Chapter 17 – Heartbeats at the Edge
The night sky above Elland Road was a heavy, suffocating black, broken only by the searing floodlights raining down onto the pitch.
The scoreboard blinked:
Penalty Shootout – 2-2.
The first two rounds had been clinical — two for Leeds, two for Ipswich.
Now came the third round.
Nathan Perry's round.
He stood alone near the center circle, arms hanging stiff at his sides, boots planted into the worn grass. His pulse hammered at his ears, faster than any drumbeat, deafening.
"It's just another shot."
"You've taken thousands in training."
But this wasn't training.
This was survival.
Coach Grayson's voice echoed faintly in his mind: "Pressure doesn't create skill, son. It reveals it."
The referee raised a hand, calling him forward.
Nathan inhaled sharply —
Haaah...! —
and jogged toward the penalty spot.
The ball waited for him there, pristine and pure.
He bent down, adjusting it with trembling fingers. He could feel the weight of thousands of eyes boring into his back — fans, coaches, rivals, even scouts hidden in the crowd.
All judging.
All waiting.
He straightened up, took three measured steps back.
Glanced at the Ipswich keeper.
Tall, wiry. Twitchy. Eager to dive.
I'm afraid I'll miss, Nathan admitted to himself in a rare moment of brutal honesty.
I can't risk aiming for the corners... If I miss, I'll never forgive myself.
He clenched his fists.
"I'll shoot it down the middle. No tricks, no fancy angles. Just power. Straight and true."
He exhaled again — shorter this time, tighter.
The referee blew the whistle.
Tweeet!
Nathan surged forward — two steps, a planted left foot — and swung his right leg through.
THUD!!
The strike was firm, no hesitation, no second-guessing.
The ball rocketed dead-center, a blur of white.
The keeper dove — left!
Too late.
Too wrong.
The ball slammed into the netting with a satisfying SWISH!
Gooooooooal!!!
Elland Road exploded.
Fans jumped to their feet, fists pumping, scarves waving, a deafening roar crashing over the pitch like a tidal wave.
Nathan stood frozen for a split second, processing it.
Then his teammates swarmed him.
Marco slapped the back of his head. "You cold-blooded little monster!"
Tyler laughed breathlessly. "Middle of the goal?! You've got nerve, Perry!"
Nathan could only grin, heart still hammering, lungs screaming for air.
I did it... I held my nerve.
Leeds now led the shootout 3-2.
The pressure shifted.
Now it was Ipswich's turn to respond.
Their next shooter —
a lanky midfielder with a shaved head — stepped up, his strides stiff with tension.
Nathan and the others lined up shoulder to shoulder at the halfway line, arms locked over each other's shoulders, a human chain of trembling hope.
Coach Grayson stood nearby, arms crossed, gaze steely.
The referee whistled.
The Ipswich player ran up.
Boom!
He struck it cleanly — maybe too cleanly.
The ball curved—
CLANG—!!
It smashed against the right post and ricocheted wide!
"Aghhh!!"
The Ipswich fans groaned in agony. Some buried their faces in their hands. Others simply slumped where they stood.
On the Leeds bench, fists pumped the air. Shouts of encouragement erupted.
Nathan found himself gasping — he hadn't realized he was holding his breath.
One more... Just one more.
They had the chance now — to finish it.
Coach Grayson turned to the bench, nodding.
"Jamal, you're up."
Jamal Carter, the electric right winger, nodded grimly.
He said nothing, just pulled his jersey tighter over his chest and started jogging toward the spot.
Nathan slapped his shoulder as he passed. "Finish it, mate."
Jamal gave him a quick smirk. "What else?"
The stadium's tension was a physical thing now, a living force pressing down on every soul inside.
Leeds fans chanted in unison, a rising wave:
"LEEDS! LEEDS! LEEDS!"
Jamal placed the ball carefully, adjusting it once, then stepping back.
He took four steps — measured, deliberate — then froze.
He stared at the goal, at the keeper trembling on his line, and drew a long, deep breath.
The whistle.
PEEEEEEEP!
Jamal charged forward.
THUMP!!
A low, thundering shot — not fancy, not flashy — just pure, ruthless power.
It slammed past the keeper's outstretched hand and hammered into the bottom left corner!
GGOOOOOOAAAALLLLL!!!
The eruption of sound was immediate, volcanic, unstoppable.
Leeds had done it.
They had survived.
They had won.
Nathan didn't remember running.
One second he was standing still, and the next he was sprinting, flying into Jamal along with the others.
They tackled him, screamed, punched the air.
The bench cleared — players, coaches, even the physio staff piling onto the field, caught up in the uncontrollable euphoria.
Tears — real, hot, undeniable — blurred Nathan's vision.
It was too much.
All the pain, all the exhaustion, all the self-doubt he had buried inside him — it burst out in that one perfect moment.
He shouted at the sky, fists clenched, voice cracking.
"We did it!! WE DID IT!!!"
Far away, in the stands, Nathan caught a glimpse of a tall figure standing still amid the chaos.
His father.
Coach Tyler Perry.
Arms crossed. Face unreadable.
But Nathan could see the glint in his eyes even from here.
A proud glint.
And that — somehow — meant even more than the victory itself.
The players eventually gathered in front of the Leeds fans, linking arms as they sang and swayed.
Nathan stood between Marco and Tyler, his body aching but his spirit soaring.
He looked up at the stands, the banners, the roaring crowd.
This was it.
This was why he fought.
Not for fame.
Not for records.
But for moments like this — moments that made life feel bigger than the body could hold.