The Striker: Chapter 40
The Striker (Gods of the Game Book 1)
I ended my call with Scarlett and tossed my phone in my gym bag right as Adil bounded over to me and Noah, whose locker was next to mine.
âThere they are! My fellow Blackcastle baddies!â He clapped one hand on each of our shoulders. âMissed me?â
âLike a toddler misses a rash,â Noah muttered, but he didnât shake off the midfielderâs greeting.
âSo you did miss me.â Adil appeared unfazed by the goalieâs lackluster enthusiasm. âNew season, boys. Weâre back, and weâre going to crush those Holchester bastards! And everyone else,â he added as an afterthought.
âYou got that right.â I bumped my fist against his in agreement, but my mind lingered on Scarlett. She sounded a little off during our call. Perhaps it was her nerves over the Yvette and showcase situation. She had complicated feelings about performing in public again, and the sudden promotion from understudy to lead couldnât be easy.
I made a note to check in with her again once I was home.
I changed shirts while Adil regaled us with tales of his summer at home. The locker room crackled with the back-to-school energy of a new season, and laughter and teasing banter filled the air as the players caught up with each other for the first time in months.
âI canât wait to see them on the pitch again.â Adil rubbed his hands. âBocci better watch his fucking back.â
The mention of my old teammate filled my mouth with the taste of copper. It was the taste for competition. For redemption. For vengeance.
We almost swept the league last season, and this was our chance to vindicate ourselves. Since Vincent and I set aside our differences, there was nothing stopping us from taking the number one title come May.
Coach entered the locker room. âDuBois! Donovan!â he barked. He jerked his head toward his office. âGet in here.â
A chorus of taunting oohs swelled as Vincent and I stopped what we were doing and walked toward him, our expressions identically wary.
âIn trouble already? Thatâs a record,â Samson joked. The Nigerian winger laughed when Vincent gave him a light shove on his way past.
âNext time you want to make a joke, make sure you can complete a forty-five-minute run without heaving like youâre in labor first,â he called over his shoulder.
The first day of preseason was always the toughest as players transitioned from a summer of food and holiday back to work.
Another chorus of oohs mingled with jeers as Samson shook his head. âLow blow, captain!â he yelled after us. âLow blow!â
I smirked, but my amusement quickly faded when we arrived at Coachâs office. He shut the door, and once again, déjà vu permeated my senses as Vincent and I settled into our seats.
Coach sank into his chair opposite us and steepled his fingers beneath his chin.
The clock ticked.
The air-conditioner hummed.
The muffled noises from the locker room emphasized the tension dripping around us.
Vincent and I shifted in our seats.
If Coach was employing some sort of psychological warfare tactic to make us uncomfortable as fuck, it was working.
After what felt like an eternity of interminable silence, his eagle eyes zeroed in on Vincent. âDuBois, your father alright?â
âYes, sir.â
âIâm glad to hear that.â Coach leaned forward. âIf I ever find out you trumped up a family emergency to get out of something I assigned to you, Iâll have you running interval sprints until you develop a bloody intimate relationship with the nearest rubbish bin. Understand?â
Vincent swallowed. âYes, sir.â
My snicker died halfway when Coach turned his attention to me.
âThis is a new season. A fresh start,â he said. âIâll chalk last seasonâs problems up to growing pains, but your petty antics end here and now. You may not have spent the summer together like Iâd plannedââhe cast another glare at Vincent, who slid a few inches down in his seatââbut thatâs not an excuse for picking up where you left off. I expect you to behave like more than adults; I expect you to behave like champions. If thatâs going to be a problem, you need to tell me right bloody now.â His eyes glinted with warning. âIs it going to be a problem?â
âNo, sir,â we chorused.
âDonovan and I have come to an understanding,â Vincent added. âSo you donât have to worry about us.â
Coachâs thick brows beetled with skepticism. âIs that so?â
âYes.â I picked up on Vincentâs thread. âWeâve learned from last seasonâs mistakes.â
âIt wonât happen again,â Vincent said.
âWe are fully prepared to work together to destroyâto beat Holchester. And everyone else,â I went on, echoing Adilâs earlier addendum.
Coachâs eyes tapered into suspicious slits. âGood,â he finally said. âI assume this understanding started with the Sport for Hope charity match?â
Our mouths formed identical Oâs of surprise. He knew about my long-time involvement with the non-profit, but how did he know about Vincent?
âI read the local papers, and I have spies everywhere.â The curve of Coachâs mouth wouldâve resembled a smile if he wasnât allergic to smiling. âI heard about your brawl with Pessoa and the Greens too.â The curve vanished. âHeâs a wanker, but donât pull any of that shit during one of my matches, orâ ââ
Someone knocked on the door, interrupting what I was sure wouldâve been another flinch-inducing threat.
Vincent and I exchanged glances. Who would dare interrupt one of Coachâs meetings?
Coachâs brows bent further until they formed a single line across his forehead. âCome in,â he snapped.
The door opened, and Greely, our assistant coach, popped his head in like he was afraid Coach would chew off his limbs if he allowed them past the threshold. âSir, your daughterâs here. Sheâs waiting in the hall.â
âTell her Iâll be out in a minute.â Greely left, and Coach glared at us again. He did that a lot. âI have other business to attend to, but I trust you wonât do anything to jeopardize this beautiful, budding friendship of yours.â
We shook our heads in unison even as my unease rattled in my veins.
I was going to take a wild guess and assume dating Vincentâs sister fell under Coachâs âanythingâ clause.
Vincent and I didnât breathe until he dismissed us and left to meet his daughter. I guess he didnât care about leaving us alone in his officeânot that we were dumb enough to snoop through his stuff. We valued our lives.
âChrist. I felt like I was a student getting called into the headmasterâs office again,â Vincent muttered on our way out.
Weâd given Coach plenty of lead time so we didnât have to walk next to him. The man was inspiring but also, frankly, terrifying.
âYouâre not the only one,â I muttered back. âIâm surprised he didnât put us in detention and make us scrub the floors.â
âDonât give him any ideas.â
I snorted.
When we re-entered the main locker room, it was empty. However, a flurry of whispers led us around the corner to the exit, where the rest of the team was huddled around the little window in the door.
âWhatâs going on?â I asked.
âHave you ever seen Coachâs daughter?â Adil turned, his eyes gleaming.âSheâs here.â
âSo?â Vincent yawned. âWhatâs the big deal?â
âI heard sheâs joining the team staff,â Samson said. I didnât know how, but he always found out about team-related breaking news first. âSheâll be interning with Jones.â
Jones was Blackcastleâs lead performance nutritionist.
âBig deal. We get new interns all the time. Sheâs not special just because sheâs Coachâs daughter.â Vincent sounded unimpressed. âYou all better get back to the locker room before Coach sees you, or heâll make us do horseshoe runs again.â
A collective shudder rippled through the group, but that wasnât a big enough threat to make them disperse.
âDude. Samson forgot the most important part.â Adil walked over and placed his hands on Vincentâs shoulders with great solemnity. âCoachâs daughter is hot.â
That got his attention.
I shook my head as Vincent pushed his way toward the window, but curiosity got the better of me as well. None of us had ever seen Coachâs daughter. I knew she lived with his ex-wife and that she was his only child, but that was about it.
I didnât care that she was hot, but I was curious about what Frank Armstrongâs daughter looked like.
I squeezed next to Vincent and peered out the window. Coachâs back faced us, obscuring most of her body. After a minute or so, he shifted, revealing long blond hair, hazel eyes, and a heart-shaped face.
My jaw dropped.
Beside me, Vincent went rigid, his breath expelling in a similar rush of shock.
Because it turned out we had seen Coachâs daughter before. Not only that, weâd drank and partied with her.
We turned to each other, our expressions identical masks of disbelief while Coach continued to talk to Brooklyn.
The first thing I did when I left training was call Scarlett again. She had no idea Brooklyn was Coachâs daughter, but she didnât sound particularly upset about it.
âI knew she was hiding something,â she said. âIt makes sense. She does want to go into nutrition, and if I were Frank Armstrongâs daughter, I wouldnât run around telling people either. I barely acknowledge being Vincentâs sister.â
âFor good reason,â I told her.
She laughed, but like our conversation earlier, it sounded a bit forced. However, when I offered to drop by her house or have Earl pick her up for a rendezvous at mine, she declined, saying she was tired from rehearsals and wanted to nap.
I didnât push it. She sounded like herself again the next day, so I took her explanation at face value.
The grueling demands of the preseason soon dominated my attention, and the novelty of discovering Brooklynâs relation to Coach quickly evaporated as we swept through the friendlies and the real season kicked off several weeks later.
We won our matches easily, but we hadnât faced any heavy hitters yet. The real test would be our match against Holchester in two weeks.
Still, that didnât mean we passed up the opportunity to celebrate beating Wentworth in our first official match of the season.
What I really wanted was to celebrate with Scarlett, whom I barely got to see these days. Between my club obligations and her adjusted rehearsal schedule, we spoke on the phone more often than we did in person. I was spoiled after a summer of having her mostly to myself, and I was desperate for alone time with her.
Nevertheless, I couldnât say no to the first team outing of the season, which was how I found myself packed into the Angry Boar with the rest of the Blackcastle team.
âCaptain buys the first round,â Adil announced after we placed our orders at the barâbeer for those who indulged, water or soda for those who didnât. âItâs tradition.â
Vincent narrowed his eyes. âSince when?â
âSince now.â
âInteresting,â Vincent said. âYou know, I seem to recall you never picked up a single tab last seasonâ¦â
âHey, I entertain with my wit and humor. You canât put a price on that,â Adil said defensively. âSpeaking of which, I have a team bonding idea, and itâs all thanks to Donovan.â
Every head swung toward me.
I shrugged, as confused as they were.
âI read the book you recommended.â Adil reached into his pocket and brandished a small paperback featuring a colorful cover of a half-naked redhead and two massive, scaly reptiles. âTriceratops and Threesomes. Hey, it was good!â he shouted over an outburst of laughter and jeers.
âBruv, what are you reading?â
âAre those dinosaurs?â
âWhat kind of kinky shit are you into?â
âDonovan.â Samson crossed his arms, his mouth twitching. âExplain.â
I almost told them the truth until I remembered Scarlett was the one whoâd introduced me to the title. I hadnât read it, but I did not want to explain why Vincentâs sister was the one giving me erotic book recommendations.
âI saw it in a bookstore,â I lied. âIt lookedâ¦interesting, so I shared it with Adil and Noah.â
âDonât look at me,â Noah said when everyone swiveled to stare at him. âI was an unwilling recipient of the information.â
âYou were in a bookstore? You mean, you can read?â Stevens, one of the other forwards, cracked.
I crumpled a napkin and tossed it at him. It hit him square in the face. âBugger off, Stevens. You donât even know how to do your own laundry.â
His face fell. âI told you it was the machineâs fault! That high-tech shit is bloody confusing.â
âExcuse me, but letâs get back to the topic at hand!â Adil raised his voice. âAnyway, as I was saying, I have a team bonding idea. We should create a Blackcastle book club whereâ ââ
More jeers drowned out his voice.
âWhere we read a different erotic book every month!â he shouted. âItâll be fun!â
A book club? That was my idea! Granted, Iâd been joking at the time, but still. Let it be known that I thought of it first.
However, the rest of the team was not onboard.
âFun?â
âYou have a strange idea of fun.â
âNo bloody way!â
âYou donât have to join if you donât want to,â Adil said with great dignity. âBut it will be fun, and youâll miss out on some great books. Now, whoâs in?â He looked around.
Silence.
âCome on, guys,â he wheedled. âThis is way more interesting than partying every weekend.â
âThatâs because you donât drink,â Stevens said.
âExactly.â Adilâs smile wilted as the team remained silent. âSeriously? No one wants to join?â
Bloody hell. I was going to regret this later, but⦠âIâm in.â
I was the one who inadvertently got us into the mess. I might as well see it through.
His face brightened again, and he shot me a grateful look.
âMe too,â Vincent said, surprising the shit out of me. âIâm the captain. Team morale is part of my job.â
âGreat!â Adilâs smile returned to full wattage. âI always knew you two had a good taste. Who else is interested?â
There was another beat of silence.
âIâll observe.â Noahâs quiet rumble shocked me even more than Vincentâs participation. âBut Iâm not reading about dinosaur threesomes.â
âFine.â Adil sounded delighted. âYou can be our mascot and bring snacks.â
Noahâs scowl expressed how not delighted he was with the assignment. However, his participation, combined with my and Vincentâs approval, led the rest of the team to join in trickles and then a wave.
Soon, almost every person agreed to join the book club, though I could tell some didnât think we were seriously going to read dino erotica every month.
We grabbed our drinks and crowded around various tables and booths. The atmosphere was the most relaxed Iâd felt since I joined Blackcastle. Everyone was less on edge now that Vincent and I had called a truce, and our victory that afternoon added an extra lift to our spirits.
This was what Iâd missed. I loved the sport, but I loved the camaraderie and brotherhood of being part of a team too.
Itâs niceâ¦until you fuck it up, a voice sang inside my head.
The revelation about my relationship with Scarlett was a guillotine waiting to fall. At this point, I was deep in denial and taking my interactions with Vincent day by day.
Who knows? Maybe we could keep our secret from him until Vincent and I were both retired and I invited him to our wedding. He couldnât kill us at our own wedding, could he?
âYou good?â Noah asked while half the team left to argue over what song to play next at the jukebox.
âYeah.â I flashed a quick smile. âJust thinking about the Holchester match coming up.â
He didnât look convinced.
The gruff goalie was the quietest, most subdued member of the team, but he was also the most observant. He had to be, considering he was raising an eleven-year-old on his own. That couldnât be easy.
âIâm glad you and DuBois made up,â he said. âI guess Coachâs summer plan worked, even if you only had two weeks of training together.â
The beer turned sour at the back of my tongue.
âI guess so.â I avoided Noahâs eyes. âI was the one who messed up last season. I donât want that to happen again.â
The jangle of bells above the door cut our conversation short, and a noticeable hush fell over the pub when several members of Holchesterâs team walked in.
I stiffened, my fingers curling tight around my pint glass. Noah straightened as well while the other Blackcastle players glared at the newcomers like they were intruding on our turfâwhich, in my mind, they were.
The Angry Boar was open to the public, but London was our city (yes, I only moved here at the beginning of the year, but I already thought of it as home). Holchester was only here because they had a match against Arsenal earlier that day.
Tension brewed into a toxic storm. Even the other patrons were on high alert.
Mac and his triplet bouncers looked like they were ready to throw fists at the first sign of trouble, but that didnât stop Bocci, Lyle, and the other Holchester players from approaching me.
âLook who it is.â Lyleâs smile didnât reach his eyes. âJudas himself.â
Once, weâd been friends. Iâd bailed him out of sticky situations, and heâd thrown a surprise birthday party for me at my favorite club in Holchester. It was wild to think that a standard team transfer couldâve ruined our relationship so thoroughly, but to him it wasnât a standard transfer. Iâd left mid-season to join their biggest rival without so much as a heads-up, and that was on me.
But itâd been almost a year, and I was tired of their taunts. They needed to get the bloody hell over it.
âIâm starting to think you fancy me, what with the special nickname and all,â I drawled without standing. They didnât deserve that acknowledgment. âDid you seek me out at my favorite pub too? Iâm flattered.â
His face reddened. âI donât fancy traitors,â he snapped. âBut itâs nice to see you getting so chummy with Blackcastle. Youâve truly turned, havenât you?â
âTheyâre my team,â I snapped back, my pretense of fake congeniality gone. âAnd theyâre not the ones who hung effigies of me in front of Holchester pubs.â
Non-sports fans would never understand it, but there was nothing like a Holchester football fan who felt like theyâd been wronged.
âWe canât be held accountable for the publicâs actions.â Bocci shrugged. âItâs not our fault they hate you so much.â
My jaw clenched. I shouldâve been used to it, but after all this time, the sentiment still stung. I could try explaining it to people, but until they lived through it, no one quite understood what it was like to have a city that once adored you turn on you at the drop of a hat.
They felt betrayed by me, but I felt betrayed by them too. Their loyalty truly was transactional.
It made sense, but it hurt all the same.
âGet the fuck out of here.â Vincent came up behind Bocci, his face creased with a scowl. âYou want to drink, drink, but leave my team the hell alone. Are you so petty you canât get over a bloody transfer?â
âOh, we donât care about the transfer,â Bocci said. âIt proved we didnât need him because guess which one of our teams is the reigning league champion?â A nasty grin split his face. âNot yours.â
The tension thickened into a stifling weight.
Vincentâs face darkened, and even Noah let out a warning rumble beside me.
âHold on to your glory while you can, because it wonât last long.â Vincent bared his teeth in a semblance of a smile. âI look forward to beating you at our next match.â
Bocci smirked. âYou think you can beat us?â
âI donât think. I know.â Vincent spat something in French.
Bocci was Italian, but whatever Vincent said was similar enough to his language that he understood it. He snarled out a response, but I stood and stepped in between them before Vincent did something stupid that would get us tossed out of the pub.
âBack off,â I warned. I itched to slam my fist into Bocciâs smug face, but I was trying real bloody hard to play by the rules this season. I wasnât going to mess up my shot at a championship for anyone. âYou know Macâs rules.â
âHow sweet. Youâre defending your new best mate,â Lyle sneered. âDonât come back to Holchester, Donovan. Youâre not welcome. Even your own father doesnât want you there anymore.â
My hands instinctively curled into fists. Anger chased after my strained calm and torched it into ashes.
Iâd told Lyle about my relationship with my father when we were friends, and now he was using it to bait me?
Fuck. That.
âI can come back anytime I want, Artie,â I said, using his much-hated nickname. Arthur Lyle, or Artie for short. âRemember that wide-open shot you missed during our match against Chelsea? An amateur goalie couldâve knocked that ball right back at you. If I hadnât covered your ass, we wouldâve lost that match. Or how about the way you fumbled the first half of the season opener against Tottenham? Thereâs a reason you werenât tapped to play for the national team, and you should be fucking glad I donât want to go back to Holchester. If I did, you can kiss your playing time goodbye because guess what? Youâre not. That. Bloody. Good.â
Lyle was good enough to play in the Premier League, but compared to other forwards at the same level, he was merely okay, and he knew it.
It was a sore subject for him, which explained why he reacted so quickly and thoughtlessly.
His face flushed scarlet, and he pushed me hard enough that I stumbled back into Vincent. âFuck you, Donovan!â
A snarl ripped up my throat. I almost retaliated, but I held back when I saw the triplets bearing down on us.
Mac got to us before they did. âOut!â His grizzled beard trembled with outrage. âAll of you!â
Shouts of protest erupted from both teams.
âCâmon, Mac!â
âThey started it!â
âWe didnât touch them!â
âI donât want to hear it!â he growled. âYou know the rules. No fighting. I donât care how rich or famous you are. You.â He pointed at Lyle. âShow your face in here again, and Iâll have the triplets knock your ass out the door. The rest of you, take it outside. I will not have you in here arguing and disturbing the rest of my customers. Argue with me, and Iâll ban you for life. Now get out!â
We snapped our mouths shut and skulked out the back exit since we didnât want to attract attention from the hordes of tourists streaming past the front entrance.
One of the triplets slammed the door in our faces, leaving us in an alleyway next to the dumpster.
âNice bloody job,â Bocci spat. âYou got us kicked out before we even got a drink.â
âHow is this our fault?â Adilâs normally good-natured face flashed with anger. âYou were the ones who instigated things first!â
Fresh arguments exploded between the two sides again.
Meanwhile, I focused on Bocci and Lyle, who led the Holchester hate campaign against me.
âYou can argue all you want now, but weâll see who the real winner is during our match,â I said. âReigning champions doesnât mean youâll stay champions.â
âYeah?â Bocciâs dark eyes gleamed with malice. âHow about we put some money on it? A race after our match. You and me. We wonât be bound by rules like we are on the pitch, and the winner of the match gets a five-second head start.â
The othersâ arguments petered out.
Meanwhile, the wind died, throwing the alley into eerie silence. Summer heat and the suffocating reek of rubbish crawled into my lungs.
A race. I hadnât raced since I beat Clive over the summer.
Bocci and I used to compete for fun when I lived in Holchester, but that was then. This was now.
Any competition we had going forward, whether it was on the pitch or in the streets, wouldnât be for fun. We would go for the jugular.
âWhy so quiet, Donovan?â Bocci taunted. âI thought you loved racing. Too scared youâll lose to take me up on the offer?â
Adrenaline pounded in my ears. I wanted to wipe the smug smirk off his face as much as I wanted to win the league, but Iâd promised Scarlett I was done.
I wonât race anymore. I promise.
My teammatesâ curious stares drilled into my cheek. I hadnât told them Iâd retired from street racing, so I didnât blame them for being confused.
âLook at him,â Lyle said. âHe is scared. Heâll lose the match, and heâll lose the race. Thereâs no shame admitting it, Donovan. You gotta know when to call it quits.â
The other Holchester players snickered.
Pride reared its ugly head, demanding action. A punch, a kick, an accepted challenge thatâd shut them up and leave them eating dust in two weeks.
I wanted to feel the vibrations of the car and hear the triumphant roar of the engine as I sped past the finish line first.
Only the memory of Scarlettâs tears stopped me.
I canât wake up every day wondering if thatâs the day your luck runs out, and Iâll get a call saying youâre gone. I canât lose you.
I swallowed the ball of rage in my throat.
My pride wasnât worth breaking my promise to her.
âIâm not going to jeopardize my career to satisfy your insecurities,â I said coldly. âWe donât need a race to determine whoâs better. Weâll find out on the pitch soon.â My smile couldâve frozen lava. âAnd Bocci? Youâve won one race against me ever, and that was because I let you win. I felt bad for you. That wonât happen again. So I wouldnât be so quick to challenge others in something youâre clearly not adept at.â
I left him sputtering in the alley with the rest of the Holchester team.
My teammates followed me, their voices overlapping as they consoled me and talked amongst themselves.
Despite leaving with the last word, my heart continued to race from the confrontation. Blood roared in my ears as I tried to push the image of Bocciâs gloating smirk out of my head.
I did the right thing by not rising to his bait.
Now, I just had to make bloody sure I beat him in two weeksâ time.