Reincarnated As A Wonderkid - Chapter 346: Minus Three
Leon stood in the war room. He was just staring at the whiteboard.
On it, Walter Samuel had written their schedule.
Spennymoor Town (Away).
Sunderland (Away).
But Leon was not looking at the names. He was looking at the number in the top corner. A big, beautiful, angry number.
Minus Three.
They were so close. So, so close to zero. After starting at minus fifteen, zero felt like winning the league. Zero was the real summit. Zero meant they were finally in the race. đđđđđ°đ˛đŻđťđđđđš.đđ¨đ
"It is beautiful, compadre," Biyon G. said from his golf cart. He was not looking at the number. He was sketching on a notepad. "I am designing our special FA Cup kit. I am thinking... flames. Or maybe a giant, angry badger. What do you think?"
Leon did not answer. He was too focused.
Walter Samuel just grunted. He was studying a printout of Spennymoorâs team. "They have a tall striker," he rumbled. "He wins... headers."
"Headers! Boring!" Biyon waved his hand. "We are television stars now, Walter! We must think about the âbrandâ. The âControlled Avalancheâ brand!"
As if on cue, Leonâs phone buzzed. It was Marco. Leonâs stomach did a little flip. He answered.
"LEO!" Marco screamed, and Leon had to pull the phone away from his ear. "IT IS HAPPENING! THE âHEARTWARMING-PACKAGEâ IS A GO! The BBC is coming! Tomorrow!"
"Tomorrow?" Leon squeaked. "Marco, we have a game on Saturday! The biggest game of our season! We have to get to zero!"
"Zero is great! Zero is wonderful! But âBBC Oneâ is âBBC Oneâ, Leo! They are coming to film the town, the bakery, the âBadgerâs-call-centreâ! Be ready! Be charming! Wear the good suit!"
Marco hung up.
Leon looked at Biyon. He looked at Walter.
"The BBC," Leon said, his voice weak. "They are coming. Tomorrow."
Biyon screamed with joy.
Walter just sighed, a long, slow, suffering sound. "Catastrophic."
The next day, Kirkby was not a normal town. It was a movie set.
A friendly BBC van was parked outside the tiny stadium. A small crew, led by a kind woman with a bright smile named Clara, was unloading cameras.
"Leon! So lovely to meet you!" Clara said, shaking his hand. "We are so excited. The whole country loves this story. The baker! The minus points! The avalanche! It is just... magic!"
"It is... mud, mostly," Leon said, trying to smile. He was wearing his "good" tracksuit, the one without a scone stain.
The team was gathered. They were supposed to be training. They were not training. They were all standing in a group, trying to look "natural" for the cameras. It was not working.
"Right!" Clara clapped her hands. "Who wants to go first? How about... the âBadgerâ?"
Liam Doyle, the âBadgerâ, puffed out his chest. He had put gel in his hair. He looked less like a badger and more like a very nervous porcupine.
"So, Liam," Clara smiled, the big camera pointing right at him. "They call you the âBadgerâ. Why is that?"
Liam, who usually shouted, just whispered. "Uh. âCos I like... tackling?"
"We hear you are a bit of a... tough-guy on the pitch?"
"Yeah," Liam said, trying to look tough. "I just... I just love... kicking. Kicking people. And... winning. And... my mum. Can my mum see this? Hi, mum!"
Leon put his head in his hands.
Next was Dave the baker. He had, of course, brought props.
"And this, Clara," Dave was explaining, holding a tray of perfectly baked scones, "this is what I call the âRegista-Sconeâ. It sits deep. It controls the âflavour-gameâ."
"Amazing!" Clara laughed. "And is it true you scored the goal to get to minus three... with your stomach?"
"The âStomach-Goalâ!" Dave beamed, puffing out his bib. "It was all about âinstinctâ. Like âknowing-when-the-bread-is-readyâ. You just... âfeel-itâ. And âpopâ. Stomach. Goal."
Leon had to walk away. He found Walter Samuel hiding in the boot room, pretending to count footballs.
"Walter, you have to do an interview," Leon pleaded.
"No," Walter said.
"They just want to ask about the defense. About âThe Mountainâ."
"The defense... is fine. âThe Mountainâ... is tall."
"Walter. Please."
Walter sighed. He walked out. Clara, the presenter, beamed at him.
"Walter Samuel! A legend! What a joy. Tell me, what is the secret to Apexâs incredible defense?"
Walter stared at the camera. He stared at Clara. He did not blink.
After ten seconds of pure, terrifying silence, he just rumbled, "We... need... to... cut... the... grass."
Clara looked confused. "Oh. Uh. Right. And... the âControlled Avalancheâ? What is that like?"
Walter looked at the sky. "It is... loud. Biyon... gives me... a... headache."
Leon could not watch anymore.
He went to find Biyon. This was, of course, a mistake.
Biyon had not waited to be interviewed. He had âkidnappedâ the cameraman. He had wheeled his golf cart into the center circle. He had his own whiteboard.
"...AND SO YOU SEE," Biyon was explaining, gesturing wildly with a marker, "the âAvalancheâ is not âchaosâ! It is âpsychological-warfareâ! We are âforcing-the-opponentâ to âquestion-realityâ! I am the âTactical-Oracleâ! Leon is the âVesselâ! And Walter... Walter is the âGrumpy-Anchorâ!"
The film crew loved it. They were laughing. They were getting amazing footage.
Leon looked at his players. Jamie âRacehorseâ Scott was practicing a "cool" goal celebration. âThe Mountainâ was shyly showing the camera his "student-ID-card".
They were not a football team. They were a âfeel-good-movie-montageâ.
And on Saturday, Spennymoor Town, who did not have cameras, were going to kick them off the park.
That evening, after the BBC van had finally, finally rolled away, Leon called the team into the locker room. The buzz was still in the air.
"They liked me," Dave said, his face glowing. "Clara said my scones were âTV-readyâ!"
"She said I was âfearsomeâ!" Liam grinned.
Leon let the chatter die down. He stood in front of them. He was not angry. He was quiet.
"That was fun," Leon said, his voice calm. "You all did great. You deserve the attention. It is a great story."
The players smiled.
"But," Leon said, his voice dropping. "It is just a story. And right now... they think we are the âjokeâ."
The smiles faded.
"They are not here because we are âbrilliantâ," Leon continued. "They are here because we are âcuteâ. They are here to film the âlittle-baker-who-couldâ before the âbig-bad-Sunderland-teamâ âsquashes-himâ."
"They are filming a âbeforeâ picture, lads. They are telling the story of a âbrave-little-failureâ. Do you understand that?"
The room was dead silent.
"They all want to pat us on the head. They want to say âaww, look at them, with their minus points and their bakerâ."
Leon walked to the whiteboard. He picked up the marker. He tapped the "Minus Three".
"On Saturday, we play Spennymoor Town. They are not âcuteâ. They are not âTV-readyâ. They are just... better than us. And they want to beat the âstupid-team-from-the-TVâ."
"We have a choice. We can be the âjokeâ. The âcute-little-failureâ they all expect. Or... we can be âlegendsâ."
He pointed to the "Minus Three" again.
"On Saturday... we go to zero. We stop being the âjokeâ. We start being the âthreatâ. We show all those people, and all those cameras, what the real story is. The real story... is the âGreat-Escapeâ."
"Go home. Rest. On Saturday, we go to war."
Saturday. Spennymoor. It was raining. Of course it was raining.
There were no cameras. There was just mud, and a small, angry home crowd.
The "Sunderland Distraction" was bad. The "BBC-Distraction" was worse.
Apex started slow. Their heads were full of "camera-angles" and "scone-recipes".
Spennymoor were big. And Walter was right. Their tall striker was winning everything.
30th minute. A long ball. The tall striker won the header. It fell to a midfielder.
Bang. 1-0 Spennymoor.
The Apex players looked stunned. This was not in the âmovie-scriptâ.
Halftime. The locker room was quiet. Defeated.
Leon walked in. He was soaked. He did not shout. He just looked at them.
"Well?" he asked, his voice quiet. "Are we the âjokeâ?"
Liam âBadgerâ Doyle looked up, his eyes suddenly fierce. "No, gaffer."
"No," Dave the baker said, clenching his fists.
"Then go out there," Leon said, his voice rising. "And âfix-itâ!"
The second half was not football. It was a âControlled-Avalancheâ. It was pure, unadulterated âApex-Footballâ. It was mud, and shouts, and heart.
They threw everything at Spennymoor. âThe Mountainâ was a wall. The âBadgerâ was a whirlwind, tackling everything that moved.
Still 1-0. 80th minute. 85th minute.
Leon looked at Biyon, who was in the stands with his walkie talkie. Biyon was screaming, but Leon could not hear him.
88th minute. Jamie âRacehorseâ Scott got the ball. He had been quiet all day, dreaming of Sunderlandâs left back. But now he was just angry.
He ran. He did not stop. He beat one man. He beat a second. He was at the line. He crossed the ball, a desperate, hopeful, angry ball.
It was chaos. The keeper missed it. A defender fell.
And there was Liam âBadgerâ Doyle. He had run all the way from his defense. He did not know why. He just... ran. The ball hit him on the knee. It âbloopedâ up... and over the line.
1-1!
The tiny Apex away-end went insane.
"Get the ball!" Leon roared. "Get the ball! It is not done!"
They sprinted back. Two minutes of injury time.
92nd minute. Apex won a free kick. 30 yards out. Too far.
"Dave!" Leon roared. "Dave! Take it!"
Dave the baker, his face âred-with-exhaustionâ and âpure-hopeâ, placed the ball. This was his moment.
He ran up. He kicked it as hard as he could.
It was a terrible shot. It hit the Spennymoor wall. Straight in the stomach of the tall striker.
But the ball... it did not go clear. It âbouncedâ. It âbouncedâ high in the air, looping backwards, right into the âsix-yard-boxâ.
And there was Samuel âThe Mountainâ Adebayo. He had not moved. He had just... waited.
The Spennymoor keeper was lost.
âThe Mountainâ did not even have to jump. He just... ânoddedâ.
THWACK.
2-1. Apex.
The referee blew the final whistle.
Leon Davies fell to his knees in the mud. He did not have any thoughts. He was just... empty.
He heard a roar. His players were piling on top of him. The âBadGErâ. The âbaKErâ. The âMountAInâ. His âbeautiful, muddy, impossibleâ team.
An hour later, Leon walked into the silent locker room. The players were showering, singing âterrible-songsâ at the top of their lungs.
Leon walked to the whiteboard.
He picked up the eraser.
He looked at the "Minus Three". He wiped it away.
He picked up the marker. He drew a new number. A big, round, perfect number.
0.
He just stood there, looking at it.
Biyon wheeled in, his eyes âsuspiciously-wetâ. Walter stood next to him.
They just looked at the âzeroâ.
The âGreat-Escapeâ was no-longer-a-dream . They were at the starting-line .
And next-up... was Sunderlandâ.
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