Glory Of The Football Manager System-Chapter 398: The Agency II

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Chapter 398: The Agency II

I drove to the address Emma had given me, a small, run-down office above a dry cleaner’s in a less fashionable part of East London.

The paint was peeling on the door, the windows were grimy, and the stairwell smelled faintly of cleaning chemicals and damp carpet. It was a world away from the gleaming glass towers of the super-agencies in Mayfair and the West End. I walked in.

The office was a single, cluttered room. A young, stressed-looking assistant was on the phone at a desk near the door, trying to placate an angry client, one hand pressed to her forehead.

Filing cabinets lined the far wall, several drawers hanging open, their contents threatening to spill. In the corner, a woman was standing by a window, her back to me, staring out at the street below.

She was tall, rail-thin, dressed in a sharp, black trouser suit that looked expensive but worn the kind of suit you buy when you’re confident about the future, and then keep wearing long after the confidence has faded. She turned as I walked in, and I got my first proper look at Jessica Finch.

She was in her early thirties, with a pale, intelligent face, dark, watchful eyes, and a mouth that was set in a permanent, defiant line. She looked tired, stressed, and on the verge of giving up.

But there was a fire in her eyes, a spark of defiance that had not yet been extinguished. I had seen that look before. I had seen it in the mirror, back in Moss Side, back when I was stacking shelves at three in the morning and dreaming about tactics.

"Can I help you?" she said, her voice cool and professional, but with an undercurrent of weariness.

"Jessica Finch?" I asked.

"That’s me," she said.

"My name is Danny Walsh," I said.

She just stared at me for a long moment, her expression a mixture of shock, disbelief, and a dawning, incredulous hope. The assistant on the phone stopped mid-sentence and stared too. The room went very, very quiet.

"I know who you are," Jessica said, her voice barely a whisper.

I smiled. "I’m looking for an agent," I said.

She continued to stare at me, her mind clearly racing, the lawyer in her already running through the angles, the possibilities, the traps. "I... I don’t understand," she said. "You could have anyone. CAA, Wasserman... why are you here?"

I looked around the small, cluttered office, at the peeling paint, the overflowing bins, the desk lamp with its cracked shade, the sense of a dream that was slowly dying. And then I looked back at her, at the fire in her eyes.

"Because you’re an underdog," I said.

"Because you’re hungry. Because you have something to prove. So do I. I don’t want an agent who already has a hundred star clients, who sees me as just another number on their balance sheet. I want an agent who will make me their priority. I want an agent who will fight for me, who will go to war for me. I want an agent who needs this as much as I do."

She was silent for a long time, her dark eyes searching my face, looking for the catch, the angle, the trick. And then, slowly, she began to understand. A slow, brilliant, predatory smile spread across her face, transforming her from a woman on the verge of defeat into a warrior who had just been handed a new sword.

"You’ve come to the right place, Mr. Walsh," she said, her voice no longer weary, but filled with a new, dangerous energy. "You have no idea how much I need this."

The System chimed again, quiet and satisfied, like a chess player watching a well-calculated gambit land exactly as planned.

[Agent Selection: Jessica Finch Meridian Sports. Strategic Value: EXCEPTIONAL. A motivated agent with legal expertise, negotiation pedigree, and zero conflicts of interest. She will fight harder for your contract than any established agency. This is the optimal choice.]

She walked over to her desk, her movements now sharp and purposeful. She swept a stack of papers to one side, pulled out a fresh notepad and a pen. "So," she said, looking at me, her eyes blazing with a newfound fire.

"Let’s talk about your permanent contract. Let’s talk about making you the highest-paid manager in the history of Crystal Palace Football Club. Let’s talk about going to war."

I sat down opposite her, a sense of profound, exhilarating certainty washing over me. I had made the right choice. The game had a new player. And her name was Jessica Finch. The world was about to find out just how hungry she was.

I spent the next hour in her office, laying out the details of my situation. The rolling twelve-week contracts, the B Licence, the A Licence I had just earned, the Pro Licence enrolment, the journey from interim to the brink of a permanent deal.

She listened intently, her sharp mind absorbing every detail, her pen flying across the notepad. She asked questions that were incisive, intelligent, and occasionally ruthless.

She wanted to know about my relationship with Steve Parish, with Dougie Freedman, with the players. She wanted to know about the Europa League campaign, about the transfer window, about the revenue the club had generated from the European run, and the new signings.

She wanted to know about my ambitions, my fears, my leverage. She wanted to know how much the fans loved me, and whether that love could be quantified. It was like being cross-examined by a world-class barrister. And I loved every second of it.

By the time I left her office, the sun was beginning to set, casting long shadows across the city. The stairwell that had seemed dingy on the way up now felt like the entrance to something new, something that was about to grow.

I felt a sense of lightness, of relief. I had a partner in this fight now, a warrior who would be in my corner. The final battle was about to begin. And for the first time, I felt ready for it.

That night, Emma and I went out for dinner to celebrate. Not at a fancy, Michelin-starred restaurant, but a small, family-run Italian place in our neighbourhood that we had come to love.

The owner, a stout, cheerful man named Giuseppe who had no interest in football whatsoever, greeted us at the door and led us to our usual table in a quiet corner. A bottle of red wine arrived without being ordered. We sat in the warm glow of candlelight, and for the first time in a long time, we didn’t talk about football.

We talked about our childhoods, our families, our dreams. I told her about growing up in Moss Side, about the garage door, about the punctured ball, about my mum working double shifts so I could have boots that fit.

She told me about her first byline in a national newspaper, about the thrill of seeing her name in print, about her dad keeping every clipping in a scrapbook he thought she didn’t know about.

We were two people from different worlds, brought together by a shared passion, a shared ambition, a shared sense of being outsiders who had fought their way into the game.

And as I looked at her across the table, her face illuminated by the soft candlelight, her green eyes sparkling with intelligence and warmth, I knew, with a certainty that was as absolute as it was terrifying, that I was falling in love with her. And that, more than any contract, any qualification, any victory, was the most important thing that had happened to me all year.

***

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