A Barnsley midfielder lunged after him, but Ezra dropped his shoulder and slipped through the mess with surprising elegance.
One of the defenders followed, then another, but Ezra didn't panic.
He let them chase. It was like watching a school of fish veer after the wrong predator.
He broke into space and lifted his head—and there was Leo, still wide, still waiting.
With a coolness that cut through the clutter, Ezra slid the ball diagonally across the pitch, bypassing three red shirts in one pass.
Like Deer attracted to headlights, the players all turned their attention to Leo, who had the ball.
"What the hell is this?" Leo said as a couple of Barnsley players made their way towards him.
The ball skipped across the grass, rolling cleanly into Leo's stride like it had been waiting just for him.
The voices around the pitch dipped in volume for a moment, just a beat, as if something in the air changed.
Leo took one touch to steady it.
Then he leaned forward with the subtlest shift of weight.
Every motion in his body screamed forward.
The angle of his torso, the twitch in his foot, the look in his eyes.
He sold it completely—sold it like it was all he'd ever intended to do: drive up the flank, burn the full-back for pace, and explode into the final third.
And everyone believed it.
The Barnsley left-back immediately began to retreat, his body turning to match the supposed path of the run.
One of the centre-backs slid over as cover, raising a hand and yelling at his midfield to recover.
Even some of Leo's own teammates reacted—Ezra began to angle his run upfield, ready to support a bursting overlap, while the central midfielder tucked in, tracking what he thought was about to unfold.
The fans, a few of them now leaning over the metal railing that wrapped around the pitch, followed him too, bodies angling forward in anticipation, murmurs rising as they expected a burst of pace down the touchline.
But Leo never intended to go.
Instead, the ball kissed the grass beneath Leo's sole as he dragged it back, soft, smooth, like an artist pulling charcoal across paper.
He'd sold the forward drive with such conviction that a small gasp swept through the watching crowd, their collective anticipation now snapping into confusion.
A Barnsley midfielder, already mid-sprint to intercept the "Incoming" drive from Leo, skidded slightly as he tried to change course, stumbling for just a second.
It was all Leo needed.
With space unraveling around him like a ribbon, Leo lifted his head—not in panic, but in clarity.
His teammates, tricked by instinct and motion, were naturally drifting back into structure.
Wigan's shape was restoring itself without anyone realizing why.
That was the point of his existence.
He shifted his weight onto his left, flicking the ball to the outside of his right boot and gliding away from the press with the grace of a dancer.
One, two touches, and he was through the narrow pocket between Barnsley's striker and attacking midfielder—both of whom turned just in time to watch him ghost past like a shadow slipping through cracks in the light.
Thompson, watching from the touchline, muttered something under his breath.
A little smile pulled at the corner of his mouth.
"Good, good," he said quietly.
"That's it. Keep pulling the strings."
The Barnsley midfield was stretched now, off-balance from the brief chaos.
He could've driven forward, used his pace to burst into the gap ahead.
But that wasn't what this moment needed.
Not yet.
Instead, he let the ball roll a little further, pulling two defenders toward him before pivoting with a sharp body feint and releasing a delicate reverse pass—threaded straight between them, into the feet of Wigan's right winger, who had finally found space hugging the touchline.
The pass was surgical. Weight. Angle. Timing. Perfect.
Even the winger, halfway through calling for the ball, blinked in surprise as it arrived at his boots.
The crowd responded too, not with a roar, but a ripple of sound—laughter, a few "Ooooh"s and murmured "Who's that?" drifting through the crisp Robin Park air.
"Bloody hell," someone near the front said.
"That's the new lad, eh?"
Another voice chimed in. "Aye. That's him. Doesn't look old enough to buy a pint, but he's turning this game like he's watching from above."
The ball moved wide, and Wigan kept possession now, the rhythm building.
Leo didn't linger on his pass—he drifted into space again, fast but silent, already calling for the next movement.
His mind played seconds ahead of the ball, and his feet chased to keep up.
A Barnsley defender shouted, trying to organize the press, but their structure had fractured the moment Leo had dragged the ball back.
.........
The breeze carried faint echoes of cheers down the path as the sun began its gentle descent behind the rooftops of Wigan.
Outside Robin Park, the sidewalk was quiet save for the shuffle of hurried footsteps and the hum of casual evening traffic.
Maya Linton adjusted the strap of her camera bag and sighed audibly, her voice barely above the wind.
"Another day chasing stories that don't want to be found," she muttered, tucking a loose curl behind her ear.
Her cameraman, Rob—built like a retired centre-back and just as stubborn—grunted as he hoisted the tripod further onto his shoulder.
"Maybe tomorrow, something will blow up. Preferably not literally," he said dryly, earning a weak smile from Maya.
They had been out all day. From the town centre to the outskirts, chasing threads that unravelled before they could be tied.
Lost cats. A bakery's soft relaunch. A council meeting that got delayed twice.
Nothing that could fill more than a few inches of column space, let alone carry a lead headline.
Just as Maya reached for the car keys in her coat pocket, another cheer erupted—clearer this time, full-bodied, unmistakably football.
She paused.
"You hear that?"
Rob turned toward the sound, squinting. "Robin Park?"
"Thought the first team trained at Christopher Park," Maya replied, brows raised.
"They do. But that—" Rob jerked a thumb toward the rising shouts, "—isn't training. That's a crowd."
For a moment, they stood there, the sounds drawing them in: the echo of studs on turf, the rise and fall of supporters reacting to something just beyond view, and the unmistakable pitch of a match being played in earnest.
Maya looked at Rob, then toward the entrance to Robin Park Arena.
"We've got time."
Without waiting for an answer, she veered off the pavement and toward the gate, boots crunching softly against the gravel.
As they approached the open fencing, the sounds became clearer—chants, laughter, applause.
The crowd numbers had accumulated and now one could see about 300 people, old and young just from the scene around.
They slipped inside, staying low along the edge of the small stand as they took in the sight.
Youth-level match. Barnsley and Wigan. Probably U21s.
Just as Maya leaned on the metal railing to scan the pitch, the crowd surged with noise again.
Cheers leapt from mouths, a mix of surprise and delight.
Rob let out a low whistle.
"Alright. That didn't sound like youth-level basics."
Maya lifted her camera slowly, raising the viewfinder to her eye.
"Let's see what's just lit the place up," she murmured before lowering the camera for a moment, her eye squinting slightly from the glare of the floodlights as she turned toward a middle-aged man standing near the railing with a folded matchday programme tucked under his arm.
"Score?" she asked, not bothering to shout over the din.
The man didn't even glance at her—just lifted his hand with a shrug and formed a big fat zero with his thumb and fingers.
Maya let out a sigh. "Figures."
She scanned the ground for the scoreboard.
There it was—tucked awkwardly between two sponsor boards near the corner flag.
Manual. Of course.
The kind with flippable numbers, paper-backed, faded at the corners from years of rain and wind.
And sure enough, both sides still read 0.
Rob chuckled behind her. "All this noise for a nil-nil?"
"That's what's bugging me," she muttered, raising the camera again.
Because the crowd wasn't reacting to goals.
This was something else—this wasn't polite applause for effort. It was raw, expectant, alive.
She refocused just in time to catch a flurry of motion at the centre of the pitch.
Three Barnsley players, all of them bigger—thicker legs, broader chests, more years of protein powder behind them, closed in on a single figure.
Leo.
Maya adjusted the lens without thinking. Click. Zoom in.
One moment, he was surrounded, a sliver of blue among the red shirts.
The next, he vanished.
A sharp twist of the hip.
One defender overcommitted, stumbling as Leo dipped low and spun out like a dancer on turf.
The second tried to recover, but Leo's touch dragged the ball just past his boot, forcing a misstep.
The third lunged, but once again Leo shifted the ball with the outside of his foot and escaped, smooth as oil between cracks.
The collective gasp of the crowd seemed to rise into the evening sky.
"Woah," Rob muttered as he watched Leo move onto his next plan