From the touchline, the sun filtered through the sparse clouds, casting long shadows across the pitch.
Nolan barked instructions from the sideline as the scrimmage kicked off, having split his squad into two even groups—starters and bench players mixed to balance things out.
Dawson leaned against the rail, arms crossed, sunglasses on, his eyes flicking between the players and Leo, who sat quietly a few feet behind the bench.
Leo's legs bounced nervously.
The fresh pair of boots Mia had doodled on sat snug against his socks, their black base laced with faint streaks of color that made him smile when he looked down.
He didn't know when Nolan would throw him into the match—if at all—but he watched like he was already on the pitch, mentally placing himself into every sequence.
Ezra, playing on the right wing, darted into space again.
He received the ball with a sharp touch and cut inside, skipping past one challenge before firing a curling shot that skimmed just wide.
Leo tracked every movement.
The speed of Ezra's footwork, the way he adjusted his shoulders before the cut—it all registered.
But more than that, Leo found himself anticipating what could happen next if the pass went one second earlier or if Ezra had cut diagonally instead of vertically.
The coaches hadn't missed Ezra's flair, either.
"He's sharp today," Nolan muttered to Malachi, who nodded. "Always is. Lacks consistency, though."
"Still makes things happen," Malachi replied, then glanced at Leo.
"Let's see how he responds to pressure."
Leo kept watching.
Another break came through the left, but the ball switched across to Ezra once more.
This time, he stood one-on-one with the fullback.
Leo's mind raced: if he dropped his shoulder and cut back sharply to the byline instead of trying to beat the defender inside, there was space—and a potential goal.
Ezra chose to go inside again. The defender held strong. The ball was lost.
Leo's lips tightened, but he said nothing. His hands rested on his knees, eyes never leaving the field.
"Kid watches like he's got a controller in his hand," Malachi said softly, drawing Nolan's attention for a second.
"Hmph," Nolan grunted. "Let's see if he plays like it when the chance comes."
Leo sat up straighter.
The pace of the match had dipped slightly. He could sense something coming.
And Nolan, clipboard in hand, started to call out names.
Leo's fingers curled, his pulse quickening.
"Leo."
His name cut through the sideline chatter, and he blinked out of his trance.
Nolan jerked a thumb toward the pitch.
"You're in. Number ten's off. Let's see something."
Leo stood quickly, almost too quickly.
His calves tingled, partly from the nerves, partly from the rush of adrenaline.
He jogged over, replacing the attacking midfielder who'd just finished a run, and offered a passing pat on the shoulder without even looking back.
Nolan didn't say much. Just "Find the game."
As Leo crossed into the pitch, he didn't head straight into the pocket behind the striker.
He drifted. Barely two or three steps back from where he was meant to operate.
Not enough to seem disobedient, but enough to scan.
The ball was currently at the feet of the opposing center-back.
Leo slowed his movement, taking in everything.
Ezra was high and wide on the right. The left-winger had tucked in slightly.
The midfield pairing—his teammates now—were spaced well enough but slightly too flat.
The fullbacks, one pushing higher than the other.
The striker was pressing… but without urgency.
And then his eyes flicked to the far sideline.
Dawson stood with arms folded, watching him—not the ball.
When their eyes met, the assistant coach pointed subtly to his temple.
Think.
Leo gave the faintest nod.
The reminder wasn't needed, but it helped center him.
Not everything had to be instinct. There was thought behind this.
The center-back he'd just been observing sent a long ball up toward the left channel.
Leo adjusted. He wasn't going to rush. Not until the space spoke to him. Not until it opened.
For now, he settled into his rhythm, floating just between lines—close enough to join the attack, far enough to read the play.
The ball was back with his side now.
And with it came his first touch.
Smooth. Settled. Safe.
No flair yet.
But he was seeing the pieces. The spaces. The potential.
And something in him—deep and quiet—was ready to unfold.
.............
It started with the simple things.
Leo eased into the game without calling attention to himself.
He played short, intelligent passes, rarely needing more than two touches.
One to settle. One to move the ball on.
And when a press came, it never quite landed.
He turned his shoulder just enough, let the ball roll across his body, or took a quick touch around the incoming boot—never flashy, but effective in a way that unsettled those who tried to close him down.
He wasn't just evading pressure. He was ignoring it.
Even Nolan, hands tucked under his armpits, started to lean forward slightly.
There was something odd about the way the boy moved. His tempo wasn't quite like the others. Slower.
But not lazy. Intentional.
And then—there it was.
A loose ball spilled from a midfield duel and rolled into Leo's path.
He didn't hesitate.
His touch brought it close, then nudged it into the outside channel where he opened his body and looked up.
Ezra was hugging the touchline.
In the blink of an eye, Leo's boot sliced under the ball and unleashed a pass lavish, arcing, almost casual in how well-weighted it was, skimming between the defensive lines and curling just away from the recovering fullback.
Ezra took it on the outside of his boot with a sharp inhale of surprise, controlling it well on the first touch, but his second betrayed him.
The ball bobbled off his stride and skipped over the line for a throw-in.
The winger let out a frustrated hiss, hands on hips.
But his head turned immediately—toward Leo.
Who was already jogging back into position like nothing had happened.
On the sideline, Dawson exhaled like he'd been holding his breath.
Nolan muttered without turning, "Did he mean that?"
Malachi answered, "Every inch of it."
The players on the pitch hadn't reacted yet. Not fully. One pass doesn't change perception.
But it plants the seed.
And Leo—unfazed—was just getting started.
...........
Nolan's arms were still crossed, but his eyes had narrowed.
The ball rolled back to the keeper on Leo's side, the pitch suddenly alive with pressure.
The opposition had smelled blood—two forwards surged forward, cutting passing angles with precision, while the midfield line stepped high, smothering options before they could even develop.
Leo had been still for a second, like a statue in the chaos.
Then he moved.
Just enough.
He drifted out of shape, not far, but into a pocket where the keeper spotted him.
The pressure was closing in, and with no time to think and no time to settle, the keeper launched it.
A high, floating ball that dipped toward Leo, whose marker had seen it too and was already racing in to collapse space.
No time for elegance.
At least, that's what everyone expected.
Leo let it drop. As the ball reached him, he shaped up like he was going to thump it up the pitch—a clearance under pressure.
The kind even a youth coach wouldn't question.
The defender bit hard.
Launched himself, twisting in the air to block what he thought was coming.
But Leo… didn't swing.
He chopped his foot mid-motion, dragging the ball across his body with a fluid pull, letting the defender's leap take him past like a gust of wind.
Then, with the space now created, he sent the real clearance upfield—clean, measured, and into the run of the right-back who was already darting forward.
Nolan blinked.
"Okay…" he muttered under his breath, voice like gravel. "That was… something."