Chapter 77: Chapter 77 — Stage Two Begins
The bus ride back to the academy should have been loud. They had won comfortably, the coaching staff were pleased, and several scouts had sat in the stands watching the whole thing unfold. By every measure it had been a good night, the kind that normally left players buzzing for hours, replaying moments in their heads, laughing a little too hard at jokes that weren’t that funny. Instead, the atmosphere inside the bus felt like someone had turned a dial down somewhere and forgotten to turn it back up.
Players talked in small clusters, keeping their voices low. A few watched match highlights on their phones, the tinny audio leaking out from one earbud left dangling. Others had their headphones in and their eyes closed, either sleeping or pretending to. The bus hummed along through the city, and the conversation that did happen stayed careful, almost polite, the way conversation does when people are aware of something they haven’t agreed to name yet.
Every now and then, someone’s gaze drifted toward Sean Nelson. Not long — a second, maybe two — before they pulled it back and found something else to look at.
Sean sat by the window with his shoulder against the glass, watching the city slide past in long amber streaks. The streetlights came and went. His reflection appeared and disappeared with them. Across the aisle, Damien sat with his elbows on his knees and his eyes on the floor, which was unusual enough that Sean had been tracking it for the better part of twenty minutes without saying anything.
He finally broke the quiet first.
"You’ve been staring at the floor since we left."
Damien looked up. A faint smile appeared at the corner of his mouth, the kind that arrives before words do.
"And you’ve been staring through the window without seeing anything."
Sean couldn’t argue with that. His eyes had been pointed at the passing city, but his attention had been somewhere else entirely — fixed on two words that kept surfacing and refusing to settle. Stage Two. He didn’t know what it meant in any practical sense. Didn’t know who had built whatever system was feeding him these notifications, or who was on the other end of it watching. But he knew it existed. That certainty had been growing for days, quiet and persistent, and it bothered him in a way he couldn’t fully articulate, because the unknown itself didn’t scare him — it was the fact that someone else already knew the shape of what was coming, and he was only just catching up to it.
The system notification appeared without warning, the way they always did now.
*Phase Transition Pending. Estimated Initiation Window: Unknown.*
He frowned at it. It vanished before he could think too hard about what it meant.
That was becoming a pattern. The system had started revealing less. Either it was holding information back deliberately, or it had decided he was ready to work things out without being handed answers. Neither possibility sat comfortably with him.
Damien noticed the shift in his expression.
"It happened again?"
"The system," Sean said.
Damien exhaled through his nose. "Figures."
Sean looked at him directly. "You know more than you’re saying."
For a few seconds Damien didn’t respond, and the silence was specific — not the silence of someone gathering a thought, but of someone choosing how much of it to hand over. When he finally answered, it wasn’t reassuring.
"I know enough to be worried."
"About me?"
Damien shook his head. "No." He paused. "About what comes after."
Neither of them said anything more. Outside, the academy gates materialized in the distance, lit from below and rising from the dark like something from a photograph Sean had seen a hundred times without ever really looking at. The bus slowed, turned, passed through. The ride was over. But Sean couldn’t shake the feeling that it was only one thing ending among several others just starting.
---
The dormitory hallways were empty by the time he got back to his room. He sat at his desk with the lights off, the only illumination coming from the moon through the window, which threw a pale rectangle across the floor and left the rest of the room in layered shadow. On any other night he would have pulled up match footage. He had a system for it — he’d rewind to moments where his positioning had been a half-step off, or where his first touch had cost him a yard, and he’d sit with those clips until he understood what he’d missed. It was the kind of work most players found tedious and he’d always found almost meditative.
Tonight none of it felt relevant.
Because every time he tried to redirect his attention, his thoughts circled back to the same question, wearing a groove in him. Who was observing him? Helix. The unknown figures he’d registered in the stadium, half-caught in peripheral vision and then gone. The correction force — whatever that was — and the reports he’d only partly understood. He’d been pulling at a thread for months now, and with each pull the hidden world on the other end had gotten larger, not smaller. Whatever he’d first suspected was happening to him, the reality was bigger than that. He’d barely grazed the surface of it.
Three knocks at the door stopped him.
Slow. Evenly spaced. Deliberate.
He looked at the door for a moment before he moved. It was nearly midnight, and players didn’t knock on each other’s doors at midnight unless something was wrong, and even then they didn’t knock like that — like they’d counted the seconds between each tap. He stood and opened it.
Coach Adrian was standing in the hallway, and Sean blinked at him the way you blink when a piece of the world shows up somewhere it doesn’t belong. The coach’s eyes moved briefly down the empty corridor before he spoke.
"Walk with me."
No greeting. No explanation offered or apparently expected. Just those three words, delivered in a tone that didn’t leave much room for anything other than agreement. Sean grabbed his jacket from the back of the desk chair and followed.
---
The night air outside was sharp and cold in a way the dormitory hadn’t prepared him for, and he felt it across his shoulders as they crossed the grounds toward the training fields. Coach Adrian walked in silence. Sean matched his pace and kept his own counsel. There was something about the way the coach moved — unhurried, not nervous exactly, but carrying something — that told Sean clearly enough this wasn’t a conversation about set pieces or the weekend’s fixture. He’d learned early that Adrian communicated differently when something mattered. He went quieter, not louder.
They reached the main pitch. The grass was dark and still. The floodlights on the far side of the facility threw just enough ambient glow to make the white lines of the pitch faintly visible, like something half-remembered. The coach stopped near midfield and stood there for a moment without speaking, and Sean waited.
"How much do you remember from before?" Adrian asked.
"Before what?"
The coach looked at him. "Before your evolution accelerated."
The word landed. Sean felt the precision of it — not improvement, not development, not growth. Evolution. The same word the system used. He hadn’t told the coach about the system. He was almost certain of that. Which meant Adrian had arrived at that word from somewhere else entirely.
"Why are you asking?"
Adrian exhaled slowly. "Because I’m trying to determine whether you’re still experiencing football normally."
The question hit differently than he’d expected. Not invasive, exactly — more like the question had been asked at the exact moment he was least equipped to dismiss it. Was he? He stood there in the cold with the pitch stretching away from him in both directions, and he genuinely didn’t know how to answer. The silence that filled the gap was more honest than anything he could have said.
The coach nodded, as though the silence had confirmed something.
"I thought so," he said, and started walking again.
"Years ago," he said, his voice lower now, carrying only as far as it needed to, "I met a player who changed the way everyone around him experienced the game."
Sean listened.
"Not because of his quality alone. Every generation throws up quality. This was different. The players around him stopped reacting to what was happening on the pitch. They started reacting to him."
Sean didn’t interrupt. He knew where this was going, or thought he did, but he let it come at its own pace.
"Who was he?" he asked.
"The name doesn’t matter." Adrian paused. "He’s gone now."
"Gone?"
"Disappeared from professional football entirely." The coach’s expression shifted — not dramatically, just enough. "One day he was the most gifted player I’d ever worked with. The next, he was gone. No explanation. No announcement. Just gone."
The cold felt heavier suddenly, pressing in from the edges.
"What happened?" ƒreewebηoveℓ.com
Adrian stopped walking. He looked out toward the dark mass of the stadium beyond the academy grounds, the structure barely distinguishable from the night sky behind it.
"No one knows." He was quiet for a moment. "The strange part wasn’t his ability. It was the effect. Players around him stopped reacting to the game. They started reacting to him. Avoidance. Hesitation. Their decision-making shifted. The game itself seemed to reshape around his presence."
Sean kept his face still.
Because what the coach was describing wasn’t abstract. He’d been living inside it. The way opponents pulled up when they shouldn’t. The way teammates seemed to orient themselves around him without meaning to. The hesitation in people’s eyes in the moments before they acted, a half-beat of something that didn’t belong to the game.
Coach Adrian stopped and looked at him directly.
"Tell me honestly. Do you think you’re influencing people?"
The question hung between them in the cold air. Sean could have turned it sideways. Could have offered something vague and let the conversation shift. It would have been easy enough.
Instead he said: "Yes."
The coach closed his eyes for a moment. When he opened them again, the expression had changed — not surprised, but landed somewhere past the point of hoping he was wrong.
"Then be careful," he said.
"Of what?"
Adrian looked up at the night sky. He was quiet for long enough that Sean thought he might not answer.
"Of enjoying it."
The warning was strange in the way certain truths are strange — you hear them and you know immediately that they’re pointing at something real, even if you can’t see it clearly yet. Sean opened his mouth to ask what the coach meant. He didn’t get the chance.
The system erupted.
*EMERGENCY NOTIFICATION. Stage Two Initialization Detected. Location Lock Acquired. Event Beginning.*
His vision blurred. Then it sharpened — harder than normal, like the world had been brought into focus by hands other than his own. And then the academy grounds weren’t there anymore.
Not physically. It was perceptual — a shift in the reality of what he was experiencing, as though the world he’d been standing in had been a layer placed over another one, and that layer had been peeled back. The pitch vanished. The cold night air vanished. The distant shape of the stadium dissolved. What replaced all of it was another stadium entirely — enormous and impossible, rows of seating climbing into darkness on all sides, its scale suggesting something that couldn’t exist within the ordinary dimensions of an afternoon or an evening. There were no lights. There was no sound. There was only the field beneath his feet, identical in its markings to any other pitch, and one figure standing at the center circle with his hands clasped behind his back.
Helix.
The man stood with the easy stillness of someone who had been waiting for a specific thing and was not at all surprised by its arrival. A faint smile crossed his face.
"You’re later than I expected."
Sean’s jaw tightened. "Where am I?"
Helix glanced around at the impossible stadium, unhurried about it. "Stage Two."
The weight of those words was not dramatic. It was specific. Because every previous encounter with this man had felt like something happening at the margins — a test running alongside real life, probing without fully committing. This felt different. Planned with intent. Official in a way the others hadn’t been.
Helix began walking toward him slowly. The atmosphere changed with each step — not threatening, but significant in the way that a door opening onto a large room is significant, the sense of space expanding in a direction you hadn’t accounted for.
"You adapted faster than most," Helix said. He kept walking. "You survived correction. You resisted external influence. You remained stable." He stopped several meters away, and for the first time since Sean had encountered him, the smile disappeared entirely. What was left in its place was something more serious and, in its way, more honest. "Which means the real evaluation can begin."
The stadium lights came on.
Not all at once — one after another, floodlight after floodlight, thousands of them firing in sequence until the darkness retreated from every corner of the arena and the full scale of the place became visible. Sean turned slowly, taking it in.
The stands weren’t empty.
Thousands of figures sat in absolute silence, motionless in their rows, watching. They didn’t shift. They didn’t murmur. They simply observed, with an attention so total and so still that the word crowd didn’t apply to them. These weren’t spectators who had come to watch football.
Every one of them had their eyes fixed on him.
*STAGE TWO. OFFICIALLY COMMENCED.*
Sean stood at the center of it — the lights, the silence, the weight of thousands of eyes — and felt the full shape of what he’d walked into settle around him like something that had been waiting a long time to close.