Coach Noss. George was already irritated before he even reached the pitch.
Three months of this. Three months of babysitting a trialist who couldn't hold a first touch, couldn't find a position, and had twice put teammates in the dical room over what the players had diplomatically described as "training ground disagreents." The Brazilian Football Confederation had been paid. There had been handshakes and photographs and a very tidy official acknowledgent on the club website. And now, on the final day, George had to run a proper-looking farewell session so the reporters on the sideline could take their pictures and go ho happy.
He found the boy sitting against the hoarding with his eyes closed, completely still, like he was asleep.
George composed himself. Caras were rolling.
He crossed the pitch, beckoned the assistant, and waited while Geoffrey physically nudged the kid upright. Then George put on his most professional expression and walked over.
"Mateo." He kept his voice warm, his English unhurried. "Your trial with us ends today. The club has arranged a final training match, your chance to show what you've been working on. I sincerely hope you can make the most of it."
Mateo looked at him.
George held the smile. He knew the kid could read exactly what it was worth. There was sothing genuinely unsettling about the way this boy looked at people - not hostile, exactly, just... asuring. Like he was calculating whether a situation was worth his ti.
George didn't particularly care. He just needed twenty minutes of presentable footage.
[System mission triggered.]
[Objective: Obtain your first professional contract within 7 days.]
[Reward: Unknown.]
Mateo paused on his way off the pitch.
A contract. Within seven days. He was about to walk out of Dortmund with a plane ticket to São Paulo and nothing else to show for three months of cone work and the system wanted him to get a professional contract.
He looked at the unknown reward. He thought about maxed-out passing going completely to waste on a forward who was getting on a flight tonight.
He turned back.
George, watching from the sideline, saw the kid decide to stay and felt a flicker of sothing. He quickly suppressed it. This was purely administrative.
The two squads divided up. George put Mateo at the top of the A Team's attacking line and shifted the B Team's standout forward, Steven, into their camp as a balancing move. No tactical significance, it was an exhibition. The idea was to funnel a few passes to the Brazilian kid, let him do sothing photogenic, then wrap up.
Ham, the B Team's defensive midfielder, still smarting from the staredown earlier, put his hand up to swap sides.
George nodded and didn't think anything of it.
Ham caught Mateo's eye as he jogged over to the B Team bib and smiled with most of his mouth. I'll see you out there.
Mateo said nothing and went to find his position.
A Team: 4-3-3 - Mateo nominally at centre-forward, though he had no idea what he was doing up there.
B Team: Compact 4-4-2 - Organised, physical. Ham sitting deep in midfield.
Geoffrey's whistle.
The reporters on the sideline raised their caras, pointed them at the dark-haired Brazilian, and waited.
What they got, for the first five minutes, was a masterclass in exactly how not to play football. Mateo arrived at every position a half-second too late. His runs were predictable. When the ball ca to him, it bounced off him and away, because he was facing the wrong direction. He was a headless fly in a system that demanded precise spatial awareness he hadn't yet developed.
House, the right winger, sighed and began finding better options.
Ham, tracking Mateo's every movent, was visibly relaxed. This was going to be straightforward.
In the sixth minute, Ham intercepted a diagonal pass that had been aid at Mateo, reading the run before Mateo had even made it. He played it forward imdiately, one clean line into space and Steven, the B Team striker, killed it on his chest without letting it drop, turned in the sa motion, and volleyed it into the far corner before the A Team goalkeeper had moved.
The reporters swung their caras to Steven. This was what they'd been angling for all session.
B Team 1 - 0 A Team.
Mateo stood in the attacking third, arms loose at his sides. He watched Ham walk past with a look of quiet satisfaction and said nothing.
After the goal, the A Team regained possession and tried to build. Mateo, invisible for the next ten minutes, eventually drifted into central midfield out of sheer frustration, there was simply nothing to do in attack.
He was, predictably, useless there too. His positional instincts were all wrong for that zone, and his teammates quickly stopped looking for him.
The reporters were starting to check their watches.
George, on the sideline, had already ntally moved on to the post-session remarks.
Then Montari, the A Team's defensive midfielder, played a simple square ball that landed at Mateo's feet in the centre circle.
And the world changed.
The mont the ball arrived, sothing lit up in Mateo's vision - lines, angles, trajectories, all overlaid across the pitch like a navigator's chart. Each one carried a number. Most of them were white or pale green. But one - one burned red.
Mateo didn't think about it. He took a touch to kill the ball's montum, shifted his weight, planted his standing foot, and swung his right leg through the ball with the outside of his boot. The contact was crisp and low, almost sneaky in how little effort it looked.
The ball ca off his foot with heavy backspin and began to rise.
It didn't look like much from the sideline. It looked, in fact, like a mis-hit.
Ham broke into a jog to cover ground, soone needed to track the ball's trajectory and the two B Team centre-backs held their shape, confident the ball was sailing harmlessly through their corridor. Nothing was getting through there.
The ball kept climbing, then reached its peak and curved. Not dramatically. Just enough. It dropped between Ham and the nearer centre-back, hit the turf once, and the spin brought it running left instead of straight, curling directly into the path of House, the A Team's right winger, who had made a late diagonal run behind the B Team's defensive line without anyone tracking him.
House didn't break stride. One touch to set it, then his right foot through the ball into the far post.
1–1.
Mateo was still standing in the sa spot, weight forward, watching the ball in the net.
The reporters, who had been in the process of lowering their caras snapped them back up. Finally.
Most of them assud it was a fluke. The ball had taken a funny bounce, the winger had been in the right place. Put it down to luck and call it a day.
On the far side of the technical area, however, an old man with neat white hair and clean shoes had not moved a millitre since the ball left Mateo's boot. His expression, which had been studied and neutral for most of the session, had shifted into sothing more alert.
He watched Mateo, still standing in the centre of the pitch, a little dazed with the focused expression of soone who has just heard a sound they can't imdiately account for and is very quietly deciding whether it ans anything.
George checked his watch and didn't look up.
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