Chapter 22: Chapter 22 : Before the Strike
The morning came fast.
Sunlight bled through the curtains, soft and pale, and Julian was already up before it fully broke the horizon.
But he wasn't lacing up cleats.
Not today.
Out in the backyard, barefoot on the cool grass, he stood in silence—then shifted into motion.
A breath in.
A sharp exhale.
He moved.
A jab. A side kick.
His body flowed into a familiar rhythm—horse stance, rising palm, elbow strike.
It wasn't football.
It was martial arts.
And it felt like coming home.
The ground beneath him felt alive as he pushed off it with each step, his fists slicing the air like they remembered blood and war.
It wasn't for power.
It wasn't for flash.
He just… missed it.
The simplicity.
The discipline.
Each punch was precise.
Each kick a quiet meditation.
And with every breath, he remembered what it meant to control the body—not for survival, but for balance.
He was soaked in sweat by the time a familiar voice broke the air.
"Not football training today?" Crest's voice carried across the yard. "You decide to become a martial artist now?"
She stood at the patio's edge, arms folded, brows slightly raised, but there was no judgment in her tone—just genuine curiosity.
Julian smiled, wiping his brow.
"No, nothing like that. Like I told you… I had a dream. In it, I was strong—really strong. And when I woke up… I guess that version of me stayed behind, helping my body recover. So sometimes…" He exhaled and stretched his arms out wide. "I train like the guy I was in that dream."
Crest blinked. Then rolled her eyes.
"Right. Dream strength. Sure."
She walked past him toward the kitchen door, muttering just loud enough for him to hear:
"Dreams are just flowers of sleep. They aren't supposed to affect your lungs."
Julian chuckled. "Guess mine did."
Still, she didn't press further.
That was Crest. Cold on the surface, but underneath? She was watching. Always making sure he didn't collapse again.
Julian dropped into one last horse stance, then began his breath training—the anchor of all martial discipline. Inhale through the nose, hold, let the breath settle, then exhale through the mouth in a slow hiss.
By the time he finished, the sun was fully up.
He stood tall. Focused. Ready.
It was game day.
And after school…
The first whistle would blow.
…
The sun dipped low in the sky, casting long golden rays across the pitch.
Julian stepped out onto the field, the crunch of cleats against turf steady and deliberate.
Across from them, the opponents were already warming up—El Monte High School.
Their brown jerseys shimmered slightly under the late afternoon light as they jogged in lines, passing balls between them with crisp rhythm.
Lincoln High, in their own corner of the field, was a wall of blue and white stripes.
Their warm-ups were quieter—focused. Controlled.
Not flashy. Not chaotic.
Disciplined.
A sharp whistle cut through the air.
"Gather, all of you!" Coach Owens barked.
The Lincoln players jogged over. But not just them—El Monte's players joined the huddle too, a small moment of formality before the fire began.
Coach Owens faced them with that ever-serious look, his black windbreaker rustling in the breeze.
"They've got two key players," he began. "Striker Lucas Ortega and center back Dominic Reyes. Watch for them. They'll be running a 4-4-2 flat—standard formation, but they rely heavily on Lucas's finishing and Dominic's long clearances."
His eyes swept over the team.
"Stick to our strategy. Trust the shape. Own the midfield."
Then he stepped back.
And Leo stepped forward.
"Circle up," the captain called, voice sharp and confident.
They gathered close, shoulder to shoulder, a ring of fire forming under the late sun.
"This might be a practice match," Leo began, eyes sweeping the group, "but for us—it's more."
Julian stood quietly at the edge of the circle.
Cael crossed his arms beside him, face unreadable.
"We've got two new brothers in this squad now." Leo looked right at them—at Julian and Cael. "And this—this is the first step of our climb."
"Let them see our team. Let them feel our fire. Let them regret standing on the same pitch as us."
Leo raised his fist into the center. "We win—together."
One by one, hands followed.
"Together!" the team echoed.
The sky rumbled faintly in the distance.
The match hadn't started.
But the war already had.
…
Both teams lined up under the fading sunlight.
Cleats bit into the turf.
Breaths steadied.
Eyes locked.
Julian sat on the bench, elbows resting on his knees, watching every movement like a hawk. The whistle hadn't even blown, but his muscles were already tense, coiled like springs.
The referee's whistle pierced the air.
Kickoff.
Ricky tapped it forward.
To Leo.
The ball rolled smoothly across the grass—clean, crisp, alive.
Leo didn't hesitate.
He took the ball with a light touch, his body already turning as if he were dancing with the pressure.
El Monte's midfield surged forward, but Leo—composed as ever—stepped through the first man with a sidestep and a shoulder dip.
Julian leaned forward slightly on the bench. His eyes followed the movement.
He wasn't just watching.
He was learning.
Leo played the ball wide to Felix, who was already sprinting down the right channel.
El Monte's defenders reacted late.
Felix controlled it in stride and whipped a low pass toward the top of the box.
Ricky was there, back to goal, trying to pivot—
But the center back, Dominic Reyes, closed in hard.
CLACK!
A clean tackle.
Dominic didn't just win the ball—he dominated the moment.
The ball spilled out to midfield where Aaron cleaned it up.
He reset the tempo, passing back to Ethan, and Lincoln regained shape.
On the sideline, Coach Owens folded his arms, voice like steel.
"Don't force it! Reset and break them down!"
Julian narrowed his eyes.
This wasn't like training.
This was war.
And he?
He was waiting for his turn in the trenches.