him on the back.
"What were you even doing up there?"
"The gaffer told us to be illogical!" McLean retorted.
"That was the most illogical thing I could think of!"
Ethan walked over to them, a serene, proud smile on his face.
He wasn't the furious, crate-kicking manager anymore. He was just a young man watching his team, his creation, celebrate a victory that would be etched into the club's history forever.
He was mobbed, pulled into a massive group hug, the players chanting his name. He felt a dozen hands ruffling his hair, clapping his back.
It was a moment of pure, unfiltered connection.
The dressing room was a sanctuary of happy exhaustion.
The wild celebrations had given way to a deep, satisfying sense of accomplishment. The players were quiet now, but the room was buzzing with a powerful, unspoken energy.
Ethan stood before them, leaning against a massage table.
He didn't need to shout. He had their complete, undivided attention.
"Tonight," he began, his voice filled with a quiet, profound pride, "you didn't just beat a Premier League team. You beat a system. You faced a perfect, logical, data-driven machine that was designed to be unbeatable. And you broke it."
He looked around the room, at the tired, triumphant faces. "You broke it not with tactics, not with formations, but with the one thing that a machine can never, ever calculate. You broke it with your humanity. With your chaos, with your creativity, with your heart."
He pointed to Ben Gibson. "Ben, you scored the equalizer in a 2-2 comeback against a Premier League giant. You were a central defender. That is beautifully, brilliantly illogical."
He pointed to Kenny McLean. "Kenny, you scored the winner in the 116th minute. You are a defensive midfielder who is supposed to be protecting our goal. That is magnificently insane."
The room filled with a low, appreciative chuckle.
"I asked you to trust me," Ethan continued. "I asked you to trust a crazy, half-baked plan that went against every rule in the football textbook. And you did. Without question. You trusted my vision, and you executed it with a courage and a joy that I have never seen before. That trust... that's what won us the game tonight. Not me. Not the tactics. Us."
He let the word hang in the air.
"Get showered. Get some rest. We are in the semi-finals of the EFL Trophy. We are one win away from a million pounds and a shot at a real, major trophy."
He broke into a wide, infectious grin. "The impossible dream is still alive. And honestly, after tonight, I'm starting to think it's not so impossible after all."
A quiet, confident cheer went through the room. They weren't just giant-killers anymore. They were believers.
Ethan logged off, the feeling of victory a warm, pleasant hum in his veins. He sat up in the pod, the real world feeling calm and peaceful.
He was physically and emotionally drained, but in the best possible way. He was about to get up and fall into bed when his phone, lying on his desk, began to ring.
He frowned. It was late.
Who would be calling him now?
He picked it up. The name on the screen made his heart do a little stutter-step.
Maya
He answered, a nervous, happy energy suddenly surging through him.
"Hello?"
"Don't tell me you're already asleep," her voice came through, a playful, teasing melody.
"The giant-killer needs his beauty rest?"
Ethan laughed, a genuine, happy sound
. "How did you... were you watching the game?"
"Are you kidding me? The entire FCG world was watching that game!" she exclaimed, her voice filled with an excitement that matched his own.
"My brother, the beta-tester, even called me. He said, and I quote, 'This Apex kid is either a tactical genius or the luckiest human being on the planet'."
"A little bit of both, I think," Ethan admitted, a grin spreading across his face.
"That comeback was insane, Ethan," she said, her tone turning more serious, more impressed.
"That second half... and extra time... it was like watching a different team. What did you say to them at halftime?"
"I just told them to have fun," he said, a little shyly. "To be human."
"Well, it worked," she said. "You completely broke him. I've played against 'CatenaccioKing' in the beta. He's a legend. And you made him look like a confused amateur. I'm officially impressed. And a little bit scared to play you in three weeks."
"You should be," he teased. "My team is powered by chaos and friendship."
"Well, my team is powered by an S-Rank Spanish Maestro and a deep-seated desire to wipe that smug grin off your face," she retorted playfully.
They talked for another half an hour, a comfortable, easy back-and-forth that felt less like a phone call and more like a conversation they had been having for years. They talked about her own team's progress (a solid 2-0 win in the league), about Liam's scouting reports, about the absurdity of Leo having to wear the Apex United tracksuit.
"So," she said finally, a slight hesitation in her voice.
"I was thinking. Since you're a giant-killer now, and I'm a tactical mastermind, it seems only right that we should have a proper... debriefing."
"A debriefing?" Ethan asked, his heart starting to beat a little faster.
"Mmmhmm," she hummed. "There's this little Italian place downtown. They do a great pizza. And I figure, you owe me dinner for giving you all that free tactical advice on how to beat me."
Ethan laughed. "Is that what that was? I thought it was trash talk."
"It can be two things," she said
. "So, what do you say, gaffer? Friday night? A celebratory dinner for the cup hero?"
"Yeah," Ethan said, his voice coming out a little breathless.
"Yeah, I'd like that a lot."
"It's a date, then," she said, and the word hung in the air, sparkling with a million possibilities. "Don't be late."
She hung up. Ethan lay back on his bed, his phone clutched in his hand, a goofy, lovesick, triumphant grin on his face. He had a semi-final to prepare for.
He had a league to win. And now, he had a date.
His two worlds weren't just coexisting anymore.
They were starting to merge in the most wonderful, unexpected way possible.
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