NOVEL FOOTBALL GOD SYSTEM: RISE OF A MONARCH Chapter 91 - 92 :The First salary dreams

FOOTBALL GOD SYSTEM: RISE OF A MONARCH

Chapter 91 - 92 :The First salary dreams
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Chapter 91: Chapter 92 :The First salary dreams

Author’s note : Please kindly read the next Chapter first, there was an error during upload on my side.

Thank you for your patience and support..

Keep your comments, gifts, Golden tickets, Power stones coming .

This author appreciate you...

The morning session ended with Sean Nelson lying flat on the training grass, arms spread at his sides, staring up at a sky that was pale and indifferent to the state of his legs.

He was exhausted.

Not the familiar exhaustion of the academy — the exhaustion he had learned to manage, had built a relationship with over years of early sessions and double training days and recovery runs that nobody asked him to do but that he did anyway. This was something different. Something that reached deeper into the muscle, that settled into the joints rather than just the surface tissue, that suggested his body had been operating at a level it was not yet fully calibrated for.

Professional football was different.

He had known it intellectually since before he arrived. He had heard it from coaches, from older players who had made the transition, from every piece of content he had ever consumed about what the step up actually required. He had understood it as a concept.

Now he understood it as a physical fact.

Everything was different. The speed at which the ball moved between players. The physicality of challenges that arrived harder and faster than anything the academy had prepared him for. The pressure that existed in every pocket of space, even during drills that the academy equivalent would have felt comfortable and controlled. Even the simplest exercises — passing patterns, positional rondos, technical repetitions — felt like they had been compressed and intensified, the margins reduced to a point where errors that would have been recoverable at academy level became immediate problems here.

Northbridge FC was not interested in potential as a concept.

They cared about performance. About results. About the ability to produce quality consistently, not occasionally, not when the conditions were favourable and the opposition was manageable, but every session, every drill, every moment that a coach’s eye might rest on you and form a judgment.

Sean sat up slowly, forearms on knees, and looked at the state of his fellow development squad members scattered across the grass around him. Several were already moving toward the locker room with the purposeful economy of people who had learned not to waste energy on anything unnecessary. Others sat in small groups, quiet, absorbing.

Footsteps approached and stopped nearby.

Sean looked up.

Ryan Holt stood over him — twenty-three, reserve team captain, a central midfielder who had been at Northbridge for four years and had the particular ease of movement that came from being completely comfortable in an environment that was still new and slightly overwhelming to everyone around him. He was one of the most respected players in the development squad, not because he was the most talented but because he was the most consistently reliable — the kind of player coaches built systems around precisely because they knew what they were going to get from him every single day.

He was holding a spare water bottle loosely at his side.

He tossed it toward Sean without ceremony.

"Not bad."

Sean caught it.

"Thanks."

Ryan shrugged — a minimal movement, more acknowledgment than enthusiasm.

"You survived."

Sean took a long drink, then lowered the bottle and looked at him.

"That’s the standard?"

Ryan’s mouth curved into something that was almost a smirk.

"For the first week?"

A pause.

"Yes."

Sean held the answer for a moment. It landed differently than it might have a week ago. Surviving — just enduring the demands of the environment, just not collapsing under the weight of the step-up — was considered a meaningful achievement here. Not embarrassing, not a low bar, not a consolation for players who weren’t progressing. A genuine benchmark for the first week in professional football.

He thought about that as Ryan walked away.

Nobody expected him to dominate immediately. Nobody was watching him with impatience, measuring his contribution against a professional standard from day one. The environment had its own timeline — one that allowed for adjustment, for calibration, for the slow process of a player learning what this level demanded before he could begin imposing himself on it.

But Sean was not here to survive.

He was here to rise. And the fact that survival was the expectation simply meant the gap between where he was expected to be and where he intended to go was wider — which was, if anything, an opportunity.

---

The locker room after training had a different energy from the pitch.

The controlled intensity of professional work gave way to something more human — voices overlapping, the particular rhythm of a group of young men who spent enough time together that they had developed their own private language of jokes and references and shorthand. Some were dissecting moments from the session. Others had already moved on entirely, phones out, scrolling through whatever existed outside of Northbridge’s training complex walls.

Sean changed quietly, absorbing the room without performing participation in it. He was the newest arrival. The rhythm here was not yet his rhythm. He listened more than he spoke, which was usually how he learned fastest.

His phone vibrated against the bench.

He glanced at the screen.

*Northbridge FC Administration.*

Sean’s brow creased slightly. He picked it up and opened the message.

The text was brief and functional — the kind of language that club administration used when communicating with players, precise and impersonal.

*Welcome to Northbridge FC Development Squad. Financial registration has been completed. Salary details have been uploaded to your player portal.*

He read it twice.

Then the word that had been abstract for his entire career — a concept, a destination, a thing that existed in the future — became concrete and immediate.

*Salary.*

His salary. Money he would receive for playing football. Not academy expenses, not travel allowances, not the small stipends that academies provided to cover costs. An actual professional wage. The financial recognition that what he did on a football pitch had value in the real world — value that would be converted into numbers and deposited into his account on a schedule.

For a moment he simply stared at the notification.

Then he opened the portal.

The figure appeared on the screen.

It was not millions. Not the numbers attached to the names he read about in transfer news, not the wages that made headlines, not anything that approached the financial reality of the players whose highlights he had watched growing up. It was a development squad salary — a professional wage, yes, but the first rung of a very tall ladder.

To Sean Nelson, sitting in a Northbridge FC locker room at seventeen years old, the son of parents who had watched him chase this from the beginning and had never once told him it was impossible even when it probably looked that way — it looked extraordinary.

Because it wasn’t about the number.

It was about what the number *was.*

It was the first money he would ever earn through football. Not through working a part-time job to fund his training. Not through borrowing time and resources from people who believed in him. Through football. Through the thing he had chosen, the thing he had committed to completely, the thing that had asked everything of him for years and was now — finally, concretely — giving something back.

A slow smile appeared.

It built gradually, the way real ones do — not performed, not conscious, just the physical expression of something too large to contain. It spread until it was completely impossible to hide and Sean wasn’t trying to hide it.

Ryan Holt noticed from across the room immediately.

"What happened?"

Sean looked up from the screen.

"My salary."

The locker room understood instantly. A laugh broke from Ryan — genuine, recognising — and spread to the nearest players before it had finished. Several heads turned. One player pointed.

"Look at that face."

Another leaned back against his locker, nodding.

"First contract salary. Every single time."

Ryan grinned.

"Happens to everyone."

Sean shook his head slowly.

"No."

He said it quietly enough that it drew attention rather than deflecting it. The room settled slightly.

"You don’t understand."

He wasn’t being dramatic. He wasn’t performing humility for the room or constructing a narrative about his background for an audience. He was simply telling the truth. Because the players around him — most of them from academy systems with resources, with structures, with the infrastructure of clubs that had invested significantly in their development — would experience this moment differently than he did. Their first salary would mean something. His meant something *specific.*

He looked back at the screen.

His mother’s face appeared in his mind without invitation — the way she looked on the morning he’d left for Northbridge, standing at the door, composed because she had decided to be composed, her hands wrapped around a mug of tea she’d made too early and barely drunk. His father sitting at the kitchen table, already dressed, having been awake for hours. The years that lived behind both of their faces. The weight they had carried while carrying him.

This wasn’t just money.

It was proof. The specific, tangible, undeniable proof that the path they had all believed in together had been real. That football was not just something Sean chased but something that recognised him back. That the sacrifices — the early mornings, the financial strain, the years of watching their son pour everything into something with no guarantee of return — had resolved into something real.

The locker room had moved on around him. The conversations resumed. Sean sat quietly for another moment with the screen lit in his hand, letting the feeling settle into something he could carry with him.

---

He left the training complex later than most.

Northbridge City was in the full rhythm of its evening — traffic thickening on the main roads, restaurants and cafes filling up, the particular energy of a city that never fully powered down. People moving with purpose and without it, the ordinary texture of a place that was simply living.

Sean walked without a particular destination, letting the cool air of the evening work on his muscles. The city still felt large in the way it had on the bus journey in — not intimidating anymore, but not yet familiar either. Something he was still calibrating himself against.

His phone rang.

He looked at the screen.

*Mum.*

The smile was immediate. He answered before the second ring.

"Mum."

Her voice came back instantly, no preamble, no greeting.

"How is it?"

Sean laughed.

"You didn’t even say hello."

"I want updates." The tone was completely unapologetic.

That made him laugh harder — the easy, unguarded laugh that only existed in certain conversations with certain people. He kept walking, the phone warm against his ear.

They talked through everything — the training sessions and how they compared to the academy, the coaching staff and the different rhythms of professional instruction, the teammates and the early impressions of people he was still learning to read. She listened carefully, asking the specific questions that told him she had been thinking about this conversation before it happened.

Then Sean mentioned the salary.

Silence.

Complete and immediate — the line not cutting out, just going quiet in the way it did when someone on the other end had stopped to process something.

"You’re getting paid?"

"Yes."

A pause.

"For football."

Not a question. Just the sentence repeated back to itself, as if saying it again would help it become fully real.

Another silence.

Then he heard it — the soft, unmistakeable sound of his mother crying. Not dramatically, not in the way of grief. The specific sound of someone releasing something they had been holding for a very long time.

Sean closed his eyes briefly. He kept walking but stopped registering the city around him.

"Mum..."

She laughed through the tears — a broken, genuine sound.

"I know." A breath. "I know."

His father joined the call a few minutes later — Sean heard the familiar background sounds of the house, his dad’s voice a little rough with the lateness of the evening and something else that Sean chose not to name directly.

For the next hour — easily an hour, possibly more — they talked. freewёbn૦νeɭ.com

Not strategy. Not numbers or plans or what came next. Not the road ahead, not the targets on the Book Bible’s roadmap, not what a professional contract meant for the trajectory of everything that followed.

Just happiness.

The simple, uncomplicated happiness of three people who had shared something difficult for a long time and were now sharing the first moment on the other side of it. The kind of happiness that didn’t need to be dissected or celebrated loudly — that was enough by itself, carried quietly in the sound of familiar voices on a phone call on a Northbridge evening.

---

Training resumed the following morning.

The development squad gathered for an internal practice match — the reserve team running through tactical setups ahead of upcoming fixtures, with the newer arrivals included in varying capacities. Sean checked the team sheet when it went up.

His name was on the bench.

Expected. Completely expected. He was two days into his professional career. Starting positions were earned over weeks and months of demonstrating consistent quality in training, of building the trust of coaching staff, of showing that the level was something he could sustain rather than produce occasionally. The bench was where this stage of the journey began.

He took his place without reaction.

Coach Martin gathered the squad briefly before kick-off.

"Today is about observation as much as performance." He looked across the group. "No hero football. Play what’s in front of you."

Several players smiled — the smile of people who knew exactly what he meant because they had seen it before. Young players arriving at professional clubs with things to prove, trying to manufacture moments of individual brilliance rather than contributing to the collective function of the team. It never worked. It always produced the wrong impression. The coaches who ran development squads had watched it happen enough times that they had stopped waiting for it and started pre-empting it.

Football wasn’t about showing off.

It was about helping the team win.

Sean understood that at a level that went beyond simply agreeing with the instruction.

The match began. He watched from the bench with the same focused attention he brought to everything — not passive watching, not waiting for his turn, but active analysis. He was learning. How his teammates moved in relation to each other, the communication patterns between the defensive and midfield lines, the specific ways that professional players created and closed space that differed from what he had operated within at academy level. The pace of decision-making. The reduced tolerance for error.

He was building a picture he would need when his moment came.

Halftime arrived with the score level — neither team having managed to convert the moments they had created, both sets of coaches making adjustments with the focused efficiency of people who treated a practice match as a genuine test.

Coach Martin walked along the bench.

He stopped.

His eyes settled on Sean for a brief moment — long enough to communicate the decision before the words did.

"Sean."

Sean was on his feet before the name was finished.

"You’re on."

His heartbeat shifted — not to fear, not to anxiety, but to the specific elevation of someone stepping toward something they had been building toward for years. Not nervousness. Excitement. The calibrated, purposeful excitement of readiness.

He stripped off the training top. Handed it to the bench coach. Stepped to the touchline. ƒrēewebnoѵёl.cσm

The grass of the Northbridge training pitch met his boots.

He had stood on this surface before, during evaluation sessions, during the trial that had brought him here. But this was different. This was as a Northbridge player. A development squad player, yes — a player who had enormous distance still to cover before he reached the story he was building toward. But a *Northbridge player.* With a contract. With a salary. With a place in this structure that was his to keep or lose based entirely on what he produced.

The atmosphere of the pitch settled around him differently than it had as a trialist.

He looked up at the sky briefly — the same pale sky from this morning, but it seemed to carry a different quality in the afternoon light.

---

**⚽ PLAYER STATUS UPDATED**

**Professional Development Player**

**Current Objective:**

**Earn First-Team Attention**

---

Sean read it and felt the rightness of it.

Not first-team selection. Not trophies. Not records. Not the distant, extraordinary destinations that the journey ultimately led toward. Just the next thing. The immediate, achievable, necessary next thing.

Earn First-Team Attention.

The whistle blew.

The match restarted.

And Sean Nelson was already moving — not toward the ball immediately, but into position, into the shape that would make him available when the ball arrived, into the angles and the channels and the spaces that professional football rewarded with opportunities.

Toward the future.

Toward greatness.

Toward becoming the Football God.

---

END OF Chapter 92

Author’s note : Please kindly read the next Chapter first, there was an error during upload on my side.

Thank you for your patience and support..

Keep your comments, gifts, Golden tickets, Power stones coming .

This author appreciate you...

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