Chapter 6: The City of Second Chances
Gray dawn leaked through the thin, yellowed curtains like spilled dishwater. Marc Evans—Martin Ostin no longer—woke on the thin mattress laid directly on the concrete floor. His back ached from the lack of support, his quads burned from yesterday’s impromptu trial, and his right calf twitched with the memory of every sprint. The one-room apartment smelled of damp concrete, yesterday’s takeout grease, and the faint metallic tang of old pipes. No marble corridors. No quiet staff gliding past with fresh towels. No legacy pressing against his lungs like humidity.
For the first time in years, the silence felt like freedom instead of punishment.
He rolled to his feet, stretched until joints popped, then pulled on plain black running gear—no logos, no sponsor patches, nothing that could whisper Ostin. Hood up, cap low. He slipped out the narrow stairwell and hit the streets of Westbridge.
The city was grittier than anything he’d known back home. Cracked sidewalks buckled underfoot. Graffiti sprawled across brick walls in violent neon—tags, murals, half-finished protests. Food trucks were already firing up, the sizzle of eggs and chorizo cutting through the morning chill. He ran. Past shuttered factories, past early-shift workers smoking outside bodegas, past kids kicking a deflated soccer ball against a chain-link fence. He ran until his lungs screamed and sweat stung his eyes, pushing harder every time Damien’s voicemail tried to surface in his head.
Come back. Please.
He shoved the echo down with another stride. Faster. Farther. Until the hollow in his chest felt less like absence and more like space he could breathe in.
By mid-morning he was back at the Westbridge United academy grounds. The floodlights were off; the grass still carried a silver sheen of dew. A handful of trialists milled near the entrance—nervous energy crackling like static. Most were local boys, eighteen or nineteen, carrying second-hand boots and dreams too big for their frames. Marc kept his head down, cap shadowing his face. No one gave him a second glance. No one cared who he’d been.
Coach Reyes—stocky ex-midfielder, scar slicing through his left eyebrow like a old knife fight—stood at the touchline with arms crossed and a whistle dangling from his neck. He blew it once, sharp.
“Two-touch, small-sided. Four v four. Show me hunger, not pedigree. First to five wins the round. Losers run suicides.”
Marc slotted in at striker without a word. The ball came to him almost immediately—bouncing, awkward. First touch: inside foot trap, soft as a whisper. Second touch: spin past the defender’s lunging slide, hips low, body coiled. He drove forward three steps and slotted it low past the keeper’s dive. Goal.
Teammates muttered. Someone whistled low.
Next sequence: a chipped cross from the right. Marc timed his run, rose, met the ball at the peak of his leap—clean header, powerful, angled down and in. Net rippled. 2–0.
Reyes watched without expression, but his eyes never left Marc.
Thirty minutes later the drill ended. Marc’s side won four of six rounds. Sweat soaked his hoodie; his breathing came steady, controlled. Reyes jerked his chin.
“You. Over here.”
Marc jogged across, wiping his face on his sleeve.
Reyes studied him like he was reading fine print. “You move like you’ve played pro. Where?”
“College,” Marc said flatly. “Small school up north. Nothing big.”
Reyes snorted. “Bullshit. But I don’t need your life story. I need goals.” He glanced toward the first-team training pitches in the distance. “Lopez tore his ACL two weeks ago. First team’s short a striker. Reserves train tomorrow at eight. You survive the week without pissing me off, you’re in the mix. Don’t fuck it up.”
Marc nodded once. Inside, something tight and painful uncoiled—relief laced with guilt. This was escape. Not betrayal.
Wasn’t it?
Evening came fast. He stopped at a corner store on the walk back—cheap protein bars, instant noodles, a liter of water. Back in the apartment he sat cross-legged on the floor, eating cold noodles straight from the pot. The single bulb overhead buzzed faintly. He stared at the bare wall opposite, at the single nail hole where someone else’s picture had once hung.
When the silence became too loud, he powered on the phone.
Notifications flooded the screen like blood from a reopened wound.
Elena: Where are you? The club is in chaos. Call me.
Club PR: Martin we need a statement. Media is asking questions.
Teammates: variations of bro wtf and you good?
Damien’s number was still blocked, but a new unknown number had sent one message, timestamped forty minutes ago.
Found your flight. You’re not invisible. —D
Marc’s stomach dropped through the floor. He deleted the thread, powered the phone off again, and stared at the dark screen until his reflection stared back—hollow-eyed, jaw set.
A sharp knock at the door.
He froze. Heart slammed once, twice.
Through the peephole: empty hallway. No one.
He cracked the door on the chain. Nothing. Then he looked down.
A small, unmarked package sat on the mat. Plain brown paper. His fake name—Marc Evans—scrawled in thick black marker.
He snatched it inside, shut and locked the door, chain rattling.
Tore the paper open.
Inside: a single Ostin City FC training sock. Navy blue with white trim. Still grass-stained at the toe, still carrying the faint scent of turf and liniment.
Tucked deep in the toe: a folded note.
Marc’s fingers shook as he unfolded it.
Damien’s handwriting—sharp, slanted, unmistakable.
You left this in my office after that last session. Come get the rest yourself.
No signature. No threat. Just the quiet certainty of someone who refused to lose.
Marc’s knees gave out. He slid down the door until he sat on the cold floor, sock clutched in one fist, note in the other. Breathing came in shallow, ragged pulls.
He pressed the sock to his face—stupid, desperate—and inhaled. Grass. Sweat. Home.
Tears came hot and fast. He didn’t fight them this time.
Outside, Westbridge hummed on—traffic, distant sirens, the low roar of a city that didn’t know his name and didn’t care.
Inside, Marc Evans realized the truth he’d been running from since the airport:
You can change cities.
You can change names.
You can even change teams.
But you can’t change what lives under your skin.
And Damien Vale lived there—deep, permanent, impossible to outrun.
Marc closed his eyes, sock still pressed to his cheek, and whispered into the dark:
“Come find me, then.”
