Glory Of The Football Manager System-Chapter 330: Off Season

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Chapter 330: Off Season

VOLUME 3: OFF SEASON

June 1st, 2017

The first week of June arrived not with a bang, but with the quiet, contented hum of a city stirring to life. For the first time in what felt like a lifetime, I woke without the gut-wrenching anxiety of a relegation battle or the adrenaline hangover of a season finale.

The past ten days had been a whirlwind. Manchester United’s demolition of Ajax in Stockholm on May 24th had been the final, glorious confirmation, the starting gun for a week of city-wide celebration.

The words Crystal Palace in Europe had been plastered across every newspaper, sung in every pub in South London, and echoed in the disbelieving, joyous calls from my own mother. The storm had passed. The miracle was complete. And now, there was only a strange, beautiful calm.

I felt a soft stirring beside me and opened my eyes. Emma was already awake, propped up on one elbow, watching me with a gentle, knowing smile. The morning light filtered through the blinds of the penthouse, catching the fiery strands of her red hair and making them glow like something out of a painting.

"Morning," I mumbled, my voice thick with sleep.

"Happy birthday, gaffer," she whispered, leaning in to kiss me.

I froze. The words, the date, the significance of it all came crashing down on me at once. June 1st. My 28th birthday. 𝐟𝐫𝕖𝗲𝘄𝚎𝗯𝕟𝐨𝕧𝐞𝚕.𝕔𝕠𝐦

For a moment, I was thrown back in time. My 27th birthday. My first day at Crystal Palace, a lonely, anonymous man in a soulless Croydon flat, eating a sad Tesco sandwich and trying to ignore the gnawing ache of homesickness.

I hadn’t told a soul it was my birthday. I hadn’t celebrated. I hadn’t done anything but work, because work was all I had. Emma had called that evening and torn a strip off me for it. "A TESCO SANDWICH, Danny. On your birthday." She had never quite forgiven me for that.

Now, a year later, I was waking up in a penthouse apartment overlooking the city, the woman I loved in my arms, with the confirmed reality of a European campaign waiting for me. The contrast was so stark, so profound, that it almost didn’t feel real.

"I forgot," I admitted, a sheepish grin spreading across my face. "Completely forgot."

Emma laughed, a sound like wind chimes. "Of course you did, you absolute muppet. You’d forget your own head if it wasn’t screwed on. That’s why you have me." She swung her legs out of bed, her back to me as she stretched, the morning light tracing the elegant line of her spine. "Come on. Get up. I’m making you breakfast. No arguments."

An hour later, I was sitting at the kitchen island, a plate of pancakes in front of me and a mug of coffee in my hand, feeling a sense of domestic peace I had never known. The apartment was filled with the smell of coffee and maple syrup, and the sound of Emma humming to herself as she moved around the kitchen. It was a world away from the sterile silence of that Croydon flat. It was home.

"So," she said, leaning against the counter, her arms crossed. "What does a 28-year-old Premier League manager who’s officially going on a European tour do on his birthday?"

I took a bite of pancake, savouring the simple, perfect taste. "Honestly? I was thinking of spending the morning on the phone with the recruitment team. There’s a midfielder at Porto I’ve been tracking, and his agent is only available on..."

She threw a tea towel at me. "You’re impossible. It’s your day off. We are not doing football today. We are going to be normal people. We’re going to go for a walk. We’re going to see a movie. We are going to do anything but talk to football agents."

I held up my hands in surrender. "Alright, alright. You win. No football."

But as I looked at her, a sudden, sharp wave of emotion washed over me.

Twenty-one years. It had been twenty-one years since my seventh birthday, the last one I had truly acknowledged, the one where I had seen the exhaustion in my mother’s eyes and decided, with the solemn gravity of a child, that I would never be a burden again.

Since then, birthdays had been just another day on the calendar, a date to be ignored, a fuss to be avoided.

Today felt different. Today, for the first time in a long time, I wanted to celebrate. I wanted to mark the day, to acknowledge the journey, to simply be happy.

Just as I was about to say something, the intercom buzzed, a sharp, intrusive sound that broke the morning’s peace. Emma’s brow furrowed. "Are you expecting someone?"

"No," I said, confused. "Maybe it’s a delivery?"

She walked over to the panel, her voice cautious. "Hello?"

A muffled voice came through the speaker, a voice I recognised instantly. "Hi, is that Emma? It’s Christine. From the club. I’ve got a... a special delivery for the gaffer."

Emma’s eyes widened. She shot me a look of pure, unadulterated panic, then pressed the button to open the main door. "She’s coming up," she whispered, her voice a frantic hiss. "The apartment’s a mess! I’m still in my pyjamas! You’re not even properly dressed!"

I looked down at my t-shirt and shorts. "This is as dressed as I get on my day off."

Before we could panic any further, there was a knock at the door. Emma took a deep breath, smoothed down her hair, and pulled it open.

And my world stopped.

It wasn’t just Christine, the club’s warm, no-nonsense secretary, standing there with a cake in her hands. Behind her, crammed into the hallway like a very disorganised football team, was a sea of familiar faces.

My mother was there, her eyes already shining with tears. My entire coaching staff: Sarah, Marcus, Michael, Kevin, and Rebecca were beaming at me. And behind them, a chaotic, grinning mob of players.

The U18s: every single one of them was jostling for position in the corridor, their youthful energy barely contained. And even some of the senior players: Scott Dann, Wilfried Zaha, and James McArthur were there, looking slightly awkward but undeniably happy.

They all surged into the apartment, a wave of noise and laughter and affection, and as one, they broke into a ragged, heartfelt, and profoundly embarrassing rendition of "Happy Birthday."

I just stood there, frozen, a stupid, happy grin plastered on my face. I looked at Emma, who was leaning against the doorframe, a triumphant, conspiratorial smile on her face. "You did this," I mouthed.

She just winked.

***

Thank you to Sir nameyelus and chisum_lane for the support.

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