Chapter 260: Call me [1]
Leon and Byon walked side-by-side, their arms slung over each other's shoulders, two exhausted warriors who had just fought each other to a standstill.
Byon's bombshell of a revelation was a quiet, personal grenade that had just gone off in the middle of Leon's triumphant, chaotic world.
"He just wanted to know if the champions of Europe might be interested in a trade. Their 'unhappy' playmaker for a certain German-born left-back..."
Leon's brain was still trying to process the sheer, audacious, beautiful insanity of it all. Flavio Briatore, their new, flamboyant president, had seen the chessboard and decided to flip it over and suggest a game of poker instead.
"He's joking, right?" Leon finally managed to say, his voice a low, disbelieving whisper.
"Briatore. He has to be joking."
Byon just shrugged, a tired, wry grin on his face.
"With a guy like that? Who knows? All I know is, Pep just laughed for a solid five minutes and then told my agent to tell your president that I am 'not for sale, even for a very fast car'."
They reached the part of the tunnel where the paths to the home and away dressing rooms diverged. They stopped, a silent, profound understanding passing between them.
"That was a war out there," Byon said, his voice full of a deep, professional respect.
"It was," Leon agreed. He clapped his friend on the shoulder.
"See you in Manchester."
The Liverpool dressing room was not a place of celebration.
It was a strange, beautiful, and slightly frustrated cathedral of pride.
They had been humiliated, and they had fought their way back from the dead.
A 3-3 draw against the best team in the world, after being 3-0 down, felt less like two points dropped and more like a statement of incredible, defiant character.
"I still can't feel my legs," Andy Robertson announced to the room, slumping onto the bench. "I think De Bruyne's ghost is still haunting my midfield."
"But the comeback!" Trent Alexander-Arnold said, a fierce, proud light in his eyes. "Did you hear the crowd? They didn't care that we drew. They cared that we fought."
Julián Álvarez, who had been acquired in a shock late-window transfer from Man City and was now a beloved, if profoundly weird, part of the Liverpool family, was staring at the ceiling with a look of deep, philosophical concentration.
"So," he began, and the room quieted expectantly. "A draw is one point. But a comeback from three-nil down is at least two 'emotional bonus points', yes? So, did we win the 'Emotional League' today? This is very important for the morale standings."
The room erupted in a wave of tired, happy laughter.
Arne Slot walked in, his suit immaculate, his face a mask of calm, controlled pride.
"I have never been prouder of a draw in my entire career," he began, his voice a low, powerful rumble that filled the room.
"For forty minutes, they were perfect. They were the champions of Europe, and they reminded us why." He looked around the room, his eyes lingering on each player. "But for the next fifty minutes, we were Liverpool. You were a storm. You were a force of nature. You looked into the eyes of the best team in the world, and you did not flinch."
He paused, a slow, dangerous smile spreading across his face.
"They threw their best punch. They knocked us to the canvas. And we got off the floor and punched them back, twice." He clapped his hands once, a sharp, decisive sound.
"Today, you didn't just earn one point. You sent a message to every single team in this league. A message that says you can hurt us, but you cannot kill us. Rest. Recover. You are a special group, and you have just proven it to the world."
The drive home was a quiet, contemplative affair.
The streets were still buzzing with fans, a river of red scarves and happy, tired faces. Leon felt a profound sense of belonging.
But Byon's words, the final, absurd twist in his transfer saga, kept replaying in his mind.
A trade.
It was a ridiculous, impossible idea.
But it was also a reminder that in this new, high-stakes world, he was no longer just a player; he was an asset, a chess piece in a game played by giants.
He got home to find his mother waiting for him, a plate of his favorite pasta already on the table.
"You were magnificent," she said, pulling him into a hug, her voice thick with pride. "Even when you were losing, you were magnificent."
"Thanks, Mom," he said, the simple, unconditional love a perfect balm for his weary soul.
They ate, and he told her about the game, about the comeback, about Julián's 'emotional bonus points'.
He didn't tell her about Briatore's crazy trade proposal. Some things were just too absurd to explain.
The next day was a designated rest day. No training. No tactics. Just peace. Leon woke up late, the aches and pains of the battle a pleasant, hard-earned reminder of the war they had just survived.
He decided he needed to clear his head, to wash away the last of the game's intensity. He needed the sea.
He drove out to the coast, to a quiet, windswept beach he had discovered during his first few weeks in England.
The sky was a vast, dramatic canvas of grey and white, the sea a churning, powerful expanse of deep blue.
He walked along the sand, the salty wind whipping his white hair, the roar of the waves a beautiful, cleansing sound.
He wasn't Leon, the world-record signing.
He wasn't the 'Creative Apex'. He was just a boy on a beach, feeling small and insignificant in the face of the vast, beautiful, and utterly indifferent ocean. It was a wonderful feeling.
He thought about everything. He thought about the impossible choice he had faced, the paths not taken. He thought about Liverpool, about his new family, about the beautiful, chaotic, and utterly brilliant world he was now a part of. He thought about Sofia, a quiet, happy smile on his face. He had made the right choice. He was home.
As he stood there, at the edge of the world, feeling a profound sense of peace and clarity, his phone buzzed in his pocket. He almost ignored it. He didn't want the outside world to intrude on this perfect, quiet moment. But a strange, inexplicable curiosity got the better of him.
He pulled out his phone. It was a message from an unknown number, but the Italian country code was a familiar, jarring presence. His heart did a little nervous flutter.
Chivu?
He opened the message. It wasn't from his old coach.
The message was simple, direct, and written in a flamboyant, almost comically arrogant, style that he had only ever read about in the newspapers.
[From: F.B.]
[Subject: Unfinished Business]
[My Boy,
I hear you are enjoying the English weather. A shame. The sun is much nicer in Milan.
Your performance yesterday was... acceptable. But a draw is a draw. Here, we only celebrate victories.
We have unfinished business to discuss, you and I. That silly little clause in your contract.
Call me.]
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