Dynasty Awakening: Building My Own Football Empire

Chapter 44: The Empire or the Shop


The news of Arthur's crash was a tidal wave.

But the Aston Villa article, which landed just hours later, was the aftershock that truly threatened to bring the entire building down.

It spread through the media like wildfire.

By the time Michael got back to his flat for a desperately needed shower, it was the only story in the football world. The narrative was perfect, tragic, and utterly devastating.

"BARNSLEY'S ARCHITECT IN HORROR CRASH... HOURS AFTER PREMIER LEAGUE OFFER."

Michael stood in his small living room, watching the 24-hour news, a towel draped over his shoulders, his hair still damp.

The pundits were not just reporting; they were speculating, their faces a mask of grim, self-important concern.

"You have to ask the question, Gary," one was saying, "was he unhappy? Did the pressure of working for an 18-year-old owner finally get to him? He was on the motorway... was he driving to Birmingham to sign the deal when this tragedy struck?"

"It's a terrible, terrible situation," the other replied.

"You see the crash location on the M1... it's the right direction. You have to feel for the lad, but was he another victim of the 'Stirling Circus'?"

Michael felt sick. He clicked off the TV, the words "unhappy" and "circus" echoing in the quiet room. A cold, venomous seed of doubt, one he was ashamed to even have, began to sprout in his mind.

He had just assumed Arthur was his partner. His general.

But what if... what if it was all just a job?

What if Arthur, the [PA 91] genius, was just waiting for the first big club to notice him?

What if his "empire" speech in the hospital was just a morphine-induced ramble?

He had to know.

He returned to the hospital later that afternoon.

The rain had stopped, and the world felt too bright, too normal.

Arthur was in a different room now, a private one. The beeping monitors were still there, his leg was in a complex web of traction, but his color was better. He was more lucid.

When Michael walked in, Arthur's weary eyes flickered open, and he managed a weak, lopsided smile. "Twice... in two days," he rasped, his voice a dry whisper.

"You'll have the... nurses... talking."

Michael pulled up a chair, his heart aching.

"How are you feeling, Gaffer?"

"Like I've been... hit by a lorry," Arthur said, a ghost of his old, dry wit. "Oh, wait. I was."

Michael smiled, but it didn't reach his eyes. He sat there, the silence stretching, the unspoken question a heavy weight between them. He had to get it out.

"Arthur," he said, his voice quiet, "I saw the news. This morning. All of it."

Arthur's weak smile faded. He just watched him, waiting.

"Aston Villa," Michael said, the words feeling like a betrayal. "The offer. Was... were you leaving us?"

He hated himself for asking. He hated the doubt, the insecurity, the implication. But he had to know.

Arthur just stared at him for a long, quiet moment. He seemed to be gathering his strength. When he finally spoke, his voice was still a rasp, but it was clear, and it was the truest thing Michael had ever heard.

"They called me... yesterday morning," Arthur whispered, his eyes locked on Michael's.

"The offer was... huge. More money than... I've ever seen. A 'project' in the... Premier League. Everything a man... like me... is supposed to want."

Michael's heart sank. This was it. The confession.

"I told them," Arthur continued, a small, pained cough interrupting him. "I told them... no. An hour before the crash."

Michael blinked, his brain struggling to catch up.

"You... you turned them down?"

Arthur managed a weak, exhausted smile.

"Of course, I turned them down, you idiot."

"But... why?" Michael asked, his voice cracking.

"It's the Premier League! It's... Aston Villa!"

Arthur's eyes, clouded with pain, suddenly became sharp, clear, and full of the fire Michael had come to respect more than anything in the world.

"Michael," he rasped, his voice gaining a sudden, fierce strength. "Why... why would I leave? Why would I go... manage someone else's shop... when you and I... are busy building an empire?"

The breath left Michael's lungs in a rush. It wasn't relief; it was a profound, overwhelming wave of pure, unadulterated emotion. This man, this genius, this architect... he believed. He wasn't an employee. He wasn't a hire.

He was a true partner.

Tears, hot and sudden, welled in Michael's eyes. He tried to blink them away, but he couldn't. He put his head in his hands, a choked, half-laugh, half-sob escaping him.

"We'll keep your seat warm, Gaffer," Michael promised, his voice thick as he looked up, his eyes shining with a new, unbreakable determination.

"I swear to you. We're going to win for you. You just... you just get better."

"I know you will," Arthur whispered, his eyes closing, the exhaustion finally taking him. "Now... get out of here. You're... you're making the room... look messy."

Michael left the hospital feeling ten feet tall. He was floating. The doubt, the fear, the sickness... it was all gone. His father's text, his brother's hate, the media's cynicism—none of it mattered. Arthur believed.

He walked back onto the training ground at Oakwell, the afternoon sun feeling warm and hopeful for the first time. He wasn't just a "kid owner." He wasn't a "lucky punk."

He was the guardian of a promise. He was the co-founder of an empire. He was going to win. For Arthur.

He strode towards his office, a new, iron-clad determination in his step. He was ready to plan, to work, to get Steve, the terrified assistant, ready for the biggest test of his life.

He turned the corner to his office corridor, and stopped dead.

Brenda, the secretary, was standing by her desk, looking pale and terrified.

And blocking the entrance to his office were three men.

They were in dark, ill-fitting, identical suits. They looked official, bored, and deeply, deeply unpleasant. They looked like men who enjoyed their authority.

"Mr. Sterling?" the man in the middle asked, his voice a flat, bureaucratic drone. He didn't offer a hand.

"I am," Michael said, his good mood instantly vanishing, a cold, defensive chill running up his spine. "Can I help you?"

The man flashed a badge. "We're from the League Medical Committee. We're here to conduct a surprise... full-squad... drug test."

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