The Wigan U21 players made the quiet walk back to the training and accommodation complex, the cool evening air brushing against tired legs and sweat-dampened hair.
Some chatted softly, others moved in contented silence, shoulders a little looser than they'd been just days before.
The air wasn't triumphant—but it was lighter.
Hopeful.
Coach Thompson walked with them, clipboard tucked under one arm, his jacket zipped halfway up.
When they reached the threshold of the complex, he turned and raised his voice just enough to command attention.
"You did well today," he said, nodding slowly.
"Solid effort. Disciplined."
Some smiles followed.
A few fist-bumps were exchanged behind backs.
"But," he added, his voice sharpening like a knife over glass, "don't get comfortable."
The smiles faded slightly. Thompson scanned the group.
His gaze lingered, just a second too long, on Leo.
A small, unreadable twitch at the corner of his mouth—approval, maybe, or just calculation—before he moved on, his tone cool again.
"That win came because of a couple of standout plays," he continued.
"Moments. Not structure. Not control. And you won't always get bailed out by brilliance."
His eyes moved to Ezra now, then drifted over the rest of the group.
"Change, eat, rest," Thompson said.
"You've earned that. But tomorrow, we're loosening up first thing with a run—seven sharp. I want muscles awake and minds sharper."
The players groaned softly, but they nodded.
They knew better than to argue.
Thompson turned without another word, walking toward his office, already scribbling something onto his clipboard.
Meanwhile, across town at a modest brick building with the words Lancashire Echo – Wigan Branch on the frosted glass window, Maya sat at her desk, her brows furrowed in concentration.
Rob was in the adjacent seat, camera cable trailing into his laptop as he clicked through hundreds of stills.
He zoomed in on one—Leo, surrounded by five Barnsley players, mid-turn, body bent low and foot caressing the ball like he was painting on grass.
The motion froze perfectly in the frame, with all five defenders slightly off-balance.
"There," Rob said, pointing. "That's the one."
Maya looked over, the corner of her mouth lifting.
"That's the story," she murmured, turning back to her laptop.
Her fingers flew across the keyboard, words forming faster now.
"Wigan U21 Find Their Spark – And It's Wearing Number 17"
She paused, glanced at the photo again, and kept typing.
This wasn't just another filler article anymore.
Something was brewing at Robin Park.
......
The morning air was still brisk when the players returned from their early run, their shoes slapping against the pavement as they pushed through the final stretch back to the training complex.
A few collapsed dramatically onto the grass, arms flung wide, chests heaving.
Ezra leaned forward, hands on knees, sweat dripping from his forehead.
"Next time, I will try and fake an injury."
"I don't think Coach Thompson would mind letting you run on your injured leg," Leo muttered between breaths, grinning, his shirt clinging to his back.
Around them, groans echoed as teammates dropped onto the grass or stumbled toward the water taps nearby.
Coach Thompson stood with his arms folded near the gate, barely winded from his own light jog.
His eyes swept across the exhausted group, mouth twitching in something close to amusement.
"You've got the rest of the day to yourselves," he announced.
A few cheers came up, half-hearted, tired.
"But listen here—don't do anything stupid. I don't want to hear about anyone getting into trouble. If I do... well, don't."
He gave them a final nod before turning away, disappearing into the building, clipboard in hand as always.
Leo and Ezra peeled off from the group with a few other boys, still catching their breath as they walked across the short gravel path leading to the two-block residential wing.
The building loomed quietly, its beige stone front now familiar.
"You think he was watching yesterday's match again this morning?" Ezra asked.
"Thompson? I wouldn't know if he did, but from how he is, I'm sure he might have watched it twice before we even went for the run," Leo replied, amused.
They reached the second floor. Leo turned toward his room—2A—while Ezra gave a lazy wave and entered 2C, two doors down.
Inside, Leo peeled off his clothes and hit the shower, letting the water wash away the ache in his legs.
After drying off and slipping into a clean tee, he dropped onto his bed, arms crossed behind his head.
With nothing scheduled for the rest of the day, the idea came to him casually—why not head to Manchester?
See Mia. Maybe even Sofia, if she wasn't busy.
Just as the thought started to form more fully, a knock came at his door.
Leo blinked, rolled off the bed, and padded barefoot to the door.
When he opened it, he found Dawson standing there, a folded newspaper in his hand.
Without a word, Dawson stepped in and tossed the paper at Leo, who caught it by instinct.
"You know," Dawson said, closing the door behind him, "you should probably hurry up and get to the senior team already. Might help your name land somewhere more glamorous than a tucked-away column on page seven."
Leo unfolded the paper.
His eyes scanned the local sports page until he saw it—a small photo of him from yesterday's game, five Barnsley players closing in, his figure poised in calmness among the chaos.
Beneath it, a bold headline in modest print:
"Who's the New Kid at Wigan? U21s Win With a Spark."
Leo smiled, quiet and proud, fingers tracing the edge of the photo.
Dawson crossed his arms, grinning. "Not bad for a warm-up."
Leo kept looking at the paper, a small grin still tugging at his lips, then tilted his head toward Dawson with a spark in his eyes.
"So… how's the first team doing?" he asked, tone too innocent, too casual.
Dawson didn't even try to hide the smirk.
He stepped forward and caught Leo in a quick headlock, ruffling his hair with a knuckle-dragging noogie.
"Are you trolling me right now?" Dawson muttered.
"Four draws in five games. One bloody win. And somehow I'm still not bald."
Leo laughed, squirming out of the headlock, running his fingers through his tousled hair.
"You've been ruthless, though. I saw what you did to Devlin. That guy's older than you."
"Doesn't matter," Dawson said, walking over and pulling the chair from Leo's desk to sit on it backward.
"We've got standards. And if I let them coast, I'll be out of a job before I'm 38. It's not easy, trust me. But I'll manage."
Dawson's eyes narrowed just a little, serious again.
"What you need to do is focus. Stack up a few more callup-worthy performances, and I'll make the move. Thompson just thought I should promote you after yesterday, but he backtracked again, saying your next 4 games could be proof if you can really handle the senior team."
He stood, dragging the chair back into place with his foot, and turned toward the door.
His hand touched the knob—but then he paused.
"Oh, Sofia said she'll be coming over with Mia in three days," he said, glancing over his shoulder.
"So focus on training. No need to come over."
Leo blinked, then raised a brow.
"Wait—Sofia told you that?"
Dawson nodded.
Leo tilted his head, a slow grin breaking across his face.
"You two text now? Should I be worried? I can be your wingman if you're into her, you know."
"Shut up."
"No, seriously. I mean, if you're dating my aunt, that could totally be a valid reason to call me up. Nepotism with a romantic subplot, yeah?"
Dawson was already halfway out the door, shaking his head.
"Think about it!" Leo called after him, laughing.
"I could get you a gift for your anniversary or something—Hey! I'm good with flowers!"
The door shut before Leo could finish his next joke.
Still grinning, he threw himself back on the bed, arms wide, eyes on the ceiling.
"Wingman material," he muttered to himself.
......
Two days later, it was on again.
The air around Robin Park Arena was different this time—charged, heavier, as if the grass itself had soaked in the growing buzz.
It was another home game for Wigan U21, this time against bottom-of-the-table Crewe Alexandra.
On paper, a simple fixture.
But the chatter in the small stands and standing zones told a different story.
Leo jogged out with the rest of the boys, the clack of boots on the concrete fading into the rustle of studs on turf.
They spread out across the touchline in front of the technical area, balls rolling lazily between them as the warm-up began.
But even as he bent down to stretch beside Ezra and Ben, Leo could feel it—eyes.
Dozens of them. More than his first match,
And not the vague, drifting kind.
No, these were focused, trained on him.
"Feels louder than last time," Ezra murmured, standing back up and twisting his torso with a groan.
"That's because it is louder," Ben grinned, jabbing a thumb subtly toward the crowd.
"Look, there's way more people here."
"And half of them keep looking at you," Ezra added, turning to Leo with a sly grin.
"Local celebrity after just one game, huh?"
Leo didn't say anything at first, just leaned into a deep lunge stretch, one hand brushing the turf.
He could hear snatches of the crowd—voices pointing him out, a couple of fans with programs whispering to each other, fingers raised.
"Is that the kid? The one from the paper?"
"Number seventeen, I think. That's him, right?"
Ben whistled low. "One assist and a goal chain, and suddenly you're Eden Hazard."
Leo laughed under his breath. "Please. I've seen you try to dribble, and you think you're Hazard."
They cracked up together, shaking out their legs and moving on to the next drill.