Football Coaching Game: Starting With SSS-Rank Player

Chapter 91: The Sea (2)


The "Great Couch Family Strike Against Misery" was, by all accounts, a resounding success.

They drove to the coast with the windows down and a terrible 90s pop playlist blaring from the speakers, a chaotic, off-key chorus of rebellion against the quiet sadness that had threatened to consume them.

The beach was a perfect, windswept canvas of pale sand and grey-blue sea.

For a few hours, they were just a family again. His dad, a man who ran a toy shop, predictably failed to get a kite to fly, blaming the "sub-optimal aerodynamic conditions."

His mom sat wrapped in a blanket, a peaceful, contented smile on her face as she watched the waves, the deep lines of worry on her forehead seeming to soften with each crash of the surf.

Gaffer, in his official capacity as 'Morale Officer', took his duties very seriously, which mainly involved trying to steal sandwiches, digging a hole of impressive depth for no apparent reason, and barking furiously at the concept of tides.

Ethan found himself walking along the shoreline with Sarah, the cold water washing over their ankles.

"How are you?" he asked, his voice quiet, stripped of the usual brother-sister teasing.

"Really?"

She was silent for a long moment, watching a distant ship on the horizon.

"Scared," she admitted, her voice so soft he could barely hear it over the wind. "And... relieved. Does that make sense? It feels like I've been running a marathon for five years, and someone just walked onto the track and told me I could stop. I don't know what to do with my hands. I don't know what to do with the quiet."

"You don't have to do anything," he said simply. "Just... be."

"I don't know how," she confessed with a small, sad smile.

"I've been 'Sarah the Responsible Law Clerk' for so long, I think I've forgotten how to just be 'Sarah'."

They walked in a comfortable silence, and Ethan looked at his sister.

He didn't just see his annoying, brilliant, sarcastic older sister anymore. He saw a young woman who had put her own dreams on hold, who had sacrificed her youth to keep their family afloat.

She had been their S-Rank provider, their captain, their star player, carrying the team on her back while he had just been a promising, self-absorbed youth player.

And as he watched her, a new, fierce, and unshakeable resolve settled in his heart.

The game, his secret world, had always been about his own ambition, his own dream of becoming a manager.

But that wasn't true anymore. It had become something more.

The million-pound prize wasn't just about a new training ground.

It was about buying his family freedom. Freedom for his dad to run his toy shop without worrying about the bills. Freedom for his mom to rest and recover without a single financial care. And most importantly, freedom for Sarah. Freedom for her to go back to university, to travel, to figure out who 'Sarah' was, without the crushing weight of the world on her shoulders.

The wager against GridironGuru, the impossible, high-stakes match for the 'Composure' trait, was no longer a choice.

They drove home as the sun was setting, the car quiet now, filled with a peaceful, contented exhaustion. The strike had been a success. The misery had been, if not defeated, then at least held at bay.

When they got home, his mom, with a theatrical flourish, brought out a chocolate cake from the back of the fridge.

It was a little lopsided, and the icing was a bit messy, but it was perfect. It wasn't a birthday cake or a celebration cake. It was a 'we're-still-a-family-and-we'll-be-okay' cake.

They ate it straight from the dish with forks, laughing as Gaffer tried to lick the icing off their plates.

For the first time since the news had broken, Ethan saw his sister genuinely, truly smile.

The next day was Saturday. No CostMart. And more importantly, it was matchday.

He woke up feeling a profound sense of calm and purpose.

He had a quick breakfast with his family, the atmosphere light and hopeful, before retreating to his room. He lay down in the pod, ready for the away match against Port Vale. He was ready to get back to work.

He was about to close the lid when his phone buzzed. It was a text from a number he now knew very well.

Maya: Morning, gaffer. Big game today.

A smile touched his lips.

Ethan: Morning. Just another day at the office. You watching?

Maya: Are you kidding? My brother and I have a running bet on your matches now. He says your team is a chaotic mess that's due for another collapse. I say you're a chaotic mess that's figured out how to weaponize it.

Ethan: Glad to know I'm providing so much entertainment.

Maya: Always. But hey, I have a little tip for you. From the command center.

Ethan sat up a little straighter.

Ethan: I'm listening.

Maya: You know how the FCG has its own internal betting market? The odds on a Port Vale win today are ridiculously low. The system is predicting a massive dip in your team's performance. It thinks your squad's 'Morale' is still shattered after the 6-2 disaster against Burton, and it's heavily favoring the home side.

He stared at the message.

Maya: The system thinks you're weak. Prove it wrong.

He looked at the message, then at the sleek, white pod waiting for him.

A slow, determined grin spread across his face.

...

He spent the next few days in a state of quiet, focused intensity. His real-world life was a comforting routine. He'd have a peaceful breakfast with his family, his mom now well enough to complain about his dad's terrible taste in music. He'd go to his shift at CostMart, where he had become a surprisingly competent and valued member of the dairy team, his rivalry with Maya a constant source of playful, flirtatious banter.

But in the virtual world, he was a man on a mission.

He logged into his office a few days before the away match against Port Vale, the second-place team in the league.

The first thing he did was check the in-game news feeds.

The fallout from the 6-2 Burton disaster was even worse than he'd imagined.

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