Chapter 188: Coach Chivu
"I have solved it," Julián Álvarez announced, holding up a slice of Quattro Formaggi pizza like it was a sacred text. "A pizza is not a flatbread with a hat. It is an open-face cheese sandwich that you are legally required to share."
Lautaro Martínez, who was in the middle of a conversation with Coach Chivu, just buried his face in his hands. "Julián," he sighed, his voice muffled. "For my soul. Please stop having thoughts about pizza."
"It's a valid point, though, Captain," Cole Palmer chimed in, taking a sip of orange juice. "If you fold it, it becomes a calzone, which is technically a pizza dumpling. The legal ramifications are staggering."
Coach Chivu, who was in a shockingly good mood, actually chuckled, a deep, rumbling sound that made everyone at the table turn in surprise. "Let him have his fun," the coach said, a rare, genuine smile on his face. "After the way they played, they can call the pizza whatever they want."
The room was filled with the easy, contented buzz of a team that had been to war together and emerged victorious. They were more than a team; they were a family, a loud, dysfunctional, pizza-obsessed family.
But amidst the external joy, Leon was fighting a quiet, internal battle.
The two paths presented by his system pulsed in his mind, a constant, silent ultimatum.
[Path A: Maximize Tactical Efficiency & Career Progression.]
[Path B: Prioritize Personal Relationships & Emotional Well-being.]
He looked at Path A. He saw a gleaming vision of the future: a cabinet full of trophies, the Ballon d'Or in his hands, his stats reaching the legendary 99.
It was everything he had ever dreamed of as a boy kicking a ball against a wall. It was the path of greatness, a cold, logical, efficient climb to the top.
Then he looked at Path B. He didn't see trophies. He saw the laughing faces of his teammates around the table.
He saw his mother's proud, tear-filled eyes. He saw the warm, easy smile of a girl who studied art history and wasn't afraid to call him out for wearing a hat indoors. He saw... happiness.
The system wanted him to choose. To sacrifice one for the other.
To become either a perfect machine or a happy man.
He looked around the restaurant. He saw Lautaro, the fierce captain, now laughing at one of Julián's terrible jokes. He saw Bastoni, the redeemed hero, locked in a passionate argument with Dimarco about who had the best taste in music. He saw Chivu, the terrifying coach, looking on with the quiet pride of a father.
He had never felt more connected to these people, more a part of something real and meaningful. How could he possibly choose a path that might compromise that? But at the same time, how could he abandon the ambition that had driven him his entire life?
In his mind's eye, he did something the system probably hadn't anticipated. He reached out and mentally grabbed both pulsing options.
He gritted his teeth and dragged them together, trying to force them to merge into one.
I refuse, he thought, a fierce, defiant energy surging through him. I won't choose. I'll have both.
The system in his head seemed to short-circuit.
The two paths flickered violently, and then the screen went blank, replaced by a single, flashing line of text.
[SYSTEM ERROR: Contradictory user input received. Priority protocol cannot be established. Recalibrating... Recalibrating...]
Leon took a deep breath, a slow smile spreading across his face. He didn't know what "recalibrating" meant, but it felt like a victory. He had broken the rules of his own power.
The party finally began to wind down in the early hours of the morning.
The players, full of pizza and pride, began to filter out, saying their goodnights with back-pats and promises to see each other at training.
"Don't be late!" Chivu called out, his good mood still intact. "The Scudetto doesn't win itself!"
Leon was one of the last to leave, saying a final goodbye to the restaurant owner.
As he stepped out into the cool Milan night, he saw a familiar, imposing figure waiting for him by the door. Coach Chivu.
The easy, post-victory calm in Leon's stomach instantly evaporated, replaced by a frantic swarm of butterflies.
He knows. He knows. He's going to make me run laps around the Colosseum.
"Leon," Chivu said, his voice quiet, all traces of the earlier good humor gone. "A word."
"Yes, Coach?" Leon said, trying to sound as innocent as possible.
Chivu was silent for a long moment, his intense gaze fixed on Leon. "You had lunch with my daughter."
It wasn't a question. It was a statement of fact. Leon's blood ran cold.
He opened his mouth, but no words came out.
He just stood there, caught, like a deer in the headlights of a very large, very scary tactical bus.
"I... uh... yes, Coach," he finally managed to stammer. "It was... we just had some pasta. It was very... respectful pasta."
Chivu didn't react. He just continued to stare. "Sofia is a smart girl," he said, his voice a low growl. "She is kind. She is studying to be something great. She is the most important thing in my world. More important than any trophy. More important than any league title. Do you understand me?"
"Yes, Coach," Leon whispered, his heart pounding.
"Absolutely. One hundred percent."
Chivu took a step closer, and the full force of his legendary intensity was now focused entirely on Leon. "I am your coach. It is my job to make you the best player you can possibly be. But I am also her father. And it is my job to protect her."
He paused, a dark, dangerous glint in his eye.
"So, here is the deal," Chivu said, his voice dropping to a terrifyingly calm whisper. "You break her heart, I break your legs."
Leon's eyes widened in horror.
"But," the coach added, a cold, predatory smile slowly spreading across his face, "only in a way that looks like a tragic, unavoidable training ground accident. We are clear?"