Glory Of The Football Manager System-Chapter 320: The House Hunt II

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Chapter 320: The House Hunt II

This journey felt different. We were heading back into the city, but to a part of South London that felt like a village. The roads narrowed again, lined with huge, ancient trees and handsome Victorian houses.

We drove through Dulwich Village, with its white picket fences, old-fashioned pubs, and people queuing outside a bakery, the smell of fresh bread and coffee hanging in the air. The noise here wasn’t traffic; it was the sound of life.

The distant shouts of kids playing in the park, the chatter of people sitting outside a café, the gentle hum of a place at ease with itself. This felt real.

We pulled into a private underground car park beneath a modern, stylish but understated apartment building that overlooked the park.

"It’s the penthouse," Christine said, leading us towards a private lift. "It’s been vacant for a few months. We had it fully furnished for a player who was supposed to be coming from Spain, but the deal fell through at the last minute."

The lift opened directly into the apartment, and the effect was instantaneous. It was stunning. A huge, open-plan living space with floor-to-ceiling windows that flooded the room with light.

A state-of-the-art kitchen flowed into a comfortable living area with a huge, soft grey sofa, a thick rug, and a large television mounted on the wall. It was stylishly furnished, modern but warm, with tasteful art on the walls and books on the shelves. It felt lived-in, even though it was empty.

But Emma didn’t even look at the furniture. She walked straight past it, her eyes fixed on the glass doors at the far end of the room. She slid them open and stepped out onto a huge, wrap-around balcony. The view was breathtaking. The green expanse of the park below, and beyond it, the iconic skyline of London stretching out to the horizon.

She stood there for a moment, breathing in the air, a gentle breeze lifting the loose strands of her red hair. Then she turned back to me, and her face was alight with a joy that eclipsed even the 9-0 victory.

"A house is too much hassle, Danny," she said, her voice full of certainty. "The garden, the cleaning, the upkeep... we’re not there yet. We’re a young couple. We need a place that’s easy, that lets us live our lives."

She gestured around the bright, open space, her eyes shining. "This," she said, her voice dropping to a soft, happy whisper. "This is us. It’s perfect. It’s home."

And I felt it too. She was right. A house felt like a commitment to a life we hadn’t chosen yet, a life of garden parties and school runs. The apartment was a statement of intent for the life we were building right now. It was a home for a young, ambitious manager and his brilliant, beautiful partner. It was a place to think, to work, to live. It was a foundation.

Christine, who had been watching us with a knowing smile, stepped forward. "I thought you might like this one," she said softly. "The keys are yours whenever you’re ready."

"Ready now," Emma said, without taking her eyes off the view. Christine laughed and handed me a set of keys.

The journey back to Croydon in the club car was a blur of phone calls from Christine. "Yes, a moving crew for this afternoon... I don’t care if it’s a Sunday, Bill, the boy’s a hero... Just two strong lads and a van, that’s all he needs."

By the time we got back to the flat, the adrenaline of the decision had worn off, replaced by the daunting, physical reality of what we were about to do. The small space, which had felt so cramped this morning, now seemed full of a life that needed to be packed away. It was exhausting just looking at it.

"Right," Emma said, clapping her hands together with a determined look. "You tackle the books and the tactical notes. I’ll do the kitchen and the clothes."

For the next two hours, we worked in a state of organised chaos. The emotional high of the last twenty-four hours gave way to the mundane, physical reality of packing.

I carefully took down the tactical diagrams from the wall, the notes on Liverpool’s press, the set-piece routines against Man City. Each one was a memory, a small victory. I packed them into a box labelled ’WORK’, along with my coaching manuals and notebooks.

Emma, meanwhile, was a whirlwind of efficiency in the bedroom, folding clothes, wrapping the few mugs we owned in newspaper. We didn’t have much, but it was ours. It was the story of our first few months in this new life.

By four o’clock, we were both flagging. The physical and emotional toll of the weekend was catching up with us. We were sitting on the floor, surrounded by boxes, when the buzzer went. Two burly men in Palace training tops were at the door.

"Gaffer," one of them said with a grin. "Christine sent us. Said you needed a hand."

They were astonishingly efficient, clearing the flat in under thirty minutes, treating our few, slightly battered boxes with the same care as if they were handling priceless antiques. We did one last sweep of the empty flat. It looked sad and forlorn.

I stood in the doorway of the living room, remembering the sleepless nights I’d spent in here, the fear, the hope. I felt a pang of nostalgia for the man who had lived here, the terrified, uncertain boy who had been thrown in at the deep end.

Emma came and stood beside me, slipping her hand into mine. "You did alright, you know," she said softly, as if reading my mind.

"We did alright," I corrected her.

We arrived at the new apartment as the sun was beginning to dip in the sky. The movers placed the boxes neatly in the living room, a small, humble island of cardboard in a sea of polished floors and designer furniture. They wished us luck for the United game and left.

And then, we were alone. The silence descended, a different kind of silence to the corporate void of Canary Wharf. This was a peaceful, welcoming quiet. But we were both too tired to appreciate it. The exhaustion hit me like a physical blow. My body ached. My mind was numb.

"I can’t move," Emma said, slumping onto the huge grey sofa and closing her eyes. "I think I might live here now."

"Don’t we?" I said, collapsing next to her.

We didn’t have the energy to cook, or even to find the kettle. I found my phone and ordered two large pizzas from a local place, paying by card.

We ate them straight out of the boxes, sitting on the floor with our backs against the sofa, using a cardboard box as a makeshift table.

It was the least glamorous meal I’d ever had, and it was one of the best. We were too tired to talk much, just comfortable in each other’s exhausted silence, the simple act of eating a shared, primal pleasure.

Afterwards, while I was stuffing the empty pizza boxes into a bin, Emma found the bottle of champagne Christine had left for us in the fridge, and two glasses. She carried them out onto the balcony. The sun had set, and the city was beginning to twinkle to life below us, a vast, sprawling metropolis of light and shadow.

I came and stood behind her, wrapping my arms around her waist, resting my chin on her shoulder. The cool evening air was a balm on my tired skin.

"To our new home," she said, her voice a soft murmur. She twisted around to clink her glass against mine.

"To our new home," I repeated, my voice thick with an emotion I couldn’t quite name. It was more than just happiness. It was a profound sense of peace, of rightness. Of arrival.

We didn’t talk about the future in grand terms. We talked about the small things. About buying a plant for the balcony. About which side of the bed would be hers. About having my mum down from Manchester to stay in the spare room, and how she would probably try to reorganise the kitchen.

We were building a life, not just a season. One box, one pizza, one conversation at a time.

Later, as we stood there, her head resting against my chest, her red hair catching the glow of the city lights, I looked out at the vast, sprawling beauty of it all, and I felt the last of the tension from the past few months finally drain away.

The survival mission was over. The next Chapter of my life, a life I was building here in South London, had truly begun. I had a home. I had the woman I loved beside me. Now, all that was left was to conquer Old Trafford.

***

Thank you to nameyelus for the magic castle.

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