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Now reading: Chapter 116: Now You See Me, Now You Don’t from Harbinger Of Glory, a Sports novel by Art233.

Marco’s whistle pierced the warm Italian morning, sharp and clean as the ball rolled into play imdiately, the red team taking first possession.

Voices rang across the pitch, quick, sharp bursts of Italian football slang: dietro, uomo, gira!

The words bounced in rhythm with the ball as the Reds zipped passes between each other confidently.

The blue team scrambled to keep shape, shouts overlapping in confusion. Although Marco had split the teams evenly, the red team had just the edge of first possession.

Leo heard the calls but didn’t fully catch them.

He’d spent nights trying to learn the phrases, but on the pitch, they blurred into noise.

Avanti!

Vieni!

Dentro!

He tried to piece aning from movent, not words.

But then after a while, he stopped trying altogether and just shut it all out.

Instead, he began scanning, eyes darting, feet shifting, just watching.

He saw how the reds rotated, how their left-back, Destiny Udogie, liked to tuck inside instead of hugging the line.

He also noticed how Carlo drifted too high when the Blues lost the ball.

He was reading everything from posture, angles, to habits in the few monts he lingered around.

"Leo, premi Miretti (Hey, press Miretti)", Quagliata, the blue team’s left-back, called, but then Destiny Udogie made the mistake.

He drove centrally again, gliding past one man and then trying to skip past Leo.

He succeeded halfway and got by the body, but not with the ball.

Leo’s foot had nicked it away cleanly, almost lazily, as it rolled under his control as if the ball had rembered who it preferred.

A small cheer ca from the blue team, nothing dramatic, just a release of tension after minutes of chasing shadows.

Leo glanced up, pretending to drive forward, and his feints were so convincing enough that two opposing teammates darted ahead instinctively, and more red shirts braced to close him down.

But Leo suddenly stopped, shifted his weight back, and rolled the ball behind his standing leg.

"Calmo," he muttered, softly but clearly enough for those near him to hear.

The effect was instant.

His teammates slowed, readjusting, taking a breath.

Even the red press hesitated for a beat, unsure if he was mocking them or commanding sothing deeper.

Then, swish, the ball left his boot, slicing diagonally toward Caleb Okoli, the 20-year-old centre-back from Atalanta.

Marco, watching from the sideline, smiled faintly, looking keenly as the ga flowed again, faster now.

The Reds regrouped, closing passing lanes and forcing play backwards, where the ball reached Dalle Mura, who looked uncomfortable under pressure.

One red at first, then another closing in after seeing him idling with the ball, but just as it seed he might lose it, Leo drifted closer, offering a calm outlet.

Dalle Mura, in need of the outlet, released it gratefully watching Leo turn with the first touch, dragging two markers with him as he shifted right, and just when it looked like he was boxed in, he backheeled the ball perfectly into Dalle Mura’s path again.

And from there, space opened like magic.

From there, the ball went wide to Carlo.

The winger, spotting sothing, leapt slightly, cushioning the pass with his chest into open grass.

All eyes turned, expecting a chase towards the ball they thought loose, but out of nowhere, Leo was there, a blur of motion where no one expected him.

He controlled the bouncing ball on his instep and flicked it back behind him, straight into Carlo’s stride like he had eyes on the back of his head.

The rhythm between them was absurdly smooth, like two players who’d known each other for years instead of days, or even less.

Carlo sent it forward again, to which Leo stepped over it, then reclaid it in space, and the reds couldn’t keep up.

They pressed, hesitated, pressed again, but Leo and Carlo were playing a private ga, with their mates too relegated to just spectators.

Marco’s grin widened.

He didn’t even bother hiding it anymore.

Back to the action on the pitch, the ball zipped through tight spaces, Leo receiving with one touch, turning with another, slipping short passes with angles that seed invisible to everyone else.

He moved with that eerie calm, half Busquets in his stillness, half Pirlo in his vision.

Red shirts closed from every direction, but Leo’s solution always ca a second earlier.

A drop of the shoulder, a faint twist of the hip, and he was gone, leaving his markers stumbling.

The pace built, the energy electric, until one mont silenced everything.

A long diagonal ca Leo’s way, who had already had a glance and seen the red midfield line tightening, three players converging, expecting him to head it down, so he played along.

He jumped, body angled left, and every red shirt turned that way, reacting to what they thought they saw.

But Leo didn’t head it.

He let the ball miss his head and chested it down the other way instead, twisting midair, and as he landed, he flicked the ball with the outside of his boot back across to his right, where he was just keeping the ball from going.

The feint froze two defenders completely, and the third, having overcommitted in both directions, slipped and fell, clutching his thigh to his groin with a grimace.

Marco’s whistle blew instantly.

"Stop!" he roared in rough Italian as the physios sprinted across the grass, kneeling by the fallen player, Samuel Ricci, a highly rated midfielder from Torino.

The rest of the players slowed, hands on their hips, breathing heavy.

"Take a breather!" Marco called, voice booming but cheerful despite the ongoing scene on the pitch with the dic and Ricci.

He was trying to sound authoritative, but his grin betrayed him.

He couldn’t stop smiling.

As players gathered by the sideline, grabbing bottles and chatting under their breath, Leo stood a little apart.

He wasn’t preening, wasn’t soaking in the praise.

He just took a bottle, poured a splash over his head, and sipped quietly, chest rising and falling with asured rhythm as the other players muttered, nodding in his direction.

Across the pitch, Marco watched him, and though he said nothing, his expression said enough.

"I am so excited I got hard."

After a few minutes, one of the dics began walking straight to Marco, who had his hands on his hips, waiting.

Their exchange was brief, with a few quiet words, a nod, and a quick glance toward Ricci, who was walking off the pitch with one hand pressed to his thigh.

Marco exhaled through his nose and rubbed the back of his neck.

"He’s fine," he finally said aloud, raising his voice just enough for the players to hear.

"Nothing serious. Just muscle tightness. But—" He paused, looking over the group, "he’ll probably miss a couple of sessions."

There were a few murmurs from the players, a mix of relief and sympathy.

Ricci was well-liked, one of the quieter but more grounded ones in the squad.

Marco looked around the field again, his eyes running over the cones, poles, and bibs scattered around the grass.

It was only the first proper session of camp, and already soone had gone down.

He wasn’t superstitious most of the ti, but with young players, luck mattered.

And if he didn’t handle it well, montum could turn fragile.

He sighed once more, then clapped his hands together. "Alright, enough. We stop here."

So players blinked, surprised.

Others nodded right away, already understanding what was up.

The whistle that hung from Marco’s neck swung slightly as he motioned toward the sidelines.

Leo, still standing a bit off from the rest, caught part of what Marco said, enough to know sothing was changing, but not exactly what.

He looked around, trying to read faces, then looked toward Carlo, who was unscrewing his water bottle.

Carlo noticed his look and walked a few steps closer, his accent thick but understandable.

"He said... we stop," Carlo explained, pointing toward Marco.

"He thinks it is—" he searched for the word, squinting slightly, "bad luck... to keep going after injury."

Leo blinked, processing.

"Oh," he said simply, nodding once in understanding.

Carlo was about to say sothing else, probably to explain that it was just an old Italian coaching superstition, sothing passed down through youth setups, but Leo was already turning away, heading toward the touchline where his slides and water bottle sat.

He crouched down, loosened his boots, and slipped his feet out, dusting the bits of grass off his socks before sliding into the slides, this little action causing the keen eyes on him to increase further.

Marco stood near the centre circle, arms folded, watching them pack up. His tone softened as he called out, "Good work today, boys. Go get rest while I figure out what’s next."

A few answered with short "Va bene, coach," and "Certo," while Leo just gave a small nod from where he stood, grabbing his bottle and boots in tow.

And soon, the grass was empty again.

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