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December 26, 2015 – Anfield
Post-Match Press Conference
The press room buzzed like a stirred hive.
When Jürgen Klopp entered, the volume didn't drop — it lifted. Reporters leaned in. Cameras snapped early. There was an energy in the air that didn't match the scoreline.
Jacket half-zipped, cap pulled low over his forehead, his smile was crooked — equal parts exhaustion and adrenaline. His face was flushed, hair damp at the temples. He moved like someone who'd just run the match himself.
He sat, exhaled deeply, then adjusted the mic with one hand while the other gave a short, sheepish wave.
"Hello," he rasped, voice hoarse from barking instructions all night. "Okay. I know. Let's get to it."
The front row laughed.
First question — Sky Sports.
"Jürgen, thoughts on the performance tonight?"
He nodded slowly, pressing his palm over the back of his neck like the question physically weighed there.
"Tough," he said. "Honest. One of the best games I've been part of since arriving — maybe not by result, but by the game played? By fight? That was real football."
He leaned forward now, more alive.
"Leicester defended like eleven goalkeepers. And the twelfth one was Schmeichel."
Laughter scattered across the room. Klopp let it hang.
"We threw everything at them. Crosses, cutbacks, passes from angles I didn't know existed. But they stood tall. They earned it. I couldn't be prouder of our performance but you have to respect theirs."
Another reporter jumped in. "That second goal — Tristan's corner. Did it catch you off guard?"
Klopp's eyebrows lifted theatrically. He gave a slow, open-handed shrug.
"What do you think?" he asked, eyes sparkling. "We were halfway back to our marks. And he's walking like he's debating dessert options. Then boom. Pass. Flick. Net. We're blinking."
A shake of the head. A slow, reluctant smile.
"That's the danger with him. It's not just skill — it's everything. He thinks differently. Doesn't rush. He waits. Then moves when you don't expect."
"How do you even prepare for a player like that?"
Klopp crossed his arms, chuckling without humor.
"You can't man-mark him. He's not there. You press high? He splits you. Sit deep? He dances. Tonight he barely ran second half — and it didn't matter. The damage was already done."
He paused, then muttered in German under his breath.
"Zu jung für so etwas. Wirklich."
"What was that, Jürgen?"
"Too young for this," he translated, deadpan. "At twenty, I was figuring out how to open beer bottles with lighters. He's out here deciding Premier League matches."
Laughter again — a mix of admiration and disbelief.
A voice from the middle of the room:
"Jürgen, be honest. Is he the best in the world right now?"
Klopp didn't laugh this time.
He took a breath.
Then nodded.
"Yes."
Murmurs rippled.
He continued.
"I know people will say Messi or Ronaldo of course. Incredible players. Generational. Maybe the greatest ever. But this… right now?"
He tapped the table softly.
"This kid is changing games like it's nothing. One goal. One assist. In a stadium like this. Against us. And he's doing it every three days."
Another beat.
"Maybe their fans will get angry with me," he said, cracking a small smile. "But I don't care. Right now, for me — Tristan Hale is the best in the world."
A stir of camera shutters.
"And Leicester?" someone called. "They're still unbeaten in all competitions. What do you make of that?"
Klopp let out a low whistle.
"In this schedule? In this country?" He laughed once, not because it was funny — but because it was mad.
"They're not just winning. They haven't lost. Not once. That's not a good run. That's historic. Ranieri's got them believing they're untouchable — and right now? They are."
He looked around the room now, hands spread like it was obvious.
"Champions League clubs don't even manage that. Big squads, deep benches, rotation. But Leicester?" He grinned. "They have one bus. One engine. And they're still going."
A pause.
"At Dortmund, we weren't this small — but we were still underdogs. Bayern had the money. The machine. We just had energy with young players hungry. And sometimes? That's enough. That's what I see in Leicester. A miracle in motion."
A different voice.
"About the… the hug."
Klopp's eyes rolled dramatically.
"Hug? What hug? Was I hugging someone?"
"You two looked… familiar."
"Did we? I'm very friendly. German men are famous for our warmth, no?"
Chuckles rolled across the room again.
"Have you met before?"
A pause.
"I meet a lot of people," Klopp said. "I hug some. I remember some names. I forget others. But if I hugged someone tonight? I promise, it was earned."
"There's rumors of a meeting a month or two ago—"
"Gerüchteküche," he muttered again. "Always cooking something."
"Translation?"
"Rumor kitchen. And like any kitchen — too many chefs."
"Cameras caught Henderson and others speaking with Tristan — covering mouths. Anything to say?"
Klopp threw up his hands.
"Maybe they were asking about boots. Maybe they were talking about lunch. Maybe they were offering shampoo tips. Who knows?"
The laughter returned, but now the tension under it felt different.
"Would you like to coach him one day?"
This time, no dodge.
"Yes," Klopp said simply.
"Do you think it will happen?"
He smirked again.
"Sadly, I don't play FIFA Career Mode. I can't just press 'buy now' and skip the paperwork — or throw in a bonus clause and a new stadium."
He stood to leave, then hesitated.
"Look," he said, softer. "He's special. Everyone wants him. But right now? He's part of something bigger. A team chasing the impossible. And I hope they keep going."
He nodded once, then gave one last grin.
As he stood to leave —
"Jürgen! One last thing did you think it was disrespectful for Ranieri to sub off his three biggest stars with time still on the clock?"
Klopp blinked. Then smiled.
"No. Not at all. Not disrespect, it was just smart. They've got a huge match in three days. One that could decide the league. If I'm Ranieri? I'm protecting my best players too."
Sky Sports Studio – Post-Match Reaction
The screen froze on Klopp's final smile. A second later, it darkened into a wide pause frame — the kind that made him look like he'd just been mid-sneeze.
"—and that was Jürgen Klopp, wrapping up what's already being called one of the best press conferences of the season."
The screen paused momentarily on Klopp's final quote, frozen with a subtitle beneath it: "He's special. Everyone wants him. But right now? He's part of something bigger… Just remember I said all this when it stops being a miracle — and becomes a memory."
David Jones turned to the panel with a smile.
"Alright, let's talk about it. Jamie — I'll start with you. That hug. That moment. That quote. It's all gone viral. What do you make of it?"
Jamie Carragher couldn't stop smiling. His voice came out more charged than usual.
"Oh, mate, I'm buzzing," he said. "Seriously. If there's even a chance Tristan Hale ends up in a red shirt one day — you have to take it. Klopp looked like he was hugging his son out there!"
Thierry Henry raised an eyebrow, grinning. "He hugged you like that?"
"Only when I retired," Jamie shot back, laughing. "But come on you saw it. That wasn't just a handshake. That was… I don't know. That was something."
David leaned in. "Do you think there's already something in the works?"
Jamie shook his head. "Honestly? I've got no idea. The club's locked up tighter than Fort Knox right now. Everything about Tristan, it's all kept super close. Mendes isn't talking. His whole team's quiet. Not even a hint."
Thierry leaned forward. "But you've got friends at the club, Jamie. No inside info?"
Jamie laughed nervously. "Not this time. And listen me and Tristan, we've got history. Everyone knows that. If there's even a tiny chance my big mouth messes this up? I'm out. I'm not risking it. If Liverpool have a shot I'd never forgive myself for being the reason he didn't come."
Roy Keane, arms folded, finally chimed in. "The lad's got options. You can feel it. But I'll say this when Klopp really wants a player, he doesn't do all that by accident. That was a message."
David nodded. "And let's not forget Tristan is close to Henderson, to Gomez, even Ox. These England boys talk. They're friends off the pitch. That group chat must be wild right now."
Jamie added, "It's true. Hendo and him are properly tight. I saw them covering their mouths post-match. That wasn't just 'how's the weather.' That was 'do you want your locker here or over there?'"
Thierry laughed. "You think it's that far along?"
"I'm saying if he walks into Melwood tomorrow, no one would blink."
Paul Scholes, quiet till now, spoke up. "I mean, just look at the numbers. It's hard to even argue anymore. Last season — 75 goal contributions. Broke Thierry's assist record. Second player ever to hit over 20 goals and 20 assists in one season. And now? He's got 31 goals and 29 assists in 25 games."
Henry nodded, serious now. "In the league alone — 20 goals, 16 assists. In under 18 matches. We're talking numbers beyond Messi-level output. He's still only twenty."
Jamie added, "And not even in a superteam, mind you. This is Leicester. No offense to them, but come on. He's not feeding Benzema and Suarez. He's got Vardy, Mahrez, and a squad that no one really cared about until a year ago."
David turned to Keane. "Roy, does that make him the best in the world right now? Klopp said it do you agree?"
Keane paused. Then, slowly:
"Form-wise? Yeah. I don't like saying it, but yeah. Messi's still magic. Ronaldo's still a machine. But Tristan's doing things every week now. Every. Single. Week. He decides games. He makes the others better. And he's doing it under pressure."
Thierry added, "Of course, to be the best ever, you need trophies. Lots of them. Champions Leagues. Ballons d'Or. But right now? There's no one playing better football than Tristan Hale. That's just fact."
Jamie leaned back. "And we've played with them, against them. Messi makes you dizzy. Ronaldo breaks your ribs. But Tristan? He breaks your shape. He breaks your rhythm. And then he breaks your heart."
David nodded. "Speaking of facts — let's talk about Leicester."
The graphic changed behind them:
Leicester City – 14 Wins, 4 Draws, 0 Losses – 46 Points
Manchester City – 11 Wins, 3 Draws, 4 Losses – 36 Points
Jamie whistled. "Ten-point gap. Eighteen games in. And they haven't lost in any competition."
Paul Scholes said flatly, "It's not luck anymore. It's not a fluke. They're serious."
David asked, "And Vardy?"
Henry laughed. "Twenty-six goals in twenty-six games. Twenty in the league. That's Golden Boot pace. He's chasing records too. Of course whether Tristan or Vardy will win the Golden Boot — we'll have to see."
Jamie leaned back in his chair, still beaming.
"Tristan. Vardy. Mahrez. It's like every week we say, 'they can't keep this up' — and then they do."
Roy shook his head, muttering, "It's December and they're unbeaten. If they win that match in three days…"
David finished the thought. "It could decide the title."
Scholes added, "And if he goes to Liverpool? Forget it. Derby's done. United haven't even beaten him at Leicester."
Roy grunted. "7–1, 5–4, 4–2."
Jamie nearly fell out of his chair laughing. "Oi, don't look at me! I'm just dreaming of trophies again."
Henry leaned in, mock-serious. "Tristan. Mon ami. If you're watching — Arsenal still plays football too, you know."
Jamie pointed. "He's joking. Don't listen to him."
David chuckled, holding up a hand. "Whatever happens — if we see Tristan in red one day, I just want it on record: Jamie called it."
"And if it doesn't happen?" Thierry asked.
Jamie smirked. "Then I'll blame Roy. Or Mendes. Or the Wi-Fi. Anything but me."
Laughter filled the studio. The cameras zoomed out. And the segment faded into highlights — but the headlines had already written themselves.
Leicester – 11:41 PM
Tristan's Bedroom
The curtains were half drawn, and the only light came from the hallway — soft and gold, barely touching the foot of the bed.
Tristan lay on his side, shirtless, one arm tucked under the pillow, the other draped lazily over Barbara's waist. Her leg was tangled with his. Her hair spilled across the pillow and part of his chest, like a curtain he never wanted to pull shut.
She traced a circle just above his hipbone with her fingertip. He exhaled.
"That press conference," she whispered, lips brushing his collarbone. "You've broken the internet again."
Tristan didn't answer right away. His eyes were half-lidded, still somewhere between the roar of Anfield and the safety of this room. He moved his hand to the small of her back, feeling the curve of it like muscle memory.
"I didn't do anything," he murmured. "Klopp did."
Barbara tilted her head up. "You sure you didn't hug him first?"
His mouth twitched. "I don't even remember. It just… happened."
"You two looked close."
Tristan didn't answer.
She pressed a kiss to his chest. Then another. Then higher, just under his jaw. "Hey."
"Mhm?"
"If this is something…" she started. "Like — if Liverpool really is next, and if we're gonna stay in England long-term…"
He blinked. Turned his head to look at her properly.
"…Should I start looking for houses?" she finished.
There was a pause.
Then Tristan let out a soft breath and cupped her cheek. "Yeah," he said. "Probably best to."
Barbara smiled faintly. "You sure?"
"I'm not going to Spain," he said simply. "Not yet. And Liverpool's always been first choice."
She leaned in and kissed him again — slower this time. He kissed her back.
When they pulled apart, he rested his forehead against hers.
"You can pick a bigger one this time," he murmured. "More light. Garden. I don't know. Whatever you want."
Barbara's voice was soft. "You think we'll be there a while?"
"Yeah," he said. "I think so."
Barbara shifted closer, pressing her forehead against his again. Her fingers were still moving now tracing the line of his ribs, just barely there.
"How are you feeling about City?" she whispered. "Nervous?"
Tristan blinked up at the ceiling for a second. "Not really nervous," he said. "It's more like… I'm ready. We didn't go all out against Liverpool for that reason."
Barbara pulled back just enough to see his face properly. "You think you'll win?"
He tilted his head, considering. "Yeah," he said quietly. "I think we will. They're good, obviously. And they're angry after dropping points. But we've got momentum behind us. No one in the team wants to lose."
She smiled. "Sounds like a captain."
"I'm not captain."
"You play like one," she said. "You lead like one."
He kissed her lightly — a press of lips and then a soft pause. She chased him for a second one before speaking again.
"Do you want to win the Golden Boot?"
Tristan laughed under his breath. "I did. At the start of the season, yeah. I wanted it badly. Now?"
He ran his hand down her back, stopping at her waist. "Not really."
Barbara raised an eyebrow. "Why not?"
He looked at her — eyes steady. "Because Vardy deserves it more. I've got enough records. Enough awards. He's thirty-something, having the season of his life. I'll help him win it. I can win it next year."
Barbara stared at him, then kissed him again — firmer this time. "That's why I love you," she murmured. "You're ruthless when it matters. But never selfish."
He kissed her cheek. "I'm still a little selfish."
"Only when it comes to me?"
"Only you," he whispered, fingers brushing her thigh.
Barbara chuckled, then tucked herself against his chest. "Sofia and Sophia have meetings set up meetings with people in the makeup industry. Those two have been busy for me, they don't get paid enough. Things have been looking up for me."
Tristan blinked. "Wait, really?"
"Apparently a few of the brands Mendes works with already have licensing partners in the beauty space. We wouldn't even need to do it from scratch. Just build on what's already there."
"And you'd be the face?"
Barbara smirked. "I'd be the queen. And you'd be my sponsor. Our own label. Our rules."
Tristan grinned. "I like the sound of that."
Her voice softened. "I love you."
He kissed the top of her head. "I love you too."
"I love you," she repeated, in English.
Then, in Chinese: "我爱你."
And then, in Hungarian — soft and warm: "Szeretlek."
He smiled that kind of smile that only ever belonged to her.
"Szeretlek én is," he replied, brushing her hair behind her ear with the number 4.
Barbara closed her eyes.
Tristan did too, for a moment — then opened them again. His thoughts drifted.
Almost close to two years now.
He remembered their first kiss. The airport. The early FaceTimes. The fights, the wins, the quiet nights like this. And he knew.
He'd marry her.
Maybe not tomorrow. Maybe not next week.
But soon. Staring at her tattoo representing her family, he couldn't help but want to start a family of his own. He died in his first life alone without anyone besides his parents.
He could imagine a girl looking like Barbara, his own daughter and son if Barbara wanted more.
She looked up, and whatever she saw in his eyes made her smile again — wide this time.
"What?" she whispered.
Tristan didn't answer. Not with words.
He just leaned in and kissed her until she melted into him again.
Her hand slid down his stomach.
His found the hem of her shirt.
There were no more questions after that.
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Next Morning
The kettle clicked off with a sharp ping, but Barbara was already reaching for the mugs. One in each hand — his and hers. Her hair was tied up messily, and one of Tristan's old training shirts hung off her shoulder like a dress. Biscuit skittered around her feet, nose pressed to the kitchen cabinet like she was about to crack open a box of bacon.
"No," Barbara said in Hungarian, nudging the puppy gently with her foot. "Not until he's awake."
Biscuit barked once. Then again. Tristan's voice drifted in, groggy from down the hall.
"Why's she yelling at me?"
Barbara laughed. "She's not yelling at you. She's yelling at me."
He padded in a few seconds later, shirtless, hair a tousled mess, eyes still fighting daylight. He scratched his jaw and leaned against the doorframe.
"You wore that to bed?"
"No," she said. "I stole it this morning."
He walked over, looped his arms around her from behind, and rested his chin on her shoulder.
"You're making tea."
"I always make tea."
He kissed her shoulder. "You always look better in my shirts."
She smiled, leaned into him, and turned her head just enough to brush her lips over his cheek.
She kissed him again — a little longer this time.
Biscuit barked again, this time louder. Neither of them flinched.
"You think you're gonna get mobbed by media today?" Barbara asked, brushing a hand down his chest.
"Already am," Tristan said, pulling his own phone closer. "One headline says 'Tristan Hale: Anfield Goodbye?' Another says 'Klopp's New Son?'"
She snorted into her mug. "You did look like you were about to cry during that hug."
He rolled his eyes. "Don't."
Barbara studied him. "You okay with all this?"
He nodded. "Yeah. Mostly."
Biscuit barked a final time, pawing at the cabinet.
Tristan sighed. "She's gonna destroy the floor if we don't feed her."
Barbara grabbed the kibble with one hand and kissed him again with the other. "Go shower, miracle boy. Felix will be here soon for breakfast."
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Apologize for the no chapters, had a busy week at work so I haven't been able to post some chapters on Patreon so Webnovel uploads had to be set back for two days. But things should be going back to normal schedule.