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Alexia Putellas x Explorer!R
8.5k Fluff, Fun, Minor Angst
Hi Guys,
This is pt4. in the 'I Would Climb Every Mountain With You" otherwise known as Explorer!R Universe. TW: description of killing an animal.
Highly recommend you read those 3 first, as this is entrenched in lore. Pt 1 can be found here.
It's developed from an ask I received from @karsonromanoff so thank you so much for the idea! I hope I did it justice and I'm sorry for the delay and the words. ha.
This is the first time I've written since my dad died. I'm not being emo or heavy about it but I am asking to please, be kind. I know there's nice people out there but often they're drowned out by the loud haters.
So throw us a comment, like or reblog if you enjoyed. I'm just trying to get back into something that brought me joy. I know I enjoyed writing it.
Also, may be weird for a fic about a spanish gay footballer, but you probably need a good working knowledge of Bear Grylls to understand 80% of this. ha.
As has become tradition, here's the song running though my head when writing! Yes, my music taste remains to be that of someone born in 1962. God love Helen Reddy.
âVamos Ale! I donât like to make Miguel waitâŠâ you shout from the kitchen, bag resting on the countertop as you try to fix your bracelet with your left hand,
âDeja de preocuparte, a Ă©l no le importa, I will be one minuteâŠâ you head called back from the bedroom where your wife had been getting dressed for 2 hours now.
Yes.
Your wife.
Sometimes you couldnât believe it.
Sometimes the weight of the band on your finger catches you by surprise and youâd remember.
Sometimes Alexia would place her hand on your bare thigh and you could feel the cool metal on your skin and youâd remember.
Sometimes youâd get called âMrs Putellasâ at a school talk, or at the Doctors, and youâd remember.
It felt so natural that sometimes youâd forget that you werenât always Alexia's wife.
But now you are. And had been for almost 6 months. And married life couldnât have suited you more.
Your wedding ring was your new favourite accessory, you never took it off.
In a fire you would save Alexia and your ring.
Maybe even your ring first.
It was embossed with the imprint of grass that Alexia has been collecting from each pitch of each game she had played in since you had met. The intricate design brought tears to your eyes as soon as you saw it. Made even worse by the inscription ââcause you are my goalâ.Â
You would be embarrassed if Alexia hadnât cried like a toddler when you presented her with the ring you had made for her, which had rock from each of the 7 peaks you had scaled, as well as a granule of sand from the Dead Sea set within it. Integrated into the metal, visible but smooth to the touch.Â
The inscription 'every mountain high, every valley low' on the inside of the band.
You knew youâd done good and you knew your Ale well enough to anticipate the absolute mess she would be when presented with it, ensuring you had a pocket full of tissues for the inevitable waterfall.
You werenât wrong.
You had to assure a passing couple on the trail you had chosen that she was fine, not having a medical incident and you were definitely not mid break-up but in fact exchanging wedding bands early because you knew your fiance well enough she didnât need her teammates to witness this much of her soft side.
Though you tried, they still saw enough on your wedding day to tease her for the last 6 months with no sign of slowing down.
Though right now your wife's behaviour was nothing but unexpected. You had agreed to attend one of Alexia's events this evening. Since getting married you had felt more of a duty to attend and make up for the years youâd left her carrying her own handbag whilst you trotted over mountains on the other side of the world.Â
She insisted that you didnât have to. Like she always did. You werenât one for the fancy dresses and the flashing cameras. But you saw the gleam of hope in her eyes as she insisted she would be fine on her own.
You couldnât let that sparkle dim.
Also you had to set off for a camp in a few days and you had gotten seriously stuck in the honeymoon phase meaning that an evening without your wife by your side wasnât something you could stomach.
Not that you would admit to being so clingy.
But it wasnât like Ale to take so long to get ready, neither of you being particularly fussy, usually she would throw on some light makeup, smack your bum whilst you ate nutella off a knife under the hob light, procrastinating getting ready until she dragged you and dropped you into the ensuite, steal a kiss and a spray of perfume, and wait for you whilst watching old football clips in the living room.
But now, as you still struggled to attach the clasp of your bracelet and you had one eye on the poor Barca driver, Miguel, waiting in your driveway, you started to grow frustrated at your wife's sudden vanity.
You smelt her perfume invading your senses as you felt her arms envelope you from behind, moving your uncoordinated left hand away and easily attaching the clasp of your bracelet for you, pressing a kiss to your neck as she did so.
âFinalmente⊠Letâs g-...â you spoke as you turned in her embrace, finally taking in her attire which stopped you in your tracks.
âBoobsâ
You had suddenly turned into a 14 year old boy and you couldnât explain it.
You had seen your wife naked hundreds of times.
Hundreds of fantastic times.
But here she stood looking, regal. Her hair falling lightly over her face, her dark sparkly dress with wide shoulders and only what you could describe as a boob portal you had been rendered speechless. Mouth gaping open like a fish.
â...Amor?...â you heard the delight in her voice. âAre you listening to me⊠my eyes are up here.â she jokingly clicked her fingers in front of your face which took you out of your breast-inspired trance.
âAle you are so beautifulâ you looked deeply into her eyes but you didnât miss the blush rising from her neck. And you meant it. She was. Wow.Â
âDo you like it?â she asked, shyly, âYou donât think itâs too much? Itâs just the first event weâve gone to together since we got married and I wanted toâŠâ
You interrupt her but pressing a kiss to her lips, and, well, if you slipped a little tongue in there then fine. She was your wife after all.
âWhat? Show the world what they're missing out on? I am so proud to stand by your side, my love.â you whispered into her lips, as you toyed with her wedding band.Â
You couldnât help yourselfâŠâand your boobs are fantastic.âÂ
She barked out a laugh as you leaned back into where you left off, but she took a step back, her heel clicking against the tile floor, to which you let out an annoyed grumble.
âOi Oi, Mi Amor. What about poor Miguel, he is waiting, Si?â she teased.
âHe doesnât care⊠CĂĄlla y bĂ©same.â
â---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
You took a deep breath and leaned back on your chair at the round table you found yourself at. Alexia had been pulled from your side which she had stuck to like glue all evening, to go and present the final award of the evening which she had just done, very sexily if you do say so yourself. All confident and boob-y.
You smiled, imagining her now making small talk backstage, eyes bored but a smile plastered on her face as she tried to make her way back to your table.
Your other table-mates seemed to take the opportunity of the break in the ceremony to raid the free bar put on by the charity. Which seemed very uncharitable of them. But, as you toyed with the rim of your glass, who were you to judge?
Stomach full from a mediocre-mass produced meal and head happily fuzzy from the bubbles you had consumed you found yourself oddly satisfied as you sat here. In this conference room-turned auditorium in the middle of Barcelona, here, loudly and proudly as Alexia's wife.
Mrs Putellas.
You couldnât help but smile to yourself, you felt weirdly grown-up. With your wife, your house, and your business. You blinked and missed yourself becoming so settled and for once in your life you werenât terrified of the idea.
You saw the glint in Alexia's eye. When Irene and her wife would come round for dinner and bring their kid. Sheâd surrender all hostess duties and sit on the living room floor, crawling around at the beck and call of whatever imaginary game the 5 year old insisted on. Youâd seen her perfect her lion roar in that very spot. It probably matched the glint in yours when you were grocery shopping and a child being pushed in a trolley would go past shoving cookies into the trolley without their Mother seeing.
Maybe, you thought, maybe it was timeâŠ
âIt is you! I am so sorry to interrupt. I had to come over to introduce myself. I am such a fanâŠâ
You glanced around, expecting Alexia to be standing over your shoulder and smiling politely at the person who had approached your table to meet her⊠but you were met with blank space and then you engaged your silly brain and realised the person was speaking English and looking at you andâŠ
Oh My God.
Itâs Bear Grylls.
âOh My God. Youâre Bear Grylls.âÂ
You let out.Â
Stupidly.
Standing and thrusting your hand out like an idiot to your legitimate childhood hero.
You and your brother would watch his series for hours as children. Sat cross-legged 2 inches from the TV on your living room floor, eating up every second of his adventures. Your mum had to stop you from eating a woodlouse once in your garden because youâd seen him eat a cricket in the Amazon the evening before. Your brother smacked upside the head for trying to drink a cup of his own wee for the same reason.
Now you were a well-seasoned adventurer yourself you knew that all of that was for theatricks.Â
You had spent more than 7 weeks wandering the Amazon yourself once, and not one drop of urine passed your lips. Not one 8 legged insect had you gulped down in one.
But still.
Hero.
He took your hand graciously, as you both sat back down you prepared to barrage him with questions but before you could he jumped right inâŠ
âI have been wanting to meet you for years. But my team said you had disappeared off to Spain and couldnât be tracked down. Please, I've been desperate to know. .. Tell me all about summiting Orjas del SaladoâŠâ
So you told him, and you asked him about his adventures, and you chatted for what could have been hours, sharing stories and advice with Bear-fucking-Grylls.
He blushed as you pointed out his for-TV tricks and you thanked him for being a portal into the wider world from your living room.
At some point you felt Alexia return, a strong hand on your shoulder. You paused your monologue about Patagonia and giddily took her hand in yours, introducing them to each other.Â
Polite pleasantries exchanged you could tell she had legitimately no idea what was going on or who this middle-aged English guy at your table was, but judging from your excited eyes, she didnât need to interrupt.
It didnât take too long for someone from his team to pull him away for an interview with the charity. But as you stood to say your goodbyes he made an offer, âYou know, me and the production company are making a special about survival in the Alps⊠I would love for you to be a guest star.â
You stood there like a gaping fish for a moment. âReally?â you asked, in wonder, your 7 year old self spinning around in glee in your chest. Alexia smiling up at you from her chair at the joy in your voice.
âOf course! I would be honored, itâs especially about how to survive in an Avalanche situation. Obviously, with what happened in NepalâŠyou are an expert in that fieâŠâ
At that point, Alexia stopped her polite silence she had been maintaining whilst you had your moment with your childhood hero. And abruptly stood, clutching your hand hard in both of hers, stern look on her face.
âNo.â
From the look on his face you gathered that this successful upper-middle class white English man had not been told no too often, and a beat of silence followed which Alexia was more than happy to fill.
âSorry Señor Oso. She doesnât do snow now. Thank you for the offer though.â
She said it with such finality that even you didnât think to question it. Her mis-translation brought a smile to your face. Her hands still encompassed yours, her eyes didnât leave his face. As though daring him to rebuff her.
He looked at you as though to confirm she could answer for you. Of course she could. But you knew this refusal wasnât just about you, but about her also. You knew the anxiety it would cause her for you to put yourself in that situation wasnât worth anything on this planet.
Nevermind the trauma it would dredge up for you. So obviously, you agreed.
âSorry Mr Grylls. Not my rodeo anymore. Iâve got some contacts though who you could work withâ you politely confirmed your refusal and felt Alexias hands lessen their grip on yours in relief.
âNo, no, of course. Sorry. But no. I would really love for you to be involved in the series. We have an episode about promoting women in outdoor pursuits. It's still on the drawing board, but if you are interested Iâll get our people to liaise with each other!â
âThat sounds amazing but⊠I donât have any people for you toâŠâ
âDonât be silly Mi Amorâ Alexia interrupts again, hand still in yours and the other expertly reaching into her clutch and pushing a card into his outstretched hand⊠âWe have people. Please, Oso, be in touch.â
Smiling vaguely and confusedly at your wife, still clearly mildly terrified of her, he takes the card as he's dragged away by his handler. He's probably still in hearing distance as you squeal in glee and throw yourself into your wife's arms, making her spin with the momentum.
âAle, Ale, Ale!!! Do you know who that wasâŠ.â you exclaim.
She canât help but laugh aloud at your antics, soft look on her face as she lifts you lightly off the ground to stop your spin.
âSi Mi Amor, ese era el hombre oso de la televisiĂłn. Tu favorito.â she replies with a smile on her face, speaking softly, somehow, in the middle of this event where she was the guest star, making you feel as though you were the only person in the universe.
âNo.â you corrected â..eres mi favorito.â You sealed your words with a light kiss to her lips, chaste but warm.
âAh, Si. And you have had some wine. You always get soft after wine.â she lightly rolls her eyes with affection at your gushing over her.
Itâs your turn to roll your eyes as you pull her into a soft sway, your childhood hero quickly forgotten now youâre in the company of your wife.
Though the giddiness in your bones from your encounter remains.
âSi the wine.â you agree moving your lips close to her ear as you whisper, breath dancing against her cheek, your hand moves to her chest and you feel her breath falter at your closeness,
âbut also your boobs.â and you quickly poke her exposed chest between her breasts before she can stop you, and you move away from her pulling her behind you as you rush off to the bar.
âAmor!â she cackles.
âVamos Ale! A La Barra!â
â-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
âEstoy Muerta.â
You grumble in complaint into the chest of the warm and moving pillow that you had clearly settled on in the night.
âShh Ale.â
âMe estoy muriendo y a mi esposa no le importa.â
âYou are not dying Ale. You are hungover and over 30â, you mumble in reply, moving away from resting on her chest, the heat becoming too much for your own fuzzy brain.
âExplain to me how that is different.â she doesnât take kindly to your light chuckle in reply, as you move your hand to cover your eyes from the sunlight starting to bleed through the curtains.
You peek an eye open and see the remnants of your previous night strewn across the bedroom floor.
You take in the glorious dress of your wifes thrown across your chest of drawers. You recall unzipping it with your mouth after making very good use of the boob portal. Much to Alexia's delight.
You had probably taken it a little bit too far at the bar. Your giddiness let your binge-drinking brit out a little too much.
You had a flash of memory at dancing on a table at a dive bar in the town centre, before being brought down by Alba who you had called and demanded come and dance the night away.
Meanwhile Alexia had been in the corner trying to drunkenly explain to Mapi a set of complicated tactics that they should try out at an additional training session in the morning.
âI thought you had scheduled extra training today Aleâ you teased after taking in her pasty complexion as you rolled over and settled back down onto your, cooler, side of the bed.
âI hate you.â she replied, quite seriously, as she moulded herself against your back, taking your hand in hers and burying her face into the back of your neck.
âOf course you do, dear, it feels like it.â you tease again, wiggling yourself and making her grumble again.
You rest there for a few moments, before youâre dragged onto your back again and pulled into Alexia's embrace as she moves you around like her own personal teddy bear.
You go with the flow, quite used to your wife's clingy nature, especially when she didn't feel well.
But your silence doesnât last two minutes before she rolls you over again, now onto your back, âOh bloody hell, where are we going now.â you mumble, as she rests her head on your chest this time, nuzzling into your breasts.
âme estoy poniendo cĂłmodo.â she mutters into your bosom, âallĂĄ. ahora estoy cĂłmodoâ. You run your hands through her hair, smiling down at your wife who is practically purring at the attention.
âBebĂ©âŠâ, you make a noise of affirmation.
âWill youâŠâ you know what she wants, and you know she must be feeling bad if sheâs asking for attention.
âSi, my love. voy a trenzar tu cabello. One big plait or lots of little ones?â.Â
âThe tingly ones por favorâ she mumbles into your chest. Your heart expands at her adorableness, never quite learning the English for âfrench plaitâ they became known as the âtingly onesâ in your household, because of the feeling she would get as you plaited her wet hair after a game, hands working through her scalp.Â
It brings a smile to your face and you can see the lovesick smile on hers where it is squished against your chest.
You start to section out her hair as she lies still, your ministrations slowly putting her to sleep, working methodically in the quiet morning.
Moving strand over strand in intricate braids, lightly tugging her scalp and undoing when it's not perfect and redoing, giving her an extra scratch to the soft skin behind her ear when you get there, knowing it's her most sensitive spot. Receiving a sleepy purr in satisfaction as your reward.
You hear the animals from the national park outside, feel the sun starting to warm the room around you. Her chest rising and falling against yours hypnotising you further into the moment. Youâve got grand plans, brunch and a walk along the beach in your mind, maybe a lazy afternoon swim, hold on no. Maybe a lazy afternoon skinny dip. Yeah.
That sounds good.
Youâve almost finished tying off the last plait when you are startled back into the moment by the buzzing of your wifes phone on the bedslide table.
You fight back a smile at the groan that is emitted from your fully grown-pro-athlete-wife. It resembled that of a teenager whoâd been asked to clean their room or no dessert. When she doesnât go to make a move you nudge her shoulder.
âAle. Ale, your phone."
âNo.â
âYes."
âNo."
âC'mon Ale.â you reach across and pick the phone up. âIt could be important. It could be your secret wife wondering where you are.â
She rolls off you at your tease, throwing you a glare that resembles more of an angry kitten than anything, âIt could not be, she knows where I am. I snuck out whilst you were dancing on the tables in that last bar to make plans for dinner.â
âAh, Si of course. My mistake.â
She surges up and gives you a completely unnecessary chaste kiss, as though even the joke is too much and she has to confirm sheâs kidding. The phone has stopped vibrating against the bedside table and the silence that settles over you both is welcome.
âHow are you so okay? I feel like I have been run over by a truck.â she states as she rubs her face, finally sitting up to start the day.
âYou are old.
âI am 2 months older than you.â
âTwo, very long, months my darling.â you tap her cheek lightly as you move to get out of bed, throwing on one of her oversized t-shirts you find on the floor.
âSeria, how?â she asks again, now sprawling across the space you have vacated.
âI am English. I once did a vodka shot through my eyeball in the park. I was 14.â you state, plainley, eyebrow raised in challenge as she just looks at you, open mouthed.
âOjalĂĄ no hubiera preguntado.â she mutters, as her phone starts to ring again.
âAle, phone.â you say, just to annoy her.
âÂĄlo sĂ©!â you hear thrown at you, as you head downstairs to set some food out for Billy-the-Goat, and make a coffee for your dying wife.
Soon after, you feel her presence behind you as you stir her coffee, turning as you feel her hands wrap around your waist and presenting her coffee and she takes it from you as though it's a ballon dâor. She takes a sip before she presses a kiss to your head.
âThat was my agent.â
Your heart drops, and you canât help the petulant whine that leaves your lips.
âNo, Ale! I wanted to spend the day together. Try that new brunch place Alba told us about. Have a swim, just be together. Whatever brand needs you can wait. Tell them no, pleaseâ you finish your little monologue with a pout, and you feel a childish frustration rise as a laugh teases against her lips. You donât get very far when a kiss is pressed against your lips.
âWell that sounds like the perfect hangover cure Mi Amor. Do you not want me to tell you what it is before I tell them no though?â there's something in her taunt, a glint in the eye that makes you think twice as your mouth already wraps around the refusal.
You take a moment too long apparently, and she takes things into her own hands as she clutches her coffee happily and spins around, âIâll tell them no! Donât worry Mi AmorâŠâ teasing lilt in her tone. Whatever the news is, it has pulled her from her hangover.
You wait a beat
Another.
âFine, What is it!â you groan out in defeat, hands raised to the sky, Alexias t-shirt riding high on your thighs as you raise your arms.
Your wife turns and is distracted momentarily by the flesh on display. Before you cough and she remembers what she's supposed to be doing. Coy smile on her face returning.
âThat was my agentâŠâ you huff out at her drawing out the anticipation. âOr should I say our agent.â your brow furrows in confusion as she continues⊠âshe has been contacted by a muy interesado oso.â
Realisation starts to dawn on you, memories of the previous night flashing in your mind and you canât help the grin that forms.
âSi, Mi Amor. It turns out he really meant it. She said they were willing to offer anything to get you on. Sheâs getting the details now and will contact us again after our day together today to see if you are interestedâ.
âI am interested!â you exclaim with glee, Alexia throwing her head back in laughter.
âI know Amor, but let's let them sell it to you. You need the details. Though⊠I am sure it is no more dangerous than ojos de vodka.â
â------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
âHola, love!â you shout into your empty hallway, hands full of groceries, you shuck off your trainers, hearing them thump against the wall as you struggle into the kitchen.
Tonight was the premiere of âMan Vs Womanâ , the special episode of your and Bear's adventure. After the offer was made you met with the TV production company via Zoom to go through ideas.
You pretended you didnât know Alexia was standing just outside the door to your study, listening and clearly deciding if she thought it was too dangerous or not. At least that's what you deduced from her interrupting with a cup of tea every time a particularly hairy idea was mentioned. Â
When you brought this up with her you pretended you didn't see her blush creeping up from her neck. Because youâre her wife and it was the wifely thing to do.
The concept was a really cool one. You were excited from the start. The idea was that you and Bear would both be dropped in an inhospitable environment with a map and a knife and nothing else. Neither of you would be told what type of environment but you had assurances in your contract that it wouldnât involve snow. You had 28 days to get to the muster point. Whoever got there first won.
Simple.
Convincing Alexia it was really cool. Less simple.
âAmor what if there are animals!â
âI know how to avoid dangerous animals. And there will be a medical team on standby,â
âWhat if you fall and cut yourself on your knife."
âWhat if you get tackled and break your leg?â
âThat's different. What if you lose your map and canât find your way out and you have to live out there foreverâ
âI will always find my way back to you.â
âWhat If-â
âAle.â
You stopped her rambling with a kiss and when you pulled away you looked deeply in her eyes.
âQue pasa I miss you too much?â eyes wide and vulnerable.
There we go. Her real source of anxiety.
You had spent more time apart than most couples but since you scaled down your travels you had fallen into a sweet domesticity you could admit was a struggle to pull yourself from. 28 days plus the week before to get to the location is longer than youâd like. But it was an adventure of a lifetime. Maybe⊠maybe your last adventure? The thoughts had been creeping in more and more recently.
Of early mornings chasing more than sunrises, maybe rising due to a baby's babble instead?
Youâd made sure that Alexia really knew how much youâd miss her the night before you flew out. On reflection maybe you should have rested your muscles a little more before such a physically demanding month but. Be serious. Look who your wife was.Â
You are not God's strongest soldier.
So, off you had gone. Competing against your childhood hero for all of womanhood. And you couldnât lie. You loved it.
Being blindfolded and dropped in an unknown location was exhilarating. Learning the land as you went, with only a map and a knife in hand it was one of the biggest challenges of your life.
The team had made good on their promise and the tropical rainforest you were in couldnât be further from a snowy mountain range.
Youâd refused to let anything slip to Alexia in the 3 months youâd been back. Lips tightly sealed no matter what she tried. You wanted her to be surprised and watch it in real time with you. In all the games you'd attended since you had to deal with an injured Mapi yapping your ear off whilst you tried to concentrate on the game, probing for hints about if you won, what you won, where you were, if you wrestled a snake, how big was the snake youâd wrestled.
âMaria stop with the snake!â youâd finally snapped during the tense quarter final of the Queen's cup.
Which had worked.
For all of two seconds.
âWhat did the snake taste like?â
Youâd originally planned to go home to England with Alexia to watch the premier with your family. But then a schedule mess-up in the league had meant that Ale had to play in a rescheduled game the day after the premier. It just didnât work for her to come to England.
She insisted you still go, but you refused. You wanted to watch her game. And you knew sheâd need you when the show was on. Even if she didnât know that yet.
You started to unpack your groceries mindlessly, youâd picked some great snacks for the evenings viewing, you suddenly were hit with how suspiciously peaceful your house was, though, you were sure youâd seen Alexia's car in the drive.
âAle! Love!, ÂĄEstoy en casa! Come help me unpack!â You shouted into your empty kitchen, back turned to your living room, you had a few hours before the show was on air, âI got that ice-cream you like! I know it gives you a tummy ache sometimes but donât worry, I'll rub your tummy how you like afteâŠâ
âAmor!â
You turned around at the panic in her voice, âWhaââ
âSURPRISE!â
Ale stood in your living area, face reddening, surrounded by her closest Barca teammates as well as Mario, his ever pregnant wife and his kids, your mum and brother as well as Eli and Alba. Everyone comically in paper party hats and some lop-sided bunting was up above your couch,
âHOPE YOU BEAT THE BEAR SNAKE!â it read, and you immediately knew who was on the decoration committee.
You jumped in surprise, dropping the ice cream and immediately ran into your mum's open arms, âMum! Youâre here!â you squealed into her neck, hiding the tears that had appeared in her presence.
âI am, love. Alexia literally wouldnât let us refuse the flight. She pretended she didnât understand English when we tried to at least pay for it. And you know I have a 265 day streak on duolingo but my accent must need work because she didnât understand my Spanish.â
You pulled yourself from her neck with a wet laugh and transferred yourself into your wifes open and familiar strong arms. âAleeeeâ you whined. She knew you meant thank you. And I love you. And you mean the world to me. But you were too British to do that infront of people.
âYou need to stop pretending you donât speak English when you donât like what you hear.â you muttered without malice after placing a kiss below her ear.
âI know amor. I love you too. And your family needed to be here for your big moment! You couldnât miss this with them because of me. And then also. Mapi happened and now weâre having a viewing party! There's a cake!â
âAnd Ice Cream Ale! Donât worry, Iâve saved it! Though we donât want your barriga to hu-â Mapi stands the space you'd just vacated holding up the abandoned and slightly battered carton of ice cream. She's stopped from her gleeful teasing by Ingrid covering her entire face with one big palm.
âWe wanted to be here to support you.â Ingrid interrupted her girlfriend, addressing you kindly.
âWe all did!â you hear from Alba in the back, already tucking into the buffet set up on the coffee table, paper hat skew-whiff on her head. You have never felt so loved. It was perfect.
â-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
âSo, when are you going to tell her youâre ready for them?â
You are brought out of your daydream by Ingrid sidling up to you and addressing you with her familiar soft lilt.
âHuh?â
She doesnât reply vocally, just nods her head towards your wife, who is currently having a very intense game of 2v2 in your garden with 2 of Marios youngest and Mapi.
The kids little legs making them toddle around after the small ball adorably, Mapi and Ale giving soft touches they would easily catch up with.
You canât help but laugh out loud as Ale takes Mapi by surprise and takes a shot against her hard, the ball catching her bare thigh in a manner which must have left a sting much to the small Spaniard's disdain.
Her and the two kids start to chase Alexia around the garden, dramatically tackling her as she suddenly becomes some sort of football monster, rolling around and blowing raspberries on their stomachs as Mapi cheers her toddler army on from the sidelines.
You feel another knock against your arm, dislodging your hand which is supporting your head as you lean over the breakfast bar facing the garden. Lovesick looks clearly on your face, going off Ingrid's coy smile.
âYou know, barn. Kids. MunchkinsâŠâ
âYeah, Yeah I get it IngridâŠâ you steal another look outside at your more-often-than-not-stern wife getting grass stains on her comfy shorts for the entertainment of your best friends' kids, suddenly you feel like being really really honest. You turn to Ingrid with a shy smile of your own, âsoon.â
Her face lights up, teeth on display unable to disguise her smile. âYeah?â she asks, before turning to look towards the garden, âMe too.â
You smile to yourself and drop your head onto the dark haired girl's shoulder, you both taking a moment to watch your partners play with the kids. The moment is ruined by your mum mussing up your hair on her way past,
âCome on Love, we need to wrangle these last-minute spaniards, it starts in 10 minutes!â
She had a point to be fair. A very chaotic 8 minutes later you practically push Eli into her seat on the couch after she tries to get another plate full of food for Marioâs wife, âÂĄEstĂĄ llena de Eli! ella esta embarazada no tiene hambre!â you cheekily remind her, your wife looking up at you from her place on the floor with tender eyes.
âAnd youâŠâ you turn your attention towards her as you make your way to your seat, âget up here.â you demand, patting the empty space next to you.
âIâm bueno down here Mi Amor, me and Bruno can watch from down here.â she insists. the 4 year old of Marios nestled on her stomach, her arms wrapped around his sleeping form where he attached himself to her after being forced back inside.
You hesitate for a moment, not watching to make a scene or be too needy in front of all your closest family and friends, but you knew that Ale would need to be within touching distance of you in the next hour.Â
Youâre about to make your peace with it when Mario glaces your way. You and Mario have worked together for years. Years before you met Ale and the girls.
Youâve battled more than just bears together. Weeks spent isolated in the mountains. And a bond like that means that you can communicate with just a look.
With just that glance heâs up and pulling his toddler into his own burley arms. Bruno remaining in his deep sleep through the change.
âIâve got el monstruo Ale. Go sit with your wife."
She doesnât need any more direction, the small interaction is subtle and missed by everyone, except your brother who sends you an exaggerated puppy dog look.
âFuck offâ you throw at him, finger in the air, quickly grabbed by Alexia, âHey, I thought you wanted me to sit here!â she teases, sending your brother a wink.
âStop ganging up on meâŠ!â youâre about to protest further before youâre shushed by Mapi, of all people, sitting on the floor between Ingrid's legs who sits on the couch above her. âIt's about to start!â
She has a point, a familiar British accent fills the living room, Spanish subtitles appearing on the bottom of the screen for the Spanish contingent. Bearâs voice is as dramatic as ever, long sweeping scenes fill the screen of intense jungle, a crocodile and an action shot of a snake thrown in for good measure.
âSerpiente!â Mapi shouts, pointing at the screen, before Ingrid hushes her and pulls her back against her legs.Â
      âWe all know by now that humans are masters of the jungle. But the unanswered question remains. Is it the King, or Queen of the Jungle? Find out tonight in Man V Woman.â
The title fills the screen with a dramatic crescendo of music. Your friends and family whooping as though it's the champions league final. Alexia barely contains her excitement next to you. You had been steadfast in your refusal to tell anyone the outcome.
The next shot is a recognisable one, the sound of trees being hacked with a machete accompanies a close up of a muddy puddle set deep in the jungle, until the water is disturbed by a ever-familiar battered boot stomping in the puddle, blaugrana laces pulled tight, as proudly as ever.
This prompts another wild round of jeering from the crowd around you as the camera pans out and reveals your full profile as Alexia places a loving kiss onto your shoulder, âThat's my wife!â she shouts, proudly, making you laugh.Â
Bear's voice over continues as you pull Alexia's hand into yours, half pulling her on top of you, she gives you a peculiar look, this being more PDA than you would usually allow in front of your English family, but she goes with it, too full of pride to be worried otherwise.
As the voiceover continues, highlights of your career flash across the screen to introduce you to the audience.
Mountains in Peru, Arctic Explorations, Treks across Siberia, all flash across the screen, mixed in with childhood pictures your mum must have supplied painting a picture of your career so far and your expertise in your career.
The music turns more dramatic as you shift uncomfortably, being the only one to realise in the room what's about to happen.
A picture of you smiling with Arjan at the peak of Everest, ice picks raised proudly in the air. You feel Alexia stiffen on your lap, ever so subtly. Stock footage of snow hurling down a mountain as Bear describes the avalanche you got trapped in.
He gives out stats and figures to heighten the drama⊠âyour chance of survival drops 3% every minute you are trapped after the first 15 minutes⊠being trapped for 2 days⊠our guest star did the unthinkableâŠâ
The room is bathed in a white light as the screen changes. Camera shaky and audio changing to the shouts and heavy breaths of whoever the body worn camera is strapped too. âYahÄmÌ, YahÄmÌ, she is here!â
The camera catches Arjan digging desperately, it's clear now the camera is strapped to a rescuer on the slopes of Everest, the TV production company having access to the footage through a sister company who were filming a documentary about altitude rescue at the time.
It shakes as the man helps dig, grunts of exertion as the spade digs desperately. A flash of colour and your snow suit is revealed, face pressed up against the rock you had found shelter near.
Arjan clears snow from your face desperately and puts his head close to yours, âSheâs breathing!â he pulls you up and your hand, satellite phone frozen in place, falls from the side of your ghostly white face as the camera fades out.
The whole segment couldnât have lasted more than 32 seconds. But it had felt like time had slowed. You could feel from her placement on you that Alexia hadnât taken a breath. Her eyes remained wide as she stared at the screen.
There was a heaviness in the room around you.Â
The voiceover continued, explaining the challenge to the audience but the silence continued. Eli glances at her daughter worriedly, every few seconds.
Just as you thought the tension couldnât get any more intense⊠âThat's what Alexia looks like when she visits England for Christmas and mum wonât let us put the heating on.â your brother jokes, awkwardly, a crooked smile on his boyish face.Â
The room is silent, your mum hiding a smile behind a hand only you notice. He goes to speak again, probably to apologise when-
Alexias' laugh shocks even you, bubbling up from deep within her chest. She closes her eyes, a stray tear escaping at the pressure. Laugh still rumbling deep in her chest, slowly the room joins in, as though theyâve been given permission, and soon your in a choir of laughing spectators, your brother blushing deep red at the attention.
âThank youâ you mouth to him across the room, as you wrap your hands around your wife, whos body still shakes with the odd giggle.
He tips an imaginary hat at you in return.
Because he is an idiot.
The challenge begins, unhelpfully, with you throwing yourself out of a helicopter into the rainforest, âOh Dios Mioâ she mumbles, heard subtly under Mapis, âCool!â.
You press your lips against her shoulder again and mutter into her skin; âI am here, I am warm, I am Safe.â Like a mantra, you feel her nod and grip your hand tighter.
The thing about being in the environment completely opposite to an avalanche inducing mountain range, was that it was hot. Hot and wet. The camera follows both you and Bear as you struggle through the elements seperatly, deciding when to camp down and preserve energy and when to try to gain more miles.
Bear goes hard, and Mapi looks up at you aghast as you decide to build a shelter and bunker down for seven days straight. The heat zapping any energy you had.
âWhat are you doing! It's a race!â she exclaims, to which you laugh and zip your mouth closed with your fingers, cocking an eyebrow at her as she eagerly looks back towards the TV like a small child.
You spend two days collecting water and, seemingly, according to Mapi, wasting time cutting palm leaves and collecting bark to make twine. Meanwhile Bear is hacking down trees, making spears out of sticks and rock and throwing himself at seemingly anything that would give him a bit of protein on the move.
Youâve ridden yourself of most of your clothing due to the heat. Smothering yourself in mud from the riverbank you were camped next to, you explain to the camera its sun-cream qualities and how itâs safer than clothing as it also protects you from dehydration.Â
All the while you weave and weave and weave your leaves together, quietly, assuredly.
You explain to the camera; âI am a master weaver. My wife likes it when I plait her hair. Alot. Sheâs cute. Sorry Ale.â you wink at the camera as your wife groans on your lap and her teammates start to tease her, âAmor! Why!â
âNow. Let's see how this works!â you grin and pull up a large basket to the camera.
The screen shows you scantily dressed, boots safely on a rock in the background, in the river, moving twigs into position to make a run for the fish to swim directly into your basket.
You explain the contraception, set some bait and say your goodnights to the camera, crossing your fingers for a full basket in the morning.
Cheerful music begins as the camera fades back into your campfire, fish on a stick roasting and cooking heavenly, your muddied but smiling face coming into view.
âBear can eat his roaches and drink his wee. Iâll be here with my fish buffet!â You joke, under your shelter, camera panning to tens of fish in your basket waiting to be smoked.
The next scene shows Bear explaining the protein benefits and the unusual flavours of a witchetty grub as he struggles against the rainstorm.Â
The music begins to ramp up. Graphics on the screen showing both of your progress. Bear has made much more progress than you. But struggling physically. Heâs developed a terrible case of trench foot but was still making steady progress with his machete.
You chose to travel up the river. Walking along its bed you are able to make more direct progress, but itâs more energy draining wading through water. You have, however, had a relatively strong diet over the last 3 weeks.
Youâre sitting on the river bed, tending to your basket of smoked fish youâre carrying with you for energy when you suddenly remain completely stock still. Dramatic music begins. Your head raises subtly and then out of nowhere.
âSerpentine!â
A snake strikes at you from the shallows, clearly after your basket, or you, or whatever it can get its fangs in. You react quickly, crouching down to your knees, keeping a low centre of gravity to keep your balance as your right hand reaches into the shallows.
You and the snake strike at the same time, and you throw yourself to the side as you bash a jagged rock against its head.
The next scene shows you taking a mouthful of grilled snake; âTastes like chicken!â you joke at the camera. Before popping a piece of charred snake skin into your mouth.
You feel Alexia shudder in your arms.
"I'm never kissing you again" she lies.
Mapi slowly turns around, mouth agape, gobsmacked look on her face. âSnake!â she whispers, in disbelief. âYou beat a snake!â You canât help but laugh and lean over to turn her head back to the TV.
âTold you youâd find everything out tonta.â
The map on screen shows the last day of the challenge, Bear's voice over explaining distances to the muster points, as well as geographical challenges. The screen swaps quickly between the two of you, running, climbing and swimming to where you both believed the finish line to be.
You were making good progress, as was Bear.
A close up of a Brazilian flag on the edge of a waterfall.
A close up of you throwing yourself into the river.
Bear gripping a cliff edge and heaving himself up. The camera shows the bottom of the flag pole as he pulls himself up. The camera pans up. And the flagpole is bare.
The screen changes to you.
Standing, still relatively scantily clad in your battered boots, your hiking shorts cut down to short-shorts and thin vest muddied and holey, fish blood staining your arms,holding the flag proudly up in one arm.
The room around you erupts. âShe did it!â âÂĄJefe de la Jungla!!!!â âI always knew!â, âShe killed a snake!â. You find yourself at the bottom of a pile of bodies as Alexia's teammates celebrate in the way they know how. Which is apparently to throw themselves at you in a pile up.
âThat's my wife!â Alexia chants proudly from within the pile, laughing gleefully, all earlier angst forgotten.
The screen goes blank, and the image shows you and Bear embracing, laughing as the voiceover continues; â... at least this time. It's a Queen of the jungle⊠or should I say. La Reina de la Jungla.â Bear quips, as Alexia groans, forever hating her nickname, and the screen cuts to black.
â--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Itâs hours later, many more plates of food, celebration toasts and questions from Mapi about the snake later. That you're finally in the quiet of your bedroom in your wife's arms.
Your mum and brother are set up in the spare rooms and you have all got plans to meet up with the Alexias family at the game tomorrow before going out for a meal.
Your head is settled on her chest as she plays on her phone above you, struggling to calm down from the evening's events, and as usual, struggling to sleep before a game. You play with her wedding ring on her spare hand. Feeling the cool metal beneath against her warm skin.
You feel her swipe furiously through her phone, getting more agitated as time passes, grumbles that are not-quite words emitting from her chest.
âHey. Love.â you sit up and pull her phone away. âWhat's the matter?â
âNothing.â she replies, bottom lip out in a pout, pulling her phone back into her hand.
âItâs not nothing. Tell me.â
âNo.â
âYes.â
âNo.â
âAlexia.â you sigh, âWe aren't doing this.. What's got you soâŠâ you look down onto her phone and see. Yourself? It's her tiktok open and you see an edit of the show being played over⊠âHot Stuff? Ale. What's this?â you glance at the comments section and see a selection from seemingly anon accounts; Â
âI have never understood Alexia moreâ, âI wonder who calls who capi.â ,âCapi, your wife's thighs are bigger than yoursâ.
âNothing!â she grabs her phone back from your grip⊠you arch an eyebrow at her which crumbles her resolve in 3âŠ2âŠ
âFine! It's all over my TikTok. The comments about you. The fans have made these edits. Of you! All, wet and⊠muscley and⊠nearly undressed.â
âAnd youâŠdonât⊠like me wet, and muscled and⊠naked? Cause, love, I have evidenced otherwisâŠâ
âShut up! Of course I do but you're mine!â
Oh. Realisation dawns on you and you canât help but smile.
âDonât laugh!â she grumbles. âYouâre jealousâŠ.â you tease in a sing-song voice. âI am not jealous!â she insists, âIt's just⊠tu eres mio! And these people are all looking at youâ.
âI am,â you agree, with a smile. âBut, love. Try being married to Alexia Putellas. Maybe youâll keep your shirt on at games now.â you tease, making her smile and roll her eyes.
Eyes softening as you pull her phone from her grip and plug it in for her. Settling back into her chest, nuzzling against the warm skin you find there.
âI am so proud of you.â she whispers into the now dark room, placing a kiss on your head. The moment became more serious and tender.
âI love youâ you reply, softly, the moment feels weighted, and youâre not sure what makes you do it. Maybe it's the adrenaline of the evening, having completed your life's ambition, or maybe it's the wine you drank.
Though, really, you know it's because of the images of your lanky wife curling herself onto the rug in the living room because Bruno had decided she was the world's best pillow again. But you canât stop yourself.
âAle. I want to have kids with you.â
Her hand stops its movement in your hair and she rushes over to turn the bedside lamp back on.
âQue?â she breathes out. Hands finding their place softly on your cheeks, a look of urgency in her eyes.
âI want us to have kids. Me and you. I want that with you. Is that something youâre ready for?â you whisper, eyes looking deeply into hers.
âEn serio?â she asks, as though she's afraid of the answer.
You nod in response. Moving your hand to wipe away the tears that have appeared on her cheeks.
âSĂ, Mi Amor. Quiero eso contigo. Mucho.â
You're both smiling too much to kiss, but you make a good go of it anyway. And as you bury yourself into your wife's arms. Hands roaming and adrenaline of a decision made rushing through your body you can't help but think.
This is the beginning of the biggest adventure of your life.Â
pairings: alexia putellas x teen!reader, olga rios x teen!reader, barca femeni x teen!reader
summary: you and estrella will NOT ruin this media day for alexia
notes: ITS A CROSSOVER YALL!! itâs a play on the first fic i did for estrella!
Alexia had one goal today. Just one. A perfect media day family picture with the two teenagers in her and Olgaâs life. In a normal household, it wasnât too much to ask. In the Putellas-Rios household, it was like asking someone to carry an elephant.
Because one of them lived to spread chaos like glitter in a carpet, and the other was a stubborn little rock who would rather wrestle a bear than smile for a camera.
The morning was already off to a cursed start. Alexia blinked awake, slowly registering the bright sunlight pouring into the room. A glance at her phone made her bolt upright.
âÂĄMierda! I slept through all my alarms!â (Shit)
Olga, beside her, stirred groggily, still in dreamland. But before Alexia could fully panic, a loud crash echoed from the kitchen.
âJESUS CHRIST!â
Then came the shrill wail of the fire alarm.
The two women bolted out of bed like soldiers under attack, Olga yanking on a hoodie as they sprinted toward the chaos.
They arrived to find: the blender on literal fire, Estrella curled in the corner of the kitchen, screeching like a banshee, you covered in foam, wielding the fire extinguisher like a warrior in a war zone.
âWhat in Godâs name made you put a SPOON into a blender?!â you yelled, wheeling around on Estrella once the fire fizzled out.
âI didnât mean to!â she shouted back, still not meeting your furious eyes. âIt was an accident!â
Alexia looked between the two of you, the smoke, the foam, the utter state of the kitchen, and let out the most exhausted sigh in history.
âOkay,â she began, rubbing her temples. âWhat. Happened.â
âShe wanted a smoothie and told me to do it because she was âtoo tired to function,ââ you snapped, still glaring.
âShe pushed me out of the way and said I was too dumb to blend fruit,â Estrella snapped right back, standing up now with her arms crossed.
âYou put a metal spoon into a blenderââ
âI didnât know it was in there!â
âYou didnât check?!â
And just like that, it devolved into a full-on mimic war.
ââIâm sooooo serious all the time,ââ Estrella mocked, lowering her voice and hunching her shoulders in a perfect (and wildly offensive) imitation of you. ââI wake up scowling and I eat cereal like it wronged me in another life.ââ
ââOh look at me,ââ you fired back, flailing your arms around dramatically. ââI get yellow cards for sass and call it performance art. Iâm an artist, okay, not a menace.ââ
âShut up!â
âYou shut up!â
âBoth of you SHUT UP!â Alexia finally roared, voice bouncing off the walls. âSilencio. Ahora.â (Silence. Now.)
The silence that followed was immediate and terrified. Olga stepped forward, arms crossed, eyes narrowing like a mother hen about to throw hands.
âCouch. Now.â
Both of you shuffled over like guilty toddlers, still occasionally shooting glares at each other. You sat stiffly, arms crossed. Estrella kicked her feet and tried to whistle, failing miserably.
âI want you both to listen carefully,â Olga began, voice calm but absolutely terrifying. âYou are not to go near the kitchen again today. Do you hear me?â
You both nodded.
âYou are going to your rooms. You are going to get ready for media day. You are going to wear what we laid out for you. And you are going to behave like normal human beings who donât set things on fire. ÂżEntendido?â (Understood?)
âYes, maâam,â Estrella muttered. You grumbled something that vaguely resembled a âyes.â
âGo.â
Estrella skipped off like sheâd won a prize. You groaned loud enough for the entire neighborhood to hear.
As soon as the two of you disappeared down the hall, Alexia dropped into Olgaâs arms with the grace of a dying swan.
âI just want one photo,â she moaned. âOne. One where Azulitaâs not scowling like sheâs at a funeral and Estrellaâs not making jazz hands in the background.â
âGood luck with that,â Olga chuckled, stroking her back soothingly.
âTheyâre impossible.â
âOur girls are⊠special,â Olga said, trying not to laugh.
Alexia groaned louder. âThatâs the problem.â
Olga kissed her head with a grin. âYou picked them, cariño.â
âNo, I picked one, you brought the other, and somehow they both got your attitude.â
Olga laughed as they both turned to look at the blender wreckage.
âCome on,â she said, grabbing the cleaning supplies. âLetâs try to make the kitchen look like it wasnât ground zero.â
Meanwhile, in Estrellaâs room, the chaos was far from over.
She had a white T-shirt on the bed with black stripes drawn on it, a whistle, and a pocket full of red and yellow cards.
âIâm going as a referee this year,â she declared proudly.
You stared at her like she had grown three heads. âYouâre actually insane.â
âItâs a protest.â
âA protest?â
âYeah. Against injustice. Like all the cards I got last season. I was targeted,â she said dramatically, holding a hand to her chest. âLike a political prisoner.â
You snorted. âYou told the ref she should be banned from the sport and then clapped in her face.â
âShe deserved it.â
You rolled your eyes.
Estrella smirked. âWhat about you? Gonna smile this year? Maybe try not to look like someone just punched your cat?â
You gave her a glare so deadly it couldâve been listed as a weapon. âSay that again and I will hide all your cards before we leave.â
âTry me, stoneface.â
You lunged at her with a pillow.
She shrieked.
And down the hall, Olga and Alexia exchanged a long, knowing look as they wiped down the counters.
âTen bucks says they ruin the group photo again,â Alexia muttered.
âTwenty,â Olga grinned.
The drive to the training facility wasâŠtense. Alexia sat in the driverâs seat, one hand clutching the wheel, the other pinching the bridge of her nose like it was the only thing holding her sanity together. In the passenger seat, you had your hoodie pulled up and arms crossed, glaring out the window like someone had personally offended your bloodline. In the backseat, Estrella was humming a suspiciously upbeat tune, kicking her feet and clearly up to no good.
Alexia knew that tune. It was the same one Estrella sang before trying to convince their team physio sheâd developed narcolepsy to get out of fitness testing. This was not a good sign.
âOkay,â Alexia began, her voice tight with the kind of hope only a truly desperate parent has. âPlease. Iâm begging you both. Just this once. Can we have a normal media day? Please.â
âDefine normal,â Estrella said innocently from the back.
âOne where no one ends up banned from the press area, no one photobombs every teammateâs headshot, and no one fake-cries on camera for attention.â
âYou told me to be authentic,â Estrella shot back with a grin. âThose tears were real. Real artistry.â
âYou got into a fake argument with the mascot last year,â Alexia reminded her, voice rising. âIt ended with you giving him a yellow card and yelling, âRead the rulebook, rat!ââ
âHe was offside!â Estrella protested. âMascots should play by the rules too!â
Alexia closed her eyes. Counted to ten. It did nothing.
She turned to you next. âAnd you. Please donât scowl in every photo like weâre at a funeral. Youâre beautiful. Just smile.â
You huffed, still staring out the window. âIâll smile when Estrella stops breathing.â
âOh my God,â Alexia groaned.
âFair,â Estrella muttered.
âPlease. Iâm serious. I just want one nice family picture,â Alexia pleaded, eyes darting between the two of you. âOne. Thatâs it. For my desk. For the wall. For my sanity.â
âFine,â you both mumbled at the same time, in the same tone of someone agreeing to do chores under duress.
The moment she pulled into the parking lot, you both flung the doors open and bolted like escaped zoo animals.
âI didnât even park yet!â Alexia yelled after you. âWE TALKED ABOUT EXITING LIKE HUMANS!â
But you were gone. Youâd vanished into the building like media day goblins. Alexia stared at the empty seats, her soul slowly peeling off her body. She laid her head against the steering wheel and let out a groan so deep it echoed into another dimension.
A few cars down, Fridolina Rolfö paused mid-sip of her smoothie and turned to Lucy Bronze, who was leaning against the hood of her car.
ââŠDid you hear that?â
Lucy nodded slowly. âSounded like someone just got their soul crushed.â
They exchanged a look before making their way over. Frido tapped on the car window. Alexia lifted her head just enough to look like a haunted Victorian ghost.
âAre you⊠okay?â Frido asked gently.
âNo,â Alexia mumbled into the steering wheel.
âWhat happened?â Lucy asked, already smirking.
Alexia sat up and pointed a dramatic finger in the direction you both had disappeared. âThey happened.â
âWhich one?â
âBoth.â Alexia threw her hands up. âEstrella has something hidden in her backpack. I know it. Sheâs got that face. The âIâm planning chaosâ face. And youââ She gestured vaguely in the direction you had stomped off. ââare in a mood. And I have six interviews today. I cannot babysit two menaces and pretend to be a media darling at the same time. I just want one nice picture. ONE. And Iâm gonna end up with Estrella dressed up as god knows what and her sister looking like sheâs on her way to commit arson.â
There was a beat of silence.
âDid she actually bring a costume?â Lucy asked, trying not to laugh.
âShe claims itâs a protest,â Alexia muttered. âAgainst⊠being carded too much. I donât even know anymore.â
Frido smiled sympathetically and patted Alexiaâs shoulder. âIâll get her to smile.â
Lucy grinned and cracked her knuckles. âAnd Iâll wrangle Estrella.â
âYou would do that for me?â Alexia asked, looking up like sheâd just seen angels.
âAbsolutely,â Frido said. âBut I expect baked goods in return.â
âAnd I want to be in the good Christmas card this year,â Lucy added.
âDone,â Alexia said, already digging into her glove compartment for emergency thank-you snacks. âThereâs chocolate in here if you survive.â
Lucy grabbed a mini Snickers. âIâm going in.â
Frido cracked her neck like she was preparing for battle. âOperation: Smile Like You Mean It begins now.â
As they walked off toward the facility, Alexia stayed behind just a moment longer, staring out the windshield.
âTheyâre lucky theyâre cute,â she muttered, before finally exiting the car to deal with the mess her life had become.
Little did she know, inside the building, Estrella was already putting the whistle around her neck and practicing her best âfoul!â voice, while you sat next to a very confused makeup artist silently radiating âdo not touch meâ energy.
This was going to be a long day.
âLeave me alone, Frido.â
Frido gave you a look. Not a mad look. Not a disappointed look. No, it was worse. It was her âIâm gonna smile at you until you caveâ look. The one that had defeated many before you. But you were made of stronger stuff. Hardened by teenage angst, Estrellaâs nonsense, and the agony of being dragged to media day against your will.
âI need a smile, kĂ€rlek. Captainâs orders,â Frido said, sitting down beside you as the camera crew finished setting up. (Love)
âLeave me alone,â you repeated, staring straight ahead like a statue in witness protection.
âDonât worry,â the media manager chirped. âWeâre just gonna play a fun little game of âWhoâs Most Likely To?â Should be quick, easy, and full of laughs!â
Frido beamed. You blinked. Slowly.
âLetâs start with an easy one,â the interviewer said, chipper as ever. âWhoâs most likely to oversleep and miss training?â
âEstrella,â you and Frido said at the same time.
âBecause she sets seven alarms and sleeps through all of them,â you added flatly.
Frido nodded. âItâs like a symphony of chaos. Honestly impressive.â
âNot when she drags me down with her.â
The interviewer laughed nervously. âOkay! Next one⊠Whoâs most likely to cry during a sad movie?â
âFrido,â you answered immediately.
Frido gasped, clutching her chest. âWhat? I am notââ
âYou cried when the dog in that commercial found his way home.â
âThat dog had resilience!â
You stared at her, deadpan. âIt was a detergent commercial.â
âHE SMELLED HIS FAMILY.â
The interviewer was losing it. âOkay, next, whoâs most likely to get in trouble on media day?â
There was a beat. Both of you said, âEstrella.â
At that exact moment, as if summoned by the sheer force of your mutual exasperation, Estrella leapt into frame like a caffeinated raccoon, launching herself onto your back with an obnoxiously gleeful âWHEEEEE!â
Your soul left your body. Your expression didnât change, but your eyes said, âI am about to commit a crime on camera.â
You stood up, Estrella clinging to your back like a koala, and in one clean motion, threw her off.
âUnhand me, chaos demon,â you said, brushing yourself off.
Estrella hit the bean bag beside the set, bounced up like it was a trampoline, and tackled you to the floor. The camera was still rolling and the media team was thriving. One guy was nearly in tears from laughter.
âGet OFF!â you yelled, grabbing Estrella in a headlock. âYou smell like glitter glue and Red Bull!â
âYou love it here!â she screamed back, wrapping her legs around your waist like she was practicing jiu-jitsu.
Enter, Lucy and Frido, both with the resigned energy of babysitters at a sugar-fueled sleepover.
âWhy is she always on her back?!â Lucy barked, grabbing Estrella by the collar and yanking her off you like she was pulling a cat off a curtain rod.
Frido tried to help you up, only for you to swat her hand away. âI got it,â you muttered, smoothing your slick back with a grumble. âIâm already emotionally injured.â
Estrella was still kicking in Lucyâs arms like a rabid possum. âI had a whole monologue prepared!â
âNo,â Lucy said, deadpan. âNo monologues.â
âNo more caffeine,â Frido added. âAnd no more sneaking onto interviews!â
The Barca media crew was thrilled. The whole scene went viral within the hour. Clips of your dead-eyed glare as Estrella launched herself onto you were already trending. Fans were obsessed.
âMe when my sibling breathes.â
âSheâs fighting for her life.â
âBarça should make a reality show of just these two.â
You were not amused.
The media room at Ciutat Esportiva was packed. Journalists buzzing, cameras flashing, a Barça banner perfectly centered behind the long table where four chairs sat.
In those chairs was, Fridolina Rolfö, poised and smiling. Lucy Bronze, polished and charming. You, arms crossed and already three minutes into regretting everything. And Estrella, practically vibrating in her seat with chaotic energy, legs swinging, sunglasses on indoors, and what looked like a whistle clipped to her collar.
âThank you all for coming to this special Barcelona FemenĂ media panel,â the moderator began, chipper like they hadnât just walked into a lionâs den. âLetâs start with a fun one, who on the team brings the best vibes to training?â
Frido leaned into her mic, smiling softly. âI think Patri always brings calm, but also a lot of joy. And Vicky too, sheâs young, but she lights up the room.â
Lucy nodded. âAgreed. And obviously, Jana. Sheâs hilarious even when she doesnât try to be.â
Estrella threw her hand up like she was in class. âI bring vibes too. Not good ones, but definitely powerful ones.â
The room chuckled. You stared at her, unimpressed.
âMy vibes,â she added, leaning forward, âare disruptive. Unfiltered. Deliciously unpredictable.â
Frido let out a nervous laugh. âYes, Estrella certainly⊠brings something.â
The moderator pivoted quickly. âLetâs move on. Whatâs one personal goal youâve set for the second half of the season?â
âWin the Champions League,â Frido said confidently.
âStay healthy and keep building our defensive chemistry,â Lucy followed.
Estrella leaned back in her chair. âI would like to⊠not get carded for saying someoneâs haircut looks like a crime.â
You slowly turned your head to her. Glared.
She burst out laughing.
The moderator, barely keeping it together, turned to you. âAnd you?â
You leaned into the mic, monotone. âStay out of trouble.â
Estrella wheezed.
You didnât blink. Just turned to her again with the slow, soul-piercing glare of an older sibling whoâs so over this.
âOkay,â the moderator said, definitely enjoying the growing tension, âIf you werenât footballers, what do you think youâd be doing?â
Frido thought for a second, âIâd probably still be in something athletic. Maybe coaching or sports science.â
Lucy nodded. âI always liked kids, so maybe something in education.â
âIâd be a DJ-slash-Instagram-meme-page admin.â Estrella answered, getting scattered laughs.
You blinked. âSoâŠunemployed.â
She slapped the table, laughing so loud a camera wobbled. âYOUâRE JEALOUS.â
You turned to her fully now. âJealous of what? Your TikTok addiction or your suspension record?â
âThose cards were political!â
âNo, they were because you told a ref, âYour eyebrows are uneven and so is your judgment.ââ
âIt was accurate!â
The moderator was now wheezing behind their cue cards. The media room was eating it up. Phones were out. Recordings were on. Journalists were openly laughing.
Frido and Lucy exchanged slow, exhausted glances like theyâd rehearsed this before.
âGirls,â Frido said, her voice cutting through the chaos like a disappointed kindergarten teacher. âCan we not fight in front of fifty journalists?â
You and Estrella froze like you were being told off by your mom in public.
Simultaneously, you both muttered, âShe started it.â
âI literally didnât,â Estrella hissed.
Frido gave you both the lookâ the one that promised consequences if you didnât reel it in. So you sat back in your chair, arms crossed, your expression once again returning to emotionally bankrupt.
Estrella slumped in hers with a dramatic sigh, muttering something about âoppression.â
The moderator looked like they wanted to kiss Fridoâs feet for regaining control.
âWell then! Next question⊠which of your teammates would survive a zombie apocalypse?â
Frido blinked, considering. âCaro.â
Lucy nodded. âDefinitely Caro. Sheâd build a bunker.â
You leaned in. âIâd feed Estrella to the zombies.â
Estrella, without missing a beat, âIâd taste delicious.â
The entire room lost it. Even Frido laughed, despite herself, while Lucy shook her head, fully regretting ever agreeing to this.
The hallway outside the Barça media photo room was tense. Frido and Lucy stood in front of you and Estrella like two parents about to deliver the most intense heart-to-heart of their lives. You were slumped in your chair, chewing gum like it had offended you. Estrella had her feet propped on a stool and was flipping a whistle around her finger like she was about to cause a security lockdown.
Frido clapped her hands once, loud and sharp.
âOkay. Listen up.â
Estrella blinked, âYes, coach.â
Frido narrowed her eyes. âDonât test me.â
Lucy stepped in, folding her arms. âWe need to talk about what this day means. To Alexia.â
That made Estrella pause. You looked up briefly, suspicious.
âSheâs been planning this media day for months,â Frido said, softening a bit. âYou two are all she talks about. Sheâs been telling everyone how good these pictures are going to be. Sheâs picked out spots in the house. She has frames ready.â
âShe has a Pinterest board,â Lucy added grimly. âA Pinterest board, guys.â
âShe rehearsed her smile,â Frido said. âIn the mirror.â
âSheâs printed reference poses!â Lucy said, scandalized.
Estrellaâs mouth parted slightly. âWait, for real?â
Frido nodded solemnly. âAnd she said and I quote: âThese are going to be the kind of pictures that make me feel like my little family is complete.ââ
You and Estrella exchanged a slow, loaded look. Your brows furrowed. Her whistle stopped spinning. The hallway went silent.
Lucy whispered to Frido out of the corner of her mouth, âWhatâs happening?â
Frido whispered back, âI donât know. Should we stop them?â
âAre they communicating telepathically?â
âWhat if theyâre plotting our demise?â
âThen it was a good run.â
Then you both stood up simultaneously. You, cracking your knuckles. Estrella, cracking her neck.
Frido and Lucy both took a cautious step back.
You looked Lucy dead in the eyes and said, âFine. For Alexia.â
Estrella adjusted her oversized sunglasses. âLetâs go take these damn pictures.â
Inside the photo room, Alexia stood near the backdrop, nervously checking her phone. She was already in her kit, hair done, looking every bit the Captain of Chaos Control. She had asked the photographer three times if he had enough battery. She was two seconds away from pacing a groove into the floor.
Then the door opened. You strolled in, hands in your pockets, chewing gum with purpose. Estrella followed behind, uncharacteristically calm, not a single whistle in sight.
Alexia blinked like she was hallucinating.
You stopped in front of her. âLetâs get this over with.â
Estrella patted her shoulder. âLetâs make history, Mami.â
Alexia looked behind them, expecting Frido and Lucy to jump out and yell âSurprise! Theyâre AI clones!â But nothing happened.
Then, miracle of miracles: you and Estrella took your places on either side of her. Smiling. Genuinely.
The photographer blinked in disbelief.
âAlright, letâs start!â he said.
You didnât groan. Estrella didnât pull out a clown nose. Nobody shoved anyone off a stool.
The three of you smiled like a perfectly coordinated little football family. Estrella rested her head on Alexiaâs shoulder for one. You put your arm around her waist in another. There was even one where Alexia turned to kiss the tops of both your heads while you pretended not to be touched by it.
When it was done, Alexia just stood there, blinking like she was going to cry.
âYou guysâŠâ she said softly. âYou actuallyâŠâ
âYeah, yeah,â Estrella said, waving her off, âdonât get emotional. Thatâs your job.â
You rolled your eyes. âThis better get me out of the next five interviews.â
Alexia was already pulling you both into a hug. âI love you guys.â
Estrella mumbled, âWhatever.â
But she didnât pull away.
Two weeks later, the framed photo sat proudly above the fireplace in Alexiaâs house, perfectly centered, with the caption âMy Girlsâ etched underneath.
Another copy hung right at the entrance of Eliâs house, where no one could miss it. Eli cried when she saw it. Alba teased her for days.
Alexia pointed to it every time someone walked in. âLook at them. Look at my beautiful, normal family.â
Meanwhile, you and Estrella walked by it every day like you didnât plan the whole thing telepathically.
âShould we tell her?â Estrella once whispered.
You deadpanned, âLet her believe in miracles.â
And Alexia still smiled every time she saw it. Even when Estrella was banned from two training sessions for trying to ref a scrimmage again. Even when you got another warning for telling a La Liga photographer to âcrop your face out or else.â
Because no matter what, that picture existed. And to her, it was perfect.
đ„°đ„°đ„°
In a match where the scoreboard tells only half the story, a fierce on-pitch rivalry between you and football royalty, Alexia Putellas, evolves into something electric â something unspoken, but deeply felt. Between the lines two players lock eyes, trade touches, and blur the line between competition and connection. What begins as a game becomes a gravity neither can resist.
Part 11 Other Parts
Word Count: 7k
The kitchen is filled with soft afternoon light, filtering lazily through the open window. Itâs quiet, save for the low hum of music playing from the speaker on the counter and the soft clatter of you rummaging through cabinets.
You're barefoot, hair scraped up haphazardly, a t-shirt that's definitely not yours slouching off one shoulder as you pull ingredients out for lunch. Simple. Easy. Normal.
Or it would be, if not for the way Alexia hovers, not in the obvious way. She's subtle about it, or at least, she thinks she is. Leaning against the counter just a little too close. Reaching around you for the salt when she doesnât need to. The brush of her fingers against the small of your back as she passes, feather-light but deliberate.
It's different now, thereâs no more careful distance, no more pretending itâs platonic.
She's more tactile. Casual, but not. Her hand lingers at your waist when youâre slicing vegetables, her arm grazes yours as she leans in to taste whatever youâre cooking even though you know she doesnât really care how it tastes right now.
You glance at her out of the corner of your eye as she shamelessly dips a finger into the sauce, popping it into her mouth with an exaggerated âMmm.â
âYouâre annoying,â you murmur, bumping her hip with yours.
âIâm charming,â she corrects, eyes glinting, but her hand slides to rest at your lower back again, thumb stroking slow, unconscious circles through the thin fabric of your shirt.
It sends a quiet thrill through you, you try, really try, to focus on the pan in front of you. âYouâre distracting.â
âThatâs not a no,â she murmurs, voice lower now, closer, her breath warm near your ear.
You shoot her a look, but thereâs no bite behind it. Not when her fingers are still tracing soft, aimless patterns against your back. Not when her body is pressed just shy of touching yours, her presence curling around you like heat.
Alexia, of course, acts like itâs the most natural thing in the world, like you didnât have your hands all over her just this morning. Like you havenât both crossed a line that neither of you are pretending to care about anymore.
When you plate up the food and move to set it on the table, she catches your wrist, not enough to stop you just enough to make you look at her.
Her thumb brushes once, twice, over the inside of your wrist. âThanks for lunch,â she says, soft, but thereâs weight to it, not just for the food, for everything.
You donât answer right away. You donât need to, the smile you give her says enough, as you both sit to eat, her foot nudges yours under the table. Light. Thoughtless. Like it belongs there.
âœïž
Later in the day, the house fills up again with voices, with footsteps, with the unmistakable sound of a three year old on a mission.
Mateo arrives like a tiny whirlwind, his little arms overloaded with toys mismatched, colourful, spilling out of a too-small backpack he insists on carrying himself.
âI brought everything,â he declares proudly, dropping the bag with a dramatic huff in the middle of Alexiaâs living room. âBecause Coco said weâd play.â
You canât help but laugh, crouching down to his level as you watch him unzip the bag with the seriousness of a man about to negotiate a world cup final.
âYou came prepared, huh?â you tease, ruffling his hair. âWhatâs in there? The whole toy store?â
He beams. âAlmost. Mami said I could pick my best ones.â
Irene just shakes her head, fond but exasperated, as she and her wife settle onto the sofa with Alexia, slipping into easy conversation.
Mateo proudly pulls out a small army of action figures, you notice the subtle shift in his posture his eyes darting toward the hallway, his little shoulders pulling in. Following his gaze, it doesnât take you long to spot why, Teddy.
The picture of chill, Teddy is padding over with his usual friendly curiosity, tongue lolling lazily out, tail giving a slow, lazy wag, but to Mateo, itâs a different story.
The toys suddenly donât seem that interesting, he edges subtly closer to you, almost hiding behind your leg, his hand curling into your shorts.
You soften instantly. âHey, buddy,â you say gently, crouching down again to his level. âThatâs Teddy. He looks big, huh?â
Mateo nods, wide-eyed, his little fingers gripping you a bit tighter. You glance at Teddy, who, bless him, must sense the nerves, he stops a good distance away, sitting down with that perfectly patient doggy expression, ears perked, head tilted, tail giving a slow, reassuring thump on the floor.
âTeddyâs the biggest softie youâll ever meet,â you explain. âLoves belly rubs more than anything. Heâs basically a giant pillow that breathes.â
Mateoâs brows furrow, suspicious, but curious.
âYou know what?â you add, lowering your voice like itâs a secret. âHeâs actually a little scared of new people too, but when he sees someone is kind, he relaxes. Like magic.â
That gets you a thoughtful look, you extend your hand toward Teddy, giving him the signal to stay put, and gesture to Mateo.
âWanna give it a try? You donât have to touch him. You can just say hi from here.â
Mateo hesitates, eyes flicking from you to Teddy and back again, but then he puffs out his tiny chest, brave, determined and waves his hand in a quick, jerky motion, âHi, Teddy.â
Teddyâs tail wags a little faster, Mateo glances at you, and you grin. âSee? He likes you already.â
Little by little, Mateo inches closer, dropping into a cautious crouch, his toys temporarily forgotten. He watches as Teddy stays perfectly still, gaze soft, waiting for Mateo to set the pace, and then tiny fingers reach out. Just the tips, barely grazing Teddyâs fur. Teddy, in true golden retriever fashion, responds with a slow, happy thump of his tail and a lazy lean forward, until Mateoâs fingers are buried in the soft fur behind his ears.
A giggle bursts out of Mateo before he can stop it. âSoft,â he says, amazed.
You glance up to see Alexia watching from the sofa, her mouth tugged into a smile thatâs softer than youâre used to seeing. Something warm settles in your chest. âLook at you, already making best friends,â you murmur, giving Mateoâs shoulder a gentle squeeze.
He looks up at you, beaming. âI like himâ And with that, the toys come back into play, Teddy now firmly accepted as part of the gang.
âœïž
Alexiaâs footsteps echo lightly down the hallway as she returns from the kitchen, wiping her hands on a tea towel, brow furrowed at the sound of absolute chaos coming from the living room.
Laughter. Full-bodied, uncontrollable Mateoâs tiny giggles bubbling over, joined by yours loud, canât-catch-your-breath laughter and somewhere beneath that, Irene and her wife are laughing too, the quiet, helpless kind of giggles that come when you're around others laughing you canât help but get dragged under.
Alexia rounds the corner, towel still in hand, brows raised. âWhat is going on?â she asks, voice amused, eyes narrowing suspiciously.
Youâre on the floor, half-sitting, half-toppled over, clutching your stomach, tears in your eyes, barely able to breathe. Mateo is sprawled next to you, red-faced from laughing so hard, wheezing out little gasps between his peals of giggles.
You can't explain, you just begin waving a hand in the air like youâre physically batting away your own laughter, you gasp some air before the laughter continues.
Mateo nods vigorously, hair flopping into his eyes, absolutely useless with how hard heâs still laughing. He tries to explain, gets out one garbled word âRawrâ before dissolving again into helpless giggles, flopping dramatically against your side like itâs too much.
Alexiaâs eyes flick from him to you, then to Irene and her wife who are both just as amused as Alexia, giggling into their hands, seeing how happy this stranger made their son.
âOh my god,â Alexia mutters, exasperated but smiling now, shaking her head as she leans against the doorway, watching the ridiculousness unfold. âI leave the room for two minutesâŠâ
Youâre wiping at your eyes now, breathless, the laughter finally starting to taper off into little aftershocks. You manage to look up at her, face flushed, grin wide.
âMateoâs got jokes,â you say, voice still shaky from laughing. âAnd sound effects. Very realistic.â
Mateo immediately presses a finger to his lips, eyes gleaming with mischief. âSecret joke,â he whispers loudly. âOnly for Coco.â
Alexia just watches you, and even as she rolls her eyes, her lips curve into that soft, almost fond smile thatâs becoming dangerously familiar now. âYouâre encouraging him,â she accuses, though thereâs no heat behind it.
âAbsolutely,â you reply shamelessly, giving Mateo a high five that sets him off into another giggle fit.
Alexia shakes her head, but her eyes linger on you a moment longer and thereâs something in her gaze that says more than sheâll say out loud right now.
"Do you need a hand with dinner Ale?" Irene's wife smiled, it didn't take much persuasion before Irene and her wife were in the kitchen helping.
Youâre on the living room floor, legs crossed, as Mateo lines up his little army of toys with all the focus of a general preparing for battle. Heâs explaining the intricacies of some very serious dinosaur alliance when you catch the sound of hushed voices drifting in from the kitchen.
Ireneâs voice is unmistakable. Light. Probing. âSo⊠how long are we pretending this is just âfriendlyâ hospitality, Ale?â
Thereâs a pause. The clink of dishes. The soft scrape of a knife against a chopping board. Alexiaâs reply comes slower, careful. âWhat do you mean?â
Ireneâs wife snorts. âDonât play dumb. Youâve been hovering around like a golden retriever yourself today. I thought Teddy was the dog, not you.â
Mateo tugs at your sleeve, oblivious, asking if you thought the big dinosaur or the little one is faster, but your brain is only half here. Your ears are firmly in the kitchen.
âIâm being a good host,â Alexia says, far too innocent, but you can hear the smile in her voice. âI'm being a good friend, she's in town because of her situation with Bayern I trying to make it better, and why would she pay for a hotel when I have so much room here. I'm just helping my friend out. Is that a crime now?â
âYou donât get flustered when other houseguests walk into the room,â Irene points out, dry as ever. âOr touch your back. Or breathe the same air.â
Thereâs a brief beat of silence. You can imagine Alexiaâs expression, that carefully schooled face, the little purse of her lips when sheâs caught out but refuses to admit it. âI like her,â she says finally. Quiet, but sure.
Mateoâs still chattering away, showing you how to properly play with an action figure dinosaur, but your attention flickers again when Ireneâs wife softly adds, âGood, because sheâs good for you, Ale. Youâre different with her.â
âI know,â Alexia admits, and thereâs something so unguarded in her voice now it nearly floors you.
Mateo climbs into your lap mid-battle, tilting his head up at you with a grin. âCoco, youâre not listening,â he scolds, tapping your cheek with his little finger. âYou have to focus.â
You smile down at him, ruffling his hair. âSorry, boss. Iâm back. Letâs save the world.â But as you dive back into his toy universe, the knowledge hums quietly beneath your skin.
âOkay, Ale. Serious question,â she says, tone deceptively light. âWhy are you being so secretive? Youâre not exactly subtle, you know.â
âIâm not being secretive,â Alexia mutters, too defensive to be convincing.
âYou are,â Ireneâs wife chimes in, âBut itâs cute. In a frustrating, emotionally repressed way.â
Alexia exhales, setting down the knife, her hands braced against the counter. Thereâs a moment where she looks down, gathering herself, and then she shrugs casual, but her voice is quieter when she speaks, âI was waiting to see if I could really trust her.â
That stops you. Youâre still, so still, even as Mateo launches his toys into some epic battle beside you. Ireneâs smile softens, but she doesnât let her off the hook. âBecauseâŠ?â
Alexiaâs fingers drum lightly on the counter. âBecause sheâs heard things. Things Iâve told her. Things I havenât told many people. Things she couldâve easily⊠leaked. Or twisted.â She pauses, glancing up for a breath before dropping her gaze again. âBut she didnât. She hasnât.â
Thereâs a vulnerability in her tone now, barely concealed, like this truth costs her something to say aloud.
âI think she likes me for me,â she admits, voice small. âNot for the name. Not for what comes along with it.â
Your chest twists. A tangle of emotions wraps tight inside you. Annoyance, sharp and immediate because she tested you, she dangled trust like something you had to earn.
Pride, fierce and undeniable because you had passed, whether sheâs outright said it or not, but mostly sadness. That heavy ache for her. For the history packed into those words. For the wrong people sheâs trusted before, the scars sheâs clearly still carrying.
âI get it,â Irene says softly, after a beat. âBut you know you donât always have to keep it from your friends, right?â
As you quietly gather Mateoâs toys into a little pile, pretending you arenât listening, you feel her words settle in your chest, heavy and real.
âœïž
The clink of cutlery and soft murmur of conversation fills the dining room. Itâs an easy atmosphere, laughter lingering from earlier, wine being slowly sipped. Youâre sitting next to Alexia, whoâs close enough now that her thigh brushes yours under the table, subtle but deliberate.
Then Lucia, with that curious tilt of her head, casually drops it into conversation like itâs just another side dish. âSo⊠what actually happened with your coach? You two seemed close. But now,â she shrugs lightly, âitâs quite obviously tense.â
The table quiets just a fraction. Not awkward but attentive. Alexiaâs fork stills. You consider brushing it off, a joke, an evasive answer, but the truth feels easier now, maybe because of what you overheard earlier. âI slept with her daughter,â you say simply, stabbing a piece of roasted pepper. âAnd then I left in the middle of the night.â
Luciaâs brows lift, but she doesnât look surprised. Irene huffs a quiet laugh into her glass. âIt wasnât⊠casual, at least not for me. I thought we were. I donât know. Starting something I guess.â You glance down at your plate, jaw working for a second before you continue, you told other people a lie, to save face mainly. It's never nice to think someone doesn't like you for genuine reasons. âBut when she was asleep, her phone lit up. Group chat.â You let that sink in. âSheâd texted them. Bragging. That sheâd âticked me off the list.â Her words, not mine.â
Alexiaâs head turns sharply towards you, her lips parting slightly, but she says nothing.
âI couldnât stay after that. Not even until morning. Felt like a bloody idiot.â You pop the bite of pepper in your mouth, chewing as if the bitterness wasnât lingering elsewhere.
Irene exhales slowly. âThatâs rough.â
You shrug like itâs no big deal, even though you know it was. Still is, sometimes. âI guess I needed to learn that lesson once, right?â You flash a smile, light but not quite reaching your eyes. âNot everyone wants you for the right reasons.â
The words hang there. You donât need to look to know Alexiaâs gaze is on you. Lucia nods, but her eyes are softer now. âStill, that says more about her than it does about you.â
Thereâs a murmur of agreement around the table. You feel Alexiaâs hand brush yours again under the table, this time her pinky hooking around yours for a second longer than necessary. Itâs small but itâs loud in its own way.
âœïž
Later in the evening, while the grown-ups are back to clearing dishes and sharing stories over a bottle of wine, Mateoâs settled himself beside you on the living room rug again. Heâs got two plastic dinosaurs in each hand, giving you a very serious rundown of which one would win in a fight, a T-Rex or a Spinosaurus.
âSpinosaurus is bigger,â he insists, eyes wide. âBut T-Rex has stronger teeth.â
You nod sagely. âYou know, my dad would love this debate.â
Mateoâs head snaps up so fast itâs a miracle he doesnât get whiplash. âWhy? Does he like dinosaurs too?â
You grin, leaning back on your hands. âHe doesnât just like them. Heâs a paleontologist. Thatâs his job. Studying dinosaurs. Digging up fossils.â
Mateoâs mouth falls open. A tiny, perfect what?! hanging in the air.
âNo way.â He squints at you, like you might be pulling his leg. âThatâs a real job?â
You chuckle. âIt is. He travels all over to dig sites. Has a massive collection of bones at home. Real ones. Not toys.â
Mateo looks absolutely floored. He drops his dinosaurs into your lap, completely betrayed by his plastic versions now. âThatâs so cool,â he breathes, eyes wide as dinner plates. âDoes he have a T-Rex?â
âNot a full one,â you say, playing along, âbut he worked on a dig in Montana where they found parts of one. Big teeth. He showed me when I was little.â
Mateoâs bouncing now, practically vibrating with excitement. âThatâs the coolest dad job ever. Way cooler than my Mama's spreadsheets.â
You canât help but laugh at that, ruffling his hair. âDonât tell her you said that.â
He leans in conspiratorially. âI wonât if you show me a real dinosaur bone one day.â
âDeal.â
From across the room, you catch Alexia watching you, arms crossed, leaning against the doorframe. Thereâs something soft in her gaze, a little smile tugging at the corner of her mouth.
"Do you want anything boss man? I'm just going to get a drink?"
"I'm ok coco"
You head into the kitchen, reaching for a glass of water more out of habit than thirst. Thatâs when Alexiaâs suddenly there, moving in beside you like itâs nothing. Like itâs everything. âHey,â she says softly, voice pitched for just the two of you.
You glance sideways, and sheâs close, too close for this to be casual. Leaning against the counter, one foot crossed over the other, arms loosely folded, but her gaze sharp and thoughtful.
âIâve been thinking about what you said,â she admits, cutting straight to it. âAbout your coachâs daughter. The text you saw.â
You shrug, trying for nonchalant, but it lands closer to guarded. âOld story now.â
âMaybe,â she says. âBut it explains a lot.â
You glance at her, brows ticking up. âOh yeah? Like what?â
A corner of her mouth lifts, but thereâs no teasing in it. Just that same softness from earlier. âLike why you look at people sideways when they get too nice. Why you act like youâre always waiting for the punchline.â
You go still, the truth of her words striking deep.
âAnd why trust isnât something you give easy,â she finishes, voice low.
You huff a breath, looking down at your glass, swirling it like youâve got something important in there. âYeah, well. Canât all have the pick of everyone, can we?â
Itâs sharper than you mean. A defense mechanism. But Alexia doesnât flinch. âNo,â she agrees quietly. âBut we both know what it feels like when people want you for the wrong reasons.â
That pulls your gaze back to her and you see it, see her, not the superstar, not the badge. Just a woman whoâs been burned, same as you. âI heard what you said to Irene,â you admit, voice soft now. âAbout testing me. About needing to be sure.â
A flicker of guilt crosses her face, but she holds your gaze. âIâm not proud of that,â she says. âBut I needed to know if you were here for me. Or forâŠâ she gestures vaguely, âeverything else.â
âAnd now?â you ask, more curious than confrontational.
Alexiaâs lips press together, thoughtful, before she steps just a fraction closer. âNow I think youâre the most patient person Iâve met,â she murmurs. âAnd Iâm starting to feel like the idiot for not making a move sooner.â
Your breath catches, heart hammering louder than it should. âI told you,â you say quietly, âpatience is a virtue.â
Her smile turns warmer. âYouâre too good at this game.â
âNot a game, Alexia.â You let that sit between you.
âœïž
The house is quiet again. The dishes are done, Mateoâs toys tucked back into his backpack, and Irene and Lucia have said their goodbyes with warm hugs and knowing looks after Mateo charmed his way into a sleepover. It was obviously pre-planned on his part, he took the initiative to pack some PJ's.
You and Alexia are on the couch now lights low, some random episode playing but neither of you are watching it. Your legs are stretched out, your socked foot lightly brushing her bare shin. The casual closeness is anything but casual now.
She glances at you during a quiet part of the episode. You feel her eyes before you see them. Your gaze flicks over and meets hers and this time, nothing hesitates.
She leans in slowly, deliberately, her hand brushing your jaw, and then she kisses you. Soft. Sure. The kind of kiss that isnât about fireworks. Your lips part for her just slightly, and the kiss deepens by a breath, a slow press of mouths that says everything the two of you havenât. You chase her for half a second when she pulls back.
Her eyes stay closed for a moment longer, like sheâs memorising the way this feels. And when they open, sheâs smiling quiet and real.
Small footsteps patter down the hall. You both freeze, instinctively pulling apart just in time for Mateo to round the corner in his pyjamas, clutching a small stuffed dinosaur.
His eyes find you instantly, then flick to Alexia, his little brows furrow.
âYou were kissing her,â he announces accusingly, pointing a stubby finger at Alexia.
Alexiaâs eyes go wide. You slap a hand over your mouth to keep from laughing.
Mateo stomps forward, tiny and determined, clutching the dinosaur like a weapon of moral judgment. âSheâs my friend,â he tells Alexia, firm and scandalised. âYouâre not allowed to kiss her.â
Alexiaâs mouth opens, but no sound comes out. She looks at you for help.
âMateo,â you say, still trying to catch your laughter before it comes out, âyou kissed me on the cheek six times earlier and told me we were the best of friendsâ
âThatâs different!â he says with all the righteous fury of a three year old. âWe had a deal!â
Alexia clears her throat, trying very hard not to laugh. âI didnât realise I was in competition with a dinosaur prince.â
âYou are!â he shouts dramatically, and flops down onto the couch between you, arms crossed, glaring at Alexia using all his might to try and move her over on the sofa.
You lean down, whispering, âHe might be harder to win over than Irene.â
Alexia mutters, âApparently.â
Mateo squints up at her. âIâm watching you.â
Alexia grins now, accepting the challenge. âIâm very scary.â
He doesnât look convinced. Youâre not sure youâve ever seen her look more amused. The three of you sit in silence for a second, the episode still playing in the background. Mateo yawns dramatically.
âYou can stay,â he tells her finally, like a king issuing a decree. âBut no more kissing.â
You and Alexia share a look over the top of his head her eyes warm, yours laughing.
âNo more kissing,â you promise, lips twitching.
"I make no such promises" you can't help the giggle that escapes when Mateo turns his head to Alexia and she seems to recoil at the look she was getting.
âœïž
Mateo had fallen asleep squarely in the middle of the sofa sprawled between you and Alexia like a pint sized buffer, one hand still clutching his stuffed dinosaur and the other loosely resting against your leg. His soft snores had been the final cue that it was time to carry him up to one of the guest rooms.
You scoop him up carefully, his head lolling against your shoulder, and carry him through the hallway with slow, quiet steps. Alexia watches you go with a little smile playing at her mouth, one of those soft ones, the kind you pretend not to notice but feel anyway.
Once upstairs, you tuck him under the blanket, he stirs a little, mumbling something in Spanish in sleep-heavy, but then, just as you start to ease away, his eyes flutter open, small and round and glassy with sleep.
âDo you really like Auntie Ale?â he asks quietly, voice small in the hush of the dim room.
You blink, heart tugged. Then smile gently. âYeah, Mateo. I like her very much.â
He nods slowly, as if this confirms something important, and snuggles deeper into the pillow. âCan she come tuck me in too?â
You brush your hand through his hair. âIâll go get her.â
You step back into the hallway and pad downstairs, Alexia is still in the living room, one leg tucked up under her, turning the TV off, she looks up as you enter.
âHe asked for you,â you say softly.
Alexia arches a brow. âIs he okay?â
You nod. âHe just wants you to come tuck him in.â
Alexia chuckles, standing heading back up the stairs. You head back up after grabbing your phone but, something makes you pause in the hallway by the door, just outside Mateoâs claimed room, drawn by the soft murmur of their voices.
âAre you comfy now?â Alexia asks gently, her voice like velvet in the quiet.
âUh-huh.â A pause, then, Mateo says very seriously, âYou can make her your girlfriend now.â
Alexia is clearly caught off-guard. âWhat?â
Mateo yawns. âCoco. You can make her your girlfriend.â
Alexiaâs voice is light, but thereâs something breathless underneath it. âWhy do you say that, Mateo?â
He shifts under the covers, half-asleep but earnest. âBecause she passed my tests,â he mumbles. âSheâs nice and she played with me and she made you smile a lot.â Another pause. You can almost hear Alexia blinking, âShe told me she really likes you too,â Mateo adds, like itâs a secret heâs been holding in all day.
Silence and then Alexiaâs voice, barely audible: âShe did?â
Mateo hums, already sinking back into sleep. âMhm. She said it when I asked.â
Alexia says nothing else for a moment. You picture her there, sitting beside his bed in the soft light, her hand resting on the blanket, staring down at this kid who just knowingly played matchmaker.
Finally, softly, you hear her say: âOkay. Thanks, Mateo.â
You step back, quietly making your way to Alexia's room, it was quiet expect the hum of your phone on the bed as you got changed, as Alexia pads in softly on bare feet your already part way through your phone call.
Youâve got your back to her, one hand braced on the windowsill, the other holding your phone to your ear. You donât see her, donât know sheâs there and so you speak freely.
âNo, I get it. I know it changes things.â Your voice is low, tired, but steady. Alexia pauses just inside the doorway, out of sight but close enough to hear you clearly. Something in your tone stops her. You exhale into the phone. âLook, I didnât want anyone to lose their job. That was never what this was about.â
Another beat. You shift your weight, shoulders tense.
âIâve made a decision. Thereâs no going back now. It was the hardest decision Iâve ever had to make, leaving like that especially under those circumstances but I meant what I said, I can't play there now.â
Alexia stays where she is, quiet as a ghost.
âIâm not staying, no matter who they bring in next what assurances they give me. I know it changes the dynamic, but Iâve already committed to whatâs next. I owe it to myself and to them to follow through on that.â Thereâs a long pause where whoeverâs on the other end replying. You nod silently, then say quietly, âTell them I said thank you. For everything.â
Another pause.
âYeah. Iâm okay. I will be.â
You hang up, your head drops, and for a moment you just stand there, eyes closed, fingertips pressing into the windowsill like it might keep you upright.
Then you turn and freeze, Alexiaâs in the doorway now, arms crossed, leaning against the frame. Her expression is unreadable, soft and still. You blink, startled. âHow long?â
âLong enough,â she says gently.
You hesitate, the air thick with unspoken things. âI didnât mean for you to hear that,â you say finally.
âI know,â she replies.
âI made my choice,â you say, more quietly now. âI had to. Even if things⊠changed after.â
She pushes off the frame and crosses the room slowly, her gaze never leaving yours. When she stops in front of you, sheâs close not touching, but closer than she needs to be. âWhat happened?â
âMy head coach got let go this morning.â
Alexiaâs brow lifts, a flicker of surprise in her expression. âSeriously?â
You nod. âThe clubâs already promoted the assistant. Heâs taking over.â
Alexia takes a step further into the room. âYou okay?â
You shrug, somewhere between relief and conflict. âItâs⊠weird. She was part of the reason I left, but not the only reason.â
Alexia watches you for a moment, reading you like she always does, calm, quiet, patient. âDoes it change anything?â she asks.
You shake your head slowly. âNo. I told them it doesnât. Iâve already made my decision, and Iâm following through on it.â
Thereâs a flicker of something in her eyes curiosity, and something deeper. âWhat did you decide?â she asks softly.
You meet her gaze, steady now. "I signed with Barca yesterday before I left"
Alexiaâs eyes widen just slightly a blink, a twitch of her mouth like sheâs caught between trying to stay composed and wanting to beam. She shifts her weight onto one foot, then crosses her arms tighter like sheâs trying to keep the emotion from spilling over.
âYou⊠you already signed?â she says, voice a little higher, quieter than usual.
You nod, watching her. âYesterday, right before I left. We made it official.â
A smile tugs at the corners of her lips, and she tries to keep it subtle, but itâs hopeless. Her dimples betray her before her mouth does, and her eyes go bright even as she dips her head, suddenly shy. âI didnât think Iâd be nervous hearing that,â she mutters, half to herself, half to you.
You take a step closer, bumping her gently with your shoulder. âYouâre blushing.â
âIâm not blushing,â she says quickly, flustered now, laughing a little.
âYou kind of are,â you tease, grinning.
She rolls her eyes, cheeks pink anyway, but she canât stop smiling. âItâs just⊠after everything. I know how much this decision meant to you, and I didnât want to be part of the pressure.â
âYou werenât,â you say, and you mean it.
Alexia looks up at you, the shyness still soft around her eyes, but thereâs something else there now something steadier, warmer. âI donât really know what to say,â she admits.
You shrug. âYou could say congratulations. Or. Just an idea, maybe finish what we started last nightâ
That pulls a real laugh from her, quiet and fond. âThat is very good ideaâ
âWell, then,â you say, as she begins reaching out to curl her fingers gently in your shirt, âI just gave you a pretty good reason to kiss me.â
Alexiaâs fingers twist gently into the fabric of your shirt, and thereâs a beat of silence where you both just look at each other, soft, charged, inevitable.
Then she pulls you in, the kiss is warm and hungry all at once, not rushed, but with a certain urgency. Her hands find your waist, pulling you closer until thereâs no space left, your bodies pressed together like theyâve known for a while what they wanted.
You barely notice the shuffle backward until the backs of her knees hit the edge of the bed. She sinks down, taking you with her, lips never leaving yours.
Thereâs laughter between kisses light, breathless as you straddle her, that giddy, heady kind that bubbles up when nerves meet something longed for.
Her mouth breaks from yours only for a second. âYou sure you donât want to go back to the guest room?â
You raise an eyebrow, leaning in again. âNot even a little bit.â
Alexia hums a soft, amused sound as she with an overwhelming ease holds you against her with one arm lifting turning and laying you on the bed reattaching her lips to yours with more urgency than before.
Her touch grew bolder, her fingertips deftly lifting your shirt and sliding it up your sides and over your head. Your heart pounded in your chest like a drum, each beat echoing in the quiet room. Alexia's eyes roamed over your bare skin, a soft smile playing on her lips as she took in the sight of you. Then she leaned in, her breath warm and sweet as she placed a trail of kisses along your neck, her mouth moving with a purpose that sent your thoughts spiraling.
Her fingers found their way to the clasp of your bra, releasing it with a practiced ease that made you gasp. Your breasts spilled into her waiting hands, and she cupped them gently, her thumbs teasing the sensitive peaks. Your breath caught in your throat as she lowered her mouth, her tongue tracing delicate circles that sent waves of pleasure crashing through you. You arched your back, offering yourself up to her, desperate for more of her touch.
Her mouth moved down, her kisses growing more insistent, her tongue darting out to taste your skin. Alexia's hands found the button of your jeans, undoing them, and then sliding them down your legs. Leaving you in nothing but your lacy underwear.
She murmured in Spanish, her voice thick with desire, as she slid your panties off. You felt a blush creep up your neck, but the way she was looking at you made you feel anything but embarrassed. You were alive, on fire, ready for whatever she had in store.
Her fingers began to explore, gliding over your most sensitive spots, setting every nerve ending alight. You could feel yourself getting wetter with every stroke, your body responding to her touch with a fervor that surprised even you. Alexia's eyes never left yours, the intensity of her gaze making you feel as if she could see into the very core of your soul.
And then she was kissing your body again, her mouth moving down your body, her tongue leaving a trail of fire in its wake. When she reached the apex of your thighs, she paused, her breath hot and tickling. The anticipation was unbearable, your entire body taut with need. But she didn't disappoint. Her tongue slipped inside you, and you moaned, your hips bucking involuntarily. She took her time, savouring every part of you, her movements deliberate and precise just like on the football pitch. You felt your climax building, the pleasure coiling tighter and tighter within you until it finally broke, sending you spiralling over the edge with a cry of pure ecstasy.
Alexia pulled back, her eyes gleaming with satisfaction, and you couldn't help but feel a sense of wonder. How did she know exactly what you needed? How could she make you feel like this?
She repositioned herself between your legs, her own desire evident in the way she was looking at you. Her fingers began to work their magic again, and you felt yourself building back up to that peak, the sensations more intense than before.
Her mouth found your clit, sucking gently as her fingers plunged inside you. You writhed beneath her, your hands tangled in her hair, urging her on. The world outside the bedroom faded away, leaving only the two of you in a cocoon of passion and pleasure.
You felt your orgasm approaching, a crescendo that seemed to build forever, and when it finally crested, you moaned out her name, your body arching off the bed. Alexia's eyes never left you, her gaze a mix of triumph and hunger as she watched you come apart in her hands.
As your breathing began to even out, she kissed her way back up your body, her lips lingering on your stomach, your breasts, your neck, until she reached your mouth. Her kisses grew gentle again, almost tender, as she unbuckled her own pants, sliding them down her legs.
You could see the outline of her arousal through her panties, and the sight of her made you ache to touch her.
With trembling hands, you reached down and slid the fabric aside, revealing her to yourself. She was wet and ready, and you didn't hesitate to dip your fingers into her warmth, feeling her quiver against your touch. Her eyes fluttered closed, and she let out a deep, throaty groan.
Alexia's hips began to rock against your hand, and you felt your own desire stirring once more. You leaned in, your mouth finding hers again as you matched the rhythm of your fingers to the movement of your tongues. You could feel her tightening around you, her breath coming in short gasps as she approached her peak. As she came, her body tensed, and she buried her face in the crook of your neck, her teeth grazing your skin. You felt her release, the warmth of her against your hand, and the tremble of her muscles. It was intoxicating, the power you had over her, the intimacy that you shared in this moment.
Neither of you got much sleep that night, hands and mouths wouldn't stop exploring, if you did fall asleep, it was only temporary as you both seemed to wake up at the same time and hands would wander again silently.
âœïž
It starts with Alexia as she casually tosses herself over with a sigh and a stretch, taking up the middle of the mattress like itâs instinct.
You raise an eyebrow, amused. âComfortable?â
She shrugs, already turned onto her side. âJust getting settled.â
You catch the way she subtly shifts again, back angled toward you now not quite obvious, not quite an invitation, but unmistakable.
You're on your back behind her, heart warm. âAle.â
âSi?â she says, too innocent, gaze fixed stubbornly on the wall.
âYouâre trying really hard not to ask me to cuddle you.â
Her voice is muffled in the pillow. âIâm not trying, Iâm succeeding.â
âOh yeah?â
âIâm just... lying like this because itâs more comfortable. Nothing to do with you.â
"Ok" you smile and dramatically roll the other way, "Sleep tight" you feel the bed shift as Alexia seemingly looks over her shoulder to see where you were.
"If you wanted a cuddle, I'd allow that"
You laugh softly, "You'd allow it huh?"
"Si" you hear her sigh as she settles back down, there was silence, deafening silence but you knew that wasn't the end of it, "Cold isn't it"
You laugh roll over slid her hand over her waist and up her body to her chest and drag her back into you, snug against your chest. She melts instantly, sighing again this time quieter, softer. Her fingers find yours under the blanket and link.
After a moment, âHappy nowâ you whisper against the shell of her ear, she nods unable to wipe the smile from her face, "The great Alexia Putellas, a little spoon. Who would have thought it.
Alexia makes a small noise of protest thatâs entirely undermined by the way she nudges herself closer, tucking herself firmly into your space. âSi,â she mumbles. âBut donât get cocky about it.â
You smile into her hair. âNo promises.â
A quiet beat, then she adds, voice barely above a whisper, âWhen do you have to go back to Germany?â
You exhale slowly, letting your nose brush gently against the back of her neck before answering. âDay after tomorrow,â you murmur. âGot the last game of the season and need to pack up my things. Say goodbye. Sort out all the boring grown-up stuff.â
Alexia nods, silent for a moment. Then, quieter: âYou okay with going back?â
You think about it honestly. The flat that doesnât feel like home anymore. The training ground that feels like a chapter thatâs already ended.
âYeah,â you say finally. âItâll be weird, I think. Bittersweet. But Iâm ready to close that door.â
âDo you think⊠youâll get to play the last game before the break?â
Youâre quite a second, thinking. âI hope so. They havenât said anything official yet, but Iâm fit. If they want to show Iâm still part of the squad, even just off the bench... maybe. Get to say bye properlyâ
Alexia nods slowly. âWould that be weird for you? Playing again, after everything?â
You breathe in, then out. âA little, yeah. But it also feels right. To go out properly, not just... vanish. Iâd like that.â
She hums, the sound thoughtful. âIâll keep an eye on the match. Even if itâs just a few minutes, I want to see you play there one more time.â
was it me running 10k in the Barcelona sun? because this is getting hot đ„”
You're a highly successful basketball player who has just been transferred to Barcelona's women's team. The number 11 holds deep personal significance for you. Among the spectators is none other than football superstar Alexia Putellas, synonymous with the number 11 in Barça history, watching from the sidelines.
What starts as mutual admiration quickly turns into something more, fuelled by weeks of playful yet intense online flirting. The chemistry between you and Alexia becomes undeniable.
You werenât sure if Alexia was actually going to follow through. She talked a big game, sure. But this? This was different. This was her stepping past the safety of online flirting. Still, you couldnât shake the feeling that she meant it this time. So when training wrapped up and you were cooling down with a few teammates, you werenât entirely surprised when your phone buzzed.
Alexia: Where are you?
No pleasantries. No hesitation. Straight to the point. You grinned, wiping sweat from your forehead as you typed back.
You: Facility gym. Why? You looking for me?
Read at 2:13 PM. A long pause.
Alexia: Maybe.
Your smirk deepened.
You: You lost or something?
Alexia: No. But youâre about to be.
You frowned at your screen, confused until you heard a voice behind you.
"¿Qué tal, estrella?"
You turned, pulse kicking up a notch. Alexia stood just inside the entrance of the gym, arms crossed, a small smirk playing on her lips.
She was actually here.
And she looked way too confident about it. "Didnât think youâd actually show up," you said, tossing your towel aside as you took a slow step toward her.
She tilted her head slightly, her eyes glinting. "Why? Because you think I only talk and donât act?"
You shrugged, mirroring her stance. "Havenât exactly seen you prove me wrong yet."
A flicker of something crossed her face, challenge, maybe. Or irritation. Then, in one smooth movement, she stepped closer, invading your space just enough to make your breath hitch. "You like pushing me, donât you?" she murmured.
You swallowed, your fingers twitching at your sides. "Maybe."
Alexia hummed, her gaze flickering over your face like she was studying every reaction. Then, her voice dropped lower. "Careful what you wish for."
Déjà vu.
She had texted you those words just hours ago. But hearing them in person? That was different. That was Alexia daring you to finally stop playing games.
You held Alexiaâs gaze, your breath steady despite the heat creeping up your spine. She was testing you. Pushing you. Fine. Two could play that game.
You shifted your stance, standing taller, letting a slow smirk curl your lips. âYou keep saying that, but Iâm still waiting for you to prove it.â
Alexiaâs eyes flickered with something dark, determined. âOh?â she mused, taking another step forward.
You refused to move back. You were locked in now, a silent stand-off, neither willing to be the first to break. A few of your teammates were still lingering nearby, pretending very poorly not to watch. You caught one of them nudging another, both whispering behind their hands. Great. An audience.
Alexia must have noticed too because her smirk widened. âYour team seems interested in this.â
You let out a short laugh. âCanât blame them. Youâve been running your mouth online for weeks.â
She tilted her head. âAnd yet, youâre still here. Entertaining it.â
Your jaw clenched for half a second. She had a point. But you werenât about to give her the satisfaction of admitting it. Instead, you shrugged. âMaybe I just like the attention.â
Alexiaâs gaze dropped to your lips, just for a flicker of a second before snapping back up. âThat makes two of us.â
Damn.
That shouldnât have hit you like it did. But it did. You were about to respond when one of your teammates loudly cleared their throat.
âSo⊠should we leave you two alone orâ?â
You rolled your eyes, finally stepping back from Alexia with an exasperated sigh. âMind your business.â
Your teammate just laughed, raising their hands in surrender before walking off. Alexia, though, stayed exactly where she was, watching you with that same knowing look. Eventually, she glanced down at her phone. âI should go.â
You arched a brow. âAlready?â
She smirked. âI just needed to see something.â
You folded your arms. âAnd?â
She leaned in slightly, voice teasing. âI got my answer.â Then, before you could react, she turned on her heel and walked away, leaving you standing there heart racing, mind spinning, and absolutely not ready to let her have the last word.
If anyone thought the online back-and-forth between you and Alexia was slowing down, they were sorely mistaken. Because after your little run-in at the training facility, things only escalated. It started with a subtle like on one of your gym photosâone where your arms and shoulders were looking particularly good. No comment, just the quiet acknowledgment that she had seen it.
Then, a few days later, you posted a clip from trainingâhitting a deep three-pointer with ease. The caption?
Some things just come naturally. âïž
The fans hyped it up immediately, and you didnât think much of itâuntil Alexia replied.
Alexiaputellas: That so?
Short. Simple. Almost dismissive. But you knew what she was doing. So, you baited her right back.
Yourusername: Something you wanna say, 11?
She liked the comment but didnât reply. Left you hanging. And if there was one thing you were learning about Alexia, it was that she loved to leave you guessing.
Then, the next day, she posted a picture from her own training session sharp focus, locked in. The caption,
Alexia: Nothing worth having comes easy.
No mention of you, no direct callout. But the timing was too perfect to be a coincidence.
The fans noticed.
â Sheâs talking about YOU, bestie â Oh, sheâs so smooth with it â Just date already
Then, to your surprise, Alexiaâs teammates got involved.
Irene Paredes commented first.
Irene: Is this flirting? Or are you two actually beefing? I canât tell.
Then Mapi LeĂłn.
Mapi: At this point, I think they donât even know either.
And finally, Patri Guijarro.
Patri: Either kiss or fight because this needs to get a lot more interesting
That was it. The fans were losing their minds.
â EVEN PATRI SEES IT â MAPI BE SO REAL FOR THIS â SOMEONE PLEASE JUST CONFESS ALREADY
And then just as you were about to call it a night Alexia finally responded.
Alexia: Some games take patience.
Your heart kicked. Because now, she wasnât just playing along. She was doubling down.
You knew Alexia was watching. From the moment your basketball team stepped onto the Barcelona training pitch for a fitness test, you could feel her eyes on you. She wasnât even trying to be subtle about it. The gym overlooked the field, glass windows giving a perfect view of everything happening outside. And sure enough, through the reflection of your sunglasses, you could see her standing thereâarms crossed, watching intently. So, if she wanted to watch? Youâd give her something to look at.
The fitness test was brutal. Sprint drills, agility work, endurance runs under the unforgiving Barcelona sun. Sweat dripped down your temple, muscles burning as you pushed through each set. And still, you made sure to keep your movements sharp. Effortless. Letting your strength and control show in every stride, every pivot, every flex of muscle as you drove forward with precision.
And when the heat finally got too much you grabbed the hem of your training top and peeled it off in one smooth motion, letting the sun warm your bare skin. You didnât need to look up to know Alexia had seen it. The shift in energy was instant. A pause in her usual movement, just for half a second. The way she adjusted her stance, fingers twitching slightly at her sides. You bit back a smirk.
One of your teammates jogged past, nudging you with an amused look. âYou do realise sheâs staring, right?â
âOh, I know.â
You could feel it.
Even as you finished the final sprint, chest rising and falling with deep breaths, you knew Alexiaâs eyes hadnât left you. And when you finally allowed yourself a glance toward the gym window, you met her gaze directly. She didnât look away. Didnât try to hide it. Instead, she arched a browâalmost like she was challenging you.
Your smirk deepened. This game you were playing? It was far from over.Â
The fitness test was over however, but you and a few of your teammates werenât in a rush to leave. The sun was warm against your skin, and after pushing yourselves through relentless sprints and agility drills, a little downtime on the grass felt well-earned. You stretched out, leaning back on your hands, legs extended in front of you as you let the sun soak into your muscles. Â
That was when you noticed them. Barcelonaâs womenâs team, stepping onto the field for their own training session. Â
And leading the way, of course, Alexia. Â
You felt her presence before you even looked up properly, but when you didâoh, she was already watching. Â
Her gaze swept over you, slow and deliberate, taking in every inch of you stretched out in the sun. You were still shirtless from training, skin glistening slightly from exertion, and you didnât miss the way her eyes lingered just for a second longer than necessary. Â
She caught herself quickly, but not quickly enough. Because now, you knew. And she knew you knew. Still, she didnât back down. Instead, she smirked. Â
âYou tired already?â she called out, voice loud and teasing enough to grab the attention of both her teammates and yours. âDidnât think basketball players ran out of energy so fast.â Â
Some of her teammates snickered. One of your own muttered beside you, âOh, sheâs feeling herself today.â Â
You tilted your head lazily in her direction, feigning boredom even as amusement tugged at your lips. âDidnât realise footballers were so idle they had the time to watch other athletes train.â
The laughter from both teams was instant. Â
Alexia arched a brow, and for the briefest moment, you swore she hesitated like she hadnât expected you to throw it right back at her. Â
Then she kept walking, slowing just slightly as she passed where you were sitting. And in a voice meant only for you, she murmured, âWell, you put on quite the show.â Â
Her tone was smooth, confident like she wasnât affected at all. But her eyes betrayed her. Because just as she started to jog toward her teammates, her gaze dipped one last time trailing down the length of you, lingering at your abs before snapping back up to meet yours. Â
You caught it. Â
And judging by the sharp inhale she took before looking away, she knew you did too. You grinned, leaning back on your hands again, completely at ease. âLetâs see if you can do better, then.â Â
She glanced over her shoulder, still smirking. âOh, donât worry,â she shot back. âI always do.â Â
And with that, she was gone joining her team, acting like that whole exchange hadnât just happened. Â
One of your teammates let out a low whistle. âYeah, youâre so in trouble.â Â
Maybe. But judging by the way Alexia had just looked at you? She was too.
As Barcelonaâs womenâs team started their drills, your teammates were still chuckling beside you, sending each other knowing looks. One of them nudged your side. Â
âYouâre playing with fire, you know that?â Â
You just smirked, stretching your arms behind your head. âI donât know what youâre talking about.â Â
Another scoffed. âRight. And Alexia wasnât just eye-fucking you five minutes ago.â Â
You laughed, shaking your head, but you didnât deny it. Because, yeah, Alexia hadnât been subtle. And neither had you. Â
You stayed on the sidelines, still catching some sun, but now your focus was elsewhere. You werenât watching the entire Barcelona squad train, you were watching her. And she knew it. Â
Because every time she had the ball at her feet, she was sharper. Every pass, every turn, every effortless control of the ball was dialed up, like she wanted to make sure you saw just how good she was. Â
Then came the finishing drills. Â
Alexia stepped up first. The ball was played into her stride, and without hesitation, she struck it cleanly top corner, unstoppable. Â
You let out a small whistle, just loud enough for her to hear. She turned her head slightly, her smirk barely contained. The next one? She took it first-time, a volley that rocketed into the net. Â
Your teammates started laughing beside you. âOh, sheâs showing off now.â Â
You just grinned. âLet her.â Â
And Alexia just kept going. Â
Goal after goal. Every movement precise, controlled, effortless. It wasnât just about skillâit was about making sure you saw exactly what she could do. Â
Then came the final drill, a one-on-one situation with the keeper. Alexia received the ball, dribbled smoothly into the box, then stoppedâjust for a secondâbefore coolly slotting it past the keeper. Â
And when she turned around she didnât look at her teammates. She looked straight at you.
Like she was daring you to say something. You leaned forward slightly, resting your arms on your knees, letting her have her moment before tilting your head. âNot bad.â Â
Her brow arched, her smirk growing. She scoffed, shaking her head as she jogged back to her team. Â
One of her teammates, elbowed her and said something that made Alexia roll her eyes. But she was still smirking, still stealing glances your way when she thought you werenât looking. Â
Oh, you were definitely looking. And this game between you? It was far from over. It was heating up.
You could feel her eyes on you. Even from across the field, where she stood with her teammates, pretending to be focused on training you knew exactly who Alexia was watching. Â
So, naturally, you decided to have a little fun with it. Â
Ona Batlle had come over to chat, casual and easygoing, but you knew what this really was. An opportunity. A chance to push Alexia just a little further, to see how much she could take before she cracked. Â
So, you turned on the charm. âYou ever consider switching sports?â you asked, smirking at Ona. âI think youâd do well in basketball.â Â
Ona grinned, playing along. âOh yeah? What makes you say that?â Â
You leaned in slightly, just enough to make it look like something. âYouâve got speed. Good reflexes. I think you could handle yourself on the court.â Â
From the corner of your eye, you caught the subtle shift in Alexiaâs stance. The way her jaw clenched, the way she stood a little straighter, like she was resisting the urge to storm over. Â
Perfect. Â
Ona tilted her head, pretending to consider it. âHmm. But would you actually teach me? Or just use it as an excuse to show off?â Â
You chuckled, shaking your head. âIâd definitely show off. But Iâd make sure you learned something in the process.â Â
Ona laughed, nudging your arm playfully. âSounds like a fair deal.â Â
You made a show of grinning back, knowing exactly what you were doing. Alexia knew it too. Â
When you flicked your gaze in her direction, you didnât even try to hide your amusement. And for the first time since this whole thing started, Alexia didnât smirk back. Â
She just stared and when training resumed, she didnât hold back. Every touch, every pass, every shotâthere was extra venom behind it, extra bite. She was playing with a sharpness, a level of intensity that screamed one thing. Â
Youâd gotten to her. And that was exactly what you wanted.
You werenât staying. Â
You had done what you came to do, run your fitness tests, pushing Alexiaâs buttons, and maybe drive her just a little crazy in the process. Was an unexpected bonus.
You were leaving. Just like she had at your practice. Fair was fair.  You grabbed your bag, slinging it over your shoulder as you walked around the edge to leave, your teammates still lounging behind you, soaking in the sun. Â
But you barely made it a few steps off the pitch before you heard hurried footsteps behind you. Â
You knew who it was before even turning around. Â
âLeaving already?â Â
Alexiaâs voice was smooth, but there was something beneath it. Something tight. You exhaled a quiet laugh, not slowing down. âDidnât realise I had to check out with you first.â Â
Alexia scoffed, catching up to walk beside you, her pace casual but her presence anything but. âYou donât. Just surprised, thatâs all.â Â
You hummed, letting the silence stretch, watching as she very obviously tried to keep her eyes on your face. She failed. Her gaze dippedâonce, twiceâdragging down over your torso, where your shirt was still slung over your shoulder. The heat of the sun had been the perfect excuse to take it off earlier, and you hadnât bothered putting it back on. Â
Now, it was paying off. Because Alexia wasnât subtle. Her eyes lingered just a second too long, her tongue darting out to wet her lips before she forced her gaze back up. Â
You smirked. âSomething catch your eye?â Â
Her jaw tightened. âYou wish.â Â
âOh, I know.â Â
You stopped walking, turning fully to face her now, and she mirrored the movement without hesitation. For a second, neither of you spoke. But the tension. It was palpable. Â
A slow burn in the space between you, stretching, thickening. Her eyes searched yours, like she was looking for a sign, a challenge, an opening, something. Â
And you werenât about to back down. Â
So, you tilted your head, letting your smirk deepen. âI didnât think you followed people when they were the ones leaving early.â Â
Alexia exhaled sharply, her lips pressing together. âI wasnât following you.â Â
You chuckled. âNo?â Â
âNo.â She squared her shoulders. âI had things to do.â Â
You stepped a little closerâjust enough that you swore you saw her breath hitch. âRight. And those things just happened to be in the same direction as me?â Â
She didnât answer right away. And in that silence, you swore you felt it shift. The teasing, the gamesâit was still there, but underneath it, something heavier. Something you werenât sure either of you was ready to name. Â
Alexiaâs gaze flickered, just for a second, to your lips before she caught herself. Then, as quickly as she had followed you she was stepping back. Â
Regaining her composure. âYou should put a shirt on,â she muttered. Â
You grinned, reaching for your bag. âWhy? Distracting?â Â
She didnât dignify that with a response. She just turned on her heel, walking away without another word. But she didnât have to say anything. Because you knew. And next time you werenât going to let her walk away so easily.
You werenât one to back down from a challengeâespecially not one unspoken. Â
So, after training, standing in front of the mirror in the locker room, still shirtless, sweat clinging to your skin, you did what had to be done. Â
You snapped the picture. Â
The lighting was good, your abs looked sharp, and the smirk you wore? Just cocky enough to be annoying. Â
Perfect. Â
You opened Instagram, fingers hovering over the caption for only a second before typing exactly what you knew would send the worldâand Alexiaâinto a frenzy. Â
"Should I do as Iâm told and put a shirt on? đ€"
You hit post. Â
And within minutes, the internet erupted. Â
@barcaworldwide: WE NEED TO KNOW WHO TOLD YOU THIS. đ Â
@baskethoopsdaily: No. Donât do it. For the culture. Â
@alexiapfans: Someone check on Alexia! Is she ok? I AM NOT OKAY. Â
@yourteammatename: I vote no. But if you get fined for this, I was never here. Â
@AlbaPutellas: I feel like youâre enjoying this way too much. Â
@alexiaputellas: You already know the answer. Â
That last comment. Yeah. Thatâs the one that really got everyone talking. Â
Because unlike the othersâunlike all the laughing emojis and thirsty replies and teammates stirring the potâAlexiaâs response was⊠different. Â
She wasnât playing along, not exactly. She was reminding you that she had told you to put a shirt on. That sheâd been there, watching, reacting. Â
And that was enough to send her fans into a meltdown. Â
@alexiaupdates: WE NEED AN INTERPRETATION IMMEDIATELY. Â
@spainwntdaily: âYou already know the answerâ ??????? EXCUSE ME. Â
@barcelona_fc_fan: This is the most obvious âI was watching you and you know itâ message Iâve ever seen. Â
@yournamefanclub: IS THIS OUR ROMANTIC ERA. Â
You leaned back in your bath, staring at the screen, the likes skyrocketing, the comments piling up by the second. Â
And then, before you could even think of a response, your phone buzzed with a private message. Â
Alexia should have let it go. Â
She should have ignored your post, pretended it didnât get to her, pretended she didnât see it. Â
But she didnât. Â
She liked it. She commented on it. And then, hours later, when you were relaxing in the bath, she went a step further. Â
Alexia: Youâre a menace.
You grinned, typing back. Â
You: And yet, you keep engaging.
She left you on read. But she liked the text. And that said everything.
Your phone buzzed yet again. Â
Alexia: You still havenât answered the question.
You smirked
You: Which one?
Her reply came almost immediately. Â
Alexia: Should you do as youâre told?
You chuckled under your breath, shaking your head. She was playing now, pushing this back into your hands, daring you to make a move. Â
So you did. Â
You took your time with your response, letting your fingers hover over the keyboard before typing. Â
You: You tell me, Capitana. You seem to like giving orders.
Read at 9:46 PM. Â
No reply. Â
For a while, you let it sit, let her stew in it, let her decide whether she wanted to keep going or tap out. And then, when you were sure she couldnât handle the heat. Your phone buzzed.
Alexia: I like being in control.
Your breath caught just slightly. Oh, she was good. But so were you. Â
You could have left it there, let the tension build, let it simmer in the background. But where was the fun in that? Â
Instead, you opened Instagram again, snapped another pictureâthis time, just a teasing hint of your legs and the glass of wine in your hand in the bathâand posted it to your story with a caption that would definitely get a reaction. Â
".. whilst waiting on my orders. đ"
And you knew she saw it. Because not even five seconds later, you got another message. Â
Alexia: Eres insoportable. (Youâre unbearable.)
You: And yet, youâre still here.
She left you on read again. But something told you this wasnât over. Not even close.
Could you write leah x alessia x reader where less getts a yellow card in a match and y/n isn't best pleased about it so leah tries to get them to make.uo with eachother
she just hiiits different in an arsenal kit. also PSA just because i write this does not mean i actually ship less x leah in real life! also decided to make it a red card for the extra drama
seeing red II a.russo x l.williamson
you anxiously bounced your leg from where you sat watching your girlfriends play at the emirates, sighing with a shake of your head as alessia was given a yellow card for shoving someone in the back.
ever since she'd joined arsenal her confidence on the pitch had clearly grown and you weren't the only one who'd noticed that she was more aggressive in her style of play.
so had liverpool who were clearly targeting both her and katie, the infamous card receivers of the team their reputation proceeded them. katie was already on a yellow but had at least calmed down somewhat, knowing that next came the dreaded red.
but that didnât stop them. so whether it be pulling shirts, taking out legs, yanking on hair, liverpool were doing all they could under quite a laid back referee to wind both girls up, and it was working.
you watched as alessia and several of her team mates started to protest the card, the blonde throwing her hands around and reenacting how she was pulled back by her hair just a few moments before the shove. which admittedly the liverpool played had acted up in their dramatic falling to the ground and front roll.
you bit your lip nervously before leah finally stepped in, gently pushing alessia away and pulling her to the side, getting in her ear about hopefully calming down as kim stepped in to speak with the referee, obviously apologizing on her players behalf as he nodded and blew the whistle for play to resume.
you watched with a frown as alessia shoved leah away with an annoyed shake of her head, your other girlfriend sighing and jogging back to her position as alessia readied herself to play on.
you hoped she'd calm down, surely now she was on one card she knew she just needed to suck it up and be careful. there was only ten minutes plus stoppage time left, you knew she could do it you just hoped alessia felt the same.
turns out, she did not.
within five minutes of the first card you watched as one of the players held her back by her shirt as she shot for goal, meaning the blonde went tumbling to the ground and kicked it out instead earning the opposition a goal kick.
well that seemed to just about do it.
within a few seconds alessia was back to her feet, rounding on the liverpool defender and grabbing her shirt in her balled fists, getting in her face angrily as the girl held her hands up clearly trying to show she wasn't involving herself.
then things got worse. having had enough alessia harshly pushed the girl to the ground, sending her falling onto her ass before storming off, ignoring the referee's whistles after her, already knowing what was coming.
sure enough came the second yellow, and then the red, your girlfriend already making her way to the tunnel, shoving leah away who tried to comfort her.
your lips pursed into a thin line of disappointment at the older girls behavior, having warned her multiple times about this new often reckless attitude and how it was going to bite her in the ass.
and here the proof was in the pudding.
thankfully even now down to ten beth managed to score, putting them up 3-1 and clenching the win. nine minutes of injury time added on to play and you watched with wide eyes as your other girlfriend raced down the pitch for the final corner of the game.
then with a perfectly angled kick from frida, your blonde lover put her head to it and it sailed into the back of the net. you cheered loudly and proudly, blowing leah a kiss as her eyes found yours with a cheeky grin and the whistle blew to end the match.
waiting for your girlfriends to both join you in the family and friends box you busied yourself chatting with their team mates loved ones. knowing alessia would likely be getting quite the talking to not only from leah but her coach, it didn't surprise you as you were one of the only few left waiting.
eventually you spotted leah enter first, making a beeline right for you with a beaming smile. "well hello beautiful." the blonde rasped, picking you up into a hug and spinning you around as you grinned, pecking her a few times on the lips and mumbling how proud you were of her.
"you're looking very waggy today my girl." leah winked, nodding to her jersey which sat on your top half, alessia's puffer on over the top of that as the prada sunglasses you'd stolen from one of them sat on top of your head.
"waggy hm?" you grinned, spotting alessia entering over leahs shoulder, glancing around until she spotted you both. leah noticed the way your face changed at the sight, sighing as she realised you were clearly upset with the other girl.
"hey love, take it easy on her." leah warned quietly in your ear as alessia joined you both. "hi gorgeous." the tall blonde grinned in your direction opening her arms for a hug, chewing her gum with a smug smile that was annoyingly attractive.
"can we go please?" you directed the question to leah, grabbing your bag and completely blanking alessia who scoffed. "what did i do?" she asked her other girlfriend with a frown as you brushed past her heading for the exit.
"you know exactly what you did less." leah rolled her eyes, gesturing for the two of them to follow you as alessia huffed.
"it's not my fault they were all picking on me today, you even said i was being targeted!" alessia defended herself to leah who only hummed, having already ripped into her girlfriend about the card once the match had finished.
"yes and i also warned you about retaliating being giving them exactly what they wanted. but did you listen? no. you big dope!" leah shoved the taller girl as they hurried after you into the elevator.
"so unfair." alessia mumbled, crossing her arms and you felt her eyes burning into you longingly but you held firm, leaning into leah who wrapped an arm around your shoulders.
as the three of you reached alessia's car you kissed the oldest blonde goodbye, having driven yourself this morning while they'd driven together needing to be there earlier. "hey!" alessia called after you with a frown as you quickly walked off to your car, again completely blanking her.
"oh you have some serious grovelling to do." leah chuckled in amusement as she slid into the passenger seat of the mercedes, alessia shooting her a dirty look as she slammed her door closed.
"help me." the younger of the two requested with a pout, leah rolling her eyes and leaning over to kiss it away. "fine. but you still need to make it up to her, you know how worried she already gets about injuries the last thing she needs on her mind is worrying about cards and fist fights love." leah warned sternly buckling herself in.
"i pushed her over i wasn't gonna get in a fist fight with her! well...not yet."
~
returning home both girls arrived after you, your car already parked in the driveway as they made their way inside. as alessia struggled to take her trainers off leah ventured away to find you, seeking you out where you stood in the kitchen.
you glanced over with a soft smile seeing leah enter, the older girl kissing your cheek hello and snagging a protein smoothie out of the open fridge where you'd been trying to work out what to cook for dinner with what you had.
alessia entered next, leah sending her a look as she pulled herself up to sit on the counter and your other girlfriend cautiously made her way over to you. when you refused to look over she attempted to go in for a hug, grunting as something shoved into her stomach.
looking down she realised you held out a protein smoothie effectively blocking her from touching you, which she accepted as you closed the fridge and moved over to leah. you leant against the counter in between the blondes legs, pulling out your phone and resting your head back against her chest as you flicked through for recipe ideas.
"baby please come on. i'm sorry!" alessia put down the drink and frowned at you from across the room. "are you?" you spoke sharply, glancing at her as she hesitated. "well-" the brief pause was enough for you as you scoffed, quickly exiting the kitchen as they both heard you flop down into the lounge instead.
"yeah nice one, genius!" leah rolled her eyes, hopping down from the counter and shoving the taller girl with a shake of her head. "what! i'm sorry i got a red for it but i'm not sorry for standing up for myself. did you want me to lie to her?" alessia huffed, annoyed at your lack of attention toward her.
"she can still hear you, idiots!" you yelled out from the lounge with a roll of your eyes, flicking on the tv to drown them out.
"go and shower, i'll talk to her. and when you get out this contains a brain. try to use it yeah?" leah knocked harshly on alessia's forehead as the younger girl smacked her hands away with a scowl, storming off to the bathroom.
"don't." you warned as leah appeared at the end of the lounge, looking down at you with an amused smile. "what?" leah feigned innocence, gesturing for you to sit up as she sat down, your head falling to her lap as her fingers carded through your hair.
"where's this come from babe? we've both been carded before." leah asked quietly after a few moments, still playing with your hair as you sighed and rolled onto your back, looking up at her. "i know. but they were clearly trying to target her today, and the more she gives in and kicks off the more thats going to happen." you started to explain where you were coming from.
"and if that keeps happening and she gets on the wrong end of a poor tackle or something she might..." you trailed off as leah nodded in understanding, knowing that ever since she'd done her acl your worries for them both being injured had grown ten fold.
now knowing your anger was coming from a place of worry, leah bent down to tenderly kiss your forehead as you sighed. "you need to tell her that then sweets, she might actually listen to you." leah cautioned as you nodded, knowing she was right.
"we're letting this overshadow the fact someone scored today though!" you remembered suddenly, moving to sit up and straddle the blondes lap. "oh you noticed that did you? was nothing!" leah waved it off casually with a shrug before sending you a beaming grin, pulling you in for a kiss.
her hand coming to rest on the back of your head deepening the kiss you both failed to notice alessia return, the striker rolling her eyes at the sight of the two of you making out, jealously pumping through her veins as she threw herself down on the other end of the lounge with a scoff.
the noise caused you to pull away, resting your head on leahs shoulder and looking to the grumpy blonde across from you. "go on." leah murmured in your ear, patting your bum with a firm look as you nodded and stood up.
alessia looked up as you kicked her feet apart, moving to stand between them and stare down at her with an annoyed look on your face. though as promised you explained just why you were so frustrated with her, features softening as guilt flooded alessia's at the confession.
the striker was quick to apologise, this time sincerely and with a promise she would try her very best to be more careful and considerate.
with a nod of acceptance you collapsed into her awaiting arms which wrapped around you, your legs wrapping around her waist as she shuffled forward, squeezing you tightly and mumbling how much she loved you in your shoulder as your hands pressed at the back of her head and you nodded.
moving your hands to gently rest on her cheeks you kissed her sweetly, thumbs caressing her jaw as the striker kissed your palms with a soft smile, the tall girl melting into a puddle every time you showed her any sort of affections.
âbut donât entirely lie gorgeous, you find it quite hot when we get angry on the pitch.â alessia grinned knowingly, her large hands moving to squeeze your thighs teasingly. âmaybe just a tiny bit.â you left millimetres in between your fingers making alessia laugh, one of your favourite sounds.
"excuse me. third girlfriend is feeling a bit left out here!" leah interrupted the sweet moment from the other end of the lounge with a frown as alessia's grip on you tightened and your head fell to her shoulder, glancing to leah with an amused smile.
âcome here then stroppy.â gesturing for her to move closer the three of you shuffled around until you were comfortable, your body wedged in between them as your top half rested against leah, your legs draped across alessia's lap as the girl massaged your feet.
your girls.
Capi Mami - Alexia Putellas x barcelona femini
Summary: Alexia swears sheâs not the team mom⊠and yet sheâs the one confiscating phones, doling out granola bars, and keeping this locker room from imploding.
Word count: 1.5k
This is part of my 1k commemoration blurb! <3
a/n: a single mama who works two jobs
Masterlist
..
The locker room was a mess. Water bottles were scattered across the floor, shoes were everywhere, and a few jerseys had been tossed carelessly on the benches.
The younger girls were in full gossip mode, laughing and talking over each other, completely oblivious to the chaos they had created.
Vicky was sitting on one of the benches, animatedly chatting about some TikTok challenge, while Salma and Jana were having a loud conversation about the training session they had just finished.
Pinaâs laughter echoed through the room as Esmee said something dry and hilarious.
Y/n and Sydney were livestreaming on Instagramâvery much against team rulesâtalking about their training routine and casually throwing shade at the referee from their last match.
Marta walked in first. Her eyes widened as she surveyed the scene. She shook her head with a sigh and muttered, âWhat is this, girls?â
She took one step and nearly tripped over a bag lying in the middle of the floor.
âOkay,â Marta said angrily, lifting the bag into the air. âWhose bag is thisâand why do I have a bunch of stickers glued on my locker?â
âDo you like it?â Vicky asked brightly, the only one acknowledging Martaâs presence.
âI hate it,â Marta replied flatly. âTake it off.â
Vicky rolled her eyes and continued chatting. The others kept pretending Marta didnât exist.
âYou might want to clean this up before Alexia gets here,â Marta warned, but the girls barely looked up.
Marta rolled her eyes and muttered something under her breath before walking out.
She walked down the hall to find Alexia stretching on a bench, prepping for another round of training. Marta couldnât help but chuckle.
âTus nenas estĂĄn causando problemas,â [Your girls are causing problems], she said with a teasing smile.
Alexia raised an eyebrow. âQuĂ©?â [what?]
"Theyâre making a mess in the locker room again. And Iâm pretty sure I saw Y/n going live on Instagram ranting about the ref being bought."
Alexia sighed, her expression shifting from confused to fondly exasperated. "You know what theyâre like," she muttered, standing up. "Iâll handle them, and then Iâm confiscating Y/nâs phone."
The moment Alexia stepped into the locker room, her gaze swept across the chaos. Water bottles, jerseys, shin guards, and random clothes covered the floor. Not a single head turned.
Alexia didnât speak at first.Â
She simply stood there in the doorway, arms crossed, expression unreadable. After a long pause, her voice finally cut through the room.
"Nenas, qué es esto?" [Girls, what is this?]
Y/n jumped to her feet, face paling at the tone. The room fell silent in an instant.
Vicky, Salma, and Pina all sat up straighter. Y/n very discreetly hid her phone behind her back while nudging Sydney to sit properly and kick a rogue boot under the bench.
âHi, Ale!â Vicky greeted sweetly, putting on her most innocent baby voice.
âMi reina!â Pina chimed in, springing up and reaching for a hug.
Alexia sidestepped her without missing a beat. âWhat is all of this?â she asked, gesturing at the chaos with one unimpressed sweep of her hand.
âNothing! We were just⊠talking,â Jana said quickly, voice shrinking. âIt, uh⊠got a little out of hand?â
Alexiaâs eyes scanned the room like a laser. Her lips pressed into a thin, disapproving line.
âIs this how we treat a shared space?â she asked. Her voice didnât rise, but the warning in it was sharp.
âNo,â they chorused, voices barely above a whisper.
âIs the locker room where we throw our stuff around like toddlers?â
âNo.â
âShould I start labelling your bottles and jerseys like youâre in daycare? Or can we act like professionals?â
âWe can act like professionals,â they muttered in unison, chastened.
Alexia took one slow step forward. The shift in the room was immediateâevery breath held, every eye on her.
âI donât like doing this,â she said quietly, the calm in her voice somehow worse than yelling. âBut this? This is not okay. I expect better from all of you.â
Y/n shifted awkwardly, guilt written all over her face. âAre you mad at us?â
âIâm not mad,â Alexia said, her pause deliberate. âIâm disappointed.â
The words hit harder than anything else could have. The silence that followed was thick.
âWeâre sorry, Capi,â Y/n said, her head ducked. âWe didnât mean to mess up. We just got carried away.â
Alexiaâs gaze softened, but only slightly. âYou shouldâve known better. I trust you girls. Donât make me regret that.â
âWeâre really sorry, Alexia,â Salma added quickly, voice sincere.
âSorry isnât enough,â Alexia replied, crossing her arms. âI better not hear another complaint. Understood?â
âYes,â they all said, truly meaning it this time.
âClean it up,â Alexia ordered, turning to walk out. âAnd next time? Think before you act.â
As soon as the door shut behind Alexia, Sydney let out a dramatic exhale. âI really thought she was gonna make us run laps again.â
âMy feet still hurt from last time,â Y/n groaned, flopping back onto the bench.
âObviously,â Pina snorted. âIt was yesterday, genius.â
âWe are never doing this again,â Vicky said, voice solemn like she was making a blood pact.
âNope,â Jana chimed in, hand raised like she was swearing an oath. âFrom now on, we will clean up before she walks in.â
âWe should actually stop throwing stuff the second we get here,â Salma added thoughtfully.
Y/n suddenly sat up, panic dawning on her face. âWait. Do you think she saw me go live?â
âYes,â everyone said in eerie unison.
Y/n groaned and buried her face in her hands. âIâm so screwed.â
âYou two are a disaster,â Jana muttered, nudging Sydney.
âWe are not,â Sydney defended. âThe world just needed to know how rigged that ref was.â
âYou need to stop,â Esmee said, already starting to clean up the bottles.
Sydney shot her a look. âYouâre just mad you didnât join the live.â
âNo,â Esmee said dryly. âI just donât enjoy being yelled at. Call me crazy.â
Their chatter continued as they cleaned, a little more subdued now. Just outside, Alexia leaned against the wall, listening.Â
A soft smile tugged at her lips.
Y/n leaned back on the bench, phone in hand, muttering just loud enough for the others to hear, âOne day, I swear, Iâm gonna figure out how to get away with this. Maybe Iâll just block the older girls on Instagram and on Twitterâproblem solved.â
A few of the girls snorted in laughter.
But thenâŠ
A voice, calm and deadly precise, cut through the moment.
âYou think Iâm gonna let that happen?â
Silence.
Alexia had stepped into the room like a shadow. Everyone froze. Y/n especially.
"Phone. Now."Â Her palm was out, her stance unyielding.
Y/n clutched her phone like a lifeline. âAle⊠come on. Please.â
Alexia didnât budge. âNow. Youâll get it back after trainingâif you survive it.â
A dramatic sigh escaped Y/n, but she reluctantly handed it over, placing it in Alexiaâs open palm like a guilty child surrendering contraband.
Alexia smirked, tucking it safely into her jacket pocket. âYou really think I donât hear everything? Iâm always watching.â
As she turned and walked off, Vicky whispered, âSheâs got ears like a hawk.â
âNo,â Jana said with a grin, âsheâs got mom-radar.â
From across the room, Alexia called out, âI heard that, too.â
As soon as she left, Vicky whispered, "Okay⊠maybe we should behave."
"Maybe," Jana said. "But I doubt itâll last."
After cleaning everything, the door opened again. Alexia stepped back in and surveyed the room.
"Well done," she said. "Now get ready. Trainingâs going to be tough."
As they moved, Alexia pulled a small bag from her backpack and began tossing sandwiches and granola bars at them.
âEat,â she ordered, hands on her hips. âNo oneâs stepping onto that pitch with an empty stomach.â
âBut we already had lunch,â Y/n mumbled, catching hers mid-air.
Alexia raised an eyebrow. âAnd?â
âYouâre serious?â Vicky asked, halfway through peeling the wrapper.
âSĂ,â Alexia replied, voice firm but laced with affection. âYou need it. Youâve all been dragging your feet since drills this morning.â
Y/n took a bite and sighed. âOkay, youâre right. I was kind of sluggish.â
âYou always try to avoid eating before training,â Jana chimed in, smirking. âNo more excuses.â
âIâm eating, arenât I?â Y/n grumbled around a mouthful.
Alexia gave her a knowing smile. âGood. You need the energy to keep up with the rest of them.â
âOkay, mamĂ,â Y/n teased, raising an eyebrow.
Alexia paused mid-step. âWhat did you just say?â
âMamĂ,â Y/n repeated, grinning now. âYou act like a mom. You scold us, you take our phones, you pack our snacks. Youâre literally parenting us.â
âI am not,â Alexia scoffed.
âYou are,â Vicky said through a mouthful of granola. âThis is full-on mom behaviour.â
âKeep calling me that and Iâll ground you,â Alexia warned, but her lips twitched, threatening a smile.
âSee?!â Y/n pointed dramatically. âMom threat.â
Alexia rolled her eyes but didnât deny it. Instead, she watched them finish the bars and sandwiches, making sure every last bite was gone.
Once the wrappers were tossed and silence settled back in, she straightened, captain mode back on.
âAlright. Letâs go. Hydrate, boots on, and meet me in five. Weâve got work to do.â
She turned, but not before one last glance over her shoulder at the girlsâher girls.Â
Their chaos, their charm, their energy. They might not be hers, not really, but her love for them was unmistakable.
Strict? Always.
Soft? Only when they werenât looking.
..
a/n: Just really wanted to write something platonic haha
In a match where the scoreboard tells only half the story, a fierce on-pitch rivalry between you and football royalty, Alexia Putellas, evolves into something electric â something unspoken, but deeply felt. Between the lines two players lock eyes, trade touches, and blur the line between competition and connection. What begins as a game becomes a gravity neither can resist.
Part 3: 36 hours in Munich
Word Count: 8k
âœïž
Youâre in the locker room, post-session. Freshly changed but, pulse still settling, water bottle half-drunk and rolling somewhere near your bench. Everyoneâs moving slow â stretches, recovery gear, shower queues. Typical post-training lull.
But youâre pacing already packing away, quicker than normal, you normally linger for longer. You sit finally. Jacket half-zipped. Legs twitchy, breath short, heart doing sprints while your teammates are winding down.
You check your phone for the sixth time in two minutes. Still nothing. Still soon.
âAlright,â a voice cuts through behind you. âWho is it?â
You look toward the voice. Georgia. Leaning against the wall, towel over her shoulder, one brow cocked. You blink. âWhat?â
âYouâre all⊠shifty.â She waves a vague circle around you. âNicely-dressed, hair down. You keep checking your phone like it's gonna grow lips.â
You try to brush it off. âItâs nothing.â
Georgia doesnât even flinch. âLiar. Spill it.â
You stare at her for a second. You werenât going to tell anyone. But something about her tone â casual but not cruel â makes your chest loosen. And you need to say it out loud. Just once.
You sigh, grab your other boot, and sit. âSheâs flying in.â
Georgia pauses. âShe?â You assumed Beth would of blabbed by now.
You swallow. âAlexia.â
That name lands like a stone in a calm pool. Georgia blinks once. âPutellas?â
âYeah.â
Sheâs staring now. Like full-body-turn, jaw-slightly-dropped, towel-falling-off-the-shoulder staring. âFor⊠?â she tries.
You sigh a hand going through your freshly washed hair. âFor a day.â
Her mouth opens. Then closes. Then opens again. âAs inâŠâ
You shrug, but you canât help the way your face warms. âYeah. As in that. She followed me after the home game against Barca, after the away game, that's when she first started DM'ing me" You smile at Georgia's mouth hanging open.
"Saying what?"
"Football stuff mainly, about the games, but after the last game at Wembley, she asked if she could come here to see me. I said yes.â
Georgia whistles low. âBloody hell. Youâre actuallyââ she stops herself. âWait. Are you nervous?â
You nod, fast and helpless. âI feel like Iâm gonna throw up.â
She laughs, loud and bright. âYou scored a free kick at Wembley in front of ninety thousand, but youâre sweating because the Queen of Barcelona herself is flying in for a sleepover?â
You put your hand out, "You say it like they're not both just as equally massive" You groan, head in hands. âWhy did I tell you.â
Georgia grins. âBecause you needed to.â She slaps your back once, warm and steady. âSheâll have a nice time I'm sure. And you're interesting when your social battery is full. Just donât overthink it.â You look up. Georgiaâs still smiling â not teasing now. Just sure. âGo get the girl from the airport,â she says. âDon't over think it, just take it for what it is, it's her idea to come here so let her lead what it is"
You roll your eyes. But youâre nodding too. Because yeah â itâs real now. Sheâs coming. And you have to be ready.
âMeado knows about mine and Alexiaâs conversations, she doesnât know about her coming. If you know, you need to freak out about this when Iâm goneâ
âœïž
The car is parked just beyond the pickup loop, engine idling low. Your hoodieâs half-zipped, one hand gripping the steering wheel, the other drumming nervously against your thigh. Youâve been here twenty minutes early, but youâd never admit it.
Your phone lights up with a text.
Alexia: Just got my bag. Coming out now.
You swallow hard.
You glance in the rearview mirror, tug at your hair, check your reflection. You donât even know why â itâs her, youâve already been through matches and mud and bruises together â but somehow, this is different.
Itâs real. And quiet. And outside the lines. The terminal doors slide open again. A few people walk out. Not her. Another group. Still not. Your fingers tap faster.
Then there she is. Alexia. Dressed in all black, sunglasses pushed up into her hair, duffel bag over her shoulder. She walks out calm, casual, that familiar captainâs posture in every step. But her eyes are already searching.
And the second she sees you, they soften. You watch her approach through the windshield, heart thudding so hard youâre sure sheâll hear it before she even opens the door.
She pulls it open and slides into the passenger seat with that impossible grace, dropping her bag between her feet. You look at her.
She looks at you. And for a second, neither of you says a thing.
âHey,â you breathe, voice barely above the hum of the engine.
âHey,â she says back, softer.
You both smile. Itâs awkward and perfect and so much. âI canât believe youâre actually here,â you say as you pull out into traffic.
She leans back in the seat, eyes still on you. âI told you,â she murmurs. âI didnât want to miss you.â
The city rolls past in a blur of grey and gold. Low sunlight spills across the dashboard, and the soft thrum of music â something wordless and warm â fills the quiet between you.
Youâre both a little awkward. Not painfully so. Just⊠cautiously new.
Itâs strange, this version of her â in your passenger seat, seatbelt clicking into place, fingers drumming lightly on her thigh. Sheâs looking out the window, but keeps glancing at you when she thinks you wonât notice.
You notice. âAirport was easy, then?â you ask, just to fill the silence.
She nods. âVery. One person tried to sneak a photo. But I gave them the look.â
You smirk. âThe full âPutellas Death Glareâ?â
âLevel three only,â she says, mock serious. âMild warning.â
You laugh under your breath, relaxing a little. Her accentâs thicker in person, softer in a car. You donât know why that makes your stomach twist the way it does.
She glances at you again, a little longer this time. âItâs weird,â she murmurs. âHearing you talk without a crowd around us.â
You smile. âYouâll get used to it.â
You make it through another light, and the silence stretches â still easy, but expectant.
Then suddenly â you freeze. âOh shit.â
Alexia blinks. âWhat?â
You wince. âI forgot to tell you something kind of⊠important.â
She turns in her seat, curious. âWhat did you forget?â
You drum your fingers on the wheel. âI have a dog.â
Alexia blinks again. Then a slow smile tugs at her lips. âThatâs what you forgot?â
âWell, yeah,â you say, already cringing. âI justâI meant to tell you. Iâm not one of those people who spring dogs on people. Heâs sweet. I swear.â
Sheâs laughing now â full, rich, effortless. âYou make it sound like youâve got a bear waiting at the door.â
âHeâs just⊠enthusiastic,â you say, biting your lip. âHis nameâs Teddy.â
Alexia tilts her head, teasing. âNamed after?â
âTeddy bear. Donât judge me.â
She holds up both hands. âNo judgment. But I canât believe you didnât lead with that.â
You glance at her. âStill time to turn around, you know.â
She smiles wider, looking straight ahead again. âI came here to see you,â she says softly. âTeddyâs just a bonus.â
And just like that, the nerves quiet. Just a little.
âœïž
You pull into the parking spot in the street, heart suddenly faster than it was on the pitch at Wembley.
Alexiaâs quiet beside you, seatbelt undone, hands folded in her lap. But you feel her eyes on you as you kill the engine and sit for a second longer than necessary.
âThis is it,â you say, finally, looking up at your loft apartment on the third floor
She nods. âCute street.â
You grin. âCute flat.â
She smirks. âCute dog?â
You shoot her a look. âHeâs trying his best.â
You both laugh as you get out. The early evening air is cool, the sky dipping into that soft lilac blue. You grab her small bag from the boot, and as you unlock the door, you hesitate.
âHe might bark.â
âI can handle it,â she says, smiling.
You push the door open. It takes exactly one second.
Teddy barrels around the corner, all paws and excitement, nails tapping on the floor like a drumroll. His tail is going wild, and heâs already launching toward you when he spots the new presence behind you.
Alexia steps in, closing the door behind her. Teddy freezes. Then bolts straight for her.
You open your mouth to interveneââTeddy, no!ââbut before you can, Alexiaâs already crouching down, calm and soft.
âHola, precioso,â she murmurs, holding out a hand. And Teddy melts.
Tail wagging, head pressing into her palm, tongue ready for her cheek like sheâs his long-lost soulmate.
You blink. âWell,â you mutter, âtraitor.â
Alexia looks up at you, grinning as she scratches behind his ears. âHe has taste,â she says. âClearly.â
You lean against the doorframe, watching her â hair falling into her face, Teddy now rolling onto his back like heâs never known loyalty â and something in your chest settles. Warms.
Alexia stands, finally, brushing dog fur from her knees.
âWelcome to Germany,â you say, quieter now.
She doesnât look away when she answers. âThanks,â she says. âIt already feels like a good idea.â
And for the first time all day, you believe you can relax. Because sheâs here. This is just the beginning.
You toe off your shoes by the door, glance back to find Alexia standing just inside, Teddy still sniffing reverently at her shoes like heâs found royalty. Her bagâs at her feet, her jacket draped over her arm.
You clear your throat. âRightâum. Tour.â
She smiles like sheâs already charmed. âIâm ready.â
You lead her into the main space â open-plan living room and kitchen. The walls are clean, but lived-in. A few photos on a shelf â one of the squad after a cup match, another of you and Beth pulling stupid faces at the camera. A soft throw blanket is half-fallen off the back of the couch. A candle you forgot you lit earlier is still flickering on the coffee table.
âThis is the, uhâliving-slash-existing space,â you say, gesturing vaguely. âTeddy thinks it belongs to him.â
Teddy immediately hops onto the couch, circles twice, and settles like youâve just proven his point. Alexia grins.
You lead her into the kitchen, flicking on the under-counter light. âI donât cook much, but the kettle works. Coffee pods are in here.â You tap a cupboard. âMugs â there.â
She opens it, scans the shelves. âAll mismatched.â
You shrug. âI collect them. Kind of.â
âI like it,â she says, softly. âIt feels like someone lives here.â
You duck your head, smiling.
You show her the bathroom next â small, clean, stocked with too many hair ties and one towel you warn her not to use because itâs definitely Teddyâs now.
And then the hallway. Two doors.
âThat oneâs mine,â you say, thumb over your shoulder. âThe otherâs yours while youâre here.â
She doesnât hesitate. Just peeks inside. A double bed, made neatly. Fresh towels folded at the foot.
She steps inside. Smiles softly looking around more.
You clear your throat. âI didnât want it to feel weird.â
âIt doesnât,â she says. âIt feels like you thought about it.â
âI did,â you admit.
It slips out quieter than you mean it to, but you donât take it back.
Alexia meets your eyes. âThank you. For having me.â
You nod toward the room. âMake yourself at home, yeah? My place is your place.â
She steps a little closer. Not much. Just enough that you feel her presence like a hum. âI already feel at home,â she says.
And the way she says it. It makes your chest ache. In the best way. You raise your eyes when they moved away from hers, "I'll um, leave you to unpack" you take a step back, "Teddy" you call, he appears around the foot of the bed, "Come" you give Alexia one final look and you walk back down the hallway.
She smiled opening her bag as she heard you chatting away to Teddy about getting him some treats, asking for various tricks from him.
âœïž
You tried to cook. You really did. But somewhere between boiling the pasta and burning the garlic, you gave up and ordered takeaway. Alexia didnât mind. In fact, she looked almost relieved.
Now youâre both curled up on the couch, watching a show on a streaming app neither of you are paying attention to, warm plates in your laps and the soft, flickering glow of your fairy lights stretching across the ceiling.
Sheâs in one of your hoodies now. You hadnât meant to offer it â just handed it over without thinking when she mentioned how cold planes make her feel.
It swallows her in all the right ways.
Teddyâs curled at your feet. Loyal again. For now.
âOkay,â she says mid-bite, glancing at you. âI need to know something.â
You look over, wiping your fingers on a napkin. âWhat?â
She gestures with her fork. âDo you actually like this pasta place, or is it just close?â
You fake a gasp. âYou donât like it?â
âI didnât say that,â she says, trying to hide her smile. âI justâyour face when you handed it to me said, âThis is the best Iâve got, but I know itâs not the best in the world.ââ
You laugh. âAlright, yeah. Itâs proximity-based love.â
She hums thoughtfully. âRespect.â
The TV plays something forgettable in the background â neither of you are really watching it. The kind of background noise that just fills in the edges of something far more focused. Like the way sheâs sitting. One leg folded beneath her, turned just slightly toward you. Or the way youâre watching her mouth more than listening to her words.
She puts her plate down on the coffee table, wipes her hands, then leans back. âYou were nervous,â she says suddenly.
You blink. âWhen?â
âEarlier. At the airport. In the car.â
You roll your eyes. âWas it that obvious?â
She smiles, soft and real. âA little.â
You look down at your plate, then back at her. âI just⊠didnât want it to feel weird.â
Alexia tilts her head slightly. âIt doesnât. You make it easy.â
That catches you off guard. You blink once, then set your plate down too. The silence stretches. But itâs not awkward. Itâs warm. âIâm glad you came,â you say.
She leans her head back against the couch, eyes on you now in that slow, deliberate way she does everything. âI wouldnât be anywhere else,â she says.
Alexia is fiddling with the sleeve of your hoodie â pulling at the hem with her thumb like she doesnât realise sheâs doing it. Sheâs not really looking at you. Not often. Just quick glances. Then back down. Then away.
Youâre talking about random things. Easy things. Football. Training. Travel. Things you are confident you have in common.
She tells you about a weird airport coffee she had in Zurich. You tell her about the time Teddy accidentally got locked in your bathroom for 20 minutes and emerged looking personally betrayed.
And every now and then, thereâs a pause that lasts a little longer than it should. But neither of you fill it. You just let it be. Eventually, you nudge your leg gently against hers. âYouâre quiet.â
Alexia shifts. âAm I?â
You smile. âA little. For someone who just flew here to hang out with me.â
She huffs a quiet laugh. Itâs barely there. âIâm justâŠâ She trails off. Shrugs. âIâm not good at this part.â
You tilt your head. âWhat part?â
She stares at the coffee table like itâs got answers. âThe talking part.â You wait. She finally looks at you â really looks. âI know how to show up to a match,â she says, voice low. âHow to lead. How to win. That makes sense to me. But this?â She gestures between you. âThis isâŠâ She doesnât finish.
You finish it for her. âNew.â
She nods. And for a second, you think maybe sheâs going to stand up, shift away, hide behind something safe. But she doesnât. She just sits there. Awkward. Present. Willing.
You offer a small, understanding smile. âWe donât have to figure it all out tonight.â
She exhales, a little lighter now. âGood. Because I didnât bring a tactics board.â
You both laugh. Softly. Easily. She doesnât say anything else for a while â just leans back again, arms crossed over her chest now, head tilted slightly in your direction.
Eventually, she mumbles, almost like itâs for herself, âIâm glad I came too.â You nudge her foot with yours, with a gentle smile.
Alexiaâs sitting sideways on the couch, one leg tucked under her, the other stretched out slightly, your hoodie sleeves pushed halfway up her forearms. Youâre close, but not quite touching.
The conversationâs slowed to a hum â soft music talk, playlists, half-confessions about guilty pleasure songs. She mentions a Catalan band youâve never heard of, and while sheâs scrolling through her phone to find a song, your eyes drift downward.
And then you see it. A couple of faint lines on her knee. Pale, clean, but unmistakable. The scar. You pause. Not out of shock â you knew. You remember the coverage, the months out, the comeback.
But seeing it? Thatâs different. Itâs not just a story now. Itâs her. She notices your eyes drop. And for the first time all night, she goes still.
âYeah,â she says softly, not quite looking at you. âThatâs⊠that.â
You meet her eyes again. She doesnât flinch. Doesnât hide. But thereâs something guarded in her voice. Like sheâs used to people staring at it, asking about it, expecting something from it. You donât ask. You just nod once, gentle. âLooks like strength,â you say, matter-of-fact.
Alexiaâs brow furrows, unsure if youâre serious. But you are. She shifts slightly â not closer, but more open somehow. Her hand moves instinctively toward her knee, fingers grazing the scar once, like sheâs reminding herself itâs still there.
âSometimes it feels like I left a part of myself in there,â she murmurs. âThe version of me from before.â
You let that hang. Then, quietly, âThe version of you now scored against me. Twice.â
She huffs a breath. âOnly one actually went in.â
âStill counts.â
She glances at you â and her smile is tired, genuine, laced with something like gratitude. Not for the words. For the way you didnât try to fix it. Just saw it. And stayed.
The playlist she queued has faded into a quiet acoustic hum â soft, wordless, like it knows it shouldnât interrupt. The light in the room has gone warm and low, one lamp casting golden arcs over her face as she leans back into the couch, knee still bent, hand still ghosting near the scar.
You donât speak. You wait. And eventually â slowly â she does.
âI didnât think Iâd come back,â she says, voice low, eyes fixed on the ceiling like itâs easier not to look at you. âNot really.â
You blink, still, letting her keep control of it.
âEveryone kept saying I would. That Iâd be fine. That I was strong, that Iâd be back in a year. But insideâŠâ She swallows. âI didnât feel strong. I didnât even feel whole. I felt⊠like Iâd been cut out of myself.â
You shift just slightly. Not closer â not yet. But enough to let her know, Iâm here. She breathes, slow.
âIâd watch games and feel like I didnât belong anymore. Like Iâd already been replaced. And I didnât want anyone to know how scared I was because⊠Iâm not supposed to be scared. Iâm her, you know?â She finally looks at you now. âLa Reinaâ You meet her eyes, steady. She adds, barely audible, âBut I felt like glass.â
The words hang in the room â fragile, but not broken. You nod once. Then say the only thing you really believe in this moment. âI think youâre better now.â
Her brow pulls, confused. âWhat?â
You lean back, resting your head on the couch, looking up like she did. âYouâre smarter. Sharper. Your passes donât just thread â they cut. Youâve got control most people donât even understand. And thereâs a weight to the way you move now, like you know exactly what it costs to step back onto the pitch.â
You turn your head to her again.
âIâve watched you before. Really watched you. You were always brilliant. But now?â You shrug. âYouâre something else.â
Alexia stares at you, mouth parted slightly â like no oneâs ever said it that way. Not like that. Not to her. She doesnât say thank you. She just shifts â this time closer. Not dramatic. Just enough. Her shoulder brushes yours. Her knee bumps your thigh. And she lets out a breath that sounds a little like relief. âThank you,â she murmurs eventually, eyes back on the scar. And then, softer: âIâve never said that stuff out loud.â
You nod. âI know.â The quiet returns â not heavy this time. Comfortable. Like something sacred just happened, and you both know it.
Sheâs close now. Arm resting lightly against yours. Your hoodie sleeves bunching at her wrists. The scar still visible â but no longer raw. You glance down at her, the way her gaze has softened since she spoke, how her edges feel less guarded, like your living room gave her permission she didnât even know she needed.
You swallow once. Think. Then speak. âYou know⊠when I moved to Germany, people said it was career suicide.â
Alexia turns her head slightly, brows faintly drawn. Listening now. Not out of politeness. Intention. You stare ahead.
âAgents stopped calling. Interviews dried up. One coach â someone I used to really trust â told me Iâd disappear. That Iâd âfade out quietly.ââ You huff a laugh, but thereâs no humour in it. âI hadnât even unpacked yet.â
Alexia is silent. Not interrupting. Just there.
âIâd scroll through social media and see all the squad updates, the camps, the conversations I wasnât in anymore. And I thought⊠maybe theyâre right. Maybe I peaked.â
You pause. Swallow.
âI started believing it. Like I was a mistake that was just waiting to happen.â
Alexia shifts slightly, her arm pressing into yours, grounding you.
âBut then,â you continue, voice quieter now, âI played. I worked. And I kept showing up. And slowly⊠something changed. Not in them. In me.â
Alexia tilts her head. You glance at her.
âI stopped playing to prove people wrong,â you say. âAnd I started playing like they didnât get a say.â
Thereâs a pause. And thenâso soft you almost miss itâshe says, âI noticed.â
You look at her. Sheâs watching you now â full on. Not blinking. Not shrinking. And when she speaks again, itâs steady.
âYou didnât disappear. You became better.â
You smile, but thereâs a knot in your throat. Because you know she means it. And you never expected to hear it from her. Alexia leans her head back against the couch, her body still relaxed but her voice dipped low again.
âI know what that doubt feels like,â she says. âAnd I know how heavy it is to prove yourself to people who already made up their minds.â
You nod. âItâs exhausting.â
She murmurs, âAnd lonely.â
The room goes quiet again. But this time? Not lonely. Just two people sitting in a space neither of you were sure existed â honest, open, real. No spotlight. No pressure. Just you and her. And the ache youâve both come back from.
âœïž
Itâs late.
So late the playlist stopped a while ago. So late the city outside your windows feels like itâs on mute. You both stretch at almost the same time â that lazy, reluctant movement that means okay, maybe we should sleep but neither of you want to break the quiet just yet.
You stand first. Alexia follows. Sheâs still in your hoodie, tugging it down slightly, bare feet padding across the floor as you walk her to the guest room â side by side in a hush that feels warmer than anything words couldâve done.
You pause at the door.
She turns to face you, one hand on the doorframe. Her hairâs a little messy now, eyes slightly glassy with exhaustion. Her voice, when it comes, is soft and almost shy.
âThanks for tonight.â
You smile, slow. âThanks for coming.â
She nods, then looks down like she might say something else. But she doesnât. You step back slightly, hands in your hoodie pockets, eyes flicking to hers.
âGoodnight, Alexia.â
She looks up at that. And for a second â just one second â the look on her face says everything else she didnât say. Then she nods, once. Barely a smile. But it reaches her eyes. âGoodnight.â
She slips into the room. You donât linger. Just turn toward your own â quiet footsteps down the short hall. You push the door open and Teddy. Right there, already curled up in the middle of your bed. One eye open, tail thumping lazily against the duvet like, about time.
You smile, rubbing the back of your neck as you sit on the edge of the bed. Your phone buzzes on the nightstand. You pick it up.
Alexia: Sleep well. You talk less than I thought you would. I liked it.
You stare at the message for a second, then type back:
You: You talk more than I thought you would. I liked it too.
Teddy sighs dramatically. You laugh under your breath. Then switch off the light. And for the first time in a long time, you fall asleep not needing to prove anything. Because sheâs here. And youâre exactly where youâre meant to be.
âœïž
You wake to the smell of coffee. And the distinct sound of Teddy betraying you. You roll out of bed, hair a mess, hoodie tugged low over your hands, padding barefoot into the kitchen whereâThere she is.
Alexia.
Still in your hoodie. One sock on, one foot bare. Mug in hand, eyes still puffy with sleep, standing at your counter while Teddy leans against her legs like heâs never loved anyone else.
She glances up when you walk in, and her smile is soft. Unbrushed. Unfiltered. Real.
âMorning,â she says, voice husky.
You squint. âHowâd you find the biscuits?â
She holds up the mug in salute. âIâm elite. And you left a post-it that said âleft cupboard, top shelf, if teddy won't leave you alone'.â
You grin. âI knew past-me had potential.â
She turns back to the counter, pouring more water into the kettle, while Teddy attempts to wedge himself between her and the cabinets, tail sweeping the floor like a metronome.
âYou realise heâs using you,â you say, grabbing a clean mug.
âHe can use me all he wants,â she says, reaching down to scratch his ears. âHeâs warm.â
You watch her â the way her fingers slide under Teddyâs collar, the way her mouth twitches when he tries to climb into her actual lap. Itâs not a moment. Not a capital-letter Event. But something in your chest aches anyway.
Because she looks right here.
You grab the eggs, start cracking them into the pan. She pulls down two plates without being asked. Neither of you talks much. Just a few sleepy comments, heads bumping once as you both reach for the cutlery drawer.
When you sit across from her at the little kitchen table â plates steaming, dog underfoot â she catches your eye as you tuck your leg up under you. She doesnât look away. Not for a while.
You hold it. You hold her. And the smile she gives you. It says I see this. I feel it. Iâm here.
After breakfast, you throw a hoodie over your tee, pull on your trainers, and rattle Teddyâs lead. He loses his mind, of course â spinning, barking, pawing at the door like it personally wronged him.
âYou wanna come?â you ask, glancing over your shoulder at Alexia.
She shrugs. âWouldnât miss it.â
She throws on a coat of yours on hook, slips into her trainers, and follows you out the door â hair tied up, sleeves rolled down, sunglasses perched on her head like she forgot the sun lives here too despite the cold.
You walk through quiet neighbourhood streets, Teddy darting side to side, nose in every hedge. You and her? Side by side. Not touching. Not saying much. But every now and then, you catch her watching you. And when you glance backâ She doesnât look away.
You loop around the quiet end of the park, the noise of the street fading behind you, and find your bench â tucked under a tree just starting to bloom, a little weathered, sun-warmed. Teddy bounds ahead, lead dropped loose in your hand, tail sweeping in wide arcs like a painterâs brush.
Alexia sits first, arms wrapped around herself like sheâs trying not to take up space but still wants to stay close. You drop beside her, leg stretched long, hands resting over your thighs.
For a while, you both just sit. Watching Teddy. Letting the quiet settle.
Then Alexia speaks, voice dry. âYou really werenât kidding about him being enthusiastic.â
You glance at her. Sheâs staring at Teddy, whoâs currently rolling in something deeply questionable on the grass. You sigh.
âYeah but heâs loyal.. until someone has better snacks anyway.â
She snorts. âI didnât even have snacks.â
âExactly,â you say, nudging her foot with yours. âHeâs just shallow.â
She smirks, then leans back a little, adjusting the sleeves of your coat again. âHeâs got taste, though. He likes me.â
You raise a brow. âAre you calling yourself a snack?â
âIâm not denying it.â
You laugh â sharp, sudden, surprised. And it makes her smile wider âYouâve got this whole mysterious captain thing,â you say, squinting at her. âBut secretly, youâre kind of cocky.â
She tilts her head, smug. âOnly when Iâm right.â You roll your eyes, but your grinâs too soft to mean it. Thereâs a pause. Then, more gently âI like this,â she says, not looking at you now â just forward, at the dog, at the path.
You shift, the warmth of her words settling low in your ribs. âThis?â you echo.
She nods. âThe quiet. You. Teddy. This bench.â She pauses, then smirks again. âEven your coat.â
You laugh, quieter this time. âYou make it look better than I do.â
âI know.â She meets your eyes then. And the silence that follows doesn't last long until you're leaning into each other laughing about it.
You clear your throat, picking at a thread on your sleeve, when the little old lady that you see everyday was eyeing you with annoyance, "So, um⊠are you always like this when youâre off the pitch?â
Alexia blinks. âLike what?â
You shrug. âA bit smug. Surprisingly funny. Secretly soft.â
She narrows her eyes, mock offended. âSecretly?â
You smirk. âI mean, the brand is very serious captain with cheekbones that could cut glass.â
Alexia hums. âCheekbones and a scar. Very dramatic.â
âOh, absolutely. Youâre one trench coat away from being a Bond villain.â That gets a real laugh â full-bodied and sudden. She leans her head back against the bench, still smiling.
Then, âYou make this easy,â she says, softer now. âBeing here.â
You glance at her. And for a second, itâs all there again â the pitch, the free kick, the weight of it all.
But here, itâs light. You bump your knee gently against hers. âIâm glad you came, Alexia.â She doesnât look away this time.
âI am too.â
You stretch your legs out in front of you, glancing sideways at her â Alexia, sitting there so casually now, one foot tucked beneath her, face tilted toward the sun like sheâs been here a dozen times instead of just once.
You reach down to pat Teddyâs back as he wanders close.
Then glance at her.
âDo you like clichĂ©s?â
She lifts a brow. âWhat kind of question is that?â
You shrug, casual. âLike, romantic comedies. Grand gestures. Saying the same dumb things everyone else does. Standing on famous streets pretending youâre having an authentic experience.â
Alexia leans back, lips twitching. âYouâre stalling.â
You grin. âMaybe.â
She squints at you now, playful. âOkay. Ask me properly.â
You turn toward her fully, arms folded over your chest like youâre about to deliver something serious.
âWould you like to do all the ridiculously clichĂ© tourist things in Munich with me today?â
Alexiaâs head tips slightly to the side, considering.
You keep going.
âI mean the whole deal â the Marienplatz selfie. Pretending to care about the Glockenspiel. Giant pretzels. A walk through the Englischer Garten where Iâll tell you lies about German history I definitely make up.â
Her smile creeps in slowly â then fully.
âI want lederhosen photos.â
You gasp, dramatically. âThatâs advanced clichĂ©.â
âIâm committed.â
You laugh. âGod help us.â
She leans in slightly. âOnly if you wear them too.â
You groan. âIâve made a mistake.â
âYou offered.â
You hold her gaze for a second, heart kicking a little louder now beneath all the lightness.
And sheâs still smiling.
But thereâs something genuine behind it.
Like maybe, for the first time in a long time, sheâs just saying yes to a day that doesnât come with pressure, or cameras, or expectations.
Just you.
She nudges your knee with hers. âSo? We going or what?â
You whistle for Teddy. âMarienplatz, prepare yourself.â
âœïž
You start with Marienplatz. Because of course you do.
The crowds are already gathering under the watchful clock of the Neues Rathaus, phones out and necks craning toward the tower. You know the Glockenspiel starts at eleven. Youâve seen it a dozen times. Itâs slow. Itâs slightly underwhelming. But you still pretend like itâs sacred.
âPeople clap after this?â Alexia murmurs beside you, watching a small bronze knight rotate in a slow, juddering circle.
âEvery time,â you whisper back. âItâs powerful.â
She gives you the driest look youâve ever seen and it almost takes you out.
You snap a selfie right there â her unimpressed expression next to your exaggerated awe. Itâs perfect. You don't even check it before saving.
From there itâs Viktualienmarkt â where you insist on finding the most absurdly oversized pretzel possible. Alexia watches you barter with a vendor and somehow ends up paying instead. She splits it with you anyway. You walk through the stalls like locals, even though you're both definitely not.
You buy her a little pin shaped like a beer stein. You stick it to her jacket pocket. âSouvenir,â she says.
You end up in the Englischer Garten by early afternoon, the kind of place where the trees stretch wide and people picnic like theyâve got nowhere else to be. Teddy loses his mind over a pigeon and nearly pulls Alexia into a fountain.
You donât let that one go quietly. âTwo time Ballon D'or, and you still couldnât hold the line.â
âIt was a very fast pigeon.â
You laugh until youâre leaning against her, shoulder to shoulder, catching your breath while Teddy runs victory laps around you both.
At the beer garden, you sit under the shade of chestnut trees, and Alexia orders something she canât pronounce while you pretend to translate and definitely make it worse.
She tries white sausage and doesnât hide her reaction.
You raise a brow. âToo real?â
âI can mark out midfielders. I canât defend this texture.â
You toast anyway.
Later, you wander without purpose â through side streets with painted shutters and ivy-streaked balconies, past musicians playing under archways and little kids holding balloon strings tight to their wrists. Alexia keeps her sunglasses low on her nose, watching it all.
âI get why you like it here,â she says.
You glance over. âYeah?â
She nods, then adds softly, âYou fit here.â
It sticks.
You end up near the river as golden hour starts to take the edge off the buildings. Thereâs a stone ledge overlooking the water. You sit. She leans back on her hands, face turned to the sky.
âOkay,â she says finally. âThis was... fun.â
You grin. âYou sound surprised.â
âI am. I didnât think clichĂ© could feel like this.â
âLike what?â
She glances at you. Her expression doesnât change much â but her voice does. âEasy.â
You donât say anything for a second. Just smile. Then bump her knee gently with yours. âThink we earned ice cream?â
She tilts her head. âIs that part of the clichĂ© package?â
âObviously.â
You walk back into the city with cones in hand, Teddy leading the way again, tail wagging like a metronome keeping time with your steps.
And somewhere along that walk â maybe crossing a street, or brushing hands as you trade bites of each otherâs flavours â something soft settles between you.
Not tension. Not expectation. Just understanding.
âœïž
You swing by the flat first â the front door barely closed before Teddy flops dramatically across the hallway floor like heâs survived something immense.
Alexia kneels down beside him, ruffles behind his ears, and says, âYouâll be alright without us.â
He sighs like he wonât.
You both change quickly â nothing fancy, just different hoodies, fresh faces, the kind of casual that looks better on her than it has any right to.
The bar you pick is a local one â tucked into a side street off the main square, part wine bar, part cafĂ©, part 'we might have regulars but we wonât pretend to know your name unless you want us to.'
You take the corner table. The lights are soft and golden, the walls cluttered with mismatched frames and shelves of wine bottles. You order a bottle of white youâve had before â one you hope sheâll like â and a snack board that arrives faster than expected: warm bread, cheese, olives, salted almonds.
She looks around, impressed. âYou bring all your international friends here?â
You raise an eyebrow. âOnly the ones who knock me out the champions league.â
âFair,â she says, hiding a smile behind her glass.
Youâve barely had a sip before you reach into your bag and pull out a battered Uno deck.
Alexia blinks. âYou brought cards?â
âThey have them as you walk in. Iâm competitive,â you say, shrugging. âAnd brave.â
She laughs once, short and sharp. âYouâre going to regret this.â
âIâve already accepted that.â You deal. And it begins.
It starts civil. Friendly. Smirks over skips. Light jabs when she stacks draw twos. You both pick at the snack board between plays, hands brushing occasionally as you reach for the same olive.
But by the second game, Itâs personal.
She slams down a reverse like itâs a tactical sub in a final. You pull a draw four from your hoodie pocket like a weapon of war. She narrows her eyes. You lift your brows, mock-innocent.
Itâs deadly serious. Itâs ridiculous. And youâre both grinning like you havenât stopped since this morning.
The bar starts to fill in slowly, but your little corner stays quiet â like a bubble you havenât noticed growing around you. Just you, her, your wine glasses catching the light, and a stack of discarded cards that tells a very messy, very entertaining story.
Somewhere between games, you pause â mid-sip, watching her draw her hand.
âAre you always like this?â you ask. âLowkey evil under all that calm?â
She looks up, unbothered. âOnly when provoked.â
You laugh, leaning back. âRemind me not to cross you again.â
She smirks, eyes flicking up at you over her cards. âYou already did,â she says, laying down a wild card.
The round ends. She wins.
You groan dramatically and throw your cards onto the table. She raises her hands in mock celebration, then quietly steals another piece of cheese from your side of the board.
âYou know,â she says casually, chewing, âThis might be the most fun Iâve had in a long time.â
You blink. She doesnât look up right away â just flips the deck over and starts reshuffling it absentmindedly.
But youâre watching her. And thereâs no doubt in your mind. She means it.
âœïž
The walk home from the bar is slow. No rush. No real conversation either. Just a lot of little smiles. Shoulders brushing sometimes. The city quieter now â streetlights pooling in soft circles at your feet.
When you reach your building, you both slip inside quietly, Teddy greeting you at the door with a sleepy grumble and a thump of his tail.
You toe off your shoes, hang your jacket, glance over at her â and then, impulsively:
âWanna see something stupid?â
Alexia blinks. âNot usually the way someone convinces me to follow them, but⊠sure.â
You grin.
You lead her through the flat â past the living room, into your bedroom. Teddy hops onto the bed like heâs reclaiming his kingdom. You move to the window â the one you always leave cracked just a little â and unlatch it the rest of the way.
You glance back at her.
Sheâs standing with her arms folded, watching you like sheâs bracing for something truly ridiculous.
You duck out first â onto the sloped bit of roofing just beyond the window, socks scraping softly against the tiles. You crouch low, then stand carefully, balancing with practiced ease.
You turn and beckon. Alexia just stares. âYouâre kidding.â
âNope.â
She steps closer, looks out.
The dropâs not that bad. 22 feet, maybe. But the tiles are slick with dew, and thereâs no railing, no barrier, no sensible adult supervision.
âThis is wildly unsafe,â she mutters.
You just smile. âCome on. Iâm not gonna let you fall.â
She glares at you, muttering something in Catalan that sounds very judgmental. But you can see it â the twitch at the corner of her mouth. Sheâs not really mad.
Sheâs just concerned. Which somehow only makes it better.
After a few more seconds of muttering under her breath, she sighs dramatically, steps up onto the ledge, and eases herself through the window with surprising grace â a little unsteady at first, reaching for your hand instinctively.
You catch it. Steady her. âSee?â you say, squeezing her fingers lightly. âEasy.â
âStill stupid,â she mutters.
But she doesnât pull away. You lead her a few steps up â careful, slow â until you both settle onto the slightly flatter part of the roof, side by side, legs pulled up to your chest..
She finally looks up the whole city stretches out in front of her.
The rooftops curve into the skyline, lights twinkling like fallen stars. The dark river cuts a lazy path through the buildings. A few stray sirens whine in the distance, but mostly itâs just quiet. Wide and open and impossibly still.
Alexia exhales â a soft, almost disbelieving sound. The corners of her mouth lift. And whatever worry she had before melts off her shoulders.
âOkay,â she says, voice lighter now. âMaybe itâs worth the risk.â
You bump your knee against hers. âTold you.â
You sit like that for a long time â no rush, no plan. Just the two of you, the city breathing around you, your hands close enough to touch if you dared.
Every now and then, you glance over and catch her watching the lights, the horizon, the night itself like sheâs letting herself believe she could belong to something this simple.
The climb back in through the window is quieter than the climb out.
Alexia moves slower now, heavy with the kind of tired that comes after a day full of laughter and nowhere to be but here. She drops softly into your bedroom, feet padding across the floor, hoodie sleeves pulled down over her hands again.
You follow behind, closing the window gently behind you.
Teddyâs already curled up on the bed, barely lifting his head to acknowledge your return. He gives Alexia one approving thump of the tail. Youâre not sure if itâs for coming back safely or for still being here.
You rub at the back of your neck, eyes a little hazy, wine long gone.
Alexia stands in the doorway to the guest room now, hand on the frame. Her expression is soft â not sleepy exactly, just settled.
She looks at you. And it hits again â this moment. How simple it is. How much it means. You lean against the wall across from her, arms crossed loosely, smile tugging at the corners of your mouth.
âIâll make sure you donât miss your flight in the morning,â you say.
She smirks faintly. âYou better.â
âIâll set three alarms.â
She lifts an eyebrow. âFour.â
You laugh, quiet and tired. âPushy.â
She shrugs. âPunctual.â
The pause that follows isnât awkward. Itâs full. Of all the things neither of you are saying right now. But itâs okay. You already said so much.
She shifts slightly, head tilting. âToday wasâŠâ
You nod. âYeah.â
She doesnât finish the sentence. She doesnât have to.
You step forward, and without thinking, you pull her into a light hug â not long, not heavy, but enough. Enough to feel the warmth of her hoodie, the steady beat of her breath, the soft slide of her hand as it rests briefly on the back of your head.
You pull back just a little. Sheâs still close. âGoodnight, Alexia.â
Her eyes flicker â tired and unreadable, but warmer now âGoodnight.â
She steps into the guest room and closes the door behind her with a gentle click. You exhale.
Teddy stretches across your bed with a groan like he just ran the city.
You flick off the hallway light, pad back into your room, and crawl beneath the covers.
The room is dark now. But your chest is full. And your alarms are definitely set. Tomorrow she leaves.
âœïž
The alarms buzz you awake just after six.
Teddy barely lifts his head as you stumble into the kitchen, yawning, the world outside still caught between night and day.
Alexiaâs already up. You find her sitting on the edge of the couch, tying her sneakers â hair messy, hoodie slung loose over her frame, backpack by her feet.
She looks up when you walk in, and thereâs a small, tired smile waiting for you. âMorning,â she says, voice thick with sleep.
You hum a reply, rubbing your eyes. Neither of you rush.
You load Teddy into the backseat. He whines a little, sensing something is different. The drive to the airport is quiet â warm coffee cups in the holders, the radio playing something soft neither of you bother to change.
She leans her forehead against the window once, watching the fields blur into concrete. When you pull up to Departures, you leave the car idling, glancing over at her.
Sheâs already unbuckling her seatbelt, but neither of you move right away.
The city is waking up outside. Youâre wide awake here. Alexia shifts in her seat to face you. âThis wasâŠâ She trails off, the words sticking again.
You smile, small. âYeah. It was.â
She fiddles with the ring on her finger.
You grip the steering wheel lightly. âYouâll make your flight.â
She nods. âThanks for not letting me oversleep.â
You bump your shoulder against hers gently. âThanks for making it hard to say goodbye.â
That gets a real smile â tired, fond, a little crooked. She opens the door, stepping out into the sharp morning air. You get out too.
You meet her around the back of the car â not rushed, not dramatic. Just standing there, with a sea of taxis and early travelers moving around you like another current youâre not ready to step into yet.
She shoulders her bag. You jam your hands into your hoodie pockets.
Then â simply â she steps closer. You think she might hug you. You think you might need her to.
But instead, she reaches up â slow, careful â and hooks one finger lightly around your hoodie drawstring. Tugs it once. Soft. Playful.
âText me when you get home,â you say, even though youâre already sure she will.
Alexia nods. âYou too.â
And then â because she knows when to let things stay perfect â she turns and walks toward the entrance. You watch her weave through the doors. She doesnât look back. Not until sheâs just inside, bag slung over one shoulder, ticket in hand. Then she does. Just once.
She finds you through the glass â through the crowd and the noise and the press of the world. She smiles. Small. Sure. Enough.
You lift a hand. She does too. Then sheâs gone, swallowed into the current of the airport.
You stand there a moment longer, breath fogging in the chill, Teddyâs nose nudging your hand.
You pat his head. Then you climb back into the car. And drive home, to grab a few more hours of sleep before training.
I'm such a softy for getting all emotional over this đ„čđ„°âïžâ€ïž
How often does Estrella switch between calling Alexia âAleâ and âmamiâ??
â estrella switches between âaleâ and âmamiâ so randomly that no one can predict it, not even alexia.
â when sheâs teasing, or trying to get on alexiaâs nerves, itâs usually âale.â âale, relax, youâre so dramatic.â âalexia, youâre literally like a hundred years old.â âale, donât be boring, letâs go do something fun.â
â but the second she wants something or needs comfort, itâs âmami.â âmami, can you make me food?â âmama, iâm tired.â âmami, they were mean to me.â
â the team has absolutely picked up on it. âoh, she said âmamiâ? sheâs definitely trying to get something.â
â sheâll be in the middle of arguing with alexia, all attitude, throwing out âaleâ every other word, but the moment alexia gives her the look, estrella shifts gears instantly. âmami, donât be mad, i love you.â
â whenever she gets injured, no matter how minor, itâs immediately âmamiâ with the most pitiful look on her face. âmami, i think iâm dying.â alexia doesnât even react anymore.
â if sheâs extra sleepy or emotional, she doesnât even realize sheâs using âmamiâ constantly, and it always makes alexia a little soft.
â sometimes she calls her âaleâ just to be annoying and immediately switches to âmamiâ when alexia ignores her.
â when alexia is upset, estrella gets serious and only calls her âmamiâ because she knows it grounds her.
â after games, especially tough ones, estrella will just walk up and mumble âmamiâ before leaning into alexia for a hug. no words needed.
â no matter how much she teases, no matter how much she pretends to be all big and independent, at the end of the day, estrella will always be alexiaâs kid.
if this doesn't end with a contract renewal.. i might just delete the app đ
đ Based after Eleven đ
Chapter 4
It started as playful online chemistry with someone unexpected-Alexia Putellas. Flirty banter turned into late-night texts before a heated moment on a club balcony shifted everything.
Now it was post game meet-ups, no-strings friends-with-benefits arrangement. They shared passion, comfort, and the grind of pro sports. But as the season went on, lines blurred.
It was supported to stay simple. These things never do however. Not in professional sports. The option to stay isn't always yours.
The city was still asleep when you left her. The sky was a deep blue fading into grey, the hush before sunrise casting a strange calm over the streets as you slipped into your car, heart heavy and full at once. Alexia had fallen asleep again for just a few minutes, curled beneath the blanket on her couch, hair still damp from your shared heat, one hand stretched toward where youâd been lying only moments before.
Youâd kissed her forehead before leaving. Quietly. Reverently. No words. She didnât need them. Now, hours later, you stood on the runway beside your teammates, the private jet humming behind you, the buzz of the semifinal beginning to settle into your chest like caffeine. Focus had returnedâsharper than ever. But underneath it, beneath the press calls and the tactical briefingsâthere was her.
Still on your skin. Still under your nails. Still in your head. You looked down at your wrist. The bracelet. Barça colours. Two white beads. Two ones. Eleven. Your thumb brushed over it as you boarded the plane.
Across the aisle, Maya leaned in. âYouâre weirdly calm.â
You shrugged, lips twitching. âIâm not calm. Iâm just ready.â
Liv, already half-asleep beside her, muttered, âYou say that like you didnât sneak off to see your lucky charm last night.â
You raised an eyebrow. âIs that a problem?â
âNo,â Maya said with a smirk. âItâs a flex.â
You settled into your seat, the engines roaring to life beneath you. You didnât respondânot out loud. But you did glance out the window, the early light catching on your bracelet as the plane lifted off the ground. You were leaving for war. But you were carrying her with you.
Back in Barcelona, Alexia stirred awake to sunlight and an empty space beside her. She reached out, fingers brushing the couch cushion where youâd been, and smiled to herself. On the coffee table sat your jersey. And on top it, folded once, a note in your handwriting.
Donât watch the scoreboard. Watch me.
She read it twice. Then she leaned back with a sigh, heart pounding, already counting down the hours until your next return. Semifinals were next. And this time, you werenât just playing for the win. You were playing for the chance to win it all.
The wheels hit the tarmac in Milan with a soft thud, and your world shifted into overdrive. From the moment you stepped off the plane, it was a blur.
Camera crews. Sponsors. Staff. Schedules. Microphones shoved in your face before you even reached the hotel. You had barely adjusted to the Milan air before you were whisked into your first media session. Hair still damp from the plane bathroom sink, laces again barely tied, and someone was already asking:
âDo you feel pressure to lead this team to another historic win?â âAre you distracted by recent online noise?â âAny comment on Alexia Putellasâ tweet last week?â
You kept your answers clipped, professional, nodding politely, eyes forward. Youâd trained for thisâon and off the court. Smile when necessary. Speak when needed. Focus where it counts. The minute the press conference ended, it was straight to the training courts.
No time for breath. No space for nerves. Milan was cold, the sky grey and brooding, and the wind whipped up outside during your open session. Cameras lined the sidelines. Reporters watched every movement, every shot you took, every time the coach shouted your name.
You dug in harder. Every sprint, every drill, every set. You werenât going to give them a headline about fatigue or distraction. You were here to prove somethingâto them, to yourself, maybe even to her. Still, the whirlwind didnât stop. Dinner was late. Meetings even later.
By the time you made it back to your hotel room, it was after 9pm. You dropped your duffel by the bed and collapsed on the mattress, fully clothed, mind still buzzing with plays, matchups, film clips you couldnât un-see. You stared at the ceiling, chest rising and falling, adrenaline still thrumming beneath your skin. Then you looked down.
The bracelet on your wrist caught the faint hotel light. Red. Blue. Two white beads. Two ones. You reached for your phone without even thinking, heart pulled toward her like gravity.
One unread message waited from hours ago.
Alexia: Play your game. The rest will follow.
You smiled to yourself, thumb brushing the screen before you typed back.
You: I will. Hope you liked your present
You didnât wait for a reply. You slid the phone under your pillow, closed your eyes, and let the storm of the day settle. In two days, the lights would come on. In two days, the world would watch. But tonightâjust for a few hoursâyou let yourself breathe.
â
You were in mid-morning practice in Milan when your phone started blowing up. At first, you ignored it. The group chat with Liv and Maya was always chaoticâmemes, chaos, half-baked tactical jokes. But when Maya let out a loud gasp across the court, you knew something was up. âWhat?â you called out, dribbling casually toward her.
She turned her phone to face you, eyes wide, grinning like sheâd just seen a celebrity scandal. âYouâve seen this, right?â
You tilted your head, narrowing your eyes at the photo on her screenâand your brain short-circuited for a second. It was a picture of Alexia. Walking into the stadium for her own pre-match duties that day. Sunglasses on. Fresh blowout. And wearing a Barça basketball jersey. The one with your last name on the back and the big #11 stitched in bold white. The one you intended for her to wear in the privacy of her own home,
The caption beneath the post said
Alexia Putellas arrives for her game repping [Your Name]âs jersey. Is this a soft launch part two or what?!
And the replies. Forget it. The internet was melting down.
âTHE JERSEY??? THE. JERSEY?????â âSo weâve passed matching bracelets and now weâre just wearing each otherâs kit. Casual.â âAlexia Putellas wearing her girlfriendâs number like a proud WAG, Iâm fine.â âIs this... is this canon??â âPlot twist: sheâs just supporting Barça basketball. Right?? RIGHT???â
Your heart thudded in your chestânot from nerves this time, but from something warmer. Something that made you want to jump on a plane back to Barcelona and kiss her in front of every camera lens in the world.
Maya was still grinning. âThatâs your jersey, isnât it?â
âSheâs just supporting the team,â you said quickly, trying to play it coolâeven though your ears were hot and your smile was threatening to break your face.
Liv jogged over, phone in hand. âOh, the locker roomâs gonna scream. Her teammates probably are too.â
You sighed, but you were smiling. Hard. âShe really wore it?â you asked quietly, mostly to yourself.
Maya nodded. âTo her game. Into her stadium. Repping you. Thatâs not just support, thatâs a statement.â
You looked down at your wrist. The bracelet was still thereâanchoring you. Then you looked back at the court. âAlright,â you muttered, smirking now, refocusing. âGuess Iâve got a game to win. Canât let my number one fan down.â
Liv rolled her eyes. âYou two are disgusting.â
âChampionship-level disgusting,â Maya added with a laugh. You just grinned and stepped back onto the court, locked inâbecause this time, your name wasnât just on your back. It was walking into stadiums across the world on hers, too.
Back in Barcelona, the cameras were rolling as the team made their way onto the pitch for warmups. The sun was dipping low, casting a golden hue across the stadium, and the crowd was already buzzingâhalf for the game, half for the players they adored. But tonight, all eyes locked on Alexia. She jogged out onto the field, leading the squad in her crisp pre-match warmup kit, hair pulled back, face calm. Classic captain energy. But the camerasâsharp-eyed as everâzoomed in fast. It wasnât her boots this time. Not her armband. Not even the glimpse of the jersey sheâd arrived in earlier. It was the bracelet on her wrist. Red and blue beads. Two white ones. Each with the number 1.Â
Instant chaos.
âSHE HAS THE MATCHING BRACELET OH MY GOD???â âTwo 1s. Itâs the number 11 again. This is insane.â âThey are doing this on purpose now and I refuse to believe otherwise.â âSo itâs not just emotional support, itâs FULL matching accessory energy.â
Screenshots hit every social feed within minutes. A slow-motion clip of Alexia stretching on the sideline, bracelet catching the light as she adjusted her socks, was already being edited into fan videos with romantic music. And her teammates noticed.
Patri gave her a look mid-stretchâeyebrows up, smirk fully loaded. âNice bracelet, Capitana.â
Alexia didnât even blink. âTeam colours.â
âRight,â Patri said, drawing the word out like it had layers of meaning. âAnd the white beads?â
Alexia tied her boot tighter, expression cool. âLucky numbers.â
A few of them laughed, others nodded knowingly, and within seconds, the bracelet had taken on a life of its own. Alexia jogged past the media row, focused and unfazed, but the photographers didnât miss it. The bracelet was captured in perfect clarity as she clapped toward the crowd, her wrist flicking just enough to catch the sunlight again.
You saw it during a team video review session. Maya was scrolling through social and nearly choked on her water when the clip popped up. âSheâs wearing your bracelet,â she whispered, passing you her phone like it was contraband.
You stared at the screen for a second, caught in the slow-mo loop of Alexia walking across the pitchâbracelet fully on display, no hesitation. She told you she didnât have a matching one. You didnât say anything at first. Just looked down at your own wrist⊠and smiled. Matching. Loud in the quietest way. Two cities. Two games. One silent, sparkling connection wrapped around your wrists. The world could speculate. You both already knew what it meant.
The video review session wrapped a little earlier than expected, which was rare. You were collecting your things when Coach called out across the locker room. "Sit tight for a minuteâdonât head out just yet."
You froze mid-zip of your hoodie, glancing toward the screen youâd just been analysing game tape on. She gave a small smile and nodded to the staff member by the laptop.
âWe figured, since most of you have been sneaking updates anywayâŠâ she said, very pointedly not looking at you. âMight as well watch it properly.â The screen flickered to life, switching over to a live stream.
Supercopa de España Femenina Final. Barcelona vs. Real Madrid.
The whole room shifted.
Maya whooped, âLETâS GO,â while Liv immediately slid back down into her seat. You didnât say anything. You just blinked at the screen, lips parting, because there she was.
Alexia.
Leading her team out, wearing the captainâs armband like it was sewn into her skin, calm and focused as ever.
You hadnât expected this.
Coach glanced at you, just once. âConsider it... team bonding. Club supports club.â You couldnât wipe the smile off your face even if you tried.
For the next 90 minutes, you and your entire squad were glued to the screen. And what unfolded was absolute domination.
Barcelona came out firing. Real Madrid never stood a chance.
1â0 in the 8th minute.
2â0
3-0 before halftime.
By the time the fourth goal went in, Liv was standing on the bench screaming, and even Coach was nodding in quiet approval.
Then the fifth? Maya started the chant: âAlexia! Alexia!ââand the room joined in without hesitation.
It came in the 85th minute. You could feel it coming before it happened. Alexia picked up the ball at the edge of the boxâcurled it into the top corner with effortless precision.
The room erupted. Your teammates were on their feet, shouting, cheering, celebrating like it was your final. You didnât even realise you were standing too until someone pulled you into a hug.
You couldnât stop smiling. You werenât even trying to play it cool anymore. The camera cut to Alexia blowing a kiss to the crowd, hand briefly touching the bracelet on her wristâand your heart flipped. Because even in a 5â0 masterclass, sheâd made you feel like part of it.
After the final whistle blew and the Barcelona players lifted the Supercopa trophy, your entire team was clapping, whistling, laughing.
Someoneâprobably Mayaâfilmed you with your hands on your head, grinning like an idiot. The video made it online within the hour.
đ„ @[YourTeamHandle] âWhen your sister team wins the #Supercopa and your locker room goes wild đȘđžđâ€ïžâ
[đž: video of your squad celebrating Alexiaâs 85th-minute screamer] âNo. 11 supporting No. 11. đ«¶â
The comments, as always, lost it.
âLOOK AT HER FACE WHEN ALEXIA SCORES đđđâ
âYou canât fake that kind of joy.â
âThat is real. That is SPORTSWIFE ENERGY.â
âIâve never seen someone so proud. Sheâs LIVING.â âNot the team being fully invested in their captain-in-law.â âAlexia scoring the fifth was like a love letter, I swear.â
Today was the day. Semi final day for you, the buzz of Alexiaâs win the night before long forgotten.
The hotel lobby was buzzing with pre-game energyâcoaches double-checking schedules, staff sorting gear, players stretching, pacing, zoning in. The team bus was idling out front, clock ticking down to departure for the semifinal.
But before the chaos swept you away, you were granted a moment.
A small pocket of calm.
You stepped through a side corridor near the elevators and found them waitingâyour family.
Your mum was already holding her phone up, clearly trying not to cry while snapping a picture of you in full team kit. Your dad, ever the quiet anchor, stood beside her with his arms crossed and the proudest smirk youâd ever seen.
Your older sister, standing tall as ever, was next to your brother and sister-in-law, who gave you a quick wave before nudging your niece forward.
And there she was four years old, bouncing in place, wearing an oversized jersey that nearly swallowed her whole, a tiny version of your number 11 on the back. Her curly hair was tied in two uneven puffs, and she clutched a little homemade sign that read: Â
âGo Auntie! Score lots!â
Your heart nearly burst.
You knelt down and opened your arms, and she sprinted toward you, throwing herself into a hug that knocked the air from your lungsâin the best way.
âAre you gonna win?â she asked seriously, peeking up at you with wide, expectant eyes.
âIâm gonna try really hard,â you whispered back, brushing hair from her face. âBut even if I donât, you still proud of me?â
She nodded furiously. âDuh. Youâre my hero.â
You blinked hard.
Your brother clapped a hand on your shoulder while your mum quietly dabbed at her eyes. âNo matter what happens today,â your dad said, voice thick but steady, âyouâve already made us proud.â
You stood slowly, hugging your mum, then your sisterâwho whispered in your ear, âPlay like itâs for everything.â
âI will,â you promised.
Your brother handed you a folded note. âFrom all of us. Open in a bit.â
You nodded, carefully tucking it into your bag, right next to your water bottle and your game towel. Your sister-in-law passed you a small paper braceletâclumsily made, colourful with marker scribbles and the words: Â
âAuntieâs magic!"
You tied it on next to the real one.
Just before heading toward the team, you took one last look at themâyour family, your why, all standing together, cheering you on like it was the final.
You turned, heart full, focus sharp.
And walked toward the biggest game of your career, carrying their love with youâon your wrist, in your chest, and all the way to the court.
The moment you stepped onto the team bus, it all clicked into place. The pressure didnât disappearâit sharpened. It no longer felt like a weight to carry. It felt like fuel.
With your duffel slung over your shoulder and your game headphones in place, you slid into your seat, gaze focused out the window. Paris passed by in flashesâgrey skies, flashes of traffic, blue and red team flags waving outside the hotel. You could still feel your nieceâs tiny arms around your neck, her voice echoing in your head,
âYouâre my hero.â
You exhaled slowly, calming your nerves. Maya flopped into the seat across from you, giving you a long look before asking, âYou good?â
You nodded. âBetter than good.â
She raised an eyebrow, amused. âFamily fix that for you?â
You didnât answer right awayâjust glanced at your wrist, where two bracelets now sat side-by-side: the Barça-coloured one with the twin 1s⊠and the new, lopsided âAuntieâs Magicâ one, drawn in bright marker by your four-year-old hype woman.
âSomething like that,â you murmured with a smile.
The bus rolled forward. No music, no noise yet. Just the quiet rhythm of teammates finding focus in their own ways. Some tapped knees. Others mumbled plays. You closed your eyes briefly, centring yourself.
When you opened them again, you reached into your bag and pulled out the note your brother gave you.
You hesitatedâthen unfolded it.
The handwriting was messy, full of overlapping words like everyone had squeezed in a line:
No matter the score, we already brag about you like youâre a world champion.
You play with fire. Keep doing that.
From your favourite siblingâyouâre the GOAT.
Make history, kid. But mostlyâhave fun.
At the bottom, in scrawled marker, your niece had written in giant letters: Â
GO AUNTIE GO!Â
With a crooked heart drawn beside it.
You folded it carefully and placed it inside your jacket pocketâclose to your chest.
â
By the time the bus pulled up to the arena, the city had shifted. Milan hummed with electricity. Fans were already outside. Cameras lined the walk toward the tunnel.
The staff gave you the signal. It was time.
You stood with your team in the tunnel, bouncing slightly on your toes, the court just out of view. The arena lights glowed ahead. Whistles, cheers, and chants thundered just beyond the wall.
Your heartbeat synced to it. Maya nudged your arm and leaned in. âReady?â
You nodded slowly, eyes locked forward. âLetâs make history.â
Then the announcer called your name. And you stepped into the light.
The lights hit you like a wall of heat as you stepped out onto the court. A roar rose from the crowdânot just noise, but energy, thick and alive and vibrating through your chest. The court gleamed beneath your sneakers. Flags waved from the rafters. Music thumped through the speakers as the announcers rattled off names, hyping up the crowd. You barely heard yoursâyou were already zoning in.
The entire stadium was electric, and you felt it in your bones. You glanced at the scoreboardâstill blank, still untouched. The calm before the storm. Your team spread out for warmups. Coaches shouted instructions, but it all faded into the background. Your breathing slowed. You stretched. Let your muscles settle into rhythm.
The minute the coverage started on Alexiaâs television it fell quiet, you were all they were talking about, Alexia was locked in on the TV, oblivious to how many of her teammates had joined her for the game âItâs a historic run this Barcelona side have been on, they are dominating in every competition they are competing in, and all talk is putting that down to (your name) she just brings something out these players we didnât see last yearâ
âThatâs right, the way she moves around the court, her confidence her ability to change the play, the amount of triple doubles this woman has achieved this season has broken all records.â
âNot only is she the leading points scorer sheâs also leading in the assists to, sheâs not a selfish player. Barcelona really need to lock her down if they want there womenâs basketball team to continue to be successfulâ
âIt shocks me theyâve yet to lock her down to a new contractâ Alexia furrowed her brows, âItâs crazy to me to bring in a player of her calibre in for only one season. They have her for two more months and then after that, who knows where sheâll end up, but itâll be a sad day if she leaves Spanish Basketball because what sheâs done for the sport here is incredible. Last year you had maybe a thousand people at this game, this year is a packed sold out 19 thousand strong crowd. Thatâs the your name effectâ
âThe last we heard there were discussions on keeping her at Barcelona but I did hear she had at least 5 WNBA teams show significant interest in herâ
Alexia sat frozen, her grip tightening around the remote as the broadcast continued. The energy in the room had shifted her teammates and family were murmuring about the weight of the moment, but she barely registered it.
She didnât know. She hadnât known.
The words echoed in her head, louder than the TV itself. She had always naĂŻvely, not thought about the fact you may not be in Barcelona forever. That Barcelona was as much a home to you as it was to her. That this season wasnât just a stepping stone but the beginning of something long term.
Her stomach twisted uncomfortably as the analysts continued.
âIt would be a shame for Spanish basketball to lose her. What sheâs done here is unprecedented.â
âSheâs a generational talentâBarcelona need to do everything in their power to keep her.â
âBut is that enough? If the WNBA comes calling, how do you say no? Thatâs the dream right?â
Alexiaâs jaw tightened. She didnât realise sheâd stopped breathing until Patri elbowed her lightly.
âYou okay?â she asked, chewing popcorn with casual concern.
Alexia nodded quickly. âFine.â
But she wasnât.
She had no idea.
She watched as the camera zoomed in on your face during warm-upsâfocused, sharp, the bracelets still visible on your wrist. You looked calm. Like you were ready.
But Alexia wasnât.
Her hands fidgeted in her lap again.
âYou think sheâd really leave?â one of the younger players asked quietly, almost in awe.
Alexia looked straight ahead, masking her emotion behind a calm, composed smile. âSheâs spoken about as one of the best womenâs basketball players, if she gets a better offer why wouldnât she? I wouldnât blame her eitherâ
But inside? She hated the idea of you leaving.
--
The energy in the arena was suffocating, the kind of electric buzz that crackled in the air and made the hairs on the back of your neck stand up. A sold-out 19,000-strong crowd was packed into the stands, screaming themselves hoarse as the final minutes of the game ticked away.
Barcelona: 84 | Opponents: 84 |
15 seconds left
Your chest was heaving, sweat rolling down your temple as you dribbled at the top of the key, eyes flicking across the defence. Youâd been battered all nightâdouble teams, hard fouls, and a brutal elbow to the mouth that had left you with a bloody lip in the third quarter. But you werenât coming off. Not with everything on the line.
Coach hadnât even needed to draw up the final play. Everyone knew the ball was going to you.
You started your move with 10 seconds left, crossing over, getting your defender on their heels before driving hard to the right. The moment you saw the help defence slide in, you threw it to Maya in the corner. She faked the shot, but her defender closed too fast.
5 seconds left
Maya swung it back to you at the top of the arc. You caught it, planted your feet, and let it fly.
Time slowed.
The ball arced high, spinning perfectly toward the rim as the buzzer soundedâ
A second later.
Nothing but net.
Game over.
For a split second, there was silence. Then the arena erupted. The sound hit you like a tidal wave. Deafening. Absolute madness. You barely had time to react before you were tackled Liv was the first to reach you, wrapping her arms around your neck, her legs around your waist, nearly taking you down. Then came Maya, Claudia, the entire bench mob, screaming and jumping as the crowd lost their minds.
Barcelona was going to the final. Second trophy of four coming within touching distance.
The weight of the moment hit you like a freight train. You had done it. For the first time in history, Barcelonaâs womenâs team was heading to the championship final game, a chance to win the trophy.
The cameras were on you now, someone shoving a mic in your face as you tried to catch your breath. Your lip was still bleeding, your body aching, but all you could do was grin, overwhelmed, heart pounding so hard it felt like it might burst out of your chest.
You barely heard the reporterâs question. Something about history. Something about pressure. Your mind wasnât even in the arena anymore. You were just overcome.
The adrenaline was still coursing through your veins as you sat at the press conference table, your jersey still damp with sweat, your lip still split from the brutal elbow in the third quarter. The buzz in the room was electric reporters murmuring excitedly, cameras flashing, your teammates laughing and celebrating beside you.
Barcelona was heading to its first-ever final, and everyone wanted to talk about it. You fielded the first few questions easilyâyour thoughts on the game, the atmosphere, that buzzer-beater. You grinned as Liv elbowed you playfully when the reporter called it one of the most clutch shots in Barcelona basketball history.
âI mean, we knew the ball was going to her,â Maya said into her mic, shooting you a knowing look. âWeâd be idiots not to. She lives for moments like that. Sheâs the only person Iâve ever met that loves that pressureâ
Laughter rippled through the room, and you smirked, shaking your head. âI donât know about living for it, I just didnât want to go to overtime.â
The reporters ate it up, the cameras flashing faster. But then, the question came. Direct, cutting through the energy like a cold blade.
âThereâs been a lot of talk about your contract situation (Your name), with Barcelona only having you under contract for two more months. Given the WNBA interest, is this your last season here?â
The laughter died instantly. Your teammates shifted beside you, the air in the room changing as every reporter leaned forward, recorders in hand. You didnât hesitate. You set your mic down, leaned back in your chair, and exhaled sharply before giving a blunt, final answer.
âNowâs not the time for that conversation.â Your tone left zero room for follow-up. Cold. Unshakable. Maya smirked beside you, clearly amused by the tension in the room. Some of your other teammates chuckled under their breath, but the message was loud and clear. You werenât talking about it. Not now. Not when your team was on the verge of history. The reporter opened his mouth to push, but you didnât let him. You leaned forward, eyes sharp, and said, âNext question.â
Silence.
Then, slowly, another reporter spoke up, pivoting the conversation back to the game, to the championship ahead. The room exhaled, the pressure shifting. But your message had been sent. The press conference had settled back into its usual rhythmâquestions about the game, the teamâs mindset heading into the final when a reporter in the back cleared his throat, steering the conversation somewhere you hadnât expected.
âWe noticed Alexia Putellas wasnât in the arena tonight for such a historic moment. Sheâs been seen at several of your games this season. Was there a reason for her absence?â
You barely blinked, but you felt Maya shift beside you, clearly sensing the sudden shift in energy. The room waited, pens poised, recorders held a little closer. You kept your tone even, uninterested in feeding the media anything extra. âAlexia has her own season to focus on. Sheâs a professional sheâs got her own priorities. She and her team won the Supercopa not a couple of hours ago, sheâs busyâ
The reporter pressed on. âStill, considering the magnitude of this win, one might have expected her to be here. Does her absence say anything about your friendship..relationship?â
Your jaw clenched for a fraction of a second, but you smoothed it out before anyone could catch it. âI donât see how this is relevant to basketball,â you replied, voice firm, shutting it down before it could become a headline. Liv smirked beside you, clearly entertained by your bluntness, while a few of your other teammates stifled amused glances.
The reporter hesitated before reluctantly pivoting back to questions about the game. But even as you fielded the next round of inquiries, something nagged at you. Because they didnât know. They didnât know she had unintentionally set up a watch party. They didnât know she had spent the entire night glued to the screen, watching your every move, wearing your jersey. They had no idea that she had been just as investedâif not moreâthan the people screaming in the stands.
But for the first time, she had chosen to stay in the background. And that meant something. You were ignoring the glaringly obvious reason that you were in Paris. She back in Madrid hours post her own win.
Your phone buzzed on the table beside youâface down, out of sightâbut you knew. You just knew.
It was her.
And suddenly, the game, the questions, the noise of the press roomâit all faded.
Because whatever Alexia had to say? That was the only thing that mattered now
You subtly flipped it over, glancing at the screen.
Alexia: You looked good out there. Even with the bloody lip. Kinda hot, actually.
You bit your lip to keep from grinning, shaking your head when the pain shot through you. But before you could type a response, Liv, sitting beside you, leaned over just enough to catch a glimpse of the message.
A slow, knowing smirk spread across her face.
âOhhh,â she murmured under her breath, barely audible over the noise of Maya answering a question in her usual professional articulate manner. âThat was not a âcongrats on the winâ text.â
You shot her a side-eye, tryingâand failingâto keep a straight face. âMind your business.â
Liv simply leaned back in her chair, arms crossed, thoroughly enjoying herself. âCanât help it when itâs right there.â
Alexia: So, are we gonna talk about how you nearly gave me a heart attack? Or should I just accept that you enjoy stressing me out?
You exhaled sharply through your nose, a small smirk creeping onto your lips. Liv leaned in slightly, managing to catch a glimpse of the message before you could lock your phone.
You: I like keeping you on your toes.
Alexiaâs response came immediately.
Alexia: Weâll see how much you like it when you get back here.
âOhhh,â she whispered under her breath, barely moving her lips, eyes sparkling with mischief. âSheâs mad. Mad.â
You bit back a laugh, keeping your face neutral, though the corners of your mouth twitched.
Still staring ahead at the next reporter, Liv nudged your knee under the table, mouthing, âYouâre in trouble.â
That was it. You lost it. You tried to hold back the laugh, but the way Liv was fighting her own smile made it impossible. A small snicker escaped, and Marta, sitting on the other side of Liv, turned toward you in confusion.
âSomething funny?â she asked, raising an eyebrow.
You cleared your throat, masking your laughter with a cough, but Liv was no help her shoulders were shaking silently as she desperately avoided eye contact. When you both made eye contact you both burst out laughing, you covered your face as you laughed, âWhatâs so funny?â
âItâs not even funnyâ you laughed, your laugh was winding down but soon as you looked at Liv again you lost it again, âIâm sorryâ
Maria squinted suspiciously before shaking her head, returning her focus to the press. âYou now know the answer to why we never normally have these two in the same press conferenceâ
Your phone buzzed you peered
Alexia: If youâre laughing at me, I wonât be happy
You tilted your phone to Liv whoâs mouth dropped
Liv finally whispered under her breath, still grinning, âYouâre so dead.â
You just smirked, tapping out a quick reply. âSorry, what was your question?â You glanced as your thumbs were still moving
You: Are you ever happy?
You as a sign put your phone in your lap, cheeks warming slightly, and shot Liv a look.
She read everything from your face and chuckled, muttering, âYup. Youâre so done for.â You exhaled, shaking your head, but your grin never faded. Because you werenât sure if Alexia was mad, exasperated, or just playing with you. But one thing was clear you couldnât wait to find out.
The press conference didnât go on much longer, Maya, nudged you. âYou ready to get out of here?â
âYeah,â you said quickly, standing up and pocketing your phone, avoiding Livâs smug look.
As you all made your way out of the press room, Liv caught your arm for just a second, whispering, âTell her I said âhi.ââ
You snorted, shaking your head as you pushed the door open. âYouâre annoying.â
Liv grinned, eyes twinkling. âAnd yet, you love me.â
You laughed, shaking off the last of your nerves. Whatever was waiting in Alexiaâs next message, youâd deal with it soon enough.Â
The second you stepped into the locker room, away from the cameras and press, you pulled out your phone. Your teammates were still riding the high of the win, laughing and chatting as they made their way each grab bottles of the awaiting celebratory drinks, but your focus was entirely on your phone.
Alexia: Theyâre replaying you looking all moody after the elbow. Itâs sexy.
You tapped on Alexiaâs message, your fingers hovering over the keyboard.
You: Oh, so now you like me bloody and bruised? Good to know.
A few seconds passed, then
Alexia: Always knew you were tough, but seeing it like that? Yeah⊠definitely not a bad look.
You chuckled under your breath, shaking your head. Just as you were about to respond, Liv brushed past you, tossing a teasing look over her shoulder.
âTell her to keep it in her pants,â she quipped, loud enough for Mayam and a few others to hear.
Maya perked up immediately. âOhhh, Alexia? Whatâs she saying?â
You shot Liv a glare while Maya practically lunged to peek at your phone. You pulled it away just in time. âNothing. Mind your business.â
âNot a chance,â Maya grinned. âYouâre all over the news, and your ânot-girlfriendâ is suddenly very chatty? Weâre invested.â
âDeeply invested,â Liv added, clearly enjoying herself.
You rolled your eyes, shoving your phone into your jacket pocket. âYouâre all unbearable.â
âYou love us,â Maya quipped.
You sighed dramatically. âUnfortunately.â
The teasing continued as you fully engaged in the chanting and banging of the walls, but the moment you had a second to yourself after theyâd subsided, you pulled your phone back out.
You: Howâs my biggest fan feeling after watching that?
Alexiaâs reply was almost instant.
Alexia: Proud. Also, frustrated because youâre an idiot for not dodging that elbow more the I watch it.
You grinned, leaning against the locker.
You: Part of the game
Alexia: Doesnât mean I have to like it.
You hesitated for a moment, fingers tapping against the screen. The conversation was lighthearted, teasing, but something about her words, about her absence tonight lingered in your mind.
You: Wish you were there.
A pause. Three dots appeared. Then disappeared. Then appeared again.
Alexia: Me too.
You exhaled slowly, staring at the message. For the first time all night, the win, the noise, the celebrationâit all faded into the background. Because this wasnât just some playful back-and-forth. This was something else entirely. It was too much for you so you changed the tone throwing Alexia for a loop
You: Was a good game youâd of learned a lot.
The locker room was buzzing, music blasting, champagne already being popped despite Coachâs weak protests, teammates laughing, reliving the final moments of the game like they hadnât just lived it in real-time. You shouldâve been fully in the moment. But your eyes kept flicking to your phone, Alexiaâs last message sitting heavy in your mind.
Me too.
It wasnât just words. It wasnât just a casual response. It meant something.
âAre you even here right now?â Livâs voice broke through your thoughts, amusement dripping from her tone. She leaned on the locker next to you, arms crossed, one eyebrow raised.
You blinked, forcing a smirk. âYeah, Iâm here.â
Liv scoffed. âMmm-hmm. And Iâm the Pope.â
You rolled your eyes, pocketing your phone. âDrop it.â
Maya, freshly drenched in celebratory champagne, appeared on your other side, grinning ear to ear. âOh, no way. Whatâs going on?â
âAlexia,â Liv answered for you, smirking.
Mayaâs eyes lit up. âOoooh. Did she finally confess her undying love? Is she proposing? Did sheââ
You shoved her lightly. âYou two need hobbies.â
Liv shrugged. âThis is our hobby.â
Maya nodded, completely serious. âYouâre far more interesting than our actual lives.â
Before you could respond, your phone buzzed again. You felt both Liv and Maya shift to peek over your shoulder. You turned your back immediately, shooting them a warning glare. âTouch grass, both of you.â
Maya clutched her chest dramatically. âYouâve changed.â Ignoring them, you pulled out your phone, your heart kicking up just a little faster.
Alexia: Iâm still up.
A slow smirk forming on your lips
You: What a coincidence. Me too.
Alexia: Call me when youâre done celebrating?
There it was again. Something unspoken.
You stared at the message for a second before quickly typing back.
You: Give me ten minutes.
You felt eyes on you and turned to find Liv and Maya grinning like theyâd just won the lottery.
Maya held up her hands. âI wonât ask.â
Liv, however, smirked. âJust donât say anything stupid when you call her.â
You scoffed. âWhen do I ever say anything stupid?â
Both of them exchanged a look.
Maya patted your shoulder sympathetically. âGodspeed.â
Shaking your head, you grabbed your jacket and slipped out of the locker room, your pulse quickening just a little. Because as much as you loved celebrating with your team, there was only one person you wanted to talk to right now. And she was waiting for your call.
The night air was crisp as you stepped outside the arena, the distant sounds of celebration still echoing from inside. You pulled your jacket tighter around you, took a deep breath, and tapped Alexiaâs name on your phone. It barely rang once before she picked up.
âTook you long enough,â Alexia teased, her voice warm and familiar.
You chuckled, shaking your head. âHad to survive the post-game interrogation first. Liv and Maya were unbearable.â
Alexia laughed softly, and the sound instantly eased the last of your nerves. âLet me guessâthey saw my texts?â
âOh yeah. They were ready to write fanfiction.â
Alexia hummed knowingly. âSounds about right.â A comfortable silence settled for a second, the weight of the game, the win, and the night still lingering between you. âSo,â Alexia started, her voice softer now. âHow does it feel? You just made history.â
You exhaled, rubbing the back of your neck. âHonestly? It still doesnât feel real.â
âIt is.â
Her certainty made something settle deep in your chest. âI just wish you were there,â you admitted before you could stop yourself.
There was a pause on her end, then a soft sigh. âMe too.â The sincerity in her voice made your heart skip. âI wanted to be,â she continued. âI had the whole watch party going, but it wasnât the same.â
You smiled slightly, picturing her in your jersey, surrounded by her teammates, Alba probably making a whole event out of it. âYou had a whole crowd watching me?â
âOf course,â she said simply. âI wasnât missing that.â
Your stomach flipped, warmth spreading through your chest. âWell, weâre in the final now,â you said, trying to keep your tone light. âPlenty of time to show up.â
Alexia chuckled softly, but there was something unspoken in the pause that followed. âYeah,â she murmured. âPlenty of time.â
But you both knew that wasnât entirely true. The unspoken thingâthe contract, the future, the uncertaintyâhung between you like an invisible thread, waiting to be pulled. You werenât ready for that conversation tonight. So instead, you teased, âYouâre still picturing me with a bloody lip, arenât you?â
Alexia laughed, a little breathless. âI hate how well you know me.â
You smirked. âI have a talent for reading you.â
âOh yeah?â she mused. âThen what am I thinking right now?â
You pretended to consider. âHmm⊠youâre wondering when Iâm getting on a plane back to Barcelona.â Her silence spoke volumes. âAm I wrong?â you pressed.
âNot even a little,â Alexia admitted.
You grinned, shifting on your feet. âSoon.â
âGood,â she said, her voice softer now. âIâll be waiting.â You exhaled, the weight of the night suddenly feeling a lot lighter. âTry to get some sleep tonight, cariño,â she murmured, her voice sending warmth through you. âYouâve got a final to prepare for.â
You smiled. âAnd youâve got a flight to book to Paris.â The final was in Paris.
She laughed, shaking her head. âGo celebrate, idiot.â
âGoodnight, Alexia.â
âGoodnight.â
You ended the call, exhaling deeply, the city buzzing around you. You had just made history. But somehow, she was still the only thing on your mind.
The streets of Paris were alive, buzzing with energy, but nothing matched the euphoria radiating from you and your teammates as you spilled out of the team bus and into the bar your coach had reserved. The night was yours, and for once, you werenât thinking about anything elseânot Alexia, not the contract talks, not the endless media speculation.
Tonight was about celebrating.
The adrenaline was still coursing through your veins as you stepped out of the hotel lobby, where a fleet of black cars was waiting to take the team to your celebratory dinner. The night air was crisp, the city still buzzing from the historic win just hours earlier.
Inside the cars, the mood was electricâlaughter, cheers, and even an impromptu chant started by Maya that had the entire squad hyped all over again.
âYou do realise we only made the final, right?â Liv teased, adjusting the sleek blazer she had opted for instead of a dress. âNot saying we shouldnât be celebrating, but itâs not like we won the whole thing yet.â
Maya rolled her eyes dramatically. âPlease. We made history tonight. Do you know how many Barcelona teams before us have tried and failed to do this?â
âAll of them,â Claudia added, grinning. âSo yeah, we celebrate.â
When you pulled up to the restaurantâa high-end spot that the club had booked out exclusively for the team and staffâyou were met with flashes of cameras from across the street. The media was already outside, eager to get a glimpse of the team that had just shaken the entire league.
Inside, the energy was even louder. The coaching staff, club executives, and even a few familiar faces from other Barcelona teams were there, raising glasses in your honour. As you took your seat at a long, lavishly set table, a waiter immediately poured you a glass of champagne.
âTo making history!â one of the coaches toasted, raising his glass.
The entire room erupted, glasses clinking, cheers echoing against the walls. You leaned back slightly, taking it all inâthe faces of your teammates, your team, all of you standing on the precipice of something massive. Dinner was chaotic in the best way possibleâstories from the game, wild reenactments of the final shot, playful jabs at each other for missed free throws or sloppy turnovers. Someone started a tally of who had gotten the most fouls throughout the season, and of course, your name was high on the list.
âThis one,â Liv announced dramatically, pointing at you with her fork, âhas personally put at least five people on the injured list this season.â
You held up your hands in innocence. âNot my fault they donât move fast enough.â
Maya howled in laughter. âTheyâre still talking about that brutal screen you set last month.â
Liv shook her head, sipping her drink. âYou love being the villain.â
You smirked, raising your glass. âOnly if it gets us the win.â
By the time dessert came around, the mood had shifted slightlyâstill celebratory, but also a little more reflective.
âWe really did it, huh?â Marta mused, stirring her spoon in her coffee.
âWeâre not done yet,â the team captain reminded her. âOne more.â
âOne more,â you echoed, nodding. And that was the reality of it. The biggest game of your career was still ahead. But tonight was about the journey. About this team. And about taking a second to appreciate the moment before the real battle began.Â