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Sinbad
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Chapter 169: Silence Before the Storm

July 29, 2015 – King Power Stadium

..

The hum of cameras echoed softly from the stands. Tripods lined the touchline. Every inch of the pitch, every pass, every press — all of it was being tracked. This wasn’t just another friendly. It was the final preseason test.

There wasn’t any crowd today as that team felt it was better this way with the scandal. They didn’t need the extra attention.

Leicester’s entire coaching staff stood behind the bench, tablets in hand, cameras rolling. Claudio Ranieri had made it clear: they’d record everything. No more experiments after today — just data, execution, and answers.

Across the field, Ajax were already going through their final warm-ups.

They hadn’t forgotten.

Last season, Leicester had shocked them in the Europa League. Knocked them out. A bitter night in Amsterdam that was still fresh in their memory. Now, with a new manager at Leicester and fresh signings, Ajax wanted to see what this rebuilt squad could really do.

“4-4-2,” one of the Ajax assistants muttered in Dutch in shock seeing where Tristan is positioned at. “What the hell are they doing with Tristan?” 

But it wasn’t a 4-4-2.

Leicester lined up in a flexible 4-3-3:

Starting XI – Leicester City:

GK: Kasper Schmeichel

RB: Danny Simpson

CB: Wes Morgan (C)

CB: Robert Huth

LB: Christian Fuchs

CM: Danny Drinkwater

CM: Gökhan Inler

CM (AM): Tristan Hale

RW: Riyad Mahrez

LW: Marc Albrighton

ST: Jamie Vardy

Tristan floated higher up the pitch than a traditional midfielder, operating just behind Vardy — the role they’d been quietly shaping all summer.

Ajax, meanwhile, went with a classic Dutch 4-2-3-1:

Starting XI – Ajax:

GK: Jasper Cillessen

RB: Kenny Tete

CB: Joël Veltman

CB: Nick Viergever

LB: Mitchell Dijks

CM: Nemanja Gudelj

CM: Riechedly Bazoer

CAM: Davy Klaassen (C)

RW: Anwar El Ghazi

LW: Amin Younes

ST: Arkadiusz Milik

From the sidelines, the Ajax coaches traded observations as the teams took their places. 

The referee gave a final glance toward the benches.

Whistles blew.

Kickoff.

And the test began.

..

The first touch of the ball came from Milik, who laid it back with a soft tap. Klaassen looked up immediately, trying to set the tempo — Ajax weren’t here to play slow.

But Leicester pressed instantly. Not just high — coordinated, snapping like a trap. Drinkwater pushed up. Inler slid sideways. And Tristan?

Tristan ghosted behind Vardy like a shadow.

“Watch the kid,” Veltman shouted, already pointing to Tristan.

Tristan had drifted up between Ajax’s lines like smoke. One second he was midfield, the next he was shoulder-to-shoulder with Vardy, pressing the centre-backs, reading passing lanes.

Leicester recovered quickly in the 2nd minute. Fuchs to Inler, Inler to Mahrez, a flash down the wing — but the cross sailed over.

Tristan raised a hand in apology. He was a step late arriving into the box. But his eyes were already scanning.

Ajax tried to settle.

Bazoer and Gudelj rotated possession, pulling Leicester from side to side, but the Foxes didn’t bite. Then Klaassen found a gap and sent a sharp ball into Milik — until Huth stepped in hard.

The ball spilled loose. Inler got there first. Touch. Turn. Then he saw Tristan.

One pass.

Tristan received the ball with his back to goal near the right edge of the box — Kenny Tete was already breathing down his neck.

But Tristan didn’t hesitate.

He hooked his right foot behind his standing leg, spun sharply — a textbook Cruyff turn — and left Tete chasing shadows.

Tete stumbled a step, caught wrong-footed, as Tristan exploded forward into the open lane.

One touch to steady.

Another to glide past Gudelj, who lunged and missed.

Now, just outside the box, space to the left — but Tristan ignored it. His eyes locked on the corner.

He pulled back and struck.

A right-footed rocket — low, swerving, hissing off the grass like a bullet.

Cillessen saw it late, but got down just in time to palm it wide.

From the touchline, Ranieri just scratched his head in awe. Every time he sees Tristan play, there’s just a sense of wonder.

Behind him, Paolo Benetti didn’t even look up.

“There’s the long shot again,” he said under his breath. “Pretty sure last season he had the highest rates for that, and now it even improved; I pity all the goalkeepers with how hard he hits it.

Ajax responded in the ninth minute.

Amin Younes twisted Albrighton inside out on the left wing, throwing in a sharp stepover and dragging the ball through with a feint that left Albrighton flat-footed. With a burst of acceleration, Younes hit the byline and whipped in a dangerous low cross.

Wes Morgan was alert.

He stepped in, chested it down calmly, then smashed a clearance upfield without hesitation.

Vardy was already on the move — a blur in blue — with Joël Veltman scrambling to match his stride.

Vardy got there first but had been pushed wide. The angle was tight, too tight. He slowed, cut back inside, and picked his head up.

Tristan arrived just then — late run, perfect timing.

“Mahrez!” he called, signaling the switch.

But Mahrez didn’t need the cue. He was already setting his left foot, swinging through on instinct.

The shot was clean — slicing through air — but it slammed straight into Nick Viergever’s thigh. Blocked.

No crowd. Just the echo of the strike and the thud of ball against body, followed by clipped shouts from both dugouts.

Ajax tried to reset. Leicester were still pressing.

In the twelfth minute, Tristan dropped deep — far deeper than Ajax expected — dragging Davy Klaassen with him like a shadow that didn’t belong. He collected the ball just inside Leicester’s half, back to goal, with the weight of midfield traffic converging.

He didn’t panic.

He paused — just a second — to feel the press.

Klaassen stepped in.

Too slow.

With a deft roll of his foot, Tristan shifted the ball across his body, spun out, and burst forward — a blur in motion. Bazoer tried to close the space, eyes locked on the ball.

Too late.

A rapid step-over, then a subtle drop of the shoulder. Bazoer bit.

Tristan didn’t even touch the ball again — he just let momentum do the work, gliding past the Ajax midfielder with a push-and-go that looked more like instinct than technique.

“Go on!” Fuchs barked from the back, watching the blue blur accelerate through midfield like a firework on grass.

Mahrez darted infield from the right. Albrighton hugged the left sideline. Vardy floated between Veltman and Viergever, pulling them apart just enough.

El Ghazi tracked back, sprinting with urgency. Gudelj closed from the side.

Tristan didn’t care.

He was moving too fast — not just in pace, but in thought. Every touch was tighter now. Sharper. His body language didn’t just sell feints — it demanded belief. He drew both Ajax midfielders toward him, slaloming with the ball glued to his boot, angles shrinking with every stride.

Then, at the edge of the final third, he disguised it — the move that no one saw coming.

A reverse pass, not with the inside of the boot but with the outside — a slicing flick between the defenders, like threading a needle at full sprint.

It landed in Vardy’s path.

Touch. Shift. Bang.

One-touch finish. Low. Ruthless.

The net rippled hard, side to side.

No crowd — only the thud of the strike and the sharp ripple of netting filled the air, followed by a sharp “Yes!” from the Leicester bench.

On the pitch, Vardy turned and jogged back toward Tristan with a huge smile on his face. “You keep feeding me like that,” he muttered, “I’ll win the Golden Boot.”

Tristan looked at him like he was crazy, one eyebrow raised, “Nah, next season, the Golden Boot is mine this time.”

With Leicester up 1–0, Ajax finally slowed things down after the restart.

Younes wriggled past Simpson on the left flank in the 17th minute and curled in a tempting early ball. Milik rose — towering between Huth and Morgan — and snapped a header toward the far post.

But Schmeichel was ready. One leap, a strong hand, and the ball deflected over the bar.

“Wake up!” Morgan bellowed, turning to the back line. “Too easy!”

From the goal kick, Leicester began again — patient, measured.

Huth to Fuchs. Fuchs to Drinkwater.

Then Tristan dropped into the pivot, hand up, already pointing where he wanted it.

Drinkwater obliged.

He turned with the ball, scanned. No pressure.

So he pulled out the wand.

A diagonal switch — 40 yards, skipping through the air with that perfect, arcing whip — and it landed on Mahrez’s laces.

Velvet touch.

Mahrez dropped a shoulder and drove toward the box, but Dijks recovered, muscling him off just before the final move. Ajax cleared.

But their sideline was shouting now.

“STOP TRISTAN!” Gudelj barked, half in panic. “He’s everywhere!”

And they weren’t wrong.

19th minute.

Tristan ghosted into the right channel this time, drifting behind Drinkwater, then suddenly bursting forward.

He took a pass from Mahrez — bounced it back — and spun off his man like he had eyes in the back of his head. The return ball came instantly.

One-two. And he was away.

Vardy darted left, dragging Veltman and Viergever out of the lane.

A gap opened.

Tristan saw it and pounced — slicing through it with those long, rapid strides. Klaassen lunged — clipped his heel — but Tristan kept his balance.

Another step, just outside the arc.

And then—

Crack!

Viergever slid across with a perfectly timed challenge. Clean. But just before the contact, another Ajax body — Gudelj — crashed into Tristan from behind, too far out to argue it wasn’t reckless.

Whistle.

Free kick. Dangerous position — 23 yards out, dead center.

Tristan lay there for a second, exhaling. He wasn’t hurt.

He’d drawn the foul on purpose.

From the sideline, Ranieri clapped twice. “That’s better!”

The coaching staff logged the sequence. Another note. Another action worth studying.

Tristan stood, dusted grass off his shorts, and exchanged a look with Mahrez.

“You want it?” Mahrez asked. 

Tristan nodded. “Yeah, I think I can make it. Let me show off.”

Tristan stepped back from the ball, took a breath, and blocked out everything.

There was no crowd today. No roar. No chants. Just silence — the kind that made every boot scrape and breath sound louder than it should.

The wall stood five men tall. Cillessen squinted over it, bouncing slightly on his toes, arms raised and barking instructions.

“Don’t bite,” Veltman muttered from the edge of the wall.

Tristan took four slow steps back.

Then one more.

And then—

Strike.

Not curled.

Smashed.

A knuckling laser off his right foot — dipped viciously, swerved twice, and cut through the air like a missile.

Cillessen dove full stretch.

Too late.

The ball rocketed into the top corner — no spin, no mercy. It didn’t just beat the wall. It humiliated it.

2–0.

Even the Ajax bench reacted — their assistant coach let out a soft “Jezus Christus…” under his breath. Their manager, Frank de Boer, just blinked twice and muttered something under his breath in Dutch, barely audible: “Fuck am I looking at?”

Vardy couldn’t help but laugh, “Oi, someone check the ball — might be on fire.”

..

The match resumed with a subtle shift in tempo — not from Leicester, but from Ajax.

They were rattled.

Gudelj barked orders across the pitch. Klaassen was waving arms, trying to get El Ghazi and Younes to drop deeper. But their body language told the story. This wasn’t the Ajax team from kickoff. This was a team that just got punched in the jaw twice and weren’t sure how to respond.

And Leicester? They smelled blood.

Inler won the ball back just outside his own box — snapped a pass to Drinkwater, who barely looked before nudging it forward into space.

Tristan didn’t chase it.

Mahrez did.

He exploded into the right half-space, leaving Dijks in the dust.

Mahrez didn’t look back. His first touch was clean. His second touch nutmegged Viergever — a flash of silk and daring that left the Ajax defender frozen mid-stride.

Cillessen rushed out.

Mahrez opened his body like he was going far post.

And then he dragged it back the other way. Left foot, near post, tight angle — the ball kissed the inside of the post and bounced in.

3–0.

Ranieri didn’t celebrate. He just turned to Paolo Benetti.

“Well?” he asked quietly.

Benetti didn’t blink. “Told you. He’s in midseason form already.”

On the pitch, Mahrez celebrated with the rest of the players as Ajax just stared in shock. Last season, they were stil able to somewhat contend with Leciester. And now it felt like they were playing a totally different team.

Frank de Boer stood with arms crossed, face tight. His assistants were whispering behind him, pointing toward diagrams on a tablet. But none of them had answers right now.

Still, Ajax were Ajax.

They didn’t lie down.

In the 32nd minute, they hit back.

It started with Gudelj this time — finally finding space after pinning Inler deeper. He shifted the ball to Klaassen, who clipped a diagonal toward Younes.

Albrighton tried to intercept — mistimed it.

Younes darted down the line, cut inside Simpson, and slid a pass into Milik’s feet.

Milik turned Huth with one sharp touch. Then he fired low, first time, into the corner.

3–1.

Schmeichel got a hand on it — but not enough. He slapped the ground once, then pointed toward Huth, shouting instructions. Huth didn’t respond. He just exhale and nodded, head lowered as the game continued until it reached half-time.

..

The door swung open with a dull thud. Boots scraped tile. Shirts were tugged loose. Schmeichel was the first to speak.

“Should’ve got there faster,” he muttered, shaking his head, toweling sweat from his neck. “Could’ve done better on the Milik goal.”

Huth sat down heavily, elbows on knees, breathing deep.

Across from him, Wes Morgan was pacing slowly, rubbing the back of his neck.

“Too much space down the left,” he said, voice low but firm. “We’re giving Younes too many looks.”

Simpson leaned back, chest heaving. “He’s quick. And tricky.”

“Then stay tighter,” Morgan snapped. “I don’t care how tricky he is.”

Inler and Drinkwater sat side by side, both still catching their breath. Inler spoke first.

“They’ve shifted shape a little — Bazoer’s holding now, letting Gudelj go. That’s what caught us on the goal.”

Drinkwater nodded. “We saw it. Didn’t talk quick enough.”

Ranieri entered a moment later, calm as ever, with Paolo Benetti  right behind him. A few players sat straighter. Others took the moment to finally drop onto benches.

Ranieri didn’t speak right away.

He looked around the room, eyes drifting over each face. Then he pointed toward the board.

“Good first half,” he said softly. “But not finished.”

He turned toward the magnets — clicked a few into new positions.

“We’re switching to a 4-3-2-1.”

“Tristan, Riyad — tighter inside. Just behind Jamie,” Ranieri explained. “Albrighton drops deeper. Be ready to double wide if we lose shape. But for now? I want more control in the middle.”

Benetti added, “They're pushing Klaassen higher now. That means there’s space if we draw them out. Use your movement. Drag them. Then cut.”

Ranieri turned to Mahrez. “You’re playing well. Stay aggressive. Don’t let them crowd you out. If you see the shot, take it.”

Then to Tristan. “And you. You're doing everything right — but don't force the game. Let it come. When it does, it opens for everyone else.”

Tristan nodded once.

Ranieri clapped his hands together. “Good. Now breathe. Reset. We finish this match our way.”

..

The whistle for the second half pierced through the still air like a starter’s gun. Leicester had switched to a 4-3-2-1 just before the break, and it was clear Ranieri’s tweaks were meant to tighten control — not slow the tempo.

In the 49th minute, Tristan showed off all his new tricks, smiling like a kid in a candy store.

It started with a loose Ajax pass — Gudelj trying to force a switch under pressure. Inler stepped in, read it early, and snapped the ball forward before Bazoer could react.

Tristan pounced.

One touch to control.

Two Ajax midfielders closing.

He dropped a shoulder and spun between them — not a simple dribble, but a slashing, double-cut shuffle that turned Bazoer’s hips the wrong way and sent Gudelj stumbling.

“Oh my…” one of the Ajax assistants muttered from the bench.

Tristan didn’t stop.

He burst into the open field — the turf under his boots screaming in protest with each sprinting touch. El Ghazi tried to intercept from the side. Too slow.

Then came Tete. Tristan didn’t just beat him — he humiliated him. A no-look drag back into a Marseille turn, then an outside-of-the-boot flick through the defender’s legs. Tete spun in place, arms briefly flailing as if he’d just been yanked from the pitch by invisible strings.

Ranieri blinked. He turned to Paolo Benetti and the rest of his staff in just pure joy, “You know, I said yes to coaching this team, a major part of it being Tristan, I didn’t think he would get this much better.”

“No one did.” Benetti replied with a huge smile, he truly felt like they could create a miracle season like Tristan promised but he kept the to himself.

In the field, Tristan entered the box. But he didn’t shoot.

He stopped.

Just like that — complete stillness. The kind that made defenders freeze, second-guess, hesitate. Viergever and Veltman skidded into the six-yard box like trucks hitting the brakes on ice.

Then Tristan slid the ball sideways, slow and deliberate.

Albrighton arrived. Left-foot. Open net.

4–1.

Cillessen didn’t move. Neither did the Ajax bench. It was the kind of move that sapped belief from the lungs.

Tristan jogged back slowly, his face blank, almost tired. But Vardy slapped his back as they passed.

“Show-off.”

..

A moment later, the board went up. Substitutions.

Leicester City Substitutions (56’)
 

➤ Tristan Hale ⬅️

➤ Jamie Vardy ⬅️

➤ Christian Fuchs ⬅️

⬇️ Matty James

⬇️ Shinji Okazaki

⬇️ Ben Chilwell

As Tristan walked off, there was no crowd to cheer him. No standing ovation. Just the quiet tap of boots on turf, the low rumble of camera rigs adjusting angles, and Ranieri’s hand on his shoulder.

“Well done,” the coach said simply.

Tristan gave a quick nod, breathing deep, chest rising and falling like a piston. He sat on the bench, wiping sweat from his jaw with a towel, eyes already tracking the play again.

With the changes, Leicester played more compact — but still dangerous.

In the 64th minute, Kramarić made it five.

James fed Mahrez, who spun neatly away from Dijks and clipped a clever inside pass to Shinji. The  striker turned on a dime — his first touch set him, the second curled it around Cillessen into the far corner.

5–1.

Ajax pulled another one back in the 75th — Klaassen pounced on a loose ball outside the box after a failed clearance, hitting a dipping strike that Schmeichel got fingertips to, but not enough.

5–2.

But by then, the result wasn’t in doubt.

The final 15 minutes were about fitness and composure — players digging into tired legs, coaches watching closely, analysts jotting notes.

The cameras never stopped rolling.

..

Leicester City 5 – 2 Ajax

The final whistle cut through the evening like a curtain drop.

No roar. No crowd rising to their feet. Just the soft echo of the referee’s signal, bouncing off the empty rows of blue seats. The game was over.

Players paused for a breath — not just physically, but mentally. Ajax’s shoulders sagged first. Klaassen bent at the waist, hands on knees. Milik rested his palms on his hips, staring down at his boots. Gudelj muttered something in Serbian under his breath, a flash of frustration in his eyes.

Mahrez was the first Leicester player to walk forward, wiping his brow with his forearm. 

The players shook hands as despite the bad loss, end of the day, it was just a pre-season match with no real beef between the two teams.

Then came the managers.

Ranieri walked calmly across the pitch. Frank de Boer met him halfway. 

“You’ve built something here,” de Boer said, his voice low. “It’s not the same team we faced last year.”

Ranieri gave a small nod. “They’ve grown. We’ve worked hard.”

De Boer’s mouth tightened slightly. “So I see. Especially Tristan, told me is that kid taking drugs.” He glanced toward the bench where Tristan sat, sipping water and half-listening to Mahrez.

Ranieri exhaled through his nose. “No, lot of training and just pure talent. You don’t think we don’t drug test our players”

De Boer didn’t answer at first. Then he muttered, “Of course, I was just surprised at what I saw today, I meant no disrespect.” 

Ranieri chuckled at the response.

They separated with another nod, turning back toward their own camps. 

As the players filed off the pitch, the cameras were still rolling. Data being logged. Faces being captured. Every drop of sweat archived like it mattered — because it did.

..

The locker room smelled of sweat, tape, and liniment.

Boots had been kicked off. Shin pads tossed. Ice packs hissed against knees and ankles. A few chuckles echoed from the back where Mahrez was reenacting his nutmeg on Viergever for the third time. Chilwell watched wide-eyed, towel around his neck, still buzzing from his second-half minutes.

Ranieri stood at the front, arms crossed, waiting. Not impatiently — just calmly. Like a teacher waiting for his students to settle.

Eventually, they did.

“Okay,” Ranieri said, clearing his throat.

The noise died.

“I’ll keep it short. Today…” He looked around. “That was us.”

A few nods. Some raised brows.

“That wasn’t perfect. But it was progress. Effort. Intelligence. And most of all — hunger. You wanted it. Even in a match without a crowd. Even in preseason. That means something.”

He paused, letting it hang in the steam-heavy air.

“From the back line to the front, I saw fight. And from the bench? I saw focus. No complaining, no sulking. We are not eleven players. We are twenty. And if we want to make something of this season…” He tapped his chest lightly. “We need everyone sharp. Everyone honest.”

He clapped once.

“You’ve earned it today. Go rest. No second session. I’ll see you all tomorrow at ten.”

That got more of a reaction. A ripple of laughter, nods, some mock cheers. A few players exchanged fist bumps.

Ranieri pointed toward Tristan as he began walking out. “And you — great game. But don’t relax too much.”

Tristan raised a thumb. “Never do.”

As the players began filtering out, still buzzing from the win, Tristan grabbed his gym bag and slung it over his shoulder.

 The summer light was low now, stretched and soft over the empty stadium lot. Tristan unlocked his car.

The back door opened first.

“You sure you don’t mind?” Ben asked still high from the game

“Not at all,” Tristan said, sliding into the driver’s seat. “Besides, I’d rather not hear your mum complain to my mum about me being a terrible childhood friend.

“What me complain about you? Never?” Ben replied right back, laughing. Honestly, it was nice having someone you grew up with and climbed through the academy with together. Not to mention that friend being the Messi of the team.

Shinji Okazaki climbed in next to him, holding a protein shake and a phone with a Japanese keyboard glowing on-screen. He offered a small bow of thanks.

“Arigatou,” Shinji said. “Nice of you.”

“No problem, mate,” Tristan said, starting the engine. “You earned a ride. Besides I know you don’t have a car right now.”

“Also earned ice bath,” Shinji muttered, rubbing his calf. “My legs feel like old man.”

Ben leaned forward from the back seat. “You think we’ll get another day off if we win our next match like that?”

“No chance,” Tristan said, pulling out of the lot. “This was a gift.”

..

The roads were quiet. 

Tristan’s car glided through the familiar turns like muscle memory.

Ben was humming something in the back — some old song Vardy played in the dressing room earlier. Shinji, meanwhile, was scrolling through his messages, occasionally chuckling at something in Japanese that neither of the other two understood.

Tristan tapped the wheel. “Shinji, you settled in yet? Place okay?”

Shinji looked up. “Yes. Small, but clean. Owner gave me bread and eggs. That’s how I know it’s good.”

Ben laughed. “That’s how you know you’ve moved to England — someone hands you carbs and expects eternal loyalty.”

Shinji grinned and leaned back. “Still learning English. Hard. But… football language? Easy.”

Tristan smirked. “Don’t worry, mate. Just keep making runs. I’ll find you.”

Ben chimed in. “Or nutmeg the entire back line, do five stepovers and somehow end up assisting the left-back.”

Tristan gave a half-shrug. “Style points count.”

They continued joking around before Tristan decided to blast some One Piece openings.

..

By the time Tristan made it home, the sky was dark and the house lights glowed soft and warm behind the windows.

The front door clicked open.

Before he could take a full step inside—

“Ruff! Rrruff-ruff!”

A high-pitched yapping explosion echoed down the hallway as Biscuit launched herself from the living room like a furry cannonball.

“Biscuit—”

“YIYIYIYIYI!”

Her little paws skidded across the hardwood floor as she zigzagged toward him, tail spinning like a helicopter rotor, ears flopping wildly with every bound. Her nails clicked furiously like rapid-fire tapping.

She leapt into his legs with a delighted yowl — “Raaah!” — and barked three times in succession, full of pent-up energy and overdramatic joy.

Tristan stumbled back, laughing. “Okay! Okay! I get it, I missed you too!”

He bent down to scoop her up, but she wasn’t done.

“Arf! Rrrrrrrrr… yip!”

A growl-turned-whimper as she half-play-bit his sleeve, then immediately licked the same spot. Her tail thumped against his arm like a drum roll. Then came the “Woo-woo!” — a strange half-howl, half-demand, muffled as she buried her face into his neck.

“You little gremlin,” Tristan said, holding her close as she melted into him like a warm marshmallow.

She whimpered again — “Mmmrrrrf…” — her body shivering with excitement, tiny yaps escaping every time he moved.

“Alright, diva. Let’s go see mum.”

The scent of lemon-scented candles drifted in from the living room. From the TV, the unmistakable menu music of FIFA 15 played low. Button mashing echoed through the room.

Tristan rounded the corner.

Barbara was curled up on the sofa in one of his oversized hoodies — legs tucked under a blanket, PS4 controller in hand. Her brunette hair was loosely tied up. A half-eaten bowl of popcorn sat on the coffee table. On screen, she was mid-match — playing COD.

“Don’t even think about distracting me,” she said without looking up.

Tristan smiled, walking in and setting Biscuit down

He walked behind the couch, leaned down, and pressed a kiss to the top of her head.

“I missed you too,” he murmured.

She glanced back, smiling. “You smell like sweat and grass.”

“Compliment or insult?”

“Depends. Did you win?”

“5–2.”

Barbara exited the game.

Then she stood and turned, arms slipping around his waist, fingers brushing the hem of his training shirt. “So… MVP again?”

Tristan leaned in and kissed her, soft and unhurried, forehead tilting gently against hers when they parted.

“You’re supposed to ask how my day was first.”

Barbara gave a small laugh and rested her chin on his chest, eyes flicking up to meet his.

“Alright, alright,” she said. “How was your day, Mister Five-Two?”

Tristan tilted his head slightly. “You really wanna know?”

“Only if it involves drama, long-range goals, or someone getting nutmegged.”

“Check, check, and triple check. Mahrez sent one between Viergever’s legs that I think broke time itself. And I may have ended Tete’s confidence with a Marseille turn.”

Barbara grinned, then let out a quiet, pleased hum as she buried her face into his neck.

“Well… sounds like you earned the popcorn,” she mumbled.

Tristan wrapped his arms around her, letting the scent of her shampoo cut through the dried sweat and grass on him.

“And your day?” he asked.

“Pretty good, actually.” She pulled back just enough to look at him again. “I went out with Sofia and Sophia for a bit. We grabbed coffee and wandered around the market.”

“Oh yeah?”

“Yeah. Sofia made me try on this horrendous sun hat. I looked like a lost cruise ship tourist.”

Tristan chuckled. “Sounds accurate.”

“And,” she continued, stretching the word out teasingly, “a big box came for you. From Nike. It’s in the storage room.”

His brows lifted. “Wait—really? That early?”

Barbara nodded and stepped away, brushing past him toward the hallway. “It had your name, your logo, and a fancy customs seal. I didn’t peek inside, but it felt like it weighed a ton.”

Tristan rubbed the back of his neck, eyes lighting up as he followed her.

“That’s my signature pair. Remember it was done last season; I just told them to hold on until now. ”

Barbara turned at the doorway. “All for you?”

He shook his head. “Twenty-four pairs. One for everyone in the locker room. First game of the season, we all wear them. That was the deal.”

She blinked. “Like a team uniform, but with… designer cleats?”

He shrugged like it was no big deal. “Something like that. Everyone gets one. Personalized box. Engraved studs. The works.”

Barbara narrowed her eyes. “And I didn’t get a pair?”

Tristan stepped forward, sliding his hands onto her waist again. “You want a pair of football boots?”

“No,” she said flatly. “But I want the exclusive version. You know, the one with diamonds and ‘For Barbara Palvin Only’ stitched into the side.”

Tristan gave a playful scoff. “Alright, I’ll call Nike. Tell them we need the ‘Queen of the House’ edition.”

Biscuit, who had been circling their legs, let out a demanding “Rrrowf!” and pawed at Tristan’s calf.

Barbara looked down. “She agrees.”

Tristan bent down, scratching behind Biscuit’s ears. “You think so too, huh?”

“Fine,” he said. “Two special editions. One for the queen, one for the dog.”

Barbara laughed and walked back to the couch, flopping onto it again with a content sigh. “As long as mine doesn’t squeak.”

Tristan grabbed the edge of the blanket and slid in next to her. “No promises.”

Biscuit jumped up too, circling twice before curling up in the corner with a soft, happy groan — her tiny head resting on Tristan’s thigh.

The room was warm, the mood light.

“I’ll go open the box later,” Tristan murmured, arm resting behind Barbara.

“You better,” she whispered. “I wanna see what the world’s most overachieving 20-year-old is wearing this season.”

He leaned closer again, lips brushing her temple.

“Just wait ‘til you see it.”

..

5155 word count 

Discord Link: https://discord.gg/XSRgbmWMTB

Now I’m pretty nervous about this chapter; not sure how you guys are going to like this new style of writing for the matches. Of course I’m learning and improving on it, and there’s no commentary or crowd reaction, so that style is not perfect yet. 

I did take some inspiration from GOAT and Luka Zoric. I really love how their matches are written. So I’m not going to hide that, like I said before.

Besides that, if you guys can help me come up with some names for Tristan shoes and some pictures, AI drawings would be really nice, please. I’m struggling on this part. You can comment on the post or post them on Discord if you want to; please help, lol. If you choose to help, the only thing I ask for is that there’s some type of crown as the logo, maybe on the tongue of the shoes.

Comments

The match writing was great. Enough info to follow the game, keeping it exciting/interesting without making it feel too long

Valkorion

Thanks for the chapter

Sicario_1011

Ta weno👌

Xato


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