NOVEL FOOTBALL GOD SYSTEM: RISE OF A MONARCH Chapter 87 — Arrival
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Chapter 87: Chapter 87 — Arrival

The academy gates slowly disappeared behind the bus.

Sean Nelson watched them until they were gone.

He didn’t look away immediately, the way most of the others did. He kept his eyes on the tall iron frames until the highway curved and the gates vanished behind a row of trees — swallowed by distance, by movement, by the simple fact that the bus wasn’t stopping.

He turned back to the window.

Silent.

Watching.

For years, those gates had represented his entire football world. Every morning he had walked through them half-asleep, boots in hand, the cold air biting at his neck. Every evening he had walked back through them exhausted, legs heavy, but always carrying something — a new touch he had practiced, a lesson from a coach, a mistake he was determined not to repeat.

The training grounds.

The dormitories.

The classrooms.

The endless drills.

The victories.

The failures.

Everything that had shaped him into the player sitting on this bus right now had happened behind those gates. The academy hadn’t just trained him. It had built him. And now he was leaving — not forever, but for something bigger. Something that had lived in the back of his mind since the first time he ever kicked a ball against a wall and imagined a stadium full of people watching.

Professional football.

"Still staring?"

Sean blinked and turned. Damien was watching him from across the aisle, legs stretched out comfortably, arms folded behind his head with the relaxed energy of someone who had already decided the journey was going well.

Sean smiled.

"A little."

Damien shook his head slowly, the way he always did when Sean did something he found both amusing and slightly dramatic.

"You look like someone moving to another country."

Sean laughed — a short, genuine one.

"It kind of feels like it."

Damien said nothing more. He understood. He always understood, even when he didn’t say so.

The bus continued down the highway, cutting through open stretches of motorway where the landscape flattened out into fields and distant hills. Most of the academy players accompanying them were asleep, heads tilted against windows or seats, completely unbothered by the significance of where they were going. Others had earphones in, lost in music. A few were watching football highlights on their phones, probably studying opponents or trying to calm their nerves by drowning them in the game they loved.

Sean did none of those things.

His thoughts were elsewhere.

*Northbridge FC.*

He had looked them up, of course. He had researched them properly — their history, their academy-to-first-team pathway, the players they had developed over the years. Names that now appeared in top-flight football, in European competitions, on international squads. Players who had once been in a situation not entirely different from his. freewebnσvel.cѳm

One of the most respected clubs in the country. The place where future stars were created — not just talented players, but professionals. Men who understood the demands of the game at its highest level. Men who had survived trials exactly like the one waiting for him at the end of this journey.

And now — he had a chance to earn his place there.

---

**⚽ TRIAL COUNTDOWN**

**2 Days Remaining**

---

Sean exhaled slowly.

The system screen faded.

Unlike the early days — when every notification had pulled at his attention, when he had obsessed over every stat change and quest update — it no longer distracted him. The system had become something else entirely over time. Not a crutch. Not a mystery. Just a tool. A clean, efficient instrument that measured his progress and reminded him of what mattered.

Nothing more. Nothing less.

Exactly how he liked it.

---

Hours later, the character of the road changed.

The open motorway gave way to wider streets. Traffic thickened. Buildings grew taller. The bus moved through an interchange and Sean felt the shift in energy around him — players who had been half-asleep were sitting upright now, looking out of windows, adjusting their bags on their laps.

Then Northbridge City opened up around them.

Sean’s eyes widened slightly.

The city was enormous — far larger than it had seemed on any map he’d looked at. Glass buildings caught the afternoon sun and threw it back in long, blinding flashes. Massive roads carried four lanes of traffic in each direction. Modern stadium advertisements stretched across the sides of entire buildings — giant photographs of players in full sprint, in celebration, arms raised, faces lit with the kind of joy that only came from achieving something that had cost everything.

Football banners hung from lamp posts down the main boulevard.

Football shops occupied ground-floor units, their windows filled with kits and boots and framed photographs.

Football schools. Football clinics. Academies with professional-looking signage. Advertising boards featuring local club partnerships.

Football culture — everywhere. In the architecture, in the advertising, in the DNA of the streets themselves.

Damien leaned forward and looked outside properly for the first time since they’d left.

"Okay."

A pause.

"Now I understand why everyone wants to play here."

Sean nodded.

He understood too. This wasn’t just a city that happened to have a football club. This was a city that had been shaped by football, that had grown around it, that measured itself by it. Walking into Northbridge as a footballer meant something different than walking in as anything else.

This place *breathed* football.

The bus continued deeper into the city, winding through streets that grew progressively more polished, more deliberate — the kind of roads that led somewhere important. Then, finally, it slowed.

Around the bus, every conversation stopped.

Players who had been sleeping suddenly became alert, the instinct for competition waking them faster than any alarm could. Earphones came out. Phones disappeared into pockets.

Coach Adrian stood from his seat at the front, steadying himself against the movement of the bus.

"We’re here."

The bus came to a full stop.

Complete silence.

Every player looked outside.

And then they saw it.

The *Northbridge FC Training Complex*.

The facility was enormous — far bigger than Sean had imagined from photographs, from the club’s website, from anything he’d seen on a screen. Scale changed everything. Photographs compressed things, made them manageable. Standing before the real version was something else entirely.

Multiple full-sized pitches stretched out across manicured grass, their white lines crisp and precise. Modern buildings rose behind them — low, functional, clearly expensive. Recovery centers with glass frontage. Specialist training halls. Conditioning rooms visible through wide windows. Medical facilities. Analysis suites. All of it connected by clean paved paths and bordered by immaculate landscaping.

Everything looked elite.

Professional.

Built for people who had already committed to excellence — and designed to push them further.

Sean felt his heartbeat increase.

This was the level he wanted. Not just as an idea, not just as a distant goal — but *this*, specifically. This compound. These pitches. This standard.

This was where he belonged.

Or at least — where he hoped he belonged.

The bus doors opened with a hiss of compressed air.

One by one, the players stepped down onto the tarmac. Sean was one of the last off — not deliberately, just taking his time, looking. Taking it in. The air outside felt different from the academy. Crisper. More charged.

He immediately noticed the atmosphere on the ground.

Nobody was relaxed.

Even the players who had appeared calm on the bus had changed the moment their boots touched the ground here. Jaws were set. Eyes were focused and scanning. Shoulders were back. Everyone was carrying themselves with the careful, controlled energy of someone who had worked too long and too hard to waste this moment by being anything less than sharp.

Because every player here wanted the same thing.

A contract.

A future.

A career.

A man in a Northbridge tracksuit walked toward them with unhurried, measured steps. He moved the way people moved when they had no need to rush — when their authority was already established before they opened their mouth.

"Welcome."

His voice was calm. Even. Professional in the way that had nothing to do with performance and everything to do with genuine competence.

"I’m Assistant Coach Martin Blake."

Sean recognized the name immediately. The man who had made the phone call. The voice that had told him he had been selected.

Martin waited a beat, letting the name settle, letting the players take him in properly.

"You have all been selected because somebody saw potential in you."

He paused.

"But potential means nothing here."

No one shifted. No one looked away. The words landed the way they were intended to — not as a warning, but as a clarification. A re-setting of the terms.

Martin’s gaze moved slowly across the assembled group.

"You will be judged entirely on what you do on this pitch."

Another deliberate pause.

"Nothing else."

The message was completely clear, and Sean felt it land with the kind of weight that didn’t disappear quickly.

Nobody cared about academy reputations. Nobody cared about past achievements, about how many goals you had scored in youth football, about what coaches in your home city had said about you. Whatever story you had told before today ended at these gates.

Performance was everything.

Performance was the *only* thing.

---

The group was led toward the accommodation building — a modern block with the clean, no-frills design of something built for functionality rather than comfort. Sean carried his bag quietly, walking near the back of the group, absorbing details.

As they entered the dormitory corridor and doors were assigned, he became fully aware of something that the bus journey had slightly obscured.

The other trialists.

Not just his group — the players who had come with him from his academy. But *all* of them. Gathered in corridors and common areas, bags at their sides, expressions carefully composed.

Dozens of them.

Maybe more.

Players from different academies across the country. Different cities, different development systems, different backgrounds — but all arriving at the same threshold. All carrying the same hunger. All having been told, at some point by someone they respected, that they were good enough to be here.

The competition suddenly felt real.

Very real.

Not the abstract version he had held in his mind during training. The concrete, physical, standing-three-feet-away version.

---

Sean found his assigned room at the end of the second corridor.

Simple. Clean. A bed, a wardrobe, a desk, a window that looked out over one of the smaller training pitches. Professional and anonymous in the way that places are when they’re designed to be temporary — functional enough to rest in, sparse enough not to get too comfortable.

He placed his bag on the bed and sat beside it.

For a few moments — silence.

Just the distant sound of other players moving through corridors, doors opening and closing, muffled voices.

Then the door opened.

A tall player filled the doorway — broad-shouldered, carrying two large bags with the easy strength of someone built for the physical demands of the game. He stopped when he saw Sean, taking a quick inventory of the room the way footballers always did when they walked into a new space.

Sean stood.

The newcomer’s expression shifted — from neutral assessment to something warmer.

"Roommate?"

Sean nodded.

"Looks like it."

The player dropped his bags with a controlled thud, crossed the room, and extended his hand.

"Lucas."

Sean shook it firmly.

"Sean."

Lucas raised an eyebrow — a slight but unmistakable movement.

"The Sean?"

Sean let out a quiet breath.

*Already.*

Lucas laughed — genuinely, not mockingly. The kind of laugh that deflated tension rather than creating it.

"Relax. I watched your academy highlights."

Sean sat back down.

"Hopefully the good ones."

Lucas grinned as he started unpacking.

"Mostly."

The tension — what little had formed in those first few seconds — disappeared completely. At least his roommate seemed like a normal human being. Sean had encountered enough footballers who performed confidence so aggressively it was exhausting to be around them. Lucas wasn’t that.

---

The evening moved quickly.

Orientation covered the rules of the facility, the schedule for the trial period, the standards expected of every player on and off the pitch. Then dinner — and the dining hall was loud with the particular noise of young men who were competitive by nature trying to read each other across tables.

Trialists everywhere. Conversations starting and stopping. Eyes moving. Everyone assessing without wanting to be seen assessing.

Sean carried his tray toward an empty table near the far wall.

Before he reached it, a voice cut through the noise behind him.

"Mind if I join you?"

He turned.

Adrian Cross.

The Northbridge youth star was carrying his own tray, expression relaxed, as though the weight of the room didn’t particularly concern him. Around them, Sean noticed the ripple — heads turning, whispers starting. The academy duel between the two of them had apparently traveled ahead of them.

Sean pulled out the chair across from his.

"Sure."

Adrian sat. For a moment neither of them said anything — just ate. The whispers around them continued. Neither acknowledged them.

Eventually Adrian looked up.

"How are the nerves?"

Sean took a measured bite.

"Not bad."

Adrian nodded slowly, as if the answer confirmed something he had already suspected.

"Good."

A pause.

"Because tomorrow won’t be easy."

Sean had known that since the moment he accepted the invitation. Nothing worthwhile had ever been easy. Not the first day at the academy, not the fights for starting positions, not the match that had put him in front of the right eyes at the right time. Difficulty was just the standard cost of anything that actually mattered.

Adrian leaned back in his chair, fingers loosely around his glass.

"There are forty-eight trialists."

Sean’s eyes narrowed slightly.

*Forty-eight.*

Adrian held his gaze, reading the reaction.

"Know how many contracts are available?"

Sean already suspected the answer was going to make the room feel smaller. He asked anyway.

"How many?"

Adrian raised his hand and held up two fingers.

"Two."

The number sat in the air between them.

Sean absorbed it fully.

Forty-eight players. Two contracts. A selection ratio that left no room for performances that were merely good, merely impressive, merely promising. You had to be undeniable. You had to be the kind of player that left the coaches with no real choice.

Adrian smiled — not unkindly.

"Welcome to professional football."

---

That night, sleep didn’t come easily.

Sean lay in bed with the ceiling above him and the quiet sounds of the dormitory block around him — distant footsteps, a door closing somewhere down the corridor, the low murmur of Lucas already asleep in the other bed.

His mind was running.

*Forty-eight players. Two contracts.*

He let the numbers settle rather than fight them. The odds weren’t good. They had never been good. When he first arrived at the academy as a kid with secondhand boots and no guarantees, the odds hadn’t been good. When he had fought for recognition in a squad full of players with more experience and better resources, the odds hadn’t been good. When he had pushed for a starting position that no one had offered him — that he had taken by refusing to be denied — the odds hadn’t been good.

Yet here he was.

Still standing.

Still moving forward.

---

**⚽ NEW QUEST**

**Earn A Professional Contract**

**Objective:**

Finish Among Top Two Trialists

**Reward:**

Professional Player Package

---

Sean read it once.

Then smiled — quietly, to himself, in the dark.

Simple. Direct. No ambiguity, no mystery. Just the clearest possible statement of what the next few days were for.

He closed his eyes.

Tomorrow, the evaluations would begin. Tomorrow, forty-eight players would step onto those immaculate pitches and the distance between potential and reality would start to be measured in the only currency that mattered here.

Tomorrow, the first true test of his professional journey would begin.

And Sean Nelson was ready.

END OF Chapter 87

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