The Striker: Chapter 45
The Striker (Gods of the Game Book 1)
Nothing brought a team together like an attack from another team.
It didnât take a rocket scientist to figure out the keyed car was Holchesterâs handiwork. People might think professional footballers were above such juvenile antics, but they werenât. The Judas scratched into the hunter green paint was proof of that.
They were the only ones with the means and motive. If the incident happened in Holchester, I wouldâve been more circumspect, but in London? It couldnât have been anyone else.
They called me Judas consistently, and theyâd played Chelsea over the weekend, so they were in the city through Monday. I didnât know how they did it without anyone noticingâunfortunately, my car had been parked in one of the CCTV camerasâ blind spotsâbut it didnât matter. What mattered was that they did it.
Even though it was my car, the rest of the club took it as a personal affront. Even Coach was angry, and I wasnât his favorite person at the moment.
The fact that Holchester came to our training grounds and vandalized our property was an act of war, so we waited. We waited until they were back in town two weeks later to play against Arsenal before we confronted them.
That night, Vincent, Noah, Adil, and several other players joined me at the Angry Boar, where the Holchester team always hung out after a London match.
Mac had banned Lyle after he shoved me, so he was nowhere in sight. However, Bocci was playing billiards with another player when we arrived. The other player saw us first and nudged his captain, who straightened and turned.
A slow grin spread over Bocciâs face. âLook who it is. Donovan finally shows his face. I thought Iâd have to track you down after you ran away from our last match like a coward.â
I let his taunt roll off me. Everyone in the UKâhell, everyone in the worldâknew the real reason behind my absence from the Holchester match.
My relationship with Scarlett had been prime tabloid fodder for the past two weeks. Every news website, every magazine, every bloody celebrity podcast was talking about us. Scarlett could barely enter RAB without getting accosted by the paps. People were stopping her on the streets for photos, and sheâd had to private her social media after it got inundated with follows and comments (not all of them pleasant). She handled the onslaught of attention as well as she could given the circumstances, but it was taking a toll on both of us.
All that to say, Bocci was full of shit when he insinuated that I was too scared to play against him. He was trying to get a rise out of me, and I wouldnât give him the satisfaction.
âIâm not having this discussion with you here,â I said icily. I flicked my gaze at Mac, who looked like he was seconds away from kicking us out, fight or not. âMeet me outside unless you want to join Lyle inâ¦hmm, where is he? Eating pizza alone in his hotel room, I imagine.â
Bocci narrowed his eyes, but he didnât want to suffer Lyleâs exiled fate any more than I did. He followed me into the alley behind the pub, our teams trailing after us.
The other patrons tried and failed to pretend they werenât eavesdropping, but I heard them buzz with excitement before we fully exited the establishment.
The minute the door shut, I grabbed Bocci by the front of his shirt and slammed him up against the wall. The other Holchester players immediately bristled and moved toward us, but my teammates blocked them.
The two sides glared at each other, drenched in the threat of violence swirling through the air.
Summer heat had given way to an early fall chill, but the alley reeked of rubbish all the same.
âWhat you did to my car.â I tightened my grip on Bocciâs shirt. âI knew you were bullies, but I didnât know you were petty criminals too.â
âI donât know what youâre talking about.â Bocci sounded unfazed by his current predicament, but his eyes glittered with loathing. âWe live in different cities, Donovan. Do you think youâre so important that weâd risk our careers to play whatever prank you accused us of playing?â
âYouâre the only people who couldâve done it,â I growled. âJudas, your favorite nickname for me. Who else would carve that into the side of my Jag?â
A shadow of what looked like true surprise flashed across Bocciâs face before he laughed. âHate to break it to you, Donovan, but there are plenty of people who call you that, and plenty more who despise you enough to key one of your precious cars. You canât use us as a scapegoat for everything.â
âItâs not about scapegoating; itâs about honor. You want to attack me? Have the balls to do it to my face. This sneaky sabotage is the work of a coward.â
Bocciâs smile vanished. âYou want to talk about honor? How about we talk about loyalty?â he hissed.
My temper reared its head again, fangs bared and ready to strike. âItâs a transfer, and itâs been nine bloody months! Get over it!â
âYou know itâs not about the fucking transfer!â he shouted back. âYou can transfer whenever the hell you want. Itâs a reality of the league. But to blindside us and ditch us mid-season for Blackcastle?â He spat on the ground. âYou didnât give us any heads-up. One day, you were with us, and the next, you were against us. Thatâs cowardice.â
The air thickened into toxic sludge.
No one moved. No one so much as breathed, but the tension was so palpable I could taste its bitterness at the back of my tongue.
Bocci hadnât said anything I didnât already know. I knew I shouldâve told them first, but Iâd been afraid the news would get back to my father and heâd talk me out of it before I signed the contract.
I understood why my old team felt betrayed, but againâitâd been nine fucking months. I hadnât killed one of their family members or instigated a hate campaign toward them with Blackcastle. They were holding onto something that shouldâve been old news long ago, and none of that was a good enough reason for what they did.
It wasnât about the property itself; it was about the principle behind it. The lack of respect and good sportsmanship.
âI apologized,â I growled. âThe minute the news came out, I apologized for not telling you earlier. This grudge is unnecessary, as was your fucking stunt with my car.â
Bocciâs lips thinned. He didnât acknowledge what I said.
Fresh irritation streaked through me, but I refused to get into another fight. Not when I was already on shaky ground with Coach and the paps were breathing down my neck. Anything I did would be blown ten times out of proportion given the current scrutiny I was under.
My teeth ground together, but after a serious moment of contemplating whether I could punch him once and get away with itâit wasnât worth itâI released Bocci and stepped back.
However, the tension didnât dissipate. If anything, it intensified.
âYou want straight talk? Iâll do you one better,â Bocci said. âRace me. Letâs end this grudge once and for all. You win, we back off. Weâll still talk trash on the pitch, but youâll never hear another word about Judas or your transfer from us again. If I winâ¦â A dark gleam entered his eyes. âThat Jag of yours is mineâafter youâve fixed it up, of course.â
That bloody bastard.
He didnât want the car. He wanted a symbol for his victory. He wanted proof that he was better than me in some way. Every time he drove that car, heâd feel a kick of triumph at beating me.
It was too bad for him that was never going to fucking happen.
My fists curled. It took every ounce of willpower not to take him up on his challenge and make him eat his words. I wanted to see his expression when he lost so badly that my blood burned with it.
But racing would be worse than another fistfight, and Iâd promised Scarlett I wouldnât do itâ¦no matter how much I wanted to.
âWhatâs the matter?â Bocci arched an eyebrow, his expression turning mocking. âGot cold feet again? Going to chicken out the way you did for our match?â
I bit my tongue so hard the faint taste of copper filled my mouth.
My pride roared at me to say something. To prove him wrong.
I stormed in here with my team, ready to confront Bocci, and what did I have to show for it? A few useless words? If I wasnât going to fight him and I wasnât going to race him, why was I even here? I might as well have stayed home and fumed from a distance.
You promised Scarlett. A voice warned me away from the ledge.
Scarlett doesnât have to know. Another, more insidious voice slithered into my ears, promising retribution with impunity. Itâs one race. Thatâs all.
âYou didnât take me up on my challenge the first time. Now youâre running scared a second time.â Bocci tsked in mock disappointment. âYouâve lost your touch, Donovan. Itâs only a matter of time before everyone else finds out youâre not the perfect golden boy you portray yourself as. You say weâve been holding on to our grudge for too long, and maybe we have. But I offered you a chance to end this feud once and for all, and youâre the one who declined.â He nodded at the silent players gathered around us. âWe have plenty of witnesses who can vouch for that.â
My heart slammed against my ribcage with bruising force. Bocciâs taunting words tangled with snippets from my past, filling my head with unwanted memories.
Youâll never amount to anything.
Football is a ridiculous dream.
Dammit, Asher, youâre not trying hard enough! Do you want to be second best forever?
Promise me youâll play for both of us. You have what it takes to be the greatest footballer in the world. Donât let this opportunity go to waste.
Youâve lost your touch, Donovan.
Your team or your son?
My old teachers, my father, Teddyâ¦their fragmented voices sank their claws into reason and ripped it to shreds, making me bleed pure emotion in the dark alleyway.
Do it.
Donât do it.
Walk away.
You canât let him have the last word.
The last gasp of rationality died beneath the roar of blood in my ears.
Iâd spent the better part of a year taking the high road. Iâd endured the taunts and the hate messages silently, without retaliation, but I was sick of taking the high road.
Bocci and my old team said they valued loyalty, but they were really bullies. They dragged their resentment out because having a target made them feel good. Unless I put them in their place, theyâd continue their campaign of harassment until I snapped or they got bored.
I hadnât made it this far in my career by being passive and waiting for things to happen to me. This was my life and my reputation. It was time I retook control of them.
âIâm not scared of anything or anyone, Bocci, much less you,â I drawled, my smile a blade of white in the dark. âYou want to race? Fine. Letâs race right now.â
Word of the last-minute competition spread like wildfire through a certain segment of the cityâs street racing community.
I didnât know who alerted them to the event, but when we arrived at our designated meetup spot in north Londonâthe same spot where Iâd raced against Clive and wonâthere were around two dozen people waiting for us. Most of them were athletes.
Simon was there. So was Clive himself, who I hadnât seen since our double date. Heâd shown up with his rugby buddies, and they watched Bocci and me exit our cars to make the rounds with quiet anticipation.
I greeted them with nothing more than a short nod. I still didnât like Clive, and I hadnât forgiven him for dragging Scarlett into the middle of our spat over the summer. He looked like he hadnât forgiven me for denting his ego, either.
He clapped Bocci on the back and said something that made the other man laugh. There was no question who he was rooting for to win tonightâs race.
Noah came up beside me after I finished saying hi to Simon, who was back in the game now that his foot was fully healed.
âAre you sure this is a good idea?â he said quietly. âYouâre still on thin ice with Coach. If he finds outâ¦â
âHeâs not going to find out.â Adrenaline streaked through my veins, dulling my sense of danger. Coach, the paps, the slim but ever-present possibility of crashingâthey didnât exist at that moment. All that existed was the shining lure of victory. âI canât back down after I agreed to the race. You know that.â
Noah frowned, his expression troubled. He didnât attempt to talk me out of the race again, but he hung back from the rest of the crowd, clearly uneasy as shouts and laughter rang through the air.
I was surprised he was here at all. He was usually home with his daughter at this time, but he recently hired a new nanny, so maybe he had more freedom to stay out late.
Bocci hadnât finished making his rounds.
I let him take his time. In half an hour or so, he wouldnât be so happy.
âAsher.â
I turned at the sound of Vincentâs voice. He stood between me and my car, his face half cast in shadows.
He didnât know about my promise to his sister, and I didnât tell him. I couldnât dwell on that right now. Not when we were a heartbeat away from the race.
Vincent dipped his chin in a cursory nod. âGood luck.â
I nodded back, and that was that. Nothing else needed to be said.
Two minutes later, the race finally started.
Bocci and I climbed into our carsâhis Lamborghini versus my trusty Bugatti. He lived in Holchester but owned a house in London, and he kept part of his auto collection in the city.
We drove to the designated starting point on the main street.
I gripped the steering wheel, my body alive with nerves and anticipation.
A small voice screamed that this was a bad idea and I should back out before it was too late, but it was already too late. Like I told Noah, I couldnât back out nowânot without doing irreparable damage to my reputation.
This face-off with Bocci had been months in the making. In hindsight, it was foolish of me to assume we could settle our differences through a polite, regulated match on the pitch. It had to be something grittier. More personal.
Scarlettâs face floated at the edges of my consciousness, but for the first time since we started dating, I pushed it aside.
I hated breaking my promise to her, but I wasnât racing tonight for an unnecessary thrill. I needed to do this. It was the only way for me to close the door on this chapter of my past.
Iâm sorry, darling.
My grip tightened on the wheel.
All I had to do was win this one last race. After that, I was truly done.
Simon had offered to count us down, and the revs of our engines drowned out everything except the next few seconds.
Three.
Two.
One.
The flag came down, and we were off.