Chapter 13 - LEEDS VS IPSWICH TOWN
Even two days after the Preston match, Nathan could still feel the bruises when he moved.
But pain wasn't the main thing buzzing through the training ground.
It was the whispers.
"The lad Perez... he wasn't the flashiest on the pitch, but by God, he fought till the very last breath."
"Yeah. He's got the heart of a warrior. You can't teach that."
It wasn't shouted. It wasn't plastered on the news.
But those quiet words—the ones muttered in hallways, over coffee, behind clipboards—meant more.
Coach Grayson called him aside after the morning session.
The old man's face was carved out of stone as usual, deep lines and cold eyes, but today... there was a spark behind them.
Grayson jabbed a finger into Nathan's chest—not hard, but enough to feel it.
"Listen to me carefully, son," he said, his voice low, almost swallowed by the wind whipping across the pitch. "Skill's important. God knows we all love a fancy player. But determination..."
He paused, eyes boring into Nathan's.
"Determination is rare. Keep playing with the same spirit, and you'll outlast a lot of players better than you."
Nathan opened his mouth to answer—but found no words.
He just nodded, chest tight, heart burning like someone had poured gasoline on it.
I won't waste it, he thought fiercely.
I swear it. I won't.
But deep down, even as that fire roared inside him, he knew:
Heart alone wouldn't be enough.
-
Two days later, the FA Cup draw was announced.
-
Leeds United vs Ipswich Town.
A Premier League side.
Not just any side—a team packed with internationals, seasoned warriors of the top flight.
A stage bigger than anything Nathan had ever stood on before.
The buzz around Elland Road was electric.
The walls themselves seemed to hum with tension when Nathan walked through the tunnel on match day.
Out beyond the mouth of the stadium, the sound hit him like a tidal wave.
BOOM! BOOM! BOOM!
Drums.
Chants.
Screams.
The old chant shaking the stands:
"Leeds! Leeds! Leeds!"
Nathan's heart hammered along with the rhythm, each beat louder than the last.
Today, he wasn't in the starting eleven.
He sat on the bench, boots laced, jacket zipped up tight, staring out over the battlefield.
Coach Grayson had slapped his back before kickoff, muttering, "Stay ready, Perry."
Stay ready.
Stay hungry.
Stay burning.
He clenched his fists, feeling the leather of his gloves creak.
Out on the pitch, the game kicked off like a shot.
Crack!
A vicious Ipswich midfielder slammed into a tackle within the first thirty seconds, setting the tone.
Leeds tried to fight fire with fire, but Ipswich's machine-like pressing was brutal.
Every time a Leeds player touched the ball, a blue shirt was already there, snarling, closing down space.
Nathan leaned forward on the bench, muscles twitching.
It was like watching a chess match played at the speed of a street brawl.
The clock hit 14 minutes.
A loose pass in midfield.
Tch—! Nathan hissed through his teeth before it even happened.
An Ipswich player intercepted, one sharp touch forward—
Tap!—
and suddenly, the Leeds backline was cracked open.
Through ball.
Chase.
Shot.
BOOM!
The net rippled, and the Ipswich fans exploded in one corner of the stadium.
[0-1]
The giant screen flashed cruelly in the misty air.
Nathan's gut twisted as if someone had punched him in the stomach.
Coach Grayson barked orders from the sideline, hands cutting through the air.
"Wake up! Get tight! Reset!"
The Leeds players gathered near the halfway line, heads low, faces grim.
Nathan sat back heavily, the bench rattling under him.
He chewed the inside of his cheek, trying to swallow the frustration bubbling up.
He knew this feeling.
He hated it.
Watching.
Waiting.
Powerless.
The first half dragged on like a bad dream.
Ipswich squeezed every inch of the field, choking Leeds out of their rhythm.
Passes went astray.
Touches were heavy.
Confidence started to leak away like air from a punctured tire.
Nathan never took his eyes off the field.
He wasn't just watching the ball—he was watching the spaces.
The timing.
The opportunities.
Tch... the right wing's too isolated... the fullback's getting overloaded... if I was out there—
He stopped himself.
No 'if.' When.