"Useless! You want me to sell this club because you think they are useless?"
Richard Sterling's voice was loud.
It was the same voice that had rallied boardrooms and terrified opposing managers for three decades.
Now, it was aimed squarely at his eighteen-year-old son, and Michael felt the vibrations in his chest.
"They finished fifteenth, Dad," Michael said, his own voice steady but quiet.
He refused to shout back. Logic, not emotion, was his weapon.
"Fifteenth. We barely avoided relegation. The wage bill is astronomical, the star players are past their prime, and the youth academy hasn't produced a decent talent in five years. From a business perspective, we're bleeding money. We should sell, cut our losses, and reinvest in something stable."
Richard slammed a meaty fist on the desk.
The silver trophies lining the shelves seemed to rattle in fear. "Business perspective? This isn't a stock portfolio, Michael! This is Northwood FC! This is your grandfather's legacy! He built this club from the mud and dirt of the third division with his bare hands!"
"And he would be horrified to see it now," Michael shot back, his composure finally cracking.
"He was a winner. He wouldn't tolerate mediocrity. We're not a football club anymore; we're a retirement home for overpaid athletes who've lost their passion."
He saw the words hit his father like a physical blow.
Richard's face, usually a mask of stern control, crumpled for a second.
The anger in his eyes was replaced by a deep, aching hurt.
He sank back into his leather chair, the fight seeming to drain out of him, replaced by a heavy weariness.
"You don't get it," Richard whispered, his voice raspy.
He stared past Michael, his gaze fixed on a faded, black-and-white photo of the 1978 promotion-winning team, his own father hoisted on the shoulders of his teammates.
"This club… it's more than just a business. It's the heart of this city. When the mines closed, when the factories shut down, the one thing people still had was this team. On a Saturday afternoon, for ninety minutes, they weren't unemployed, they weren't struggling. They were giants. They were Northwood."
He leaned forward, his eyes locking onto Michael's.
The anger was gone, replaced by a burning, raw passion that Michael hadn't seen in years.
"You talk about our players being useless. Do you know what I see? I see men carrying the weight of a city on their shoulders. I see the ghosts of every player who ever wore this crest. I see your grandfather, pouring his life savings into fixing the floodlights because he believed. He believed that a football club could give people hope when they had nothing else."
Richard stood up, his towering frame casting a long shadow across the room.
"You see a balance sheet, Michael. I see a soul. You see liabilities; I see legends who gave their blood and bone for this shirt. Selling this club isn't cutting a loss. It's ripping the heart out of this community. It's telling every fan, every child who dreams of playing on that pitch, that their hope is worthless. That their history doesn't matter. That their soul is for sale."
The words hung in the air.
Michael felt an involuntary shiver trace its way down his spine.
Goosebumps erupted on his arms.
His father's passion was a tangible thing, a fire that warmed the entire room.
For a fleeting moment, he almost understood. He saw the romance, the history, the legacy his father was fighting for.
But then, the cold, hard reality of their situation crashed back in.
Romance didn't pay the bills. History didn't win matches.
"It's over, Dad," Michael said, his voice soft but firm. The goosebumps faded.
"That time is gone."
He didn't wait for a reply.
He turned and walked out of the office, the weight of his father's disappointed gaze burning into his back.
He strode through the empty corridors of the stadium, the echoes of his footsteps the only sound.
The sleek, vibrant yellow of his Lamborghini felt like an insult to the gray, overcast sky.
He gunned the engine, the roar a welcome distraction from the turmoil in his head, and sped away from the stadium, away from his father, away from the legacy that felt more like a cage than a crown.
The city blurred past his window, a smudge of brick and melancholy.
He was sad, deeply and profoundly sad, but also frustrated.
Why couldn't his father see the simple truth?
He pulled over a few miles later, the adrenaline fading, leaving only a hollow ache.
He took out his phone and dialed his best friend.
"Leo," he said, the moment the call connected.
"Whoa, you sound like your dog just died," Leo's cheerful voice crackled through the speaker.
"Let me guess. Another 'discussion' with the king about the state of the kingdom?"
"He wants to go down with the ship," Michael muttered, leaning his head against the cool leather of the headrest.
"He gave me this whole speech about the club's soul and my grandfather's legacy… It was intense."
"The 'soul of the club' speech? Oh, that's a classic! He pulls that one out every time the team forgets how to pass a ball. Did you get goosebumps?"
Michael winced. "Yeah, actually."
A loud, unrestrained laugh erupted from the phone. It wasn't mean-spirited, but it was completely unfiltered, the sound of a friend who knew him too well.
"Oh, man! He got you with the soul speech! That's brilliant! You, Mr. 'Everything-is-a-Number,' got hit with the magic and legacy talk. What are you going to do now? Lead the pre-game chants?"
Something inside Michael snapped.
It was the laughter. It was the casual dismissal of the storm raging inside him. It was the sudden, blinding realization that no one understood. Not his father, trapped in the past. Not his best friend, who saw it all as a joke.
They saw a rich kid with a rich kid's problems.
They didn't see his frustration, his ambition, his certainty that there was a better way.
The sadness evaporated, replaced by a white-hot surge of rage. It was pure, clarifying, and powerful.
"I'll show him," Michael whispered, his knuckles white as he gripped the steering wheel.
"Show who what?" Leo asked, his laughter subsiding into a confused chuckle.
"My father," Michael said, his voice no longer a whisper but a low, dangerous growl. "You think this is a joke? He thinks I'm a heartless kid who doesn't understand. Fine. He wants to hold onto his crumbling, sentimental relic? Let him."
He took a deep breath, the decision forming in his mind, solid and absolute.
"I'll do it myself. I'll do it my way."
"Do what, Mike? What are you talking about?"
"I'm going to buy a club!" The words exploded out of him, filled with all his pent-up fury and frustration. "I'm going to sell everything. The car, the watches, the apartment, all of it! I'll take every penny I have and I will buy my own team. I'll build it from scratch, the right way. No sentiment. No ghosts. Just smart decisions and ruthless ambition. I'll build an empire so powerful, so successful, that he'll have no choice but to see that I was right! I'll make him see!"