THE GREATEST OF ALL TIME-Chapter 738: Step by Step
Chapter 738: Step by Step
The days that followed moved with a rhythm, unlike the earlier months. Where the first stretch of recovery had been a battle—against pain, against uncertainty, against time—these last two months felt almost like a glide. Still demanding, still meticulous, but fueled now by momentum. Purpose.
Zachary had transitioned into more dynamic routines—integrated strengthening, full-weight-bearing agility drills, and resistance-band training to improve proprioception.
His gait had returned to a natural, effortless flow, the stiffness in his right ankle all but gone thanks to the consistency of his regimen and the precision of the Broström-Gould procedure. Plyometric work was now standard—box jumps, short sprints, lateral shuffles. Still no contact play, but the ball had finally returned to his feet.
It felt like breathing again.
Each morning began in the hydrotherapy pool or on the AlterG anti-gravity treadmill, followed by a battery of exercises fine-tuned by Aspetar’s team. And in the afternoons, under the open Doha sky, he ran. Slow strides, then faster ones, then accelerations—testing corners, pivots, angles. He was building confidence with every cut.
Through it all, Kristin was still his constant.
More than a PA now, she had become his quiet anchor—someone who understood not just the mechanics of his recovery, but the emotional turbulence that swelled beneath the surface.
They shared a bond that went back further than most people realized. Their story began in Lubumbashi, years ago, during the local scouting trials her father had flown in to attend.
Kristin had been there too—curious, observant—standing at the edge of the partly dusty pitch while her father took notes. She had noticed Zachary even before the others did—a teenager with raw talent, restless energy, and a fire in his eyes that refused to dim.
Their first interactions were light and informal—fleeting glances and shared smiles after matches and training sessions. But as time passed, that casual connection evolved into something deeper. Friendship took root. Trust followed.
And now, trust had grown into something more.
It had happened quietly, organically—one night during his fourth month of recovery, while they were sitting under the stars after a particularly good physio session.
He’d thanked her—for staying, for helping him hold things together—and she’d leaned in, teasing something about being the responsible one during his recovery. Their laughter faded. Their eyes lingered. Then they kissed—gently, uncertainly, but as if they’d both known this was where it was always going.
And now, it was habit. Simple, unforced. She still brought his post-workout smoothies and managed his schedules, but sometimes her hand found his in quiet moments. Sometimes he’d pull her close after long days, when silence said more than words.
It was the one unexpected thing in all this—the kind of light that crept in when you weren’t looking. And Zachary welcomed it.
Emily came by twice during those final two months, once at the end of April and once again just after Eid. Her visits were brief but warm, laced with banter and sharp-eyed questions about endorsements, rehab clauses, and the quiet rumblings of summer transfer whispers. She never overstayed, always sensing that Zachary needed space more than strategy. Still, she left behind little reminders—a new pair of custom boots, an updated commercial brief, and the reassurance that the world outside hadn’t forgotten him.
Messages from teammates also filtered in regularly—short videos from training at Melwood, inside jokes from the locker room, even the occasional shoutout from the manager during post-match pressers. Each one brought a smile to Zachary’s face. They reminded him of what waited beyond the clinic’s sterile walls—of the world he was still part of, even from afar.
Thinking about the team always stirred something deep within him. Sometimes it was joy, sometimes longing, and other times a quiet ache that he couldn’t quite name. But whatever it was, it never stopped him from watching. He hadn’t missed a single game.
Throughout his recovery, he had followed Liverpool’s season like a lifeline—watching matches from his hospital bed, then from the rehab center’s common lounge, and now, often from the quiet of his room with Kristin at his side. The journey hadn’t been smooth. Without him in midfield to break lines and dictate tempo, the team had stumbled. Four losses. Eight draws. They were no longer the unbeaten juggernaut they’d been when he was still on the pitch. ƒгeewёbnovel.com
And yet—Liverpool still stood at the summit, having accumulated 91 points. Manchester City had found their stride late, closing the gap fast with 86 points. But now, it was simple math: win away at Newcastle in two days, and the Premier League title would finally come home to Anfield. Their last game against Wolves wouldn’t matter.
He’d circled the Newcastle match on his mental calendar. May 4th. The date hummed in the back of his mind like the rhythm of a chant.
As for the Champions League—Zachary couldn’t help but smile at the irony. History, it seemed, had a funny sense of déjà vu. Liverpool was in the semi-finals again, and once more, they had lost the first leg—this time 2-0 to Barcelona. In his past life, it had been 3-0. And they had done the impossible.
Now, with only a two-goal deficit, Zachary was quietly confident. Maybe even certain.
He remembered how it had felt the first time—watching that miraculous comeback on TV back in DR Congo, suspended but electrified, as the Kop roared and legends were made. Fast forward to this life, he was part of the Liverpool side, but he was absent and still recovering. There was a chance he might physically be there again—not on the bench and not in the kit, but present. With the team.
That possibility pulled him through the final stages of rehab like a rope through thick water.
By now, his fifth month in Aspetar had begun. He was stronger. Leaner. Every tendon, every ligament had been tested and strengthened. There was no margin for error. No shortcuts. The Broström-Gould procedure and the follow-up rehab had done their job, and now, his body was holding up its end of the bargain.
The final tests loomed in mid-May. Muscular endurance. Joint stability. Explosiveness. Agility. A battery of assessments that would determine whether he could resume elite-level training.
Kristin, ever attentive, had already started syncing with Liverpool’s medical team to prepare a transition plan—should all go well. Liverpool’s private jet would soon be on the way to ferry them back. Then, coordination of re-entry into Melwood’s rehab protocols would follow.
If things stayed on course, Zachary would be back in Liverpool before the end of May. Just in time for the Champions League final on June 1st.
He wouldn’t play. That was clear. But he could be there. Suit up. Maybe, warm the bench. Stand in the tunnel. Sing the anthem.
And when the final whistle blew, he hoped he’d be running—not limping—onto the pitch to celebrate with his teammates.
That thought kept his spirit sharp and his will unshakable.
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