King of the Pitch: Reborn to Conquer
Chapter 95: Victory’s Funeral
CHAPTER 95: CHAPTER 95: VICTORY’S FUNERAL
Julian didn’t even wait for the whistle to settle.
He strode straight toward Dante Cruz.
"So?" His voice was low, sharp, meant only for the boy in red and black.
Dante’s smirk faltered. His teeth clenched tight enough that Julian heard the grind.
His hands twitched like he wanted to swing. For the first time, Julian saw it—rage cracking through the mask.
And maybe it was a slip. Maybe Julian shouldn’t have said anything. But after everything, after Cael’s blood, after Leo’s red, after the war East Valley had dragged them into—he couldn’t hold it in.
He turned his back on Dante and walked away. A deliberate dismissal. The kind of insult no words could match.
...
Kickoff restarted.
The clock read 80 minutes.
Ten against eleven. East Valley still pressed with fire in their eyes, chasing hope that didn’t exist.
They threw bodies forward, clattered into tackles, fouled at every chance.
But Lincoln didn’t bend.
Julian had promised to score. And when he had, something shifted.
Lincoln stopped flinching at every foul. Stopped snapping back at every shove.
Their fire wasn’t in anger anymore—it was in control.
East Valley dove. No whistles.
They hacked Lincoln down. No cards.
And yet Lincoln stayed steady, unshaken, unprovoked.
Damien, thrown into the storm, was a wall on the goal line. Palms stung red as he caught, punched, and smothered everything thrown his way. His voice roared across the box like Cael’s spirit hadn’t left.
Riku commanded the backline with steel in his stance. Aaron, once burning with fury, now carried ice in his veins. Even when shoulders slammed into him, he reset, focused, unbreakable.
Every Lincoln player moved like their veins carried the same message: no more chaos, only discipline.
Their formation tightened, their spacing clean, as if the field itself had bent into order under Julian’s presence.
Minute by minute, East Valley’s fire burned out.
By the 87th, the truth was written on their faces.
Their fouls grew weaker. Their provocation quieter. Their fight... slipping.
And in the stands, the home crowd’s roar dulled. The jeers and chants bled into silence.
Some fans cursed under their breath. Others stood, filing out early, abandoning the devils in red and black.
Dante Cruz was the last flame. His grin gone, replaced by something twisted, desperate. His eyes followed Julian everywhere, hungry for a mistake that never came.
But no mistake came.
PRITTTTTT!
The whistle split the night.
It was over.
Lincoln High had won.
0 – 2.
But the pitch told another story.
Blood had been spilled. Leo had been sacrificed. Cael was gone to the hospital. Their victory wasn’t clean—it was carved out of fire, steel, and scars.
The scoreboard read triumph. But every player in blue knew the truth.
This wasn’t just a win.
It was survival.
And survival always came with a cost.
...
Lincoln gathered at their bench, not with cheers, not with celebration. Only silence. The kind that follows blood and bruises.
"Let’s pack up," Coach Owen said, voice flat.
No one argued. No one lingered.
Every Lincoln player moved quickly, pulling bags over shoulders, heads low. Not because of shame—because staying another second in East Valley’s shadow felt unbearable.
Even glimpsing a red-and-black jersey sparked anger in their veins. And anger, tonight, was too dangerous.
Minutes later, the team filed out, boots crunching on gravel as they headed to the bus.
The night was bitter, the kind of cold that sank through sweat-soaked kits.
Their footsteps felt heavier than usual, as if the pitch itself had chained weights to their ankles.
They climbed in one by one. The door hissed shut.
Coach Owen stood at the front, gripping the rail. His eyes swept the rows of exhausted faces, then softened—just slightly.
"You’ll ride this bus back to school," he said quietly. "Then home."
His words were calm, but something inside them made the team sit straighter.
Then, headlights flared. A black double-cabin truck rolled to a stop beside the bus. Its window lowered.
Behind the wheel was Tawny Owen, her expression tight, worry still clinging to her smile.
"I’ll go see Cael first," Coach Owen said, turning back to his players. "You kids go back and rest. Tomorrow, you can visit."
"But—" Aaron started, voice raw.
"No buts," Coach Owen cut him off, firm. "You all need rest after that match. Every single one of you." His gaze landed on Laura, who sat among the players, still clutching her notes like a shield. "Laura’s counting on you to make sure it happens."
Laura only nodded once, lips pressed thin.
Coach Owen exhaled, shoulders heavy, then stepped down the bus stairs. He slid into the passenger seat of the truck. Tawny waved from the window, her warmth cutting through the frost.
"See you, kids."
"See you, ma’am! Please... please tell us as soon as you can!" Leo’s voice broke from the back, louder than he intended.
Tawny’s hand rose in promise. The truck pulled away.
Inside, the bus was quiet. Too quiet. The kind of quiet that wasn’t peace but exhaustion.
No music. No jokes. No shouting. Just the steady hum of the engine and the faint rattle of the wheels carrying them away from enemy ground.
Felix leaned his forehead against the glass, breath fogging the window.
Aaron sat rigid, fists pressed against his knees, as if still holding himself back from a fight.
Riku closed his eyes but never once unclenched his jaw. Even Leo, bandaged ribs rising and falling, stared blankly at the floor as if replaying the red card over and over.
One by one, their eyes turned to the dark windows. To their reflections. To the thoughts none dared to say out loud.
They had won. But it didn’t feel like it.
By the time the bus rolled into Lincoln High, no one spoke. Bags were slung over shoulders, goodbyes whispered half-heartedly.
Then they split, heading to their homes, to beds that would not give them easy sleep.
Because every single one of them carried the same truth in their chest.
Victory had a price.
And tonight, Lincoln High was paying it heavily.
Not in goals. Not in points.
But in blood, bruises, and the weight that lingered long after the final whistle.