Sunlight poured mercilessly over the pitch, turning the immaculately trimmed grass into a blazing green carpet beneath the midday sky. Stade Louis II's training ground hummed with the precision of a military operation. Before the whistle, a sacred tension hung in the air.
Demien stepped out behind Michel, not rushing to catch up. His legs carried him forward in a rhythm that felt natural to this body, if not to the mind inhabiting it.
Rows of cones curved in perfect half-moons across the turf. Staffers adjusted tripod-mounted GPS receivers along the sidelines, their red-and-black kits marking them as part of the machine. Sun-warmed rubber mingled with the scent of freshly cut grass. In the distance, boots clacked across hard ground as players in light red tops jogged in staggered lines, circling the width of the pitch at a tempo requiring no instruction. They knew the routine.
Eyes turned his way. Some pretended not to look.
Evra passed closest, feet light and precise. His nod was tight – not deference, but acknowledgment of rank. No smile warmed his face.
Demien returned nothing. Not yet.
Farther out, Giuly chatted with Rothen during their warm-up lap. His laughter carried too loudly – deliberately so. His eyes darted sideways each time he passed the halfway line. Measuring. Judging.
Demien kept moving.
He slid his hands behind his back, fingers locking loosely as he slowed his pace along the sideline. The posture came instinctively – calm, detached, observant. His stomach tightened while his face remained impassive.
Too many watchful eyes. Too much history he hadn't lived.
A young analyst in a Monaco windbreaker approached, clipboard extended like an offering, sweat beading at his temples.
"Coach?"
Demien took it wordlessly. Pages flipped efficiently under his thumb.
Giuly: 91% peak fitness.Evra: 88%—expected. Monitoring tendon strain.Zikos: 95%, erratic match form.Rothen: 93%. Aggression rating spiked in recent sessions.
His thumb paused. He hummed thoughtfully – neither approval nor criticism. Just acknowledgment.
The analyst nodded with visible relief and backed away.
Demien continued past hydration crates and mini-goals, eyes scanning the patterns across the pitch. Evra attacked diagonally, reset quickly, scanned after every third step – high football IQ. Giuly broke too early on vertical runs – classic winger instinct but vulnerable to offside traps. Rothen lingered wide, disconnected when not in possession – problematic.
His coaching brain activated without conscious effort, a thousand instincts clicking into alignment though he hadn't spoken a word.
Two players exchanged glances as he passed. Whispers followed. Grins that died before becoming laughter.
He didn't turn to catch their words. He didn't need to.
You're being watched. Every silence. Every movement.
At the far end, a metal equipment chest stood beside the trainer's bench. As he passed, a rippled reflection caught his eye.
He paused, studying it.
Not entirely Yves anymore. Not Demien either. Something between them – expectation, pressure, authority layered over a frame still learning its weight.
"You're supposed to own this," he muttered. "Stop hesitating."
A whistle cut sharply across the pitch. Water break.
Players peeled toward the sideline as a staffer called names and distributed bottles. Sweat glistened on collarbones and darkened sleeves.
Giuly broke from the group, drifting toward Demien with casual confidence that bordered on confrontation.
"Coach."
Demien turned, eyebrows raised just enough to invite speech.
Giuly sipped water, scanning the pitch with affected nonchalance. "You alright?"
"Why?"
Giuly shrugged one shoulder, bottle dangling from his fingers. "You seem..." The pause stretched deliberately. His smile never reached his eyes. "...different."
Silence settled between them.
Demien held his gaze until discomfort grew thick in the air.
Then smiled – not fully Yves' expression, but something close.
Giuly didn't return it. He took another sip and turned away, melting back into the group before the next whistle.