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The board eting moved on, pivoting back toward stadium naming rights and mid-season comrcial tours. But for those few minutes, the soul of the club had hung in the balance.
The London night was quiet, as if the city itself had exhaled after a long day of tensions and negotiations. The last of the lights in the Arsenal boardroom flickered off as Jorge ndes stepped out into the chill, the soft click of the heavy glass door behind him finalizing his departure. His footsteps echoed on the pavent as he made his way across the underground parking garage, the sharp sound of Italian leather against concrete.
He didn't walk quickly. There was no need. The storm inside had passed, but it had left debris behind—resentnts, doubts, wounds hidden behind formal nods and corporate platitudes. ndes felt them still, lingering like static in the air, like the sll of rain after thunder.
He reached his car, a dark Bentley with a personalized plate, and slid inside. For a mont, he sat motionless in the leather seat, letting his head fall back against the rest, eyes closed.
His fingers found his phone without looking. The mont of silence hung before him like a ledge he needed to jump from.
He dialed.
Two rings.
"Jorge?" ca the voice on the other end—young, alert, but slightly hushed. Francesco.
"Yeah," ndes said, voice low. "It's done. The eting's over."
There was a pause.
"And?"
"I handled it."
Another silence. Then Francesco asked, carefully, "What does that an?"
"I told them the truth," ndes said. "Told them it was my fault. Told them you had nothing to do with Zidane showing up. That it was who arranged the dinner, that you didn't know about it beforehand."
He took a breath.
"They listened. It got heated at tis, but Wenger stood by you. Kroenke didn't throw a chair, so that's progress. Ivan wants a statent out tomorrow to clear the air. They'll back you publicly. Strongly."
Francesco let out a quiet breath on the other end. "So… that's it? It's over?"
ndes hesitated.
"No. Not completely."
There was a beat.
"I need to be honest with you, chico," he said, his voice softening into sothing closer to personal regret. "I took the fall, and they accepted it. But the damage…"
Francesco didn't speak.
ndes continued. "I could feel it. The way they looked at . The way they looked at you. Not Wenger. Never Wenger. But the others? Gazidis, Usmanov… even Stan. There's doubt now. Suspicion. Like a crack running under the surface of the ice. You can't see it from above. But it's there. Waiting."
He drumd his fingers on the wheel as if it helped him sort his thoughts.
"I tried to shield you. I did. But I let them in, Francesco. I let them question your loyalty. I thought I could control the optics, the timing… but I underestimated them. Real Madrid. Zidane. They played ."
Another pause. "And by extension… they played you."
Francesco still hadn't spoken. ndes waited, but the silence only stretched.
"I wanted to tell you myself," ndes said. "Before you heard it from soone else. I made the mistake, but you're the one who'll have to carry it. At least for a while."
At last, the voice on the other end stirred—quiet, thoughtful.
"I know."
ndes blinked.
"I know, Jorge. I saw the photo when it ca out. I knew what it looked like. I knew what people would think. I tried not to care, but… I felt it. The shift. The way people looked at at training the next day. So of the staff. Even a couple of teammates. It's like a shadow followed in."
ndes clenched his jaw. "I'm sorry."
"I don't bla you," Francesco said. "You didn't an for this to happen. You were just doing your job. Trying to help. I get it."
Another pause.
"But that room, tonight… they were supposed to believe in . No matter what. That's what's hard to swallow."
ndes's hand tightened around the phone. "They still do, Francesco. They're scared. That's all. Scared of losing sothing they've never had before."
Francesco gave a soft, tired chuckle. "Yeah. Maybe. Still hurts though."
ndes nodded slowly, unseen. "Wenger wants to speak to you tomorrow. At training. He told to tell you he's proud of you. And to thank you."
"I'll be there," Francesco said. "First one in. Sa as always."
ndes allowed himself a small smile. "Good. That's who you are. And that's what'll carry you through this."
There was a brief silence before Francesco spoke again, quieter now, almost like a whisper.
"Do you think they'll ever really trust again? I an… all of them?"
ndes leaned his head back against the headrest, staring at the roof of the car. "Eventually, yes. But not because they decide to. Because you leave them no choice. Because you keep doing what you do. Week after week. Ga after ga. You show them with every minute on the pitch that there's no one like you."
His voice grew firr.
"You want them to trust you again? Then you beco undeniable. You give them no room for doubt."
Francesco didn't answer right away, but ndes could hear the breath he drew in. He was listening. Processing.
Then, softly: "Alright."
A pause.
"Thanks for calling ," Francesco said.
"Always," ndes replied. "And, hey… give Leah my best."
"I will. She's asleep, but I'll tell her in the morning."
"Good. Rest up. Big week ahead."
Francesco chuckled faintly. "Isn't it always?"
The call ended.
ndes sat in his car for a mont longer, staring through the windshield at nothing. The night had grown colder, and the garage was still, save for the occasional hum of a far-off engine.
He leaned forward and rested his hands on the steering wheel, letting the exhaustion finally catch up with him.
In the end, he had done what he could. Taken the bla. Told the truth. Burned a little bit of his own reputation to protect the boy's.
But he had also seen sothing in that boardroom—sothing that lingered. Real Madrid wasn't done. Not by a long shot. And now that the veil was lifted, now that the world had seen what Francesco could beco… the vultures would circle faster.
This was only the first test.
The cold silence inside the Bentley was broken only by the faint click of ndes setting his phone down on the passenger seat. For a long mont, he stared at the empty dashboard, his reflection ghosting back at him from the black gloss of the central panel. His face was drawn, tired, but his eyes still burned — not with fatigue, but with sothing deeper.
Resolve.
He reached again for the phone, this ti with the deliberate motion of soone preparing to step into a fight. His thumb hovered over the contact list for a heartbeat too long, then settled on a na: Zinédine Zidane.
It rang. Once. Twice.
Then it connected.
"Jorge," Zidane said, smooth as ever, warm in that diplomatic, maddeningly calm way. "You're calling late. Or early, depending on where you are."
ndes didn't smile. Didn't greet him. Didn't return the pleasantries.
"You did this."
Zidane didn't answer at first. But ndes could hear the subtle inhale. That was all he needed.
"You leaked the photo," ndes said flatly. "Don't insult by pretending otherwise."
Zidane's voice, when it ca, was still level. "You arranged the eting, Jorge. We both know that. All I did was show up. If the world noticed, that's hardly—"
"Cut the bullshit."
Zidane went silent.
"You knew what you were doing," ndes went on, voice low but edged now. "You knew what that photo would an. How it would look. The timing. You knew Arsenal were nervous. You knew the dia would devour it. And you did it anyway."
Zidane exhaled softly through his nose. "You're angry."
"You're damn right I'm angry," ndes snapped. "Do you know what I had to walk into tonight? That boardroom was a furnace. Francesco's na got dragged through the mud. All because you—Real Madrid—wanted to plant a seed. You wanted to twist a private dinner into a public drama. To destabilize him."
Still, Zidane didn't interrupt. That told ndes everything he needed to know. The silence was as good as an admission.
"You think you're clever," ndes said. "You think you're playing so long ga. Make him feel cornered. Make Arsenal question his loyalty. Wait until the pressure builds, and then swoop in with a shiny offer in January or next sumr when the smoke hasn't cleared. I've seen it all before."
There was a flicker of sothing cold beneath Zidane's calm when he finally replied. "We're not the only club watching him. You know that. You know how the ga works."
"No. No, you don't get to hide behind that." ndes's voice hardened. "Because this wasn't scouting. This wasn't interest. This was sabotage. You tried to break a kid who's only ever worked his ass off for his club."
He could feel his pulse in his temple, steady but forceful.
"And I'm telling you now, Zidane—because you're the face of it, because they sent you to charm him, to 'connect' over dinner, to play the legend card—I'm telling you that it backfired."
A pause. Then ndes delivered it clean, sharp, and final.
"He'll never co to Real Madrid now."
Zidane gave a short laugh. Not mocking, exactly. But incredulous.
"You can't speak for him forever."
"I don't have to," ndes said. "He saw what you did. He felt it. The betrayal. The manipulation. That dinner was supposed to be quiet. Private. But your people had photographers planted before he even sat down. You don't co back from that."
"He's young. Ti changes everything."
"No," ndes said, and this ti there was no heat, just a grim certainty. "Francesco Lee is loyal. And stubborn. That's part of what makes him great. He doesn't forget when soone tries to humiliate him."
Zidane didn't reply. The line crackled slightly with the silence.
"You may have done so damage tonight," ndes said. "But not the kind you were hoping for. You didn't create a crack between him and Arsenal. You just lit a fire under him."
Zidane's voice cooled. "We'll see."
"No. You won't," ndes said. "Because even if he moves soday—and that's a big if—it won't be to Madrid. Not now. Not ever. You made sure of that."
He let that sit for a second, then added:
"And if he's ever asked, publicly or privately, if he'd consider Real Madrid? He'll say no. Every ti. Not just because of what happened. But because he saw who you really are."
Zidane exhaled. For the first ti in the conversation, ndes thought he heard it — a tiny crack in the Real Madrid mystique. Not fear, not remorse, but a recognition. The realization that they might've misplayed their hand.
"You're very protective of him."
"I believe in him," ndes said simply. "That's more than I can say for so people in this industry."
The line between them thinned for a mont, stretched tight by silence and static, by the weight of things unsaid. Then Zidane's voice ca through again—calm, smooth, laced with the kind of detached rationale that had served him well for decades in boardrooms, dressing rooms, and interviews.
"You know it's just business," he said.
Just business.
ndes stared through the windshield, the fluorescent garage lights above casting pale rectangles across the Bentley's dashboard. The words echoed in his head like a dull thud.
"Mr. Pérez really likes Francesco," Zidane added, almost gently. "He sees sothing in him. That's real. It's not just a move on a chessboard."
ndes closed his eyes.
"I know," he said, and there was no sarcasm in his voice now, just weariness. "I know Pérez likes him. I know what he sees—talent, charisma, presence, marketability. A golden boy for the new era. He's not wrong, Zidane. Francesco is all of those things."
His jaw tensed.
"But what you don't see, what he clearly doesn't understand… is that Francesco's not for sale."
Zidane didn't respond.
ndes continued, his voice low and steady. "What you did… what Madrid did… it didn't just spark a little transfer rumor. It didn't just stir the pot. It damaged him. In front of his fans. In front of his teammates. The people who trust him. The people he gives everything for."
His hand closed around the steering wheel like it was the only thing anchoring him to the mont.
"You made him look like a traitor."
Still, Zidane said nothing. Maybe because he knew. Maybe because there was nothing to say.
"I can assure you," ndes went on, quieter now, but firr than ever. "He will say no to Real Madrid. Every ti. Not out of spite. Not even because I told him to."
He drew a breath, calm and slow.
"But because he's that kind of man. Like Gerrard. Like Totti. One of the last few who understands that legacy isn't about lifting a trophy in white because soone handed you the biggest paycheck. It's about building sothing where you are. It's about loyalty. About staying when it's hard."
"You think he'll stay forever?" Zidane finally said, voice unreadable.
"I think if he ever leaves Arsenal, it won't be because you made him feel unwanted. It won't be because you pushed him into a corner with caras and headlines. And it sure as hell won't be to join the club that tried to manipulate him."
A beat passed.
"He's not like the others, Zidane. He's not a Galáctico. He doesn't care about flashing lights and legacy tours. He cares about his people. His team. His place in their story."
Zidane let out a soft sigh, the kind that wasn't surrender but acknowledgnt.
"Maybe we misjudged him," he said.
ndes shook his head slowly, still staring ahead.
"You did worse than that. You underestimated him."
There was a long pause. Then Zidane said, quietly, "You really believe he'd shut the door completely?"
"I don't have to believe it," ndes said. "He told himself. Tonight. After I explained everything, after I told him how I took the fall… he looked dead in the eye and said, 'They don't get another chance.' And he ant it."
Zidane didn't reply right away.
"You just burned a bridge," ndes said. "One you didn't even know was yours to cross."
Zidane's tone shifted slightly, no longer asured, just weary. "That's not how Madrid works, Jorge. You know that. One door closes, another opens."
"Maybe," ndes replied. "But not this one. Not with him."
There was another mont of silence on the line—tense, tired, final.
"Tell Pérez," ndes said, "to look elsewhere. He gambled. He lost. And Francesco? He'll rember."
Zidane sighed once more, then said, "Alright."
ndes didn't bother to say goodbye. He simply ended the call.
The phone screen faded to black, and he set it back on the passenger seat like it weighed a hundred pounds.
The garage was still quiet around him. Still cold. Still sterile. But in the stillness, sothing else settled in Jorge ndes's chest—sothing that had nothing to do with anger or regret, but a conviction.
He had made many deals in his career. Arranged massive transfers. Brokered dreams and fortunes. He had walked corridors of power with the most influential n in the ga. But this one, this night, this player—Francesco Lee—was different.
ndes hadn't just brokered a future.
He'd defended a soul.
And the war, if it ca, would not be fought in courtrooms or boardrooms. It would be fought on the pitch. One performance at a ti. One loyal act after another. In front of roaring crowds who knew who their hero was.
Because that's what Francesco Lee would beco.
Not a brand. Not a rcenary.
But as a symbol.
Then across London, in the quiet shadowed bedroom of a Richmond ho, Francesco lay awake.
Leah stirred beside him, breathing softly, one arm curled over his chest, her warmth a small comfort against the cold unease that still lingered in his bones.
The phone call with ndes played over in his head in loops. The words. The tone. The aftermath.
He didn't need Jorge to tell him what Zidane and Madrid had done. He'd known the mont he saw the headline: "Francesco Lee Dines with Real Madrid Legend – Transfer Talks Begin?"
The article hadn't even included quotes. Just a grainy photo. One flashbulb. One angle. One lie.
But it was enough. Enough to turn glances into stares at training. Enough to see the slight tightening in his teamnate's face when he passed him on the touchline. Enough to feel like sothing fundantal had been cracked.
And that's what hurt the most.
Not that people believed it.
But that they even considered it possible.
He was Arsenal's number nine. Their heartbeat. He'd given everything.
And now… he had to start again. Not from scratch. But from doubt.
The fire burned in his chest, low and steady.
He shifted slightly, not to wake Leah, but to free his arm, reaching for the small notepad he kept by the bedside. Scribbled in the dark—three words, more etched than written:
They don't get .
He set the pad down, returned to the silence, and let sleep claim him. Eventually.
Tomorrow would co.
And with it, training. The weight room. Tactical etings. Preparation for Olympiacos.
He'd be there early.
He'd be the first on the grass.
And when the caras ca, when the fans filled the stadium, when the chants rose and the ball rolled—he would speak with the only voice that mattered, and that is his football. Because ndes was right. If he wanted the world to believe again, he had to beco undeniable.
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Na : Francesco Lee
Age : 16 (2014)
Birthplace : London, England
Football Club : Arsenal First Team
Championship History : 2014/2015 Premier League, 2014/2015 FA Cup, and 2015/2016 Community Shield
Season 15/16 stats:
Arsenal:
Match Played: 9
Goal: 15
Assist: 2
MOTM: 0
POTM: 1
England:
Match Played: 2
Goal: 4
Assist: 0
Season 14/15 stats:
Match Played: 35
Goal: 45
Assist: 12
MOTM: 9
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