The hospital was a different kind of theatre, one Michael had never wanted a ticket for.
Michael was a mess. He was still in the same suit he'd worn for the past day, now soaked to the bone from the motorway rain and stained with mud from where he'd knelt on the curb.
He hadn't slept. He hadn't even been home. He just sat in the harsh, fluorescent-lit waiting room of the emergency department, his mind a blank, his phone a dead weight in his hand.
The "straight line" was a cruel joke. His perfect, controlled world was a smoking wreck in a ditch.
Every time the automatic doors whooshed open, his head would snap up, his heart lurching, expecting the worst.
Finally, after an eternity that lasted three hours, a doctor in blue scrubs, his face etched with exhaustion, walked out. "Family of Arthur Milton?"
Michael leaped to his feet, his chair scraping loudly on the linoleum.
"I am! I'm his boss! I'm Michael Sterling. Is he... is he okay?"
The doctor looked at the eighteen-year-old in a muddy, expensive suit, his expression softening with a professional pity.
"Mr. Sterling, I'm Dr. Hayes." He put a hand up, stopping the flood of frantic questions he could see building in Michael's eyes.
"He's stable," the doctor said, and Michael's knees almost buckled in a wave of relief so powerful it made him dizzy.
"He's stable," the doctor repeated, his tone grave, cutting off the celebration. "But the injuries are serious. Multiple complex fractures in his left leg, and a severe concussion. We were worried about internal bleeding, but he seems to have avoided the worst of it." The doctor looked at Michael with a grim, exhausted honesty. "He's lucky to be alive. A few inches difference, a few seconds earlier... and this would be a very different conversation."
Michael leaned against the wall, the world tilting. Stable. Lucky to be alive. But...
"Will he... will he be okay? When can he come back?"
The doctor sighed. "He's a fighter. But he'll be in surgery for most of today to repair the leg. After that... he has a very, very long road of recovery and rehabilitation ahead of him. Months. Maybe a year before he's back to a high-stress job. If ever."
Months. A year. If ever.
The words hit Michael, but his brain refused to process them. All he cared about was one thing.
"Can I see him?"
"We're moving him to a private room now. You can have... a minute. That's all. He's heavily medicated."
The room was dark, the only light coming from the glowing, beeping monitors that surrounded the bed.
Arthur looked... small. He was pale, a web of cuts and bruises on his face, his leg elevated in a complex series of slings. This wasn't the Gaffer. This wasn't the tactical genius who commanded rooms and stared down journalists. This was just a broken, terribly frail man.
Michael stood by the bed, his chest aching.
Arthur's eyes flickered open, his gaze unfocused, clouded with pain and morphine.
He seemed to sense someone was there.
"Michael...?" he whispered, his voice a dry, papery rasp.
"I'm here, Gaffer," Michael said, moving closer, his voice thick. "I'm right here. You're... you're going to be okay."
"The... the team..." Arthur's hand, bruised and hooked up to an IV, twitched on the blanket. He was trying to lift it. Michael took it, his own hand shaking.
"Don't worry about the team," Michael said, trying to sound confident.
"Don't..." Arthur's grip, for a man so injured, was surprisingly strong. He was holding on, his eyes suddenly sharp, cutting through the haze of drugs. "Don't let it fall apart. Michael. All of it... don't... let it... fall... apart."
"I won't," Michael promised, his voice cracking.
"I won't. But I... I don't know what to do, Arthur. The game... the team..."
Arthur's eyes closed, a grimace of pain. He took a shallow, rattling breath.
"Steve..." he whispered, so quietly Michael had to lean in.
"Steve? Our Steve?" Michael asked, confused. He thought of the friendly, terrified, [CA 55 / PA 60] assistant manager.
"Steve," Arthur repeated, his grip tightening. "He knows the... the drills. Knows the system. He was... watching. Learning. Make him... interim gaffer."
This was Arthur's last order. And it made no sense. It was tactical suicide.
But the man holding his hand was the [PA 91] genius. This was his move.
"He... he can't..." Michael started to argue.
"Trust... me..." Arthur breathed, his eyes rolling back.
"It's the only... way..." And with that, the last of his strength was gone, and he slipped back into the darkness.
A nurse gently touched Michael's shoulder.
"You have to go now, sir."
Michael nodded, numbly, letting go of his manager's hand.
He walked out of the hospital, the sun just beginning to rise, painting the sky in colors he was too numb to see. He had his architect's last, desperate order. He had to trust a man with a PA of 60 to save his empire.
He arrived at the training ground at ten a.m. The news had not yet broken.
The players were already on the pitch, stretching, looking confused.
"Where's the Gaffer?" Finn Riley asked, spinning a ball on his finger. "He's never late."
Michael walked to the center of the pitch. "Everyone," he called out, his voice a dead, flat thing. "Gather round."
The team huddled up, their faces curious, an easy-going vibe still lingering from their last game. They saw Michael's face—the mud, the haunted, sleepless eyes—and the laughter died instantly.
"The Gaffer," Michael began, his voice breaking. He cleared his throat and tried again. "The Gaffer was in a serious car crash last night. He's... he's in the hospital. He's fighting."
The shock was instant, a palpable, physical wave. "What?!" "Oh my god." Jamie Weston's face went white. Danny Fletcher looked like he'd been punched. These kids, his "Braves," looked like a family that had just lost its father.
"His last order to me," Michael continued, his voice hardening, "was clear. Until he gets back... Steve is in charge."
He looked at the assistant manager. Steve, who had been standing with the group, looked as if he'd been shot. His face went a shade of pale, sickly green. "Me...?" he squeaked, his voice terrified. "Boss... I... I can't... I mean... I'm just..."
He was about to refuse, to crumble under the sheer, unadulterated terror of the responsibility.
But before he could, a hand landed on his shoulder. It was Danny Fletcher. The Prince. He stepped forward, his eyes red, but his face set in a look of hard determination.
"If the Gaffer trusts you, Steve," Danny said, his voice ringing out in the silence, "then we trust you. Right, lads?"
"Right!" Finn Riley said, his usual sarcastic drawl gone, replaced by a low growl.
"For the Gaffer!" Jamie Weston yelled, his voice cracking.
"For the Gaffer!" the whole team roared, a spontaneous, defiant chant.
Steve, the [CA 55] assistant, looked around at the faces of the team, his team, all looking at him.
He was trapped, terrified, and... and he was their only hope. He straightened up, his fear still there, but now hidden behind a new, shaky resolve.
"Right, lads," he said, his voice trembling. "Let's... let's get to work. For the Gaffer."
Michael watched them train, his heart a hollow, aching void. He walked back to his office. His phone was exploding. The news was out.
He opened his laptop, and the headlines were a brutal confirmation of his new reality.
"BARNSLEY DISASTER: Genius Manager Arthur Milton in Horror Crash."
"Milton's 'Revolution' Over? Career Possibly Over After M1 Pile-Up."
He felt sick. He was about to close his laptop when another, smaller headline, linked to the story, caught his eye. It was from a different, more reputable national paper, and it had been published two hours before the crash.
"EXCLUSIVE: Premier League Side Aston Villa Makes Massive Secret Bid to Poach Barnsley 'Architect' Arthur Milton."
Michael stared at the words. Aston Villa. A Premier League club. A "massive secret bid."
The phone call. The motorway. The rain.
A dark, twisting, and utterly horrifying new question entered Michael's mind.
Was Arthur driving in the rain to celebrate his new job?
If you find any errors ( broken links, non-standard content, etc.. ), Please let us know < report chapter > so we can fix it as soon as possible.