That night, I went ho. Emma was in the kitchen, her laptop open on the counter, her phone beside it, her reading glasses on. She was working on sothing the academy feature, probably, or the podcast proposal that she hadn’t ntioned in two weeks.
"How was the match?" she asked, not looking up.
"We won. Two-one."
"Good." She typed sothing. The keys clicked in the quiet apartnt.
I stood in the doorway and looked at her. Really looked at her, for the first ti in weeks. She was wearing a hoodie not mine, her own, a grey one I didn’t recognise and her hair was pulled back in a knot that looked functional rather than aesthetic.
Her face, in the kitchen light, was thinner than I rembered. Not dramatically the change you notice in soone you see every day only when you stop and actually see them. There were shadows under her eyes that matched mine.
"Em," I said. "How are you?"
She stopped typing. Her fingers hovered over the keyboard. Then she closed the laptop, took off her glasses, and looked at .
"You’re asking that," she said. Not a question. An observation. The journalist identifying the anomaly.
"I’m asking you that."
She was quiet for a long ti. Then she said, very carefully, in the asured tone she used when she was trying not to cry: "I turned down the podcast."
"What? When?"
"Last week. The schedule was too much. I couldn’t do The Athletic column and the podcast and..." She stopped.
"And be here for you. Every night. The recharging station. The anchor. The warm body on the sofa that you co ho to after another match, another press conference, another flight, another week where you don’t ask a single question about my life."
The words hit like the first cold wave of a winter sea the shock not from the content but from the recognition. She was right. She was completely, devastatingly, unforgivably right.
"I’m not a charging station, Danny." Her voice was steady but her eyes were bright.
"I can’t just be the place you co to recharge before the next match. I have a career. I have ambitions. I had an opportunity... a real opportunity, the kind that cos once, and I said no because I looked at the December fixture list on the kitchen whiteboard and I counted the days you’d be ho and I realised that if I took the podcast, we would never see each other. So I chose you. Again. The way I always choose you."
She paused. "And you didn’t even notice."
I sat down at the counter. The stool was cold beneath . The apartnt was quiet except for the hum of the refrigerator and the distant sound of traffic on Lordship Lane. The eyelid twitched.
"I’m sorry," I said. "I’m so sorry, Em."
"I don’t want sorry. Sorry is easy. Sorry is what you say after you’ve already done the damage." She looked at , and the brightness in her eyes had beco tears not falling, held, controlled, the tears of a woman who had decided to be honest rather than supportive for the first ti in months.
"I want you to see . Not the anchor. Not the constant. Not the girlfriend who always has the right words and the warm arms and the perfectly tid advice. . Emma. The woman who turned down a podcast and didn’t tell you because you had enough to worry about." She wiped her eyes with the back of her hand. "I’m tired too, Danny. And nobody asks how I am."
I reached across the counter and took her hand. She let . She didn’t pull away. But she didn’t squeeze back either; the hand was there, present but uncommitted, the hand of a woman deciding whether to bridge a gap or let it stand.
"Frankie ca to Beckenham today," I said.
"What?"
"Drove down from Manchester. Showed up unannounced. Told I was running on fus and enjoying being hated more than being loved. Told to ask you how you are." I paused. "He was right about everything."
Emma looked at for a long ti. Then, slowly, her fingers tightened around mine. Not a forgiveness, a beginning. A start of a conversation that was going to be longer and harder and more important than any tactical briefing I had ever given.
"We’re going to talk about this properly," she said. "Not tonight. You’re too tired, and I’m too angry. But this weekend. After Swansea. We sit down and we talk about what this life is doing to both of us."
"Okay."
"And you’re going to call your mum."
"I’ll call her tonight."
"You’ll call her now. Before you do anything else."
I picked up my phone. I called my mum. She answered on the first ring she always did, because she kept the phone on the arm of her chair, and she always answered on the first ring because she was always waiting.
"Hi, Mum."
"Hello, love." The warmth in her voice nearly broke . "How was the match?"
"We won. Mum, I’m sorry about your birthday. I’m sorry about everything."
"Don’t be daft. You’re busy. I understand."
"You shouldn’t have to understand. I should be better."
A pause. Then, quietly: "You’re doing your best, Danny. That’s all anyone can do."
I talked to her for forty minutes. About her chest she was seeing a doctor next week, finally. About Frankie’s visit. About the neighbours and the cat and the leaking tap that I had promised to fix six months ago.
Normal things. Human things. The things that existed outside the white lines and the System and the relentless, all-consuming machinery of professional football.
When I hung up, Emma was standing in the kitchen doorway, watching . Her eyes were dry now.
She crossed the room, sat beside on the sofa, and tucked herself against my side not the warm, instinctive cuddle of the past months, but sothing more deliberate, more conscious. A choice to be close, made with full awareness that closeness required work, not just proximity.
"Swansea on Wednesday," she said. "Then City on Saturday."
"I know."
"Win them both. But co ho after."
"I will."
"Actually, co ho. Not just physically. All of you."
Wednesday. Swansea at ho. I rotated. Mandanda, Ward, Dann, Tomkins, Digne. McArthur, Kirby. Bowen, Bojan, Gnabry. Pato. The match happened.
We won 2-0 Gnabry and Pato, the familiar combination, the machine functioning without its operator at full capacity. I watched from the touchline and could not, by the final whistle, rember the na of the Swansea left-back.
I couldn’t rember the first goal clearly. The second was a blur. The crowd sang. The points were collected. The System logged the data. I walked to the tunnel, shook Paul Clent’s hand, and drove ho. Emma was asleep when I arrived. I stood in the bedroom doorway, watching her breathe, and thought about Frankie’s words: Don’t lose the people who love you while you’re winning football matches.
[Crystal Palace 2–0 Swansea. Goals: Gnabry 34’, Pato 71’. PL: P17 W12 D3 L2. 39 pts.]
Saturday, December 16th. Manchester City at ho. The rematch of the 3-3. Guardiola coming to Selhurst Park. The biggest ho match of the season.
I should have been electric. I should have been standing in the dressing room, eyes blazing, delivering the team talk of the year. Instead, I was sitting in my office at two o’clock, an hour before kick-off, staring at the wall, and I couldn’t find the words.
The eyelid was twitching. The insomnia had reached its fourth consecutive night. I had slept approximately nine hours in the past seventy-two. My body was present. My mind was sowhere else in Moss Side with my mum, in the kitchen with Emma’s tears, in the Beckenham canteen with Frankie’s flat cap and his words about fus.
Sarah knocked on the door. "Gaffer. Pre-match eting in five."
"I know."
She didn’t leave. She stepped inside, closed the door, and sat down. "Danny. I’ve been working with you for seven months. I’ve never seen you like this."
"Like what?"
"Empty."
The word hung in the room. Not tired. Not stressed. Empty. The difference between a tank running low and a tank with nothing left at all.
"I don’t have a speech," I said. "For the first ti since I walked into this club, I don’t have a speech."
Sarah looked at for a long ti. Then she said: "Then don’t give one."
"The players expect..."
"The players expect to win. They don’t need you to tell them how. They know how. You’ve spent seven months drilling it into them. The system is in their muscles, Danny. It’s in their bones. Let them play."
She stood up. "Co to the eting. Sit down. Give them the lineup. And then let soone else talk."
***
Thank you to Sir nayelus for the Super Gift.
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