The noise reached them before the training ground did.
"Halim! What the hell was that? You've got three tres of space and you take two touches - TWO, before soone's on you! One touch and move, are we clear? ONE!"
A pause. Then: "FRENCH! I can see you from here, don't think I can't! That run was a disaster. You cut inside when the overlap was screaming at you - screaming! Where are you looking?"
Mateo and Old Jes ca through the gate and the full picture assembled itself: a large, bearded man with the build and volu of soone who had played centre-back for a long ti and missed it - Jarrers Daniel, Schalke 04 U18 head coach, was standing at the edge of the technical area conducting the session entirely through controlled fury. The players on the pitch were doing exactly what players do when their coach is in this particular register: keeping their heads down, working hard, and hoping the storm moved to a different postcode.
Nobody was answering back.
The assistant coach spotted Old Jes and jogged over to Daniel. A quick word. Daniel's head turned.
He looked at Old Jes. Then his eyes moved to Mateo.
The appraisal was fast and professional. Height - about right. Build - light, low physical contact tolerance. But Old Jes wasn't in the habit of wasting anyone's ti, and Daniel knew it.
He walked over.
"Jes." He shook the old man's hand with genuine respect. "Could hear you from the entrance," Old Jes said cheerfully.
"They earn it." Daniel glanced at Mateo again. "Who's this?"
"Just got released from Dortmund," Old Jes said. "Finishing day of a three-month trial. But I want you to put him on the pitch before you make your mind up."
"Dortmund released him and you want to-"
"His passing," Old Jes said simply.
Daniel looked at Mateo. "What position?"
"Forward," Mateo said.
Old Jes closed his eyes briefly.
Daniel raised an eyebrow. "You're a forward who's good at passing."
There was a pause. Mateo thought about the system mission. He thought about six days. He thought about the fact that the only maxed-out attribute he owned was the one he hadn't wanted.
"Midfield is probably where I'd do most damage," he said. "Forward is just where I've always played."
That was enough for Daniel. He'd been roasting Halim OShea for twenty minutes over a passing issue that wasn't going to fix itself today. What he needed right now was soone he could put in the ten position and actually trust to move the ball. Whether this kid could do that was a separate question but Old Jes asking was, in itself, a form of evidence.
He turned back to the pitch. "Halim! Off! Give the bib to the new lad!"
Halim OShea jogged over without argunt, stripped the bib, and held it out to Mateo. The look he gave him wasn't resentnt - it was, if anything, mild relief. Being publicly substituted out of a session where the coach was already furious was, in this context, borderline rciful.
Mateo took the bib.
A blond player detached himself from the group and trotted over, confident in the way only captains are, like the pitch slightly belonged to him wherever he stood on it.
"Ben Kehi. Temporary teammates, for now." He shook Mateo's hand. "I'll keep it quick. Four-three-three. I'm the ten, sitting just behind the forward line. Joey French, the big lad on the right wing, fast, direct, wants the ball in behind. Whit Benedict up top, bald one, penalty box poacher. Your job in there is to organise. When I've got it, I'll look for you. When you've got it, find the spaces."
He said all of this in the ti it took Mateo to pull the bib over his head.
"Right," Mateo said.
Ben Kehi nodded, satisfied, and jogged back into position.
On the sideline, Old Jes found a spot at the fence and leaned against it. Daniel stood a few tres away, arms folded, expression professionally neutral.
Mateo walked to his position, a little behind and to the left of Benedict, slightly in front of the double pivot and stopped. He had never played centrally in midfield in his life. He knew the forward line. He knew where to press from, where to make runs. In midfield, the geotry was completely different, and his instincts were built for the wrong shape.
Then sothing else happened.
Faint at first, almost like peripheral interference and then sharper. Lines. Overlaid on the pitch in front of him, connecting him to his teammates, threading through the B Team's defensive structure. Each one carried a number. They shifted and adjusted as players moved, as gaps opened and closed. He turned his head experintally and the whole map rotated with him.
The system's passing overlay. Working here too, not just in the forward line.
Good, he thought.
The whistle went.
Fweet-!
Ben Kehi, reading the room correctly, this was an audition, not a match, imdiately looked to involve Mateo. He took a layoff from Benedict, steadied, and pushed a quick pass toward where Mateo had taken up position just inside the B Team's half.
The ball arrived crisply. Mateo reached for it.
His first touch was an embarrassnt. The ball skidded off his instep at a bad angle and rolled nearly two tres ahead of him, just as a B Team forward ca pressing in.
On the sideline, Old Jes went extrely still.
Daniel glanced at him sideways.
"Probably fatigue." Old Jes said, with the tone of a man reading from a prepared statent.
Daniel made a sound that was not quite agreent.
Mateo had already moved. He accelerated onto the loose ball, got his body between it and the pressing forward, and dragged it back under control before the B Team could capitalise. He stood for half a second with the ball at his feet, looking at the shape in front of him.
Every passing lane forward had turned amber or red. The B Team's press was active, bodies tight, no clean option ahead. He pulled the ball back with his heel, turned, and laid it simply into the feet of Lloyd Angelo, the defensive midfielder sitting behind him.
Simple ball. Right decision. Nothing spectacular.
But he hadn't panicked, hadn't hoofed it, hadn't lost possession. And Daniel, watching, noted the composure even as he kept his expression professionally blank.
The attack rebuilt from the back. And in the centre of the Schalke U18 training pitch, Mateo Silva found his feet.
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