pairings: alexia putellas x teen!reader, olga rios x teen!reader
summary: against her better judgement, olga leaves you and azulita to babysit valerie
notes: in estrella’s pov this time!!
“Okay, now remember that Val needs to be in bed by 7:00. 7:30 at the latest. Sometimes, just sometimes we go on to 8:00, but only if she’s had a nap, and you have to make sure she’s had the nap first, don’t just assume. And no, rubbing her eyes isn’t enough, she has to actually close them, because she fake-naps sometimes. She’s sneaky like that.”
You’re sitting cross-legged on the living room rug, Valerie tucked between your knees and currently trying to fit her entire fist into her mouth. Across from you, Azulita’s letting the baby stack squishy blocks on her head. Neither of you are listening. Not even a little bit.
Olga’s pacing back and forth behind you with the binder. The sacred, terrifying, overly annotated Baby Binder of Doom. Color-coded tabs. Page protectors. Laminated bedtime routine chart. You swear it has footnotes.
“She gets her bottle at 6:30, but not too hot! Shake it and test it first, on your wrist, not your tongue, because that’s not sanitary. Bath starts at 6:45, but only if she didn’t eat too slow. If she eats too slow, you can adjust the bath to 6:50, but no later than 7:05 or the whole schedule gets thrown off. I swear to God, if you throw off the schedule—”
Valerie lets out a shriek of joy as Azulita sticks out her tongue and pretends to sneeze. You grin and toss a stuffed giraffe at Azulita’s face. It bounces off and hits Val in the arm. She’s delighted. She kicks your thigh and drools in victory.
“She needs the bunny,” Olga continues, flipping a page like she’s briefing you for combat. “The bunny, not the bear, not the raccoon, not that weird dog Estrella got her from that random shop in Portugal. She needs the bunny or she won’t sleep. If the bunny is missing, I swear—”
“Uh-huh,” you mumble, offering Valerie a crinkly octopus. She throws it at Azulita’s head.
“Storytime must be one book. No more. She will manipulate you. Don’t fall for the pouty face. That’s how we ended up reading Brown Bear, Brown Bear six times in a row last week. We all suffered.”
“Totally,” Azulita says, balancing a plush cow on her forehead. “You’re doing amazing, sweetie.”
Olga doesn’t even pause. “No TV before bed. She only has 30 minutes left of screen time anyway. No fruit after six. And don’t let her near the remote. She knows how to change the channel now and she keeps turning on Spanish soap operas and mimicking the crying.”
You clap once. “Iconic.”
Then comes The Silence. You glance up. Olga is no longer talking. She is staring.
You and Azulita both look up slowly, like maybe if you don’t move too fast she won’t attack. She’s standing there, binder to her chest, face pure exasperation. She looks like a woman who is desperately trying not to scream.
That’s when Alexia walks down the stairs. She looks stunning, hair done, blazer over a fitted shirt, matching slacks. If Olga looks like she’s on the verge of a breakdown, Alexia looks like she wants the breakdown to happen so she can laugh at it.
“Everything alright?” Alexia asks, sauntering up behind the couch.
Olga doesn’t answer. She just continues to glare at the two of you. You start sweating. Azulita stops breathing. Valerie throws a block and says, “Taaa!”
Alexia leans forward, taps the back of both your heads like she’s knocking on a door. “Hey. Idiots. Pay attention.”
“Hey,” you say with offense. “I am a professional athlete.”
“You drooled on her sock ten minutes ago.”
You scowl.
Olga takes a deep breath. She sets the binder down with a finality that shakes you to your core. Then, she steps around the couch, stands over you, and says in a tone you’ve never heard before:
“Listen to me very closely. I am ten months postpartum. I have not left my baby alone for more than two hours since she was born. And tonight— tonight I am trusting you two, Dumb and freaking Dumber, to take care of the child I carried for nine months and pushed out of my vagina.”
You flinch. Azulita flinches. Valerie freezes mid-foot chew.
“You are all I have,” Olga says. “And if anything, and I mean anything, happens to my child, you will not be able to hide. I will find you. I will ruin you. You will wish for death. And then, after you wish for death, I will hit you with the binder.”
You nod. Azulita nods. You nod again. You can feel sweat sliding down your back. Your mouth is dry. Val blinks up at Olga and goes, “Ma?”
Then Olga brightens like none of that just happened. “Okay!” she chirps. “Love you girls.”
She kisses you on the forehead. Azulita too. Then Val.
Alexia’s dying. You can see it. She’s holding in laughter with her whole body. She kisses each of you like it’s a funeral, whispering “Good luck,” in your ear like you’re about to go to war. Then the door closes behind them.
You and Azulita just sit there in complete silence.
“…Did she say vagina?” Azulita whispers.
“Yup,” you reply, staring into the void. “She did.”
Valerie, unfazed, claps her hands and lets out a fart noise with her mouth.
You sigh. “Alright. Let’s not die tonight.”
Azulita picks up the bunny and nods solemnly. “For Val.”
You’re lying on the carpet, half-propped up by a pillow you stole from the couch, scrolling through the comments of the live chat with one hand while trying to pick a decent filter with the other. Azulita’s sitting cross-legged beside you, hair in a messy bun, hoodie halfway on, vibing hard as Lil Baby blasts in the background. You can’t lie, Valerie has taste. Kid’s been bouncing in her little baby bouncer for a solid ten minutes like she’s at a festival.
“She’s got rhythm,” Azulita notes, nodding with pride as Val bounces up and down on beat, plastic keys in one fist, sock in the other.
“She got it from me,” you say without missing a beat.
“She got it from her mother’s.”
“Semantics.”
The comments are coming in fast:
"Why are y'all babysitting?? Where is Olga??"
"Alexia left two teenagers with a baby I'm scared."
"IS THAT LIL BABY IN THE BACKGROUND."
"Please show Valerie dancing again I'm begging."
You ignore the comment asking to show Valerie, but take a peek at her, bouncing away like she’s been possessed by the spirit of the beat, drool flying, hair in her eyes, sock now hanging from her mouth like a cigar.
“She’s busy,” you narrate. “She’s got moves. Don’t worry about her.”
And then, mid-bounce, mid-glory, tragedy strikes. Her toy falls. There’s a two-second pause. You make the fatal mistake of thinking she’ll let it go. And then, WAILING.
“OH MY GOD,” you flinch so hard your phone nearly flies out of your hand. The chat immediately blows up.
“LMAOOOOO”
“HELP HER????”
“THE SCREAM??????”
Azulita launches up like she’s on a mission in a spy movie. “I GOT HER,” she shouts, diving for the bouncer.
You remain frozen on live like a deer in headlights, Val screaming bloody murder off camera while Azulita picks her up and starts doing the panicked baby rock. “Shhhh shhhh shhhh,” Azulita mutters. “We got the toy. It’s okay. Life is pain. Let it out.”
“Chat SOS,” you beg into the phone. “How do we get a baby to stop crying?”
"Did y'all feed her????"
"She hungry girl what time is it??"
"Why is Lil Baby still playing turn that OFF and give her a bottle."
"Y’all are literally the worst babysitters l've ever seen and I love it."
You glance at the clock. Your heart drops. “…It’s 6:30.”
Azulita gasps behind you. “FEED THE BABY.”
You end the live so fast. Phone down. Panic mode engaged. “Why didn’t you check the time?!” you shout, sprinting for the kitchen.
“Why didn’t you check the time?!” Azulita shouts back, still holding Valerie who is now actively trying to scream her way out of Azulita’s arms.
“I thought you were on top of it!”
“I’m on top of her! That’s enough!”
You yank the bottle out of the sterilizer and start pouring boiling water into it like your life depends on it. Which it might.
“Do you even know how to mix formula right?” Azulita accuses, hovering near your elbow like the world’s most chaotic nanny.
“Do you?” you shoot back. “I watched Olga do it once. That makes me basically qualified.”
“She was measuring things!”
“I measure with vibes.”
“That’s why I don’t trust you!”
You shake the bottle aggressively, cap it, and turn around to give it to Valerie, but Azulita steps back like you’re holding a weapon.
“Did you check the temperature?” she asks, eyebrows raised.
You glare. “She’s screaming!”
“She’ll scream harder if you give her lava.”
With the most dramatic eye roll in history, you tip the bottle and splash a few drops on your wrist. It’s fire. You scream like you’ve been shot in the arm.
Valerie goes completely silent. And then bursts into laughter. Like real, belly-deep baby giggles.
You stare at her in disbelief. “You enjoyed that?!”
“Iconic,” Azulita grins, rocking her gently. “She laughed at your pain. She’s one of us.”
You mumble something under your breath and start all over again, this time making sure the water is cooled, the formula is right, and no one ends up with second-degree burns. Finally, finally, you hand the bottle to Azulita and she slides it into Val’s tiny hands.
She drinks like she’s been stranded in a desert for days. Ten minutes later, she’s full, burped, and looking at you with those big, innocent eyes like she didn’t just try to rupture both your eardrums.
You and Azulita are collapsed on the couch in exhausted silence.
“…So, bath time?” you say weakly.
Azulita groans. “Binder says yes.”
You scoop up Val, who immediately tries to headbutt your chin, and take her to the bathroom. Setting her on the bath mat, you begin the struggle of undressing a baby who thinks everything is a game and nothing is real.
By the time she’s in the tub, the floor is a crime scene— clothes, toys, a lone sock, a giraffe for some reason.
Valerie, on the other hand, is having the time of her life.
She slaps the water like it insulted her. You are soaked within seconds. Azulita is trying to save her jeans. You’re trying to figure out how a rubber duck made its way into your hoodie.
“Why is she stronger in water?” you demand.
“She’s evolving,” Azulita whispers.
There are bubbles. There is chaos. You are playing with the little stacking cups and suddenly realize Valerie has abandoned her toys to splash the two of you mercilessly.
“She’s targeting us on purpose,” you say, blinking through water.
“She’s smart,” Azulita agrees, shielding her face with a frog toy.
Valerie grins. You’re both doomed. Soaked, exhausted, and humbled, you glance at the clock. It’s only 7:05.
You look at Azulita. “We follow the binder now.”
“Binder is law.”
Val slaps the water in approval. You salute and let the night continue.
Bedtime. It should be easy. That’s what you told yourself. You survived feeding. You survived bath time. You survived the Binder (capital B). Surely putting Valerie to bed is the victory lap. Spoiler: it’s not.
You’re standing in front of the dresser, holding a plain white onesie like it’s a gift from hell itself. “This is boring,” you declare. “She’s not a tax accountant. She’s a baby.”
“It’s soft,” Azulita argues, holding it up to your face. “Feel it. It’s got little clouds.”
“She deserves better.”
“She’s literally going to sleep.”
“She deserves better while she sleeps.”
And that’s how the two of you spend 12 full minutes rifling through her baby clothes like you’re styling her for New York Fashion Week. At one point Azulita tries to convince you to let her wear just a diaper and a cape “so she dreams she’s a superhero.” You tell her to shut up.
Eventually, you both gasp at the same time when you pull out a fuzzy cat onesie in Barcelona colors— dark blue and garnet, complete with little ears on the hood and a tail.
“Look at this masterpiece,” you whisper.
“She’s going to look like a tiny feline queen.” You high-five.
Valerie, for her part, squeals when you show her the onesie and kicks her feet. She knows style. You wrestle her into it with the grace of two people who clearly don’t know how baby limbs bend, and then immediately start a full-blown photo shoot like she’s Baby Beyoncé.
“You’re serving,” you tell her, snapping a photo.
“She is giving feline fashion excellence,” Azulita agrees, angling the light just right.
You post nothing because Olga would actually murder you if her baby ended up on your story without approval, but still, those pics are going in the archives. You send one to the youngsters group chat and Pina sends back seventeen heart emojis while Patri send an odd voice note of her making a cat sound.
Once the fashion show is over, you carry Val to her crib, carefully swaddled, looking like a sleepy little purring Culer. You sit down beside her and look at Azulita.
“Want to tell her a story?” you ask.
Azulita raises an eyebrow. “We don’t know any stories.”
“We make one up.”
“What kind?”
You think for a second. “The Three Little Pigs. But it’s us.”
She grins. “And the big bad wolf is Alexia.”
“Obviously.”
You lean over the crib dramatically, dropping your voice into a narrator tone. “Once upon a time, there were three little pigs. One was Estrella Pig— gorgeous, talented, the favorite.”
“Excuse me?” Azulita interrupts.
“Second was Azulita Pig—cranky, loud, and wore too much attitude.”
“You’re gonna catch hands.”
“And the third was Patri Pig, who was probably just chilling somewhere eating fruit.”
“Valid.”
“And then came the big bad wolf,” you growl, voice low. “ALEEEXIAAAA.”
Valerie is staring up at you both with eyes the size of dinner plates.
“She huffed!” Azulita says, getting into it. “And she puffed! And she told them to get up and go to training!”
“And the little pigs said NOOOO,” you wail dramatically.
Valerie blinks. You blink back. She blinks. Then she claps her hands.
You and Azulita beam. “She loved it!” you whisper.
“Maybe we should just read the Binder to her. It’s got chapters.”
You start flipping through the pages, trying to find the section on babies not sleeping, and find a line that says: If baby is struggling to fall asleep, try singing ‘Rock-a-bye Baby’ softly.
You and Azulita exchange a look. You try it.
“Rock-a-bye baaabyyy…”
“On the treeee tooooppp…”
Valerie screams like you just stepped on her dreams.
“ABORT,” Azulita yells, rocking the crib back and forth.
You panic and lift her out of the crib. “Okay okay okay! You hate lullabies! Noted!”
The three of you migrate to the couch like refugees of bedtime failure. You’re bouncing her gently. Azulita’s rubbing her back. Valerie is still sniffly and grumbling. You’re losing hope.
“Fuck it,” you mutter. “Alexa, play something.”
“Now playing: Not Like Us by Kendrick Lamar,” the Echo says.
You and Azulita freeze. But then… Valerie quiets. Like, completely. She blinks. Looks around and listens. Very intently.
You and Azulita exchange another look.
“Is this her song?” Azulita whispers.
“She’s unbothered. She’s vibing.”
By the second verse, her eyelids are drooping. Her grip on your hoodie loosens. By the third verse, she’s snuggled into your chest, breathing soft and even. You don’t dare move.
“Don’t move,” you whisper.
“I know,” Azulita says. “I think she booby trapped me with her foot.”
Eventually, you feel your eyes getting heavy too. The couch is warm. Valerie’s head is heavy on your shoulder. Azulita’s arm is pressed against yours. Kendrick is still going. You drift off.
When Alexia and Olga come home, it’s quiet. Too quiet for two teens and a baby in the house.
Alexia steps into the living room first, heels clicking softly. Her hand goes to her mouth when she sees the sight:
You, Azulita, and Valerie all passed out on the couch. The baby is still in her cat onesie, curled on your chest. Kendrick Lamar is playing Not Like Us on repeat.
Alexia is so amused. Olga comes in next, expecting disaster. When she sees you all asleep, her mouth opens.
“I don’t want to know,” she mutters.
Alexia shrugs. “They kept her alive. That’s all I asked for.”
Olga sighs, takes the fuzzy blanket off the back of the couch, and carefully drapes it over all three of you. She kisses Valerie’s forehead, then Azulita’s, then yours. Alexia does the same, grinning the whole time.
“Idiots,” Olga whispers fondly.
The lights are dimmed. The door to the hallway closes quietly.
And in the background, Kendrick keeps rapping softly into the night.
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 — 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.
Word Count: 5k
The stadium is humming before kickoff — not with noise, but energy. That kind of low, anticipatory buzz that settles over everything like mist. Golden hour pours across the pitch, turning white lines soft and shadows long. You step out into it and feel the heat of the turf rise through your boots. The crowd’s not huge, but they’re close. Intimate. Every sound sharp and personal.
Then you see her.
Alexia.
She’s across the pitch, tying her laces with a calm that feels choreographed. Head down, then up. Hair pulled back into that signature ponytail, a strip of white tape wrapped neat around her left wrist. There's no announcement of her presence — just the quiet command of someone who doesn't need one. She's not looking at you, but you feel it anyway. The pull.
Warm-ups blur. You stretch out, chase touches, listen half-heartedly to the pre-match talk. But your focus — truly — stays across the halfway line. You’re not meant to mark her directly. Doesn’t matter. You’re already watching her like it’s your job.
Kickoff comes.
You move like you always do: quick, precise, sharp in the tackle. But this time, every shift of your weight seems to carry an extra purpose — an undercurrent of something... else. She's not in your zone, but she drifts there, like smoke, like she knows you’ll follow.
And you do.
She gets her first touch near the sideline. You’re too far to challenge, but you press anyway, closing space. Not urgent — just enough to let her know you’re there. Her first pass is perfect, of course. But as she turns away, she glances back. Not long. Just a blink. But it hits you low in the ribs.
You're in this now.
Minutes later, she receives it centrally. You close her down — this time properly. She shields, body between you and the ball. You press tighter than necessary. Not reckless. Just firm. She leans back into you — a subtle shift of weight, a muscle twitch against your torso. You stay with her, step for step.
Then she spins.
Clean. Sharp.
You miss the interception by inches, but you recover and chase her all the way to the flank. When the play resets, she jogs by you — not fast, not slow — and there's a flash of amusement in her eyes. Not quite a smile. Not yet. Just a promise.
She’s enjoying this.
So are you.
You start to anticipate her. Not just tactically — intuitively. She moves left, you’re already drifting. She checks her run, and somehow your feet do too. You find her even when you don’t mean to. When she ghosts into the pocket between the lines, you're already there, shoulder brushing hers before the pass arrives.
There’s a tension, electric and unspoken, in every overlap.
It builds.
On a through ball in the 18th, she breaks the line. Perfect run. You’re chasing, watching the flag — and then it goes up. Offside.
She stops with a shake of her head, arms slightly raised, frustrated but composed. Not dramatic. She turns like she might say something, eyes scanning the assistant ref — then she catches you jogging past, lips already tugging upward.
You tilt your head, a little smirk playing on your mouth, and lock eyes just long enough to let her know: "you were" you mutter in amusement.
Her expression falters for just a moment. The corner of her lips tighten — the beginning of a grin that dies before it can bloom as her hand wipes over her mouth. You watch it fall away. The air between you goes warmer. Denser.
She says nothing. But her gaze lingers.
Later, in the box for a corner, she finds you again. Neither of you are jumping for this one, not really — it’s too wide, too slow. But you stand shoulder to shoulder anyway. Her forearm presses lightly against yours, not enough to draw notice, but enough to feel every twitch of her movement. You don’t look at her. You don’t need to. You feel her looking.
The ball’s cleared. Still, neither of you move.
The longer the game stretches, the more your duels feel like choreography — like you’re dancing just behind the game itself. Winning balls, losing them. Pushing, pulling. Touches that linger. Eyes that hold just long enough to mean something.
In the 37th minute, you dive in for a challenge at midfield and win it — clean, sharp, textbook. She goes down, just barely, catching herself on one hand as you pass forward. When you glance back over your shoulder, she’s still on one knee, watching you with an unreadable expression.
You turn back around.
But you feel her eyes.
The tackles bite a little harder. The spaces close faster. The tension between you both thickens. She doesn't smirk anymore — not like before. Now it’s all controlled glances, occasional brushes of contact, her hand lingering on your hip just half a second longer when you battle for position. On one late run, she taps your calf with her toe as she passes behind. You pretend not to notice. She knows you did.
There’s another corner in the 40th. You’re standing close again, tighter this time. Her arm slips across your back as she maneuvers for position, then stays there — soft, light, grounding. You don’t move away. You don't breathe, really. Just watch the ball float in, both of you static. Eyes locked.
Neither of you jump.
It’s not about the ball.
In the 43rd minute, she makes a diagonal run into the box. You follow — again, unnecessarily — but this time you don’t stop. She cuts across you, brushing close, and her hand grazes your side. This time you’re the one who lingers, your arm trailing across her shoulder as you jockey. No one else sees it. But the spark of it pulses down your spine.
When the cross sails over, you don’t even notice.
The whistle finally comes. Half time. You 0 - Barcelona 3
The score is blurry. You barely registered the last five minutes of play. All you know is that you’re breathless, sweat-soaked, pulse still chasing her down the tunnel. You're about to walk toward your teammates when you feel it — a soft slide of skin on the back of your hand.
Her knuckles.
She passes behind you, close enough for her shoulder to graze yours. No words. Just that fleeting contact.
You turn slightly, catching the edge of her profile.
And she glances back.
Not a smile. Not this time.
Just eyes — warm, locked onto yours — and the kind of look that lives in the space between challenge and confession.
Then she disappears into the shadow of the tunnel.
The locker room is muffled noise and static. Coach’s voice floats somewhere above you, strategy and structure laid out in practiced rhythm. But none of it sticks. Not really. Your chest is still tight — not from exhaustion, but from the way she looked at you before vanishing into the tunnel.
That gaze hasn't left your skin.
0–3. You should be crushed. Instead, you're electric.
You step back onto the pitch with a pulse in your veins that has nothing to do with the scoreline. You scan the field, the sideline, then finally — you see her.
Alexia.
Hands on hips, head tilted slightly, watching you under the lights like she knows what’s coming. She doesn’t smile. Doesn’t smirk. She just waits.
Kickoff again.
From the whistle, your touch sharpens. You start playing like your body remembers how good it feels to win balls off her. To beat her to second touches. To be seen by her. You stretch into space, call for the ball more often. Her presence drifts near you — still not marking, but always present, always there.
In the 52nd minute, you cut inside from the wing and bury a low shot past the keeper’s left glove.
1–3.
You don't celebrate hard. Just turn away, chest heaving, pulse pounding. And when you glance toward the halfway line, she's watching. One brow raised. Almost impressed.
Almost.
The next ten minutes, she turns it up. You can feel it — the snap in her passes, the bite in her shoulder when you challenge. She knocks you off the ball once — clean, strong, fierce — and when you fall, she walks past you without breaking stride. But you catch the subtle tilt of her head. She’s waiting to see if you’ll rise.
You do.
By the 70th, the crowd has leaned back in. The buzz is back. That mist from before has thickened into fog. You’re everywhere now. Chasing, creating, pressing. You intercept a loose pass, beat two defenders, and curl one in from the edge of the box.
2–3.
You sprint toward the corner flag, teammates crashing into you. But even as they pile on, your eyes find hers. She’s standing still, hands on hips again — chest rising, jaw tight. The look she gives you isn’t frustration. It’s something deeper. Something personal. You’re not just clawing your team back into the game.
You’re matching her.
And she knows it.
Now, the duels between you are heavier. Every shared breath on a corner. Every chase down the sideline. Her hand grazes your hip again. Yours brushes her shoulder. Neither of you say a word. But your bodies speak in contact, in rhythm. There’s nothing casual anymore — not even the fouls. She clips your ankle lightly in the 77th. You fall, roll, rise — and jog past her with a grin tugging at the edge of your mouth. Her eyes flick to your lips.
Neither of you are pretending this is just football anymore.
The minutes crawl.
88th minute. Your team is pushing. The crowd rises. You feel the shape of the game bend in your direction. She’s deeper now, tracking back more, drawn toward your gravitational pull.
You find the space.
Wide right. Diagonal ball over the top. You take it down on the run, one touch to settle. One touch to beat the final defender. The keeper comes out.
You lift it.
It floats — slow, perfect — into the far corner.
3–3.
The stadium erupts. Your teammates catch you in a hurricane of arms and cheers, but your chest is heaving like it’s only the start. You jog back toward the halfway line, high on adrenaline, sweat slick down your spine.
And she’s there.
Standing in the center circle, hands on her thighs, staring at you like she’s not sure whether she wants to shake your hand or pull you closer.
You walk past her. This time, it’s your hand that brushes hers — deliberate, light.
She doesn’t move it away.
When the final whistle blows, it doesn’t sound like an end.
It sounds like a pause.
You're walking around doing the customary slapping of the opponents hands when you feel her behind you. Close again, like earlier, like always. The brush of her arm. The soft knock of her shoulder into yours.
But this time she doesn’t pass.
She stops beside you.
Neither of you speak.
You just look at each other. Fully, finally. No smirks. No glances.
And then she nods — small, private — like a secret just between you and her, puts her hand up you slap it she taps your arm as she gives your hand a gentle squeeze and keeps going.
⚽️
Your apartment is still and low-lit, the only sound the occasional creak from the radiator and the soft shuffle of your post-match playlist bleeding from your phone speaker. You’re sunk deep into the corner of the couch, hoodie loose over your shoulders, thighs still sore and buzzing in that heavy, satisfying way. Hair wet from the shower. Muscles stretched, feet up, heart finally slowing.
The match feels like it happened in another life — but the images flicker in your head on a loop: the goals, the crowd, the corner flag, her.
Alexia. Her look. Her touch. That nearly-smile in the tunnel.
You’ve barely let yourself process it, haven’t said a word about it to anyone. It’s like holding something delicate in your hands, afraid the air might break it.
Your phone buzzes against your thigh.
Ellie 🧤: Oi you absolute menace That last goal was disgusting 😮💨🔥
You grin, typing back with your free hand.
You: Had to give your defense nightmares somehow 😇 You good?
Ellie: Yeah yeah, I’m fine. Cata got a hand to your second though lol Also 👀
You pause, then watch the typing bubble start and stop.
Ellie: You’ll love this Alexia literally hasn’t shut up about you since the game ended lol
You blink. Sit up a little straighter.
You: … What do you mean?
Ellie: I mean she was in the locker room like 'number 7 is so intelligent on the ball' and 'did you see how she peeled off the shoulder??' And then she hit us with 'that third goal was world class' and just sat there smiling like she had a secret You should’ve seen her lol
Your pulse trips over itself. That heat from earlier — the kind that sat just under your skin during the match — is back, blooming warm in your chest, up your neck.
You reread the texts. Twice.
You: Shut up.
Ellie: I’m DEAD serious. She looked like she was replaying the game in her head like it was her favorite film. Like she knew something we didn’t.
You laugh under your breath, phone balanced against your knee, teeth sinking lightly into your bottom lip.
You: Maybe she does
You lean back, exhaling slow. You should be tired — spent, even — but you’re more awake than ever. The city hums beyond your window, lights dancing across your ceiling, and in the quiet… your mind drifts again.
To her.
To the touch of her hand at your back. The weight of her stare after your third goal. That unspoken thing passing between you on the pitch.
And now this.
You stare at your phone.
Your thumb hovers over her name.
You haven’t followed her yet.
Not officially.
But maybe it’s time to stop pretending this was just a game.
⚽️
You step out onto the pitch like you’ve been here before.
Same golden light. Same soft shadows drawn long across the turf. Same crowd gathered tight in the stands, every voice blurred into a single heartbeat.
But this time — it’s different.
This time, you’re walking out with a name humming under your skin.
Alexia.
It hasn’t left you since the last match — since her hand brushed yours, since Ellie’s text sent your pulse spiralling, since you caught yourself watching her clips like they might explain the way she watched you that day.
You haven’t spoken since. Not directly. But she followed you on Instagram.
No message. Just the follow. Quiet. Bold. Certain.
And now here you are — return fixture. Barcelona away. Everything on the line, but the only pressure you feel is the question hanging in the air like smoke:
Will she play it the same… or will she play it different?
You don’t have to wait long for the answer.
Kickoff comes.
She finds you inside the first minute. No ball. No contact. Just… proximity. A drift. Like gravity pulling her orbit to match yours. You’re pressing high, eyes scanning the field, when you feel her behind you. That familiar hum. That presence.
You glance over your shoulder.
She’s watching you.
You hold her gaze for a breath too long, then break into a sprint. The ball zips past the midfield, and you're on it like instinct, slicing between defenders, teasing space. You don’t get the shot — not yet — but you force the corner. Crowd rises. You walk to the flag, head high, and you know she’s there behind you.
She always is.
This time, her hand grazes your back as you step into position. Light. Intentional. No words.
Just heat.
The ball curls in. You leap. She does too. You collide midair — elbows and ribs, breath against neck — and the ball sails over both of you. When you land, you stumble slightly, and she steadies you. Briefly. Her hand presses against your lower back. You freeze for a moment, chest rising fast.
Still, no words.
Just her hand, steady. Familiar. Dangerous.
The game builds. Faster than last time. More physical. You’re both sharper, and it shows. Shoulder to shoulder, you clash again and again — not careless, but not gentle either. She fouls you once near the touchline, a tactical trip. You hit the grass, roll once, then push up to your knees.
You expect her to be jogging away.
But she’s right there, offering her hand.
You take it. You don’t have a choice, really.
She pulls you up with one firm tug, her hand wrapping around yours a second longer than necessary. Your bodies stay close. Breaths overlapping. Her eyes search yours like she’s waiting for something — for a crack in the façade, or maybe a confirmation.
You give her a smirk.
It’s the only language either of you have spoken all game.
Second half begins. It’s 1–1. Everything on edge.
You catch her drifting wide, and this time you cut her off clean. Shoulder check. Controlled aggression. She presses back into you, muscles flexing. The ball’s already gone, but neither of you pull away. Your forearm brushes hers, your wrist against her side. Neither of you move.
Then she laughs.
Not loud — just a breath. A soft exhale that hits your collarbone.
She steps away. You're left standing still.
And you’re furious at how much you want to chase.
75th minute. The pitch has grown heavy. Legs are tired. But your mind is sharp, zeroed in. You receive the ball at the edge of the box, flick it inside, cut past one, then another. She’s there — the last one between you and the goal.
You don't slow down.
She doesn’t either.
You meet.
Hard. Messy. Beautiful.
The ball moves loose to your teammate, who slams it into the back of the net.
2–1.
The stadium erupts.
You don’t hear it.
You’re still tangled up with her — half-standing, half-falling, your hands on her shoulders, her fingers curling around your jersey. She’s not letting go.
Neither are you.
Still no words.
But her eyes? They say everything. You both help steady each other before you jog off to celebrate, head spinning, throat dry, lungs full of heat and grass and her perfume.
When the final whistle comes — 2–2, again — it feels like unfinished business. You both played like the scoreboard didn’t matter. Like the real game wasn’t in goals.
It was in moments. In looks. In touches. In silence.
You walk the pitch following the play. You hear her behind you. Again. But this time, when she brushes your hand, lingering longer than before.
The score hangs on a knife’s edge now. 2–2 on the night. 5–5 on aggregate.
You’re in extra time now. Legs gone heavy. Lungs burning. Every run feels like a risk, every breath costs more than it did a minute ago. But you’re still here — still moving — because it matters. Because it’s Barcelona.
Even now, even in the thick of it, you know where Alexia is. Always. She’s the hum behind every decision, the silhouette in your peripheral, the rhythm in your heartbeat when the ball lands near her boots.
But you’re not watching her as much now.
Now, it’s survival.
You trade blows, chances. Cata Coll makes two saves that keep you breathing. You make one darting run into the box that nearly finishes it. Nearly. But not quite.
Then the final whistle comes.
Still level.
It goes to penalties.
The huddle is tight, arms around shoulders, heads pressed in. You can feel your pulse in your fingertips, in your temples, in the way the coach looks at you when they ask if you’ll take one.
You nod.
Not because you want to.
But because you have to.
Cata’s in goal for them now. Alexia stands off to the side with the rest of the squad — arms crossed, jaw tight, eyes not on the keeper…
But on you.
One by one, the shots come. Your team scores. They score. You save. They miss. They save. You miss. It builds. Evens. Spirals.
Until it comes down to you.
Final kick. Final player.
Score — and you send your team to the semifinals. Miss — and it’s over. Right here. Right now.
You step forward, boots dragging just slightly across the spot. The crowd has gone quiet — not silent, but that strange kind of stillness where every sound feels wrapped in cotton. Your breath. Your heartbeat. A faraway whistle. You set the ball down and step back.
Cata bounces lightly on the line, gloves flexing.
You exhale. Then take your steps. One. Two. Strike.
You hit it clean. Driven. Left corner. It’s going in. It should go in.
But her glove flashes.
Cata gets a fingertip. Just enough.
The ball lifts — not wildly, not violently. Just enough.
You watch it rise, helpless, as it spins over the crossbar.
And then it’s done.
The stadium erupts — not for you.
You drop to your haunches.
Head down. Hands on your knees.
You don’t cry — not yet — but your throat is full of glass and your chest is caving in. You stare at the turf, at the spot where the ball used to be. Still breathing like you’re running. But it’s over.
You hear it before you see it — the celebration. Barcelona flooding Cata. Alexia somewhere in the centre of it, jumping, shouting. Your world in reverse.
But then you feel hands.
Your team. One hand on your back. Another on your shoulder. A voice murmuring something — low, reassuring, breaking.
You don’t move right away. You just crouch there. Let it hurt.
It was yours to win. And it slipped.
Through fingertips. Through inches. Through fate.
And you’re left kneeling on the turf whilst she's in euphoria, still breathing through the weight of it all, your team lifting you up, arms around your shoulders as they pull you back toward the locker room.
This wasn’t the ending you wanted.
-
You stay where you are long after it’s over.
The crowd is still loud. Barcelona’s players are still flying, clinging to each other like magnets drawn together by joy. Somewhere in the tangle of blue and red, Cata is being swarmed. You can hear her name rising from the stands, tossed around in chants and celebration.
You stay rooted to the spot.
The grass beneath your boots feels heavier now, like it’s holding you in place. Hands on hips, lungs dragging in air like it might steady you. But nothing settles.
You close your eyes. Just for a second.
And when you open them again, she's in your line of sight.
Alexia.
Not jumping. Not screaming. Just standing back from the crowd, watching them — and maybe, just maybe, watching you too.
You wipe your face with the hem of your shirt. Not to cry — not yet. But because something about the air suddenly stings. The sweat, the weight of it, the sting of almost.
You draw in a breath and turn away.
Not toward the tunnel.
Not yet.
You walk instead to the far side, to the small clutch of away fans still standing, still clapping. Flags over the railings. Hands outstretched. Faces flushed with effort and hope and heartbreak.
You jog slowly toward them, nodding, lifting one hand in thanks — then the other waving. You press your palm to a few hands. Sign a shirt handed over the barrier. Take a photo with a young girl in your kit who’s still trying not to cry, even though you just did too.
You stay there longer than you should.
Because it matters.
Because they matter.
Because even in this moment — especially in this moment — showing up matters.
When you finally turn back toward the tunnel, the pitch is emptier. Quieter. Most of your team is gone. The lights still shine down like they haven’t noticed it’s over.
You glance once more toward midfield.
She’s still there.
The celebration has died down but the elation still electric between the players.
You exhale, tuck your chin to your chest, and start the slow walk off the field.
You don’t rush.
You carry the silence with you.
Your head still fogged, shirt clinging damp to your skin. The stadium’s quieter now. The away end’s still murmuring, and the Barcelona fans are singing, but the intensity’s dulled. It’s not roaring anymore — it’s echoing.
You’re halfway to the tunnel when you hear footsteps. Not loud. Measured. Deliberate. You look up, and she’s coming toward you. Alexia.
Still in full kit, cheeks flushed, hair stuck to her neck. She’s pulling gently at the collar of her shirt, stretching it slightly with her fingers. A silent question.
You know what it means. Your breath catches — just a little. You nod. Slow. Silent.
You peel your own shirt off and hand it over, heart thudding a little harder now than it did when you stepped up to take that penalty. Her fingers brush yours as she takes it, and she holds your gaze for a moment longer than needed before swapping.
Then, just as you start to pull her shirt over your head, she steps forward. Arms out. And pulls you into a hug. Not a polite one.
Not a professional, pat-on-the-back, good-game kind of hug.
A real one. Full-bodied. Honest. Warm.
You freeze for half a second — caught off guard — then melt into it, your forehead resting lightly against her shoulder, her arms around your back, strong and sure.
“You were unbelievable,” she murmurs against your ear, voice low and soft. You close your eyes, tears threatening yet again, the slight kindness chipping at the wall keeping your tears back like a dam “I mean it,” she adds. “You didn’t deserve that ending.” Your throat tightens. You swallow hard. “I’ve played against a lot of players,” she continues, pulling back just enough to look at you — not stepping away. “But you? You had us on edge all night.”
There’s something in her eyes when she says it. Not pity. Not consolation. Something sharper. Something deeper. Admiration. Respect. Something else. You manage a smile. Just a small one. But it’s real. “Thank you,” you murmur.
She gives a small shake of her head, still holding you at the elbows, “You’ve got nothing to hang your head about. Not tonight.”
You look down. At the shirt in your hands — hers. Still warm. Still carrying her scent, her sweat, the imprint of a game that changed something between you.
She finally lets go, steps back. And then — the faintest smile. The first one all night.
You watch her, your shirt already pulled on, number bold between her shoulder blades. You’re still standing there. Shirtless. Breathless.
And for the first time since that penalty… You're not thinking about the miss.
The floodlights are still burning overhead, casting long, tired shadows across the grass. The pitch is mostly cleared now — a few staff, some security, the odd Barcelona player still lingering near the dugouts. But for the most part, it’s just you and her.
You’ve both started walking. Side by side. Slow. Neither of you seem in a rush to leave the moment.
You’re still holding her shirt loosely in your fingers. She’s already wearing yours.
There’s a silence between you that doesn’t feel heavy anymore — just full. Soft. Comfortable in the way shared experience allows.
Alexia’s the first to speak.
“That second goal of yours…” she says, glancing over at you with a small shake of her head, “—we weren’t ready for it. Not one of us. I still don’t know how you got that shot off.”
You shrug, a wry smile pulling at your lips.
“I blacked out,” you say. “Might’ve had divine intervention. Or maybe it was just Cata screaming something in Spanish that I got scared”
She grins wide, teeth flashing under the stadium lights. It softens her whole face.
You take the opening and add, dryly, “Though I think the real miracle was me not collapsing from sheer intimidation every time you breathed down my neck.”
She turns her head fully toward you now, laughing properly — head tilted back, hand briefly brushing your arm.
“You mean when I gently existed in your space?” she teases, eyes gleaming.
You raise a brow. “Oh sure, gently existed. That must be what they call full-body marking with bonus psychological warfare.”
She laughs again — not loud, not sharp, but the kind of quiet, delighted laugh that people don’t fake. One that stays in her chest, one that stays with you.
You both keep walking, a little closer now, still smiling. The tunnel’s ahead, glowing softly like the end of a dream.
But for now, neither of you are quite ready to step inside. And somehow, after everything — the goals, the glances, the heartbreak, the hug — this is the part you know will stick with you. The walk. The warmth. The grin she only gave you, you'd seen the coolness in her handshakes with your teammates. She hadn't asked for there shirts or held a conversation with them.
It was a wonder but it seemed between the lines of the pitch- you'd gained the best in the world's respect.
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 — 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 5: One night in Barcelona part 2 Other Parts
Word Count: 9.5K
The first thing you notice is the light.
It’s soft a buttery gold spilling across the ceiling, sliding warm fingers across the covers tangled around your waist.
The second thing you notice is the silence. Not heavy. Not empty. Full.
Full of the soft breath of the house waking up. Full of the quiet stretch of a day waiting to happen. You roll over, rubbing a hand across your face, blinking into the brightening room.
For a second, you forget where you are.
And then, the smell of fresh air through the open window, the distant hum of birds, the weightless feeling still sitting in your chest her house. Her world.
You smile before you even realise you are. You push back the covers, stretch lazily, toes curling against the cool floorboards, and pad barefoot toward the doorway.
Down the hall faint but unmistakable — you hear it. Soft clinking. The low hiss of a kettle. The quiet shuffle of bare feet against tile.
You follow it moving down the stairs, your heart already lifting.
The kitchen’s warm with morning light windows thrown open, a breeze slipping in, fluttering the edge of a dish towel hanging from the oven.
And there she is. Alexia. Hair messy, pulled up in a lazy bun, hoodie loose over shorts, feet bare on the tile.
She’s standing at the counter, fiddling with the coffee machine, one hand tapping a lazy beat against the counter.
She turns when she hears you, face lighting up with a slow, sleepy smile that nearly knocks the breath out of you.
"Bon Dia," she says, voice thick and rough with sleep.
"Bon Dia," you echo, rubbing the back of your neck, suddenly shy in a way you hadn’t been the night before.
She eyes you playfully, reaching for a second mug without even asking. “You sleep okay?”
You nod, stepping further into the room, letting the smell of coffee and something fresh — toast maybe? — wrap around you. “Best sleep I’ve had in weeks," you admit.
Alexia grins, pouring the coffee carefully, sliding one cup across the counter to you. “See? Spain’s good for you."
You take a sip, it’s perfect, rich and hot and a little too strong and sigh happily.
She leans her hip against the counter, crossing her arms lightly, mug cradled between her hands. “So,” she says, a spark flickering in her still-sleepy eyes, “you ready for your big day?”
You raise an eyebrow, amused. "Depends. What’s the plan, captain?"
She pretends to think, tapping her chin with one finger. “First,” she says, ticking off on her fingers, “good coffee.” She holds up her cup meaningfully.
You lift yours in silent salute.
“Then,” she continues, "beach walk? Breakfast near the marina. Maybe a stop at a market I like. Then..." She pauses, smirking.
"What?"
"You’ll see," she says, sing-song, clearly enjoying herself.
You laugh, head tipping back slightly. “Busy day," you tease.
She shrugs, looking unfairly beautiful in the soft morning light. "Can’t waste a second."
You sip your coffee, watching her over the rim of your cup. Feeling the truth settle in quietly beneath your ribs, Neither of you want to waste a second. Not today.
You leave the house with the last sips of coffee still warm in your mouths, sunglasses pushed up into your hair.
Alexia leads the way, casual, loose, shorts showing off strong, sun-kissed legs you couldn't help but stare at as you followed.
The air is already warming the kind of spring-summer heat that rises slow and easy, not heavy yet.
The beach is a short drive away, the Mediterranean stretched wide and glittering blue, dotted with early morning joggers, sleepy vendors setting up umbrellas, a few dogs sprinting wild, free along the shore.
You both kick off your shoes the second you hit the sand. The grains are cool and soft under your feet, the breeze tugging lightly at your clothes.
Alexia squints into the sun, one hand shading her eyes, and you see it, the soft, unguarded grin that only just tugs at her mouth.
“You gonna keep up?” she teases, nudging your hip lightly with hers.
You laugh, stepping around her, a fake competitive bounce in your step. “Race you to the water.”
She raises an eyebrow, amused. "You’ll lose."
"You sure?" you call over your shoulder, already breaking into a jog.
Alexia’s laughter chases after you, low, delighted, and a second later, she’s running too, sand kicking up between you.
You’re not really racing. You both know it.
But you reach the shoreline first, your feet sinking into the wet sand, the surf rushing up to kiss your toes, cool and shockingly fresh.
You spin around just as Alexia skids to a stop beside you, breathless and laughing. “Victory,” you say, throwing your arms up dramatically.
She rolls her eyes, reaching out to flick a handful of wet sand lightly at your legs. “Only because I let you win.”
“Liar,” you shoot back, grinning.
She smirks, brushing her hair back off her face where the breeze has tugged it loose.
You both stand there for a moment. Feet in the foam. Shoulders brushing occasionally when the tide rocks you gently.
The city curves away behind you but it might as well be a thousand miles away. Here, it’s just sun and salt and her.
Alexia tips her head toward the boardwalk further down where the small breakfast spots are just starting to open, white umbrellas being pulled into place.
“Hungry?” she asks.
“Always,” you say without hesitation.
She grins, hooking two fingers lightly into your sleeve as she turns, tugging you toward the dry sand. “Come on. I know a place.”
You follow her, barefoot, laughing, sand sticking to your calves feeling lighter than you have in months.
The kind of lightness you can't plan. The kind you don't even dare hope for.
The café she leads you to is tucked right into the edge of the boardwalk, all pale wood, wide open windows, and the smell of coffee and warm bread floating out to meet you.
You snag a table outside, toes still sandy, sunglasses pushed up onto your heads, muscles loose and humming from the run and the laughter.
Alexia orders for you both without even asking remembering how you take your coffee, what you said yesterday about sweet breakfasts being your weakness.
You raise an eyebrow at her when she finishes, mock-impressed.
She just shrugs, smiling into her coffee cup. “I listen."
You don’t look away. Neither does she. And with the sea at your back, the sun at your faces, and her smile tucked like a secret between you your shoulders relax.
Plates arrive quickly, strong coffee, thick slices of bread still warm from the oven, bowls of fresh fruit glistening under the sun.
You dig in immediately into your waffles with a stupid about of Nutella over them, hunger from the beach walk sharpening everything.
Alexia watches you, one hand curled loosely around her mug, that lazy, half-hidden smile never really leaving her face.
"You enjoying that?," she says lightly.
You raise an eyebrow, mouth full of pancake.
"Don't judge me," you mumble around a bite, making her laugh. "At least I'm not boring with my fruit platter"
She shrugs, mock-innocent. "I have a reputation to maintain."
You swallow, grinning. "You mean the reputation where you're the best player on the planet and a food snob?"
Alexia leans back in her chair, sunglasses slipping down her nose a little, smiling properly now wide, unguarded. "I'm not a food snob," she protests. "I just know what’s good."
You spear a piece of chocolate covered waffle with your fork, waving it at her dramatically. "Exhibit A," you say, popping it into your mouth.
She laughs again, a warm, real sound that sinks deep into your chest and steals a piece of strawberry with chocolate on without asking, tossing it into her mouth with a smug little grin.
The easy rhythm between you builds with every bite, every playful nudge under the table. You brush your foot against hers once not meaning to. She doesn’t move away. So neither do you.
The breeze catches the corner of a napkin and sends it fluttering across the table. You both reach for it at the same time, your hands bumping, fingertips grazing, a tiny spark jolting up your arm.
You freeze for a half-second eyes locked. The moment stretches a breath, a heartbeat. Before Alexia smiles, soft and knowing, and lets her hand slide away first.
You tuck the napkin under your plate, swallowing a smile. "Smooth," you tease, your voice lower now, playful but full of something else.
She leans forward, elbows on the table, chin resting in her palm. "You have no idea," she says, soft enough that it could be mistaken for a breeze if you weren’t looking directly at her.
Your stomach flips. You don’t look away. You can’t.
And for the first time since you landed in Barcelona, since you sat shoulder to shoulder by the pool under the stars you feel it shift between you. Not just friendship. Not just admiration. Something tipping forward, slow and certain and real.
Alexia reaches for her coffee, eyes still on you. “So," she says casually, blowing across the surface of the drink, "after breakfast... market? Or do you want to beat me at another race first?"
You smirk. "I think you’re still recovering from losing the last one."
She mock-gasps, hand to her heart. "Such disrespect."
You chuckle, sliding your sunglasses back down onto your nose to hide the way you’re smiling like an idiot.
Alexia watches you over the rim of her cup soft, warm, sure. You finish the last bites of breakfast together, your legs still brushing under the table, your laughter still folding together easily.
And the whole time, you can feel it building. Slow. Bright. Unstoppable.
⚽️
Breakfast lingers in your body warm, heavy in a good way as you both leave the café, shoes back on, sunglasses shading your eyes from the rising sun.
Alexia tugs her jacket sleeves up over her elbows as you fall into step beside her. The streets are a little busier now not crazy, but buzzing in that Barcelona way, scooters weaving through traffic, cyclists darting between tourists, locals striding fast and sure like they own the sidewalks.
You’re walking close, close enough that your hands brush once, casual.
You’re laughing about something stupid she said at breakfast something about her being a 'culinary icon' for choosing the right melon, when she suddenly shifts.
It’s so smooth you barely register it until you’re already there. You feel her hand light but firm slide across your waist. Not possessive. Not rough. Just there.
Steady. Guiding.
She moves you gently to the inside, away from the curb where the street traffic rumbles past too fast, too close. No words. No big scene.
Just the easy, automatic instinct to put herself between you and everything else. Your breath catches tiny, unnoticeable to anyone but you but you don’t say anything. You don’t have to.
She keeps her hand there for a second longer than necessary fingers warm through the thin fabric of your top before letting it fall away, brushing lightly against your hip as she does.
You glance at her quick, sideways. She doesn’t look at you. Just keeps walking, hands back in her jacket pocket, casual like nothing happened.
But there’s a slight, unmistakable curve to her mouth. Like she knows exactly what she did. And exactly what it did to you. You swallow around the smile threatening to break free and match her stride.
The market is a riot of colour and sound when you arrive.
Rows of stalls spill into the street vibrant fruits stacked in messy pyramids, flowers bursting from buckets, the rich smell of roasting nuts and fresh bread curling through the air.
You drift between stalls together not rushing, not with any real plan just being.
Alexia stops to pick through peaches at one stand, lifting them gently, checking them like she knows exactly what she’s doing.
You wander a few feet away, caught by a table piled high with handmade jewellery rough-edged silver, worn leather bands, tiny delicate charms.
You’re reaching out for one when someone bumps into you not hard, not aggressive just the usual jostle of a busy street.
Still, before you even fully register it, Alexia is there. A step closer. A hand brushing your lower back. A glance sharp over her shoulder at the stranger, assessing, steady, before relaxing again when she realises it’s nothing.
She doesn’t say a word. Just stays close now half a step nearer than before, body angled subtly between you and the crowd. As if shielding you.
You look up at her, heart hammering stupidly. She catches your gaze, shrugs like it’s nothing. "Busy today," she says, voice low, easy.
You know she’s pretending it was casual. You know it wasn’t. And you don’t call her on it. You just smile, a little more than you mean to, and shift a little closer to her side. Where she clearly wants you to be.
Where you want to be.
You wander between stalls, the smells and colours thick around you citrus and flowers and bread still warm from the ovens.
Alexia stays close now. Not hovering. Not crowding. Just... there.
Every time you glance up, she’s within reach scanning the stalls casually, bumping your shoulder when she teases you about the size of the tote bag you picked up, tossing small, knowing glances your way whenever something catches your eye.
You stop by a table filled with little handmade necklaces and bracelets all simple, silver chains and tiny silver pendants shaped like shells and stars and suns.
You lean in, fingers brushing lightly over one, a tiny silver star, worn smooth from being handled so many times. You don’t pick it up. Just smile a little to yourself and step away.
You’re halfway down the next aisle when Alexia doubles back with a muttered, "Hang on."
You blink, confused, but stay where you are, pretending to study a crate of cherries while secretly watching her.
She speaks quietly to the vendor, quick, easy Spanish you don't understand, and tucks something small into her jacket pocket before rejoining you like nothing happened.
You raise an eyebrow, amused. “What was that?"
“Nothing," she says, breezy.
You narrow your eyes at her, smiling despite yourself. "Liar."
She grins, completely unbothered. "Trust issues."
You nudge her lightly with your elbow, and she laughs low, under her breath, the sound curling into your chest.
After another twenty minutes weighed down now by pastries and fruit and a tiny pot of local honey Alexia insisted you had to try you find a bench tucked between two buildings, half in the sun, half in the shade.
You both slump onto it like you’ve just finished a marathon.
Alexia stretches her legs out, one arm slung casually across the back of the bench behind you, fingers drumming an absent rhythm against the wood.
You sit there, catching your breath, letting the sounds of the market buzz lazily around you. She digs into the pocket of her jacket casual, like it’s no big deal and tosses something into your lap.
You catch it reflexively. It’s the necklace. The little silver star you’d been looking at earlier. You stare at it for a second before looking up at her.
She shrugs, smirking, trying and failing to play it cool. "You looked like you wanted it."
Your throat tightens, stupidly, around how simple and easy she makes it sound.
You turn the charm over in your hand small, worn, perfect. “Thank you," you say, voice quieter than you mean it to be.
Alexia bumps her knee lightly against yours. "You're welcome." You thread the chain through your fingers hesitating and Alexia leans closer, dropping her voice so low it almost feels like a secret. "Want me to put it on you?"
You laugh breathless, caught off guard by the way she says it light, teasing, but full of something else too.
You nod, swallowing hard. "Yeah. Okay. Please"
You turn slightly, pulling your hair away from your neck. You feel the careful brush of her fingers soft, warm from the sun as she hooks the chains at the back of your neck.
Her knuckles graze your skin once. You shiver. When she’s done, you turn back around and she's close now. Closer than she's been all morning.
She tugs lightly at the star resting against your collarbone, smiling that small, soft smile that says more than she’s ready to put into words. "Looks good on you," she murmurs.
You smile shy and wide and helpless.
"Thank you," you whisper back.
⚽️
The heat of the day is starting to thicken now not heavy yet, but enough that the shade of the narrow streets feels like a relief.
You fall into step naturally close enough that your arms brush sometimes. Close enough that you’re aware of her in every movement. Neither of you says much at first.
It’s not uncomfortable. It’s easy. The kind of silence that feels like it belongs to both of you. Alexia glances over at you once, a small, sideways smile curling at her mouth and you feel it tug at something low in your stomach.
You smile back, helplessly. You can’t not.
At one point, a group of kids on scooters whip past too close, and instinctively, Alexia reaches out her hand finding your lower back, the same steady pressure from earlier, pulling you gently toward her, away from the chaos.
She doesn’t even seem to think about it. Doesn’t make it a thing. Her hand lingers a second longer than necessary.
You glance at her heart thudding but she’s already looking ahead again, cool as anything, like it’s just natural now. Maybe it is.
You keep walking. At some point, her knuckles brush yours. Not an accident this time. Slow. Intentional.
You glance down, see her hand swinging casually, deliberately a little closer to yours than before. Your pulse picks up. You bump your hand lightly against hers.
She bumps back playful, teasing. It’s a game now, almost. A dance neither of you quite want to end.
Finally , you let your pinky hook loosely around hers. Not holding. Not grabbing. Just touching. Testing. Alexia’s fingers twitch once, soft before curling back.
Her pinky loops around yours. Light. Secure. Barely there. But there.
You both keep walking like nothing’s changed. But everything has. The world narrows to the small, secret place between your hands. You don’t talk about it. You don’t need to.
By the time you reach the car, the sun is high and your heart feels impossibly full. Alexia unlocks it with a beep, tossing the bags into the backseat without letting go of your hand just yet.
She turns to you sunglasses slipping down her nose a little and grins. "Ready for part two?" she asks, voice low and teasing.
You laugh breathless, giddy, hers without even trying. "Always," you say. And you mean it.
⚽️
The drive after the market blurs past in the low hum of warm air through open windows and music playing softly from the speakers both of you riding that edge between playful and something more.
Alexia parks outside a little cafe tucked against the edge of a park one of those local places tourists never find, the kind where old men play cards and kids chase each other between the tables.
You grab seats outside again shaded by the wide arms of an ancient olive tree. She sits across from you, sunglasses perched lazily on her nose, ankles crossed under the table.
You sit back, sipping from your glass of cold lemonade, pretending not to notice the way her gaze keeps finding yours over the rim of her cup.
But you feel it. You feel everything. She’s smiling, a little sharper than before, like she knows exactly what she’s doing now.
And you’re not helping not with the way you keep tucking your hair behind your ear, or letting your knee brush hers under the table without pulling back.
There’s no rushing it. But there’s no hiding it anymore either.
She leans forward at one point elbows on the table, chin resting on the back of one hand, watching you with that lazy, lidded look that makes your skin prickle.
"You always do that?" she asks, voice low.
You blink, thrown. "Do what?"
Her smile curves, slow. "Tilt your head when you’re trying not to laugh."
Your face heats instantly. "I do not," you protest.
She shrugs, clearly amused. "You do. It's cute."
You kick at her lightly under the table half-playful, half-flustered. She catches your ankle between her feet, trapping it, smirking across the table.
You don’t pull away. You don’t want to.
You sit there, locked in a slow, simmering stare that says everything neither of you has said yet.
Alexia breaks the silence. Not with a joke. Not with a tease.
Just: "You drive me a little crazy, you know that?"
It’s not loud. It’s not dramatic. It’s just true.
You blink, breath catching in your throat, heart hammering against your ribs. "You’re one to talk," you murmur, finding your voice somewhere down near your shoes.
She smiles not the big, showy one. The real one. Soft, certain.
She leans back, releasing your ankle with a casual nudge of her foot, and finishes her drink.
"Come on," she says, standing, tossing a few coins onto the table.
You stand too unsteady in a way that has nothing to do with your legs.
She waits until you’re close enough until the tiny space between you hums again then reaches out, casual but deliberate, looping two fingers into the waistband of your jeans belt loop for half a second, tugging you forward. It's a quirk of hers you're growing to adore more and more.
"You still owe me a rematch," she murmurs, voice low, words brushing against your skin.
"For what?"
"Race. Breakfast. Uno." She shrugs, smiling as she lets go of your waistband the touch brief but burning.
You laugh stunned and stupidly, wildly giddy. "I don’t think you’re keeping score very well."
Alexia tilts her head, that same tilt she accused you of, and grins. "I’m not keeping score anymore."
She starts walking easy, loose, confident in a way you hadn’t seen all morning.
You catch up to her without thinking. And when your hand brushes hers when her fingers curl loosely, briefly, around yours this time neither of you lets go.
Not yet. Maybe not ever.
You end up at a little tucked-away park one that’s mostly empty, a few stray families packing up picnics, some old men lounging under the trees.
There’s a worn goal painted onto a cracked stone wall no nets, just faint white lines and a dusty ball someone’s abandoned near the edge of the grass.
Alexia spots it immediately.
You can almost feel the shift in her the way she straightens, the way her grin sharpens.
"Oh no," you say, laughing as she jogs over to grab the ball.
"Oh yes," she calls back, dribbling it lazily with the side of her foot, toe taps quick and effortless.
You shake your head, walking toward her slowly. She traps the ball under her foot, raising an eyebrow at you with mock innocence.
"What, you scared?"
You bark a laugh, heart pounding with something that has nothing to do with fear. You drop your tote bag onto the bench nearby, tighten your shoelaces, and square up in front of her. "Bring it, capitana."
Her smile turns wicked. And you realise you might’ve just made a very beautiful mistake.
It starts simple light, teasing a game of keep-away more than anything else.
She dribbles in tight circles, flicking the ball from foot to foot like it's tied to her with a string.
You chase, laughing, trying to poke it away, but she spins out of reach again and again loose-limbed, smug, absolutely in her element.
"Come on," she teases. "You’re supposed to be good at this."
You lunge half-hearted, on purpose and miss by a mile. Alexia howls with laughter, head tipping back, the sound wrapping warm around your ribs.
You fake left, then dart right and this time, your toe catches the ball just enough to pop it loose.
You sprint after it, triumphant only to feel an arm snake around your waist, pulling you off balance.
You stumble, laughing so hard you can't breathe, as Alexia wrestles the ball back under her foot, grinning down at you.
"Foul!" you gasp, pointing at her accusingly.
"Play on," she says sweetly, nudging the ball back toward the goal painted on the wall.
You chase her again this time catching up enough to bump hips as you both fight for possession, laughing so much neither of you can keep proper control.
She finally kicks it a soft, lazy shot that thuds against the wall, missing the goal entirely.
You both collapse onto the grass a second later gasping, sweaty, beaming.
The ball rolls away lazily across the patchy grass. You lie there, shoulder to shoulder, staring up at the bright blue sky, hearts hammering.
Alexia nudges your elbow with hers. "Admit it," she says, breathless. "You stood no chance."
You turn your head, squinting at her against the sunlight. "You fouled me."
She grins — lazy, loose, beautiful. "You loved it."
You don't deny it. You can't. You just roll your eyes fondly and close your own, letting the sun soak into your skin, letting the warmth of her beside you settle deep under your ribs.
You could stay like this forever the low thrum of competition, the brush of her arm against yours, the weight of everything neither of you is saying yet hanging sweet and certain between you.
Alexia shifts a little her arm brushing yours again, her head turning lazily toward you.
For a second, she just watches you. Not intense. Not hungry. Just... watching. Soft. Certain.
Then, voice low and casual, she says "Next time you come... We’ll do all the tourist clichés.. like you did with me"
You turn your head slowly, raising an eyebrow at her, fighting the grin tugging at your mouth. "Next time?" you echo, teasing.
Alexia’s mouth twitches not quite a smile, not quite a challenge. She shrugs, playing it breezy even as her voice dips lower. "Assuming you survive this trip, yeah."
You laugh under your breath, tipping your head back toward the sky. "And here I thought I was just a one-time special guest."
Alexia hums a soft, thoughtful sound. "Never said that," she murmurs.
You feel her words like a warm, low tide pulling at your chest. You glance over again catch her looking at you, steady and sure. No teasing now.
You let the silence sit there for a moment — heavy in the best way — before you nudge her knee lightly with yours.
"Alright, fine," you say, pretending to sigh. "Next time, you're getting dragged to every cliche tourist spot possible."
Alexia grins, eyes crinkling at the corners. "Sagrada Familia selfie?"
"Definitely."
"Boat tour?"
"Obviously."
She groans, covering her face with one hand, laughing into it.
You nudge her again, laughing too. "Too late to back out now, capitana. It was your idea"
She peeks at you between her fingers eyes bright, mouth soft. "I’m not backing out."
You hold her gaze for a second longer than you probably should.
After lying there long enough to feel the sun start to dip, Alexia pushes herself up with a soft groan, brushing grass off her shorts.
“Come on," she says, reaching down with one hand to tug you up. "Can’t let you get on that plane later without a real meal first."
You grin, letting her pull you to your feet hands lingering longer than necessary before brushing yourself off too.
You drive with the windows down again hair whipping into your face, the city folding itself into gold and long shadows as the sun sinks lower.
Alexia hums along to the radio, lazy and a little distracted one hand on the wheel, the other drumming lightly against her thigh.
You watch her out of the corner of your eye the relaxed set of her shoulders, the way her mouth tilts up slightly even when she's not smiling and you tuck the image away in your chest for later.
The restaurant she picks is tucked into a narrow side street a tiny place, no sign above the door, just the smell of grilled meat and fresh bread spilling into the warm evening air.
Inside, it’s all stone walls and low ceilings, candles flickering on every table, the air thick with laughter and the clink of glasses. Locals only. No tourists. No cameras. Just them.
The hostess greets Alexia like an old friend a clasp of hands, a few rapid words in Catalan that make Alexia laugh low and easy. You catch your name in there hear it said with affection and Alexia glances at you over her shoulder, giving you a look that’s soft around the edges.
You’re shown to a quiet table tucked into a corner, half-hidden behind a curtain of ivy hanging from the ceiling.
You sit across from each other knees brushing lightly under the table, neither of you bothering to pull away.
The food comes in waves small plates, things meant to be shared: marinated olives, grilled peppers, thin slices of jamón glistening under the candlelight.
You pick at everything, laughing when Alexia insists you try the weirdest-looking dish first, letting the easy rhythm between you carry the conversation.
It’s effortless now. All of it. The teasing. The glances. The touches that last a beat longer than necessary.
When she reaches for her wine glass, her fingers brush yours.
When you say something that makes her laugh really laugh, that low, throaty sound you’re addicted to now she leans closer across the table, close enough that you feel the heat of her even with the candle flickering between you.
And when the bill comes when she waves away your offer to split it without even looking she just smirks, lazy and sure. “My city," she says, voice low and warm. "My treat."
⚽️
The drive back is quiet. The low thrum of music, the soft rush of the road under the tires, the weight of everything you're both not saying yet thick between you.
Alexia pulls into the driveway slowly, headlights sweeping across the olive trees, the pool glittering faintly beyond the patio.
You follow her inside through the kitchen still warm with the memory of coffee, up the stairs where the evening sun pools in lazy puddles of light. You grab your bag from the guest room slowly dragging your feet without meaning to feeling every second of the ticking clock now.
Alexia leans against the doorframe, arms folded loosely, watching you. You sling the bag over your shoulder heavier than it should feel and step into the hallway.
Neither of you moves right away. Neither of you says what you're both thinking. She shifts slightly pushes off the frame, closing the distance between you without a word.
She reaches out slow, careful and tugs lightly at the strap of your bag, her fingers brushing yours.
"You sure you have to go?" she says, voice low and rough now.
You smile, small and helpless even as your heart aches.
"I'll be back," you say quietly.
She smiles too soft and sure and so much. “I’m counting on it," she says.
And for a second. one long, suspended heartbeat it feels like she might lean in. Like you might. But then the world creeps back in and there’s an airport to reach.
You follow her back out to the car your hands brushing once, twice and neither of you pulls away.
The drive to the airport is quiet. Not awkward, never awkward now but full of a kind of slow, heavy knowing. The kind that sits deep in your chest, tugging at every word you don't say.
You watch the city slip away outside the window golden and endless and hers and you already feel yourself missing it before you’ve even left.
Missing her.
When she pulls up to the departures curb, she puts the car in park but doesn’t turn off the engine. The hum of it fills the small space between you. You unbuckle your seatbelt slowly. Reach for your bag. Fumble, a little.
Neither of you moves to open the door. Instead, you just... sit there. Breathing the same air. Trying to memorise each other in the dwindling seconds.
Alexia shifts first turning slightly in her seat, one arm thrown casually over the backrest, her fingers grazing your shoulder lightly.
"You’ll text me when you land?" she says, voice low and rough-edged.
You smile small, sure. "Promise."
Her mouth twitches, a smile that doesn’t quite reach full strength, too weighed down with everything unspoken.
You shift toward her the air suddenly electric between you. And for one suspended second, you’re sure. Sure she’s going to kiss you.
Sure you want her to. Sure you’re going to meet her halfway. You tilt up, breath catching. She leans in.
Closer.
Closer.
And at the last second instead of finding your mouth her lips brush the curve of your cheek.
Soft. Warm. Lingering.
Her nose grazes yours as she pulls back, just slightly.
Not an accident. Not a mistake. A promise. A next time.
You blink breathless, heart hammering and when you open your eyes fully, she’s still there, so close you can see the flecks of gold in her eyes.
She smiles a tiny, secret thing meant only for you and leans back, letting you go.
"Go before you miss check in," she says, almost teasing, almost not.
You laugh shaky, happy, undone and shove the door open before you can forget how your legs work.
You sling your bag over your shoulder. You look back once catch her leaning against the steering wheel, watching you go with a look that makes your chest ache.
You lift your hand in a little wave. She taps two fingers against the side of her head in reply saluting you, awkward as ever, sending you off without ever saying it.
And then you turn. And walk into the airport.
⚽️
You step through the doors into camp boots slung over your shoulder, kit bag heavy at your side, sun still clinging to your skin from Barcelona.
And immediately, you know you’re screwed. The noise, the energy, the absolute full-force chaos of being back with England.
It’s loud. It’s familiar. It’s home.
You barely get two steps into the lobby before Georgia sidles up beside you shoulder bumping yours lightly.
"Alright, world traveler?" she says, grinning, tugging your bag out of your hand before you can protest.
You roll your eyes fondly. "Alright, stalker?"
Georgia laughs, slinging your bag over her shoulder like it weighs nothing. "Come on then. Spill. How was it?"
You glance around the lobby buzzing with players dropping bags, greeting each other, shouting across the space and lower your voice instinctively. "It was good," you say, keeping it casual.
Georgia narrows her eyes immediately suspicious. "Good?" she repeats. "That’s it? Good?"
You shrug playing it cool, playing it awful. Georgia bumps you again, harder this time. "You’re a terrible liar."
Before you can open your mouth to come up with something better before you can even blink Beth drops into step on your other side, sunglasses perched on her head, sipping a coffee like she owns the building.
"What’s good?" she asks breezily, looking between you and Georgia.
You freeze. Georgia, traitor that she is, grins way too wide.
"Nothing," you blurt.
Georgia, already revelling in it, bumps your hip again. "Just asking about Barcelona," she says, way too loud, way too innocent.
Beth blinks. Then squints. Then her mouth drops open. "Wait—" she says, half-laughing, half-horrified. "Barcelona?"
You glare at Georgia, but she’s too far gone now, practically vibrating with the joy of it.
Beth rounds on you immediately, wide-eyed. "Hang on," she says, coffee sloshing dangerously as she gestures wildly. "You went to Barcelona—"
Georgia, ever helpful, chimes in "After Alexia went to Munich to see her."
Beth actually staggers, hand clutching her chest dramatically. "Are you kidding me?!"
You bury your face in your hands. Georgia howls with laughter.
Beth recovers just enough to point accusingly at you, grinning so wide she looks like she might combust. "And you didn’t tell us?!"
You groan into your palms. "It’s not—" you start.
"It’s everything," Beth interrupts gleefully.
You peek at her through your fingers cheeks burning, heart pounding, but some part of you laughing too, because it’s Beth and Georgia and they love you and they’re not mad just thrilled for the gossip.
"And she went to Munich," Beth repeats, practically dancing now. "To see you."
"And this one went to Barcelona," Georgia adds, grinning like the Cheshire Cat.
You let your hands fall, laughing helplessly. "Yeah, okay, fine," you mutter. "We’ve... seen each other. A few times."
Beth shrieks, full, delighted shriek earning a few curious looks from the others across the lobby.
"You’re in so much trouble when Leah finds out," she says gleefully, already pulling her phone out like she might text her right now.
You lunge for it half-hearted, laughing too hard to really care. Georgia slings her arm around your shoulders, pulling you into a tight, jostling hug. "We’re just saying," she says, voice sing-song sweet. "If you end up married to the Queen of Barcelona, we expect good seats."
Beth nods solemnly. "Front row. Confetti cannons."
You roll your eyes so hard it hurts but you’re grinning, wide and helpless and full.
⚽️
By the time you make it to the gym for the first session, you’re already regretting everything.
You walk in and before you even hit the first mat, Georgia and Beth are at it again.
Georgia strides ahead dramatically, dropping to one knee right in the middle of the entrance.
You don’t even have time to react.
She grabs Beth’s hand, exaggerated, way too serious, "Bethany Jane Mead, will you do me the honor of running away to Barcelona with me?"
The few girls near the squat racks snap their heads up instantly, like a school of sharks scenting blood.
You freeze hands on your hips, trying desperately not to laugh.
Beth covers her mouth with her free hand, fake-swooning in the most ridiculous way possible.
"Oh, Georgia," she gasps dramatically. "I thought you’d never ask!"
You glare at both of them, fond and furious, and shout without thinking, "Shut up!"
Your voice bounces off the walls, echoing across the gym. Everyone stops. Turns. Looks at you.
Silence, for about three seconds, before Leah, standing by the dumbbells, calls out, "Oi, what’s going on over there?"
Before you can even think of a lie, Beth the absolute traitor straightens up and shouts back, all singsong "Someone’s been keeping secrets!"
The gym erupts, players abandoning warm-ups to crowd closer like it’s feeding time.
Lucy jogs over, eyebrows high. "Secrets?"
Ella Toone, already halfway across the room, shouts "Who’s keeping secrets?!”
Georgia still riding the wave points directly at you, grinning like the cat who got the cream.
You bury your face in your hands, groaning as the teasing grows louder around you. Through your fingers, you hiss, "Georgia, I actually hate you."
But it’s weak. Empty. You don’t mean it. Not even a little. And when you peek out cheeks burning, pulse racing you’re smiling. Grudgingly. Hopelessly. Because for all the noise and jokes and fake proposals, it’s love.
Beth bounces beside you, looping an arm around your shoulders like she’s claiming you.
Georgia is no help — nudging Beth, both of them barely holding in their laughter as you fumble for a way out.
"You gonna tell them?" Georgia sing-songs.
You shake your head violently, cheeks burning. You stay silent. Absolutely silent.
Beth laughs — full, gleeful, bright. "Look at her," she tells the group, nearly doubled over. "She’s gone bright red!"
Georgia nods, clapping you on the back like you’ve just won a medal. "She’s crumbling. Absolutely folding."
More laughter spills across the gym Leah whistling, Lucy shouting "SUS!" at the top of her lungs, Ella Toone chanting,
"Tell us, tell us, tell us!"
You hold firm stubborn and suffering refusing to say anything. But your face is giving you away.
And Beth and Georgia, absolute traitors, are loving every second of it.
You mouth traitors at them as you yank your hood over your head and march toward the treadmill.
Behind you, you can hear Beth shout, grinning, "Not denying it though, is she?!"
The girls howl. And you hiding your face, heart hammering, skin buzzing can’t help the small, helpless smile that creeps over your mouth.
⚽️
You’re finally getting a moment to breathe.
The gym session’s behind you, your legs are heavy, and your tray is loaded with carbs you’re pretending not to be this excited about. You slide into your seat at the end of the long table, exhaling deeply, finally in peace.
You’re mid-way through demolishing a mountain of pasta when Leah and Keira appear across from you sliding into their seats with matching grins that immediately put you on alert.
Leah leans her elbows on the table, chin resting on her hands, eyes way too amused.
Keira just sets her phone down screen-up between them, sipping her drink, looking almost bored but her raised eyebrow gives her away.
You pause fork halfway to your mouth. “…What.”
Leah smiles slowly. Like a shark. “Lovely weather in Barcelona at the weekend, wasn’t it?”
You blink, heat rising in your chest instantly. Keira taps the screen with one finger and you glance down.
There it is. A photo. Blurry, zoomed-in, definitely from someone’s phone — but it’s unmistakably you stepping out of a car outside the gates of the Barcelona football ground.
No caption. No tagged companion. No evidence of anything. But it’s you. And it’s out there. You blink again. Then glance up.
Leah and Keira are both watching you like they’re on the edge of their seats at a theatre show.
You clear your throat. Slowly return to your pasta. “Could be anyone,” you mumble.
Leah nearly chokes on her water. Keira calmly pushes the phone closer toward you. “You’re wearing that exact hoodie,” she says dryly.
You glance down. Yeah. You are. You sigh, deep and dramatic, and shove another bite into your mouth. "Still. Not definitive."
Leah collapses into laughter, head in her hands. “You are so bad at this.”
Keira’s still watching you though not laughing now. Just thinking. Quiet. Then she leans back in her chair and says it, calm and certain, “So. Barca, huh?”
Your stomach flips for a whole different reason. You pause eyes flicking up and she raises her eyebrows slightly, still waiting.
“You know they’ve been after a out-and-out striker. That's a part of your game you can do very well”
You blink. Then realise what she’s saying. What she thinks this is. And you let out a breath that’s somewhere between a laugh and a sigh caught halfway between relief and something like regret. “No comment,” you mutter, shoving more pasta in your mouth.
Leah snorts. Keira smirks. Neither of them suspects Alexia. And you don’t correct them. Not yet. Because let them think it’s contracts and football and clubs. Let them think it’s negotiations.
The photo’s still sitting on Keira’s phone, face-down now on the table, like a loaded weapon no one wants to set off again just yet.
Leah’s still grinning, chewing thoughtfully. Keira leans back in her chair, arms folded, that look on her face like she’s just worked out a puzzle. You’re trying to act unbothered chewing way too slowly, staring far too hard at your food.
Then Georgia and Beth slide into the empty seats beside you, fresh from the food line, laughing at something you thankfully didn’t hear.
They don’t even clock the tension until Keira leans in and says, casually, “You two know anything about Barcelona?”
Beth and Georgia freeze just for a beat. Not long. But you notice. You feel it.
Beth shoots you a look. Georgia smirks.
Then Beth picks up her fork and says cheerfully, like she’s known this moment was coming “What about Barcelona?.”
Georgia sips her drink, eyes wide and way too innocent. “Why would we know anything about Barcelona?”
You whip your head toward them, trying not to glare. “Seriously?”
Beth shrugs, barely holding in her grin.
Keira leans forward again, eyes narrowing.
“So? What is it? Talks? Trial? Something in the works?”
Leah jumps in. “Is she leaving Bayern? Is it for January? Summer move? What’ve you heard?”
Georgia and Beth just... laugh. Loud. Joyful. Noisy. Georgia kicks your shin under the table, not gently.
“She’s gonna kill us later.”
Beth lifts her water bottle in mock toast. “Totally worth it.”
Leah and Keira look at each other. Then at you. Then back at them. But neither Beth nor Georgia offers another word. Just smiles
You sink into your seat, face in your hands, muttering, “Can't do anything without 15 rounds of questions with you lot. I hate you all”
Georgia pats your back. “No you don’t.”
Beth nods. “She loves us.” They clink forks and keep eating like they haven’t just lit a fire under the entire dinner table.
Leah and Keira. Still staring. Still suspicious. But getting nothing else. Playing detective across the table when your phone buzzes in your lap.
You glance down.
Alexia: You forgot to tell me you landed safely.
Your chest tightens instantly guilt and something warmer. You blink, then press your lips together already typing.
But before you can finish the reply, another buzz.
Alexia: I saw the England arrival pics. You looked fine.
Alexia: Actually more than fine. I liked your outfit.
You sit a little straighter, the words like a rush of heat against your skin.
You try not to smile. Fail miserably. Beth catches it immediately “Who’s got you smiling like that?”
You kick her under the table. Light. Helpless. “No one,” you mutter, barely above a whisper.
Georgia hears it anyway. Grins into her drink. You shift the phone lower, out of their eyeline, and type quick.
You: Sorry. Everything was busy the second I got here. It slipped my mind.
That’s all you send.
No flirting. No matching her compliment. Just honest.
You sit there for a beat longer, thumb hovering, wondering if you should’ve said more wondering if she’ll notice what you didn’t say.
Beth leans into your side.
“My guess is we know who. You’re sat here blushing into your pasta, it has to be”
You shove your phone back into your pocket, cheeks on fire. “Can we not,” you mutter.
Beth and Georgia laugh. Keira watches you eyes sharp like she knows something's there, but can't quite pin it down.
And Alexia? Still typing. Your phone stays in your lap, screen dark for a long moment. Too long.
You try to focus on the table Leah still picking at the Barcelona photo, Beth whispering something that makes Georgia nearly spit water across the table but your mind’s already gone quiet.
Then it buzzes again.
You check it quickly, heart in your throat.
Alexia: Don’t worry. I figured it was hectic.
Alexia: Just wanted to know you were okay.
Your chest tightens something warm and slow settling deep between your ribs.
Then, one more message. Shorter. Softer.
Alexia: Can't wait to see you again.
You stare at it not breathing for a second.
Because there it is. No flirting. No games. Just truth. A simple line that cuts through the noise around you like a thread pulling tight between two people on opposite sides of a continent.
You slide your thumb gently across the screen rereading it once, then again. And you don’t reply. Not right away. Not because you don’t want to. Because you want to too much.
You press the phone screen to your leg, hiding your face behind your water glass, and tell yourself to breathe.
Because she misses you. And the worst part is you miss her back. More than you can admit. More than you know how to say.
Beth is laughing, Georgia nudging your knee, Leah still trying to guess what’s going on.
But your thumb is already moving screen tucked low in your lap, head down, body leaning subtly away from the rest of the table.
You: Can't wait to see you again to.
You don’t overthink it. You don’t soften it. You don’t add an emoji to make it easier. You just send it. Plain. Simple. True.
A second later, the message goes blue.
Read. And then the typing bubble appears. Almost immediately. Your pulse stutters.
Alexia: When this camp’s over… can we talk about the next time?
You exhale a sound that’s part relief, part ache.
You type slower now.
You: Yeah. We should.
Alexia: Good.
Alexia: Sooner the better.
You smile one hand still under the table, the other gripping your glass to give it something to do.
"You're so weirdly quiet," Georgia mutters beside you. “You're not gonna eat your pudding?”
You blink, startled back into the present.
Keira leans in, squinting at you. “Why are you grinning like a teenager with a crush?”
You clear your throat. Sit up straighter. “Because,” you say flatly, reaching for your spoon, “my dessert’s better than yours.”
They don’t believe you. Not for a second. But they let it go. Sensing you don't want to talk about it.
⚽️
The hallway’s quiet as you pad down from your room hair up, tee abandoned somewhere upstairs, phone in your hand, screen still lit up from your last message.
You tug at your shorts on your hips, the waistband sitting comfortably snug, sports bra fitting like second skin bare midriff, sun-kissed abs still faintly marked from training.
You don’t really think about it. Not until you push through the doors to the indoor pitch. The lights are lower in here, soft and warm. There’s music playing low, vibey and the far corner’s full of bean bags and snacks, girls half-curled into piles as they lounge post-dinner.
On the pitch, a few are mid-intense badminton rally Ella shrieking with laughter as Lucy dives dramatically and misses.
You step in barefoot, casual, phone still in hand just meaning to slip in, but the moment you appear, the vibe shifts. Not loud. Not dramatic. Just... noticed. Conversations falter. Eyes flick over.
Leah, from her bean bag throne, lets out a low whistle without looking up from her packet of crisps. “Well,” she drawls. “Someone’s feeling herself.”
You roll your eyes too used to it but you do smile. Beth lifts her head from Georgia’s shoulder just long enough to smirk. “She’s been glowing since she got back here,” she says, not even trying to whisper.
Georgia, grinning, just nods and mutters, “Have an interesting weekend?”
You walk over slowly, shaking your head, but not exactly rushing to cover up either. You toss your phone onto a nearby cushion and drop down onto the turf, stretching your legs out, leaning back on your hands.
“Did I miss the invite to Badminton Wimbledon or…?”
Ella jogs past with a racket in hand and a headband on like she’s in the final of her life. “You’re late. We’re already through the group stages,” she shouts, missing her serve by a mile.
You laugh, watching her spin in a circle. Beth shifts over to make space for you on a bean bag, patting the spot beside her. You stay where you are for now comfy, loose, soaking it all in.
The music. The laughter. The energy. You really did love your time on England camp.
You’re still laughing at Ella’s terrible serve when you catch the weird glint in Beth’s eyes. That smirk, the one she does when she’s holding onto something explosive. Georgia’s not helping, she’s biting the inside of her cheek, leaning way too far into her drink like she’s trying not to howl.
You frown. “What?” They don’t answer just exchange a look, a delighted one. Your heart skips, just once. “…What?”
Beth lifts her chin subtle like she’s motioning behind you. “You might want to turn around.”
You turn immediately. You feel it in your spine, in the way your skin tightens across your shoulders, in the way your heart starts thudding despite you being totally still.
That feeling like someone’s watching. Like she’s watching. Your eyes scan the pitch, gaze flicking to the far side and that’s when you see it.
A sea of red training kits, across the pitch on the viewing stands a quiet pocket of the Spanish national team.
Coaches. Staff. Players a few talking, half-watching the chaos of the English group across the floor.
And in the middle of them calm. Still, exactly where she always is. Alexia. She’s not talking. She’s not laughing. She’s slowly turning her head away as if she had been watching and was trying to subtle pretend she wasn’t.
You don’t let your eyes stay on her when you spot a few of her Barcelona teammates watching you watch her, Patri leaned in mumbling what you were probably sure was ‘She’s looking at you’
But your body your posture, your breath, the way your stomach flips before your brain catches up gives you away on just what was going through your brain.
You drop your gaze and scrub a hand down your face like you’re just tired, then reach for your phone, like it’s a shield.
Beth snorts quietly beside you. “Soon as you looked away she looked again”
Georgia grins. “I think someone has a crush on you” she quietly spoke in a sing song voice at you,
You try to keep your voice neutral. “Why are they here?”
Beth shrugs. “If you weren't down here late you would know, Sarina called a meeting.”
Your ears go hot. "No one thought to come get me no?" You turn to glare at her.
Georgia shrugged “Sarina said she'd catch up with you another time”
"Can you not just tell me?"
Gee laughed, "Airport systems have gone down, they're stranded here, the FA said they could come here, so looks like you may be bunking with your new little friend"
You get to your feet with a sigh as they laugh loud and obnoxious, you walk away, "Ay! Less" you hollered, "Want a friend?" you ask as she's digging a ball out of a bag. Less smiles looking to Beth and Gee, "Dumb and Dumber are pissing me off"
"Sure" Alessia gave you her bright smile, "They've been teasing you all day, is something going on?"
You were painfully aware you were in ear shot of the majority of the Spain girls now, "They just think they're funny" You got a smile as you sucked your teeth when Ed Sheeran's Barcelona suddenly began playing, as Beth and Georgia were cry laughing. You looked over your shoulder, "You're not funny" you hollered
You’ve slipped into a rhythm now two-touch with Alessia, passing the ball lightly between you as the chatter from the beanbags fades into background noise.
It helps. The movement. The distraction.
You trap the ball under your foot, flick it up with ease, and Alessia volleys it back. Smooth, easy, familiar.
But your skin still hums. The awareness hasn’t left. Alexia's presence lingers behind you like a shadow not seen, but felt.
You keep your back to the far benches, keep your eyes down, but she’s still there.
Alessia jogs to the side to collect a stray touch, laughing. As she passes the ball back, she says it completely offhand, completely unaware of what it lands on, “She keeps watching you, by the way.”
You freeze not noticeably. Just... enough. You raise your head slowly, “Who?”
Alessia nods toward the benches as she traps the ball. “Alexia. Every time you touch the ball, her head goes with it. It’s actually kinda intense.”
Your mouth goes dry. Alessia doesn’t notice. She shrugs, smirking. You try to keep your expression neutral, cool, casual, you flick the ball up again, letting it bounce off your thigh.
Alessia laughs. “I mean, fair. You’ve got that whole ‘mysterious quiet confidence’ thing going.”
You volley it back, maybe a little too hard. She lets it roll past her and jogs after it. She doesn’t press. Doesn’t guess but she’s not wrong. Alexia is watching and you're not sure you can take much more of it.
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!! it’s 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 Olga’s life. In a normal household, it wasn’t 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.
“¡Mierda! I slept through all my alarms!” (Shit)
Olga, beside her, stirred groggily, still in dreamland. But before Alexia could fully panic, a loud crash echoed from the kitchen.
“JESUS CHRIST!”
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.
“What in God’s name made you put a SPOON into a blender?!” you yelled, wheeling around on Estrella once the fire fizzled out.
“I didn’t mean to!” she shouted back, still not meeting your furious eyes. “It was an accident!”
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.
“Okay,” she began, rubbing her temples. “What. Happened.”
“She wanted a smoothie and told me to do it because she was ‘too tired to function,’” you snapped, still glaring.
“She pushed me out of the way and said I was too dumb to blend fruit,” Estrella snapped right back, standing up now with her arms crossed.
“You put a metal spoon into a blender—”
“I didn’t know it was in there!”
“You didn’t check?!”
And just like that, it devolved into a full-on mimic war.
“‘I’m sooooo serious all the time,’” Estrella mocked, lowering her voice and hunching her shoulders in a perfect (and wildly offensive) imitation of you. “‘I wake up scowling and I eat cereal like it wronged me in another life.’”
“‘Oh look at me,’” you fired back, flailing your arms around dramatically. “‘I get yellow cards for sass and call it performance art. I’m an artist, okay, not a menace.’”
“Shut up!”
“You shut up!”
“Both of you SHUT UP!” Alexia finally roared, voice bouncing off the walls. “Silencio. Ahora.” (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.
“Couch. Now.”
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.
“I want you both to listen carefully,” Olga began, voice calm but absolutely terrifying. “You are not to go near the kitchen again today. Do you hear me?”
You both nodded.
“You 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 don’t set things on fire. ¿Entendido?” (Understood?)
“Yes, ma’am,” Estrella muttered. You grumbled something that vaguely resembled a “yes.”
“Go.”
Estrella skipped off like she’d 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 Olga’s arms with the grace of a dying swan.
“I just want one photo,” she moaned. “One. One where Azulita’s not scowling like she’s at a funeral and Estrella’s not making jazz hands in the background.”
“Good luck with that,” Olga chuckled, stroking her back soothingly.
“They’re impossible.”
“Our girls are… special,” Olga said, trying not to laugh.
Alexia groaned louder. “That’s the problem.”
Olga kissed her head with a grin. “You picked them, cariño.”
“No, I picked one, you brought the other, and somehow they both got your attitude.”
Olga laughed as they both turned to look at the blender wreckage.
“Come on,” she said, grabbing the cleaning supplies. “Let’s try to make the kitchen look like it wasn’t ground zero.”
Meanwhile, in Estrella’s 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.
“I’m going as a referee this year,” she declared proudly.
You stared at her like she had grown three heads. “You’re actually insane.”
“It’s a protest.”
“A protest?”
“Yeah. Against injustice. Like all the cards I got last season. I was targeted,” she said dramatically, holding a hand to her chest. “Like a political prisoner.”
You snorted. “You told the ref she should be banned from the sport and then clapped in her face.”
“She deserved it.”
You rolled your eyes.
Estrella smirked. “What about you? Gonna smile this year? Maybe try not to look like someone just punched your cat?”
You gave her a glare so deadly it could’ve been listed as a weapon. “Say that again and I will hide all your cards before we leave.”
“Try me, stoneface.”
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.
“Ten bucks says they ruin the group photo again,” Alexia muttered.
“Twenty,” Olga grinned.
The drive to the training facility was…tense. Alexia sat in the driver’s 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 she’d developed narcolepsy to get out of fitness testing. This was not a good sign.
“Okay,” Alexia began, her voice tight with the kind of hope only a truly desperate parent has. “Please. I’m begging you both. Just this once. Can we have a normal media day? Please.”
“Define normal,” Estrella said innocently from the back.
“One where no one ends up banned from the press area, no one photobombs every teammate’s headshot, and no one fake-cries on camera for attention.”
“You told me to be authentic,” Estrella shot back with a grin. “Those tears were real. Real artistry.”
“You got into a fake argument with the mascot last year,” Alexia reminded her, voice rising. “It ended with you giving him a yellow card and yelling, ‘Read the rulebook, rat!’”
“He was offside!” Estrella protested. “Mascots should play by the rules too!”
Alexia closed her eyes. Counted to ten. It did nothing.
She turned to you next. “And you. Please don’t scowl in every photo like we’re at a funeral. You’re beautiful. Just smile.”
You huffed, still staring out the window. “I’ll smile when Estrella stops breathing.”
“Oh my God,” Alexia groaned.
“Fair,” Estrella muttered.
“Please. I’m serious. I just want one nice family picture,” Alexia pleaded, eyes darting between the two of you. “One. That’s it. For my desk. For the wall. For my sanity.”
“Fine,” 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.
“I didn’t even park yet!” Alexia yelled after you. “WE TALKED ABOUT EXITING LIKE HUMANS!”
But you were gone. You’d 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.
“…Did you hear that?”
Lucy nodded slowly. “Sounded like someone just got their soul crushed.”
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.
“Are you… okay?” Frido asked gently.
“No,” Alexia mumbled into the steering wheel.
“What happened?” Lucy asked, already smirking.
Alexia sat up and pointed a dramatic finger in the direction you both had disappeared. “They happened.”
“Which one?”
“Both.” Alexia threw her hands up. “Estrella has something hidden in her backpack. I know it. She’s got that face. The ‘I’m planning chaos’ face. And you—” She gestured vaguely in the direction you had stomped off. “—are 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 I’m gonna end up with Estrella dressed up as god knows what and her sister looking like she’s on her way to commit arson.”
There was a beat of silence.
“Did she actually bring a costume?” Lucy asked, trying not to laugh.
“She claims it’s a protest,” Alexia muttered. “Against… being carded too much. I don’t even know anymore.”
Frido smiled sympathetically and patted Alexia’s shoulder. “I’ll get her to smile.”
Lucy grinned and cracked her knuckles. “And I’ll wrangle Estrella.”
“You would do that for me?” Alexia asked, looking up like she’d just seen angels.
“Absolutely,” Frido said. “But I expect baked goods in return.”
“And I want to be in the good Christmas card this year,” Lucy added.
“Done,” Alexia said, already digging into her glove compartment for emergency thank-you snacks. “There’s chocolate in here if you survive.”
Lucy grabbed a mini Snickers. “I’m going in.”
Frido cracked her neck like she was preparing for battle. “Operation: Smile Like You Mean It begins now.”
As they walked off toward the facility, Alexia stayed behind just a moment longer, staring out the windshield.
“They’re lucky they’re cute,” 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 “foul!” voice, while you sat next to a very confused makeup artist silently radiating “do not touch me” energy.
This was going to be a long day.
“Leave me alone, Frido.”
Frido gave you a look. Not a mad look. Not a disappointed look. No, it was worse. It was her “I’m gonna smile at you until you cave” look. The one that had defeated many before you. But you were made of stronger stuff. Hardened by teenage angst, Estrella’s nonsense, and the agony of being dragged to media day against your will.
“I need a smile, kärlek. Captain’s orders,” Frido said, sitting down beside you as the camera crew finished setting up. (Love)
“Leave me alone,” you repeated, staring straight ahead like a statue in witness protection.
“Don’t worry,” the media manager chirped. “We’re just gonna play a fun little game of ‘Who’s Most Likely To?’ Should be quick, easy, and full of laughs!”
Frido beamed. You blinked. Slowly.
“Let’s start with an easy one,” the interviewer said, chipper as ever. “Who’s most likely to oversleep and miss training?”
“Estrella,” you and Frido said at the same time.
“Because she sets seven alarms and sleeps through all of them,” you added flatly.
Frido nodded. “It’s like a symphony of chaos. Honestly impressive.”
“Not when she drags me down with her.”
The interviewer laughed nervously. “Okay! Next one… Who’s most likely to cry during a sad movie?”
“Frido,” you answered immediately.
Frido gasped, clutching her chest. “What? I am not—”
“You cried when the dog in that commercial found his way home.”
“That dog had resilience!”
You stared at her, deadpan. “It was a detergent commercial.”
“HE SMELLED HIS FAMILY.”
The interviewer was losing it. “Okay, next, who’s most likely to get in trouble on media day?”
There was a beat. Both of you said, “Estrella.”
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 “WHEEEEE!”
Your soul left your body. Your expression didn’t change, but your eyes said, ‘I am about to commit a crime on camera.’
You stood up, Estrella clinging to your back like a koala, and in one clean motion, threw her off.
“Unhand me, chaos demon,” 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.
“Get OFF!” you yelled, grabbing Estrella in a headlock. “You smell like glitter glue and Red Bull!”
“You love it here!” 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.
“Why is she always on her back?!” 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. “I got it,” you muttered, smoothing your slick back with a grumble. “I’m already emotionally injured.”
Estrella was still kicking in Lucy’s arms like a rabid possum. “I had a whole monologue prepared!”
“No,” Lucy said, deadpan. “No monologues.”
“No more caffeine,” Frido added. “And no more sneaking onto interviews!”
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.
“Me when my sibling breathes.”
“She’s fighting for her life.”
“Barça should make a reality show of just these two.”
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.
“Thank you all for coming to this special Barcelona Femení media panel,” the moderator began, chipper like they hadn’t just walked into a lion’s den. “Let’s start with a fun one, who on the team brings the best vibes to training?”
Frido leaned into her mic, smiling softly. “I think Patri always brings calm, but also a lot of joy. And Vicky too, she’s young, but she lights up the room.”
Lucy nodded. “Agreed. And obviously, Jana. She’s hilarious even when she doesn’t try to be.”
Estrella threw her hand up like she was in class. “I bring vibes too. Not good ones, but definitely powerful ones.”
The room chuckled. You stared at her, unimpressed.
“My vibes,” she added, leaning forward, “are disruptive. Unfiltered. Deliciously unpredictable.”
Frido let out a nervous laugh. “Yes, Estrella certainly… brings something.”
The moderator pivoted quickly. “Let’s move on. What’s one personal goal you’ve set for the second half of the season?”
“Win the Champions League,” Frido said confidently.
“Stay healthy and keep building our defensive chemistry,” Lucy followed.
Estrella leaned back in her chair. “I would like to… not get carded for saying someone’s haircut looks like a crime.”
You slowly turned your head to her. Glared.
She burst out laughing.
The moderator, barely keeping it together, turned to you. “And you?”
You leaned into the mic, monotone. “Stay out of trouble.”
Estrella wheezed.
You didn’t blink. Just turned to her again with the slow, soul-piercing glare of an older sibling who’s so over this.
“Okay,” the moderator said, definitely enjoying the growing tension, “If you weren’t footballers, what do you think you’d be doing?”
Frido thought for a second, “I’d probably still be in something athletic. Maybe coaching or sports science.”
Lucy nodded. “I always liked kids, so maybe something in education.”
“I’d be a DJ-slash-Instagram-meme-page admin.” Estrella answered, getting scattered laughs.
You blinked. “So…unemployed.”
She slapped the table, laughing so loud a camera wobbled. “YOU’RE JEALOUS.”
You turned to her fully now. “Jealous of what? Your TikTok addiction or your suspension record?”
“Those cards were political!”
“No, they were because you told a ref, ‘Your eyebrows are uneven and so is your judgment.’”
“It was accurate!”
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 they’d rehearsed this before.
“Girls,” Frido said, her voice cutting through the chaos like a disappointed kindergarten teacher. “Can we not fight in front of fifty journalists?”
You and Estrella froze like you were being told off by your mom in public.
Simultaneously, you both muttered, “She started it.”
“I literally didn’t,” Estrella hissed.
Frido gave you both the look— the one that promised consequences if you didn’t 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 “oppression.”
The moderator looked like they wanted to kiss Frido’s feet for regaining control.
“Well then! Next question… which of your teammates would survive a zombie apocalypse?”
Frido blinked, considering. “Caro.”
Lucy nodded. “Definitely Caro. She’d build a bunker.”
You leaned in. “I’d feed Estrella to the zombies.”
Estrella, without missing a beat, “I’d taste delicious.”
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.
“Okay. Listen up.”
Estrella blinked, “Yes, coach.”
Frido narrowed her eyes. “Don’t test me.”
Lucy stepped in, folding her arms. “We need to talk about what this day means. To Alexia.”
That made Estrella pause. You looked up briefly, suspicious.
“She’s been planning this media day for months,” Frido said, softening a bit. “You two are all she talks about. She’s been telling everyone how good these pictures are going to be. She’s picked out spots in the house. She has frames ready.”
“She has a Pinterest board,” Lucy added grimly. “A Pinterest board, guys.”
“She rehearsed her smile,” Frido said. “In the mirror.”
“She’s printed reference poses!” Lucy said, scandalized.
Estrella’s mouth parted slightly. “Wait, for real?”
Frido nodded solemnly. “And she said and I quote: ‘These are going to be the kind of pictures that make me feel like my little family is complete.’”
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, “What’s happening?”
Frido whispered back, “I don’t know. Should we stop them?”
“Are they communicating telepathically?”
“What if they’re plotting our demise?”
“Then it was a good run.”
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, “Fine. For Alexia.”
Estrella adjusted her oversized sunglasses. “Let’s go take these damn pictures.”
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. “Let’s get this over with.”
Estrella patted her shoulder. “Let’s make history, Mami.”
Alexia looked behind them, expecting Frido and Lucy to jump out and yell ‘Surprise! They’re AI clones!’ 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.
“Alright, let’s start!” he said.
You didn’t groan. Estrella didn’t 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 Alexia’s 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.
“You guys…” she said softly. “You actually…”
“Yeah, yeah,” Estrella said, waving her off, “don’t get emotional. That’s your job.”
You rolled your eyes. “This better get me out of the next five interviews.”
Alexia was already pulling you both into a hug. “I love you guys.”
Estrella mumbled, “Whatever.”
But she didn’t pull away.
Two weeks later, the framed photo sat proudly above the fireplace in Alexia’s house, perfectly centered, with the caption “My Girls” etched underneath.
Another copy hung right at the entrance of Eli’s 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. “Look at them. Look at my beautiful, normal family.”
Meanwhile, you and Estrella walked by it every day like you didn’t plan the whole thing telepathically.
“Should we tell her?” Estrella once whispered.
You deadpanned, “Let her believe in miracles.”
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 “crop your face out or else.”
Because no matter what, that picture existed. And to her, it was perfect.
Ingrid Engen x Mapi Leon x DaughterMila
Twelve-year-old Mila practically floats into the house, her cheeks pink and her eyes glowing in a way that only someone experiencing their first crush can pull off. She toes off her shoes a little too quickly, avoids eye contact, and mutters something about homework before darting down the hallway and into her room.
Ingrid, who had been chopping vegetables in the kitchen, arches a brow. She leans casually on the counter, watching the hallway like a hawk.
“She’s up to something,” she says, voice low.
Mapi looks up from her notebook, where she's been sketching a new tattoo design. She blinks, pen hovering mid-stroke. “What do you mean?”
Ingrid gestures vaguely after their daughter. “You didn’t see that? The blush? The lightning-fast retreat? That’s guilty behavior.”
Mapi shrugs. “Maybe she’s actually doing homework for once.”
Ingrid isn’t convinced. She narrows her eyes. “I’m watching her.”
---
Over the next few weeks, Ingrid’s suspicion grows with every small change. Mila hums when brushing her hair. She checks her phone more often. She starts spending hours at the park “just hanging out,” and she even starts picking out her clothes with actual effort.
Eventually, Mapi notices it too.
“She smiled at her phone,” Mapi whispers one evening, eyes wide. “That wasn't a meme smile. That was something different.”
They try asking her directly, one evening over dinner. Mila stabs at her mashed potatoes like they offended her and says, “Nothing’s going on. Everything’s normal.” She doesn’t look up once.
So, like any good parents, they do the obvious: they send in the reinforcements.
Alexia Putellas, football legend and favorite aunt, has a standing monthly cafe date with Mila. Mila doesn’t usually mind the questions about school or football or whether she’s been practicing her guitar. But this time, Alexia gives her that knowing look and goes straight in:
“All right, Mila. What’s going on?”
Mila hesitates. Her spoon stirs her hot chocolate in endless circles.
Alexia doesn’t look away.
Finally, Mila exhales and mumbles, “I like someone from my class.”
Alexia lights up with relief. “Oh, thank God. I thought you were gonna say you failed math or joined a cult.”
Mila laughs, then slouches. “I didn’t tell Mama and Mami.”
“Why not?”
“Mama would be chill. But Mami? She’d go into full football-defender mode. Asking a million questions. Staring them down. Maybe pull out that look she used on referees when they made a bad call.”
Alexia chuckles knowingly. “True. But Mila, they’re just worried. They love you. And you know what? You should tell them. They’ll understand. Especially if you do it before Mapi starts making PowerPoint presentations on what ‘normal teenage behavior’ looks like.”
Mila snorts. “Okay. Yeah. I’ll talk to them.”
That evening, Mila walks into the living room, where Ingrid and Mapi are half-watching a movie. She stands in front of them, hands twisting nervously.
“Can I talk to you?”
Ingrid immediately pauses the movie and pats the space between them. Mila curls up between her moms, and for a moment it’s quiet.
“I’ve been acting different. And I wanna tell you why,” Mila begins. “I… like someone from my class. And we’ve been spending time together. Just us two. It’s been really nice. I’m just… happy.”
Ingrid breaks into a soft smile and pulls her into a hug. “That’s wonderful, Mila. I’m so happy for you.”
Mila looks toward Mapi, who’s staring ahead, unmoving. Her face is unreadable.
“Mami?”
Mapi blinks. Her eyes are glossy.
“You okay?”
Mapi clears her throat. “Yeah, yeah, it’s just—” Her voice wavers. “It’s happening so fast. Yesterday you were watching cartoons and dressing Bagheera in princess dresses and now you’re… having your first crush?” She sniffles, wiping a tear away. “Soon you’ll be off to college. Then marrying someone. And I’ll only see you at Christmas.”
Mila wraps her arms around her. “I’ll always be your little girl, Mami.”
Mapi kisses the top of her head and holds her close.
As Mila gets up to go back to her room, Mapi calls after her, “I want to meet the boy, you hear me? Just so I can properly scare him.”
Mila pauses, turns around with a smirk, and raises a brow. “Who said anything about a boy?”
With a wink, she vanishes down the hall.
Mapi stares, processing. “Wait. No boy?”
Ingrid sees the wheels turning before Mapi even speaks. A slow, satisfied grin spreads across Mapi’s face.
“No boy,” she repeats, almost dreamily. “Of course not. She grew up surrounded by women’s football and queer aunts and rainbow everything. Why would she like boys?”
Ingrid bursts into laughter and pulls her wife into her arms.
“She’s still growing up,” Ingrid murmurs, kissing Mapi’s cheek.
“Yeah,” Mapi sighs. “But at least I don’t have to worry about a hormone-fueled teenage boy.”
They settle back into the couch, movie forgotten, their hearts full—equal parts joy, nostalgia, and a whole lot of love.
🥰🥰🥰
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 — 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. It’s 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 doesn’t need to. The brush of her fingers against the small of your back as she passes, feather-light but deliberate.
It's different now, there’s no more careful distance, no more pretending it’s platonic.
She's more tactile. Casual, but not. Her hand lingers at your waist when you’re slicing vegetables, her arm grazes yours as she leans in to taste whatever you’re cooking even though you know she doesn’t 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 “Mmm.”
“You’re annoying,” you murmur, bumping her hip with yours.
“I’m charming,” 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. “You’re distracting.”
“That’s not a no,” she murmurs, voice lower now, closer, her breath warm near your ear.
You shoot her a look, but there’s 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 it’s the most natural thing in the world, like you didn’t have your hands all over her just this morning. Like you haven’t 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. “Thanks for lunch,” she says, soft, but there’s weight to it, not just for the food, for everything.
You don’t answer right away. You don’t 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.
⚽️
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.
“I brought everything,” he declares proudly, dropping the bag with a dramatic huff in the middle of Alexia’s living room. “Because Coco said we’d play.”
You can’t 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.
“You came prepared, huh?” you tease, ruffling his hair. “What’s in there? The whole toy store?”
He beams. “Almost. Mami said I could pick my best ones.”
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 doesn’t 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, it’s a different story.
The toys suddenly don’t seem that interesting, he edges subtly closer to you, almost hiding behind your leg, his hand curling into your shorts.
You soften instantly. “Hey, buddy,” you say gently, crouching down again to his level. “That’s Teddy. He looks big, huh?”
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.
“Teddy’s the biggest softie you’ll ever meet,” you explain. “Loves belly rubs more than anything. He’s basically a giant pillow that breathes.”
Mateo’s brows furrow, suspicious, but curious.
“You know what?” you add, lowering your voice like it’s a secret. “He’s actually a little scared of new people too, but when he sees someone is kind, he relaxes. Like magic.”
That gets you a thoughtful look, you extend your hand toward Teddy, giving him the signal to stay put, and gesture to Mateo.
“Wanna give it a try? You don’t have to touch him. You can just say hi from here.”
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, “Hi, Teddy.”
Teddy’s tail wags a little faster, Mateo glances at you, and you grin. “See? He likes you already.”
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 Teddy’s fur. Teddy, in true golden retriever fashion, responds with a slow, happy thump of his tail and a lazy lean forward, until Mateo’s fingers are buried in the soft fur behind his ears.
A giggle bursts out of Mateo before he can stop it. “Soft,” he says, amazed.
You glance up to see Alexia watching from the sofa, her mouth tugged into a smile that’s softer than you’re used to seeing. Something warm settles in your chest. “Look at you, already making best friends,” you murmur, giving Mateo’s shoulder a gentle squeeze.
He looks up at you, beaming. “I like him” And with that, the toys come back into play, Teddy now firmly accepted as part of the gang.
⚽️
Alexia’s 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 Mateo’s tiny giggles bubbling over, joined by yours loud, can’t-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 can’t help but get dragged under.
Alexia rounds the corner, towel still in hand, brows raised. “What is going on?” she asks, voice amused, eyes narrowing suspiciously.
You’re 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 you’re 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 he’s still laughing. He tries to explain, gets out one garbled word “Rawr” before dissolving again into helpless giggles, flopping dramatically against your side like it’s too much.
Alexia’s 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.
“Oh my god,” Alexia mutters, exasperated but smiling now, shaking her head as she leans against the doorway, watching the ridiculousness unfold. “I leave the room for two minutes…”
You’re 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.
“Mateo’s got jokes,” you say, voice still shaky from laughing. “And sound effects. Very realistic.”
Mateo immediately presses a finger to his lips, eyes gleaming with mischief. “Secret joke,” he whispers loudly. “Only for Coco.”
Alexia just watches you, and even as she rolls her eyes, her lips curve into that soft, almost fond smile that’s becoming dangerously familiar now. “You’re encouraging him,” she accuses, though there’s no heat behind it.
“Absolutely,” 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 there’s something in her gaze that says more than she’ll 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.
You’re 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. He’s explaining the intricacies of some very serious dinosaur alliance when you catch the sound of hushed voices drifting in from the kitchen.
Irene’s voice is unmistakable. Light. Probing. “So… how long are we pretending this is just ‘friendly’ hospitality, Ale?”
There’s a pause. The clink of dishes. The soft scrape of a knife against a chopping board. Alexia’s reply comes slower, careful. “What do you mean?”
Irene’s wife snorts. “Don’t play dumb. You’ve been hovering around like a golden retriever yourself today. I thought Teddy was the dog, not you.”
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.
“I’m being a good host,” Alexia says, far too innocent, but you can hear the smile in her voice. “I'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?”
“You don’t get flustered when other houseguests walk into the room,” Irene points out, dry as ever. “Or touch your back. Or breathe the same air.”
There’s a brief beat of silence. You can imagine Alexia’s expression, that carefully schooled face, the little purse of her lips when she’s caught out but refuses to admit it. “I like her,” she says finally. Quiet, but sure.
Mateo’s still chattering away, showing you how to properly play with an action figure dinosaur, but your attention flickers again when Irene’s wife softly adds, “Good, because she’s good for you, Ale. You’re different with her.”
“I know,” Alexia admits, and there’s 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. “Coco, you’re not listening,” he scolds, tapping your cheek with his little finger. “You have to focus.”
You smile down at him, ruffling his hair. “Sorry, boss. I’m back. Let’s save the world.” But as you dive back into his toy universe, the knowledge hums quietly beneath your skin.
“Okay, Ale. Serious question,” she says, tone deceptively light. “Why are you being so secretive? You’re not exactly subtle, you know.”
“I’m not being secretive,” Alexia mutters, too defensive to be convincing.
“You are,” Irene’s wife chimes in, “But it’s cute. In a frustrating, emotionally repressed way.”
Alexia exhales, setting down the knife, her hands braced against the counter. There’s a moment where she looks down, gathering herself, and then she shrugs casual, but her voice is quieter when she speaks, “I was waiting to see if I could really trust her.”
That stops you. You’re still, so still, even as Mateo launches his toys into some epic battle beside you. Irene’s smile softens, but she doesn’t let her off the hook. “Because…?”
Alexia’s fingers drum lightly on the counter. “Because she’s heard things. Things I’ve told her. Things I haven’t told many people. Things she could’ve easily… leaked. Or twisted.” She pauses, glancing up for a breath before dropping her gaze again. “But she didn’t. She hasn’t.”
There’s a vulnerability in her tone now, barely concealed, like this truth costs her something to say aloud.
“I think she likes me for me,” she admits, voice small. “Not for the name. Not for what comes along with it.”
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 she’s outright said it or not, but mostly sadness. That heavy ache for her. For the history packed into those words. For the wrong people she’s trusted before, the scars she’s clearly still carrying.
“I get it,” Irene says softly, after a beat. “But you know you don’t always have to keep it from your friends, right?”
As you quietly gather Mateo’s toys into a little pile, pretending you aren’t listening, you feel her words settle in your chest, heavy and real.
⚽️
The clink of cutlery and soft murmur of conversation fills the dining room. It’s an easy atmosphere, laughter lingering from earlier, wine being slowly sipped. You’re sitting next to Alexia, who’s 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 it’s just another side dish. “So… what actually happened with your coach? You two seemed close. But now,” she shrugs lightly, “it’s quite obviously tense.”
The table quiets just a fraction. Not awkward but attentive. Alexia’s 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. “I slept with her daughter,” you say simply, stabbing a piece of roasted pepper. “And then I left in the middle of the night.”
Lucia’s brows lift, but she doesn’t look surprised. Irene huffs a quiet laugh into her glass. “It wasn’t… casual, at least not for me. I thought we were. I don’t know. Starting something I guess.” 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. “But when she was asleep, her phone lit up. Group chat.” You let that sink in. “She’d texted them. Bragging. That she’d ‘ticked me off the list.’ Her words, not mine.”
Alexia’s head turns sharply towards you, her lips parting slightly, but she says nothing.
“I couldn’t stay after that. Not even until morning. Felt like a bloody idiot.” You pop the bite of pepper in your mouth, chewing as if the bitterness wasn’t lingering elsewhere.
Irene exhales slowly. “That’s rough.”
You shrug like it’s no big deal, even though you know it was. Still is, sometimes. “I guess I needed to learn that lesson once, right?” You flash a smile, light but not quite reaching your eyes. “Not everyone wants you for the right reasons.”
The words hang there. You don’t need to look to know Alexia’s gaze is on you. Lucia nods, but her eyes are softer now. “Still, that says more about her than it does about you.”
There’s a murmur of agreement around the table. You feel Alexia’s hand brush yours again under the table, this time her pinky hooking around yours for a second longer than necessary. It’s small but it’s loud in its own way.
⚽️
Later in the evening, while the grown-ups are back to clearing dishes and sharing stories over a bottle of wine, Mateo’s settled himself beside you on the living room rug again. He’s 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.
“Spinosaurus is bigger,” he insists, eyes wide. “But T-Rex has stronger teeth.”
You nod sagely. “You know, my dad would love this debate.”
Mateo’s head snaps up so fast it’s a miracle he doesn’t get whiplash. “Why? Does he like dinosaurs too?”
You grin, leaning back on your hands. “He doesn’t just like them. He’s a paleontologist. That’s his job. Studying dinosaurs. Digging up fossils.”
Mateo’s mouth falls open. A tiny, perfect what?! hanging in the air.
“No way.” He squints at you, like you might be pulling his leg. “That’s a real job?”
You chuckle. “It is. He travels all over to dig sites. Has a massive collection of bones at home. Real ones. Not toys.”
Mateo looks absolutely floored. He drops his dinosaurs into your lap, completely betrayed by his plastic versions now. “That’s so cool,” he breathes, eyes wide as dinner plates. “Does he have a T-Rex?”
“Not a full one,” you say, playing along, “but he worked on a dig in Montana where they found parts of one. Big teeth. He showed me when I was little.”
Mateo’s bouncing now, practically vibrating with excitement. “That’s the coolest dad job ever. Way cooler than my Mama's spreadsheets.”
You can’t help but laugh at that, ruffling his hair. “Don’t tell her you said that.”
He leans in conspiratorially. “I won’t if you show me a real dinosaur bone one day.”
“Deal.”
From across the room, you catch Alexia watching you, arms crossed, leaning against the doorframe. There’s 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. That’s when Alexia’s suddenly there, moving in beside you like it’s nothing. Like it’s everything. “Hey,” she says softly, voice pitched for just the two of you.
You glance sideways, and she’s 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.
“I’ve been thinking about what you said,” she admits, cutting straight to it. “About your coach’s daughter. The text you saw.”
You shrug, trying for nonchalant, but it lands closer to guarded. “Old story now.”
“Maybe,” she says. “But it explains a lot.”
You glance at her, brows ticking up. “Oh yeah? Like what?”
A corner of her mouth lifts, but there’s no teasing in it. Just that same softness from earlier. “Like why you look at people sideways when they get too nice. Why you act like you’re always waiting for the punchline.”
You go still, the truth of her words striking deep.
“And why trust isn’t something you give easy,” she finishes, voice low.
You huff a breath, looking down at your glass, swirling it like you’ve got something important in there. “Yeah, well. Can’t all have the pick of everyone, can we?”
It’s sharper than you mean. A defense mechanism. But Alexia doesn’t flinch. “No,” she agrees quietly. “But we both know what it feels like when people want you for the wrong reasons.”
That pulls your gaze back to her and you see it, see her, not the superstar, not the badge. Just a woman who’s been burned, same as you. “I heard what you said to Irene,” you admit, voice soft now. “About testing me. About needing to be sure.”
A flicker of guilt crosses her face, but she holds your gaze. “I’m not proud of that,” she says. “But I needed to know if you were here for me. Or for…” she gestures vaguely, “everything else.”
“And now?” you ask, more curious than confrontational.
Alexia’s lips press together, thoughtful, before she steps just a fraction closer. “Now I think you’re the most patient person I’ve met,” she murmurs. “And I’m starting to feel like the idiot for not making a move sooner.”
Your breath catches, heart hammering louder than it should. “I told you,” you say quietly, “patience is a virtue.”
Her smile turns warmer. “You’re too good at this game.”
“Not a game, Alexia.” You let that sit between you.
⚽️
The house is quiet again. The dishes are done, Mateo’s 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 isn’t 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 haven’t. You chase her for half a second when she pulls back.
Her eyes stay closed for a moment longer, like she’s memorising the way this feels. And when they open, she’s 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.
“You were kissing her,” he announces accusingly, pointing a stubby finger at Alexia.
Alexia’s 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. “She’s my friend,” he tells Alexia, firm and scandalised. “You’re not allowed to kiss her.”
Alexia’s mouth opens, but no sound comes out. She looks at you for help.
“Mateo,” you say, still trying to catch your laughter before it comes out, “you kissed me on the cheek six times earlier and told me we were the best of friends”
“That’s different!” he says with all the righteous fury of a three year old. “We had a deal!”
Alexia clears her throat, trying very hard not to laugh. “I didn’t realise I was in competition with a dinosaur prince.”
“You are!” 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, “He might be harder to win over than Irene.”
Alexia mutters, “Apparently.”
Mateo squints up at her. “I’m watching you.”
Alexia grins now, accepting the challenge. “I’m very scary.”
He doesn’t look convinced. You’re not sure you’ve 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.
“You can stay,” he tells her finally, like a king issuing a decree. “But no more kissing.”
You and Alexia share a look over the top of his head her eyes warm, yours laughing.
“No more kissing,” 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.
⚽️
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.
“Do you really like Auntie Ale?” he asks quietly, voice small in the hush of the dim room.
You blink, heart tugged. Then smile gently. “Yeah, Mateo. I like her very much.”
He nods slowly, as if this confirms something important, and snuggles deeper into the pillow. “Can she come tuck me in too?”
You brush your hand through his hair. “I’ll go get her.”
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.
“He asked for you,” you say softly.
Alexia arches a brow. “Is he okay?”
You nod. “He just wants you to come tuck him in.”
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 Mateo’s claimed room, drawn by the soft murmur of their voices.
“Are you comfy now?” Alexia asks gently, her voice like velvet in the quiet.
“Uh-huh.” A pause, then, Mateo says very seriously, “You can make her your girlfriend now.”
Alexia is clearly caught off-guard. “What?”
Mateo yawns. “Coco. You can make her your girlfriend.”
Alexia’s voice is light, but there’s something breathless underneath it. “Why do you say that, Mateo?”
He shifts under the covers, half-asleep but earnest. “Because she passed my tests,” he mumbles. “She’s nice and she played with me and she made you smile a lot.” Another pause. You can almost hear Alexia blinking, “She told me she really likes you too,” Mateo adds, like it’s a secret he’s been holding in all day.
Silence and then Alexia’s voice, barely audible: “She did?”
Mateo hums, already sinking back into sleep. “Mhm. She said it when I asked.”
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: “Okay. Thanks, Mateo.”
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.
You’ve got your back to her, one hand braced on the windowsill, the other holding your phone to your ear. You don’t see her, don’t know she’s there and so you speak freely.
“No, I get it. I know it changes things.” 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. “Look, I didn’t want anyone to lose their job. That was never what this was about.”
Another beat. You shift your weight, shoulders tense.
“I’ve made a decision. There’s no going back now. It was the hardest decision I’ve ever had to make, leaving like that especially under those circumstances but I meant what I said, I can't play there now.”
Alexia stays where she is, quiet as a ghost.
“I’m not staying, no matter who they bring in next what assurances they give me. I know it changes the dynamic, but I’ve already committed to what’s next. I owe it to myself and to them to follow through on that.” There’s a long pause where whoever’s on the other end replying. You nod silently, then say quietly, “Tell them I said thank you. For everything.”
Another pause.
“Yeah. I’m okay. I will be.”
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, Alexia’s in the doorway now, arms crossed, leaning against the frame. Her expression is unreadable, soft and still. You blink, startled. “How long?”
“Long enough,” she says gently.
You hesitate, the air thick with unspoken things. “I didn’t mean for you to hear that,” you say finally.
“I know,” she replies.
“I made my choice,” you say, more quietly now. “I had to. Even if things… changed after.”
She pushes off the frame and crosses the room slowly, her gaze never leaving yours. When she stops in front of you, she’s close not touching, but closer than she needs to be. “What happened?”
“My head coach got let go this morning.”
Alexia’s brow lifts, a flicker of surprise in her expression. “Seriously?”
You nod. “The club’s already promoted the assistant. He’s taking over.”
Alexia takes a step further into the room. “You okay?”
You shrug, somewhere between relief and conflict. “It’s… weird. She was part of the reason I left, but not the only reason.”
Alexia watches you for a moment, reading you like she always does, calm, quiet, patient. “Does it change anything?” she asks.
You shake your head slowly. “No. I told them it doesn’t. I’ve already made my decision, and I’m following through on it.”
There’s a flicker of something in her eyes curiosity, and something deeper. “What did you decide?” she asks softly.
You meet her gaze, steady now. "I signed with Barca yesterday before I left"
Alexia’s eyes widen just slightly a blink, a twitch of her mouth like she’s caught between trying to stay composed and wanting to beam. She shifts her weight onto one foot, then crosses her arms tighter like she’s trying to keep the emotion from spilling over.
“You… you already signed?” she says, voice a little higher, quieter than usual.
You nod, watching her. “Yesterday, right before I left. We made it official.”
A smile tugs at the corners of her lips, and she tries to keep it subtle, but it’s hopeless. Her dimples betray her before her mouth does, and her eyes go bright even as she dips her head, suddenly shy. “I didn’t think I’d be nervous hearing that,” she mutters, half to herself, half to you.
You take a step closer, bumping her gently with your shoulder. “You’re blushing.”
“I’m not blushing,” she says quickly, flustered now, laughing a little.
“You kind of are,” you tease, grinning.
She rolls her eyes, cheeks pink anyway, but she can’t stop smiling. “It’s just… after everything. I know how much this decision meant to you, and I didn’t want to be part of the pressure.”
“You weren’t,” you say, and you mean it.
Alexia looks up at you, the shyness still soft around her eyes, but there’s something else there now something steadier, warmer. “I don’t really know what to say,” she admits.
You shrug. “You could say congratulations. Or. Just an idea, maybe finish what we started last night”
That pulls a real laugh from her, quiet and fond. “That is very good idea”
“Well, then,” you say, as she begins reaching out to curl her fingers gently in your shirt, “I just gave you a pretty good reason to kiss me.”
Alexia’s fingers twist gently into the fabric of your shirt, and there’s 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 there’s no space left, your bodies pressed together like they’ve 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.
There’s 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. “You sure you don’t want to go back to the guest room?”
You raise an eyebrow, leaning in again. “Not even a little bit.”
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.
⚽️
It starts with Alexia as she casually tosses herself over with a sigh and a stretch, taking up the middle of the mattress like it’s instinct.
You raise an eyebrow, amused. “Comfortable?”
She shrugs, already turned onto her side. “Just getting settled.”
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. “Ale.”
“Si?” she says, too innocent, gaze fixed stubbornly on the wall.
“You’re trying really hard not to ask me to cuddle you.”
Her voice is muffled in the pillow. “I’m not trying, I’m succeeding.”
“Oh yeah?”
“I’m just... lying like this because it’s more comfortable. Nothing to do with you.”
"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, “Happy now” 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 that’s entirely undermined by the way she nudges herself closer, tucking herself firmly into your space. “Si,” she mumbles. “But don’t get cocky about it.”
You smile into her hair. “No promises.”
A quiet beat, then she adds, voice barely above a whisper, “When do you have to go back to Germany?”
You exhale slowly, letting your nose brush gently against the back of her neck before answering. “Day after tomorrow,” you murmur. “Got the last game of the season and need to pack up my things. Say goodbye. Sort out all the boring grown-up stuff.”
Alexia nods, silent for a moment. Then, quieter: “You okay with going back?”
You think about it honestly. The flat that doesn’t feel like home anymore. The training ground that feels like a chapter that’s already ended.
“Yeah,” you say finally. “It’ll be weird, I think. Bittersweet. But I’m ready to close that door.”
“Do you think… you’ll get to play the last game before the break?”
You’re quite a second, thinking. “I hope so. They haven’t said anything official yet, but I’m fit. If they want to show I’m still part of the squad, even just off the bench... maybe. Get to say bye properly”
Alexia nods slowly. “Would that be weird for you? Playing again, after everything?”
You breathe in, then out. “A little, yeah. But it also feels right. To go out properly, not just... vanish. I’d like that.”
She hums, the sound thoughtful. “I’ll keep an eye on the match. Even if it’s just a few minutes, I want to see you play there one more time.”
YES!!! Love it 🩵
pairings: alexia putellas x teen!reader, olga rios x teen!reader
summary: school is still… rough, so alexia finds a solution
warnings: school fight
notes: i am genuinely loving writing for azulita
Don’t get it wrong. you didn’t hate Barcelona. It was a beautiful city, full of life, history, and football. The architecture was stunning, the beaches were nice, and the food, objectively, was good. But nothing— nothing could ever compare to LA.
LA had everything for you. Your friends, your school, your culture. You knew every street, every corner store, every mural that decorated the sides of buildings. The people in your neighborhood weren’t just strangers, you knew them, and they knew you. You had history with them. Mr. García, who owned the corner store, always had something for you when you stopped by, chips, a drink, a free snack, as long as you swept up the front of his store. Mrs. Alvarez, the seamstress down the block, had been patching up your old clothes for years because you couldn’t afford new ones. The local grocery store let you stock the juice shelves in exchange for a small bag of groceries. The paletero man that always made sure your favorite paleta was in stock People took care of each other in your LA. It was unspoken, but it was understood.
Barcelona had its own community, its own culture, its own way of life. But it wasn’t yours. It didn’t have your people. It didn’t have the same music blasting from car windows, the smell of carne asada grilling on the sidewalk, or the summer block parties that lasted until sunrise where you danced bachata til your feet hurt. It didn’t have the sound of Spanish and English blending together in a way that felt like home. It wasn’t the streets you grew up on. It wasn’t the familiar faces who had watched you grow. It wasn’t the city that had shaped you. It wasn’t home.
And the culture shock? It hit hard.
The Spanish spoken in Barcelona wasn’t even the same as what you grew up with. You could understand it, sure, but sometimes, the slang threw you off completely. The food was different, too—no more corner taco stands or elote vendors pushing carts down the street. No more bodegas where you could grab a pack of Hot Cheetos and a can of Arizona for a dollar fifty. And the people? They didn’t move like LA people did. Back home, you walked with a purpose, always aware of your surroundings. Here, people strolled leisurely down the sidewalk like they had nowhere to be, like they had never had to be in a rush a day in their lives.
But the biggest difference? The way you carried yourself. In LA, you had to be on guard. Always. You had to be sharp, ready, because life had never given you the luxury of relaxing. You were always prepared for something to go wrong, because it always did. Here, though, everything was so… safe. People left their doors unlocked. Kids walked home alone at night. You saw people with their phones out, not even looking over their shoulders. It made you uneasy. You didn’t know how to exist in a place where you weren’t constantly waiting for the other shoe to drop.
Olga just could not get it. She didn’t get why you always seemed tense, why you jumped at sudden noises, why you always had to sit facing the door whenever you went out to eat. She didn’t get why you never let yourself fully relax, why you kept waiting for something to go wrong. She didn’t understand because she had never had to live like that.
And then there was the biggest adjustment of all: actually living with Olga.
For years, she had been a figure in your life. A presence. Someone who popped in and out, who you called and texted, who sent you money when you needed it. But you had never lived together. You had never had to share space. And now, suddenly, she was supposed to be responsible for you.
And it was a disaster.
You weren’t used to having anyone tell you what to do. You had been living on your own for months, doing whatever you wanted, whenever you wanted. So, naturally, you didn’t see a problem with leaving your stuff wherever you felt like it.
Your shoes? Kicked off in the middle of the living room. Your jacket? Draped over the back of a chair. Your gym bag? Somewhere. (You’d find it eventually.) Olga, however, was losing her mind.
“Do you not see the mess you’re making?” she snapped one afternoon, hands on her hips as she glared at the chaos you had left in the living room.
You barely spared her a glance from where you were sprawled on the couch. “I’ll clean it up later.”
“Later when? Next week?”
You shrugged.
And the music. You had always blasted your music at ungodly hours, back when there was no one around to complain. So, why would you stop now? Except now, you had Olga banging on your door at two in the morning, looking absolutely murderous.
“Are you serious right now?” she hissed, shoving open the door. “Turn that down!”
“It’s not that loud.”
“IT IS!”
And then, of course, there was the hoodie situation.
Olga owned nice hoodies. You had noticed this immediately. You had also decided, just as quickly, that they were now yours. You never asked— you just took them. Which made Olga’s blood boil.
“Where is my hoodie?” she demanded one day, hands on her hips.
You pulled the sleeves of said hoodie over your hands, looking at her blankly. “What hoodie?”
“That hoodie! The one you’re wearing!”
“Oh. This? Thought it was mine.”
“It’s not!”
Alexia just watched it all unfold with an amused smile. She had no intention of stepping in. In fact, it would only make it worse. The best thing for her to do was to let the two of you argue then drop you off at school.
You flex and extend your fingers as you stare down at your raw knuckles, the skin cracked, bruised, and stinging with every slight movement. Your hands tremble slightly, and not just from the pain. You sit on a bench outside the principal’s office, your legs bouncing restlessly, teeth clenched, chest tight. You’re trying to breathe, trying to calm down, but the fire inside you is still burning too hot. Why do you keep losing it like this?
You wrack your brain for answers, frustrated and ashamed. You didn’t come here to be the angry kid. You didn’t come to Spain to fight. But everything felt wrong. Your body was tense from the moment you stepped off the plane a few weeks ago. Everything’s been off.
You hate how different the Spanish sounds. Everyone speaks fast, sharp, clipped, nothing like the Spanish you grew up with back home. Your classmates either don’t understand you or mock your accent. Teachers correct you like you’re stupid. You’re constantly trying to translate everything in your head, to blend in, but all it does is make you feel more alone. You squeeze your hands into fists again. The pain grounds you, just for a second.
The door creaks open, and your head jerks up. Olga steps out of the office, her jaw clenched, eyes blazing. Alexia follows behind, calm as ever, but her gaze flicks to you quickly, assessing. She says nothing.
Olga doesn’t waste time. “In the car,” she snaps, voice low and furious. “Now.”
You don’t argue. You stand silently, walking past them both with your head down. It’s déjà vu, the second time in a month. You can feel her eyes on the back of your head, and you’re already bracing for it.
And sure enough, as soon as the car doors close, Olga turns on you.
“What the hell is wrong with you?” she explodes. “Do you even care about staying here? Do you want to get kicked out of every school in the city?”
You stare out the window, jaw tight, refusing to say anything.
“I’m trying, okay?” she continues. “I’m trying to make this work. I’m trying to give you a good life here. But you’re making it impossible!”
“He was talking about you,” you mutter suddenly.
“What?”
You finally turn, meeting her eyes. “The guy I hit. He was saying disgusting stuff about you. I told him to stop. He didn’t. So I made him.”
There’s a beat of silence.
“Nobody disrespects my sister,” you say simply.
Olga exhales sharply, pinching the bridge of her nose as her anger starts to crumble.
“I… okay,” she says softly. “Okay. But Azul, this can’t keep happening.”
You don’t respond. The car ride home is quiet, tense.
Once you pull into the driveway, Olga tries again. “Can we talk more about—”
“I’m miserable here,” you cut in, still staring ahead. “I can’t keep up with the Spanish, people make fun of how I talk, I have no friends, and there’s no girls’ football team for me to play with. I feel stupid all the time. I feel… wrong.”
It hangs heavy between you. You blink back the sting in your eyes, suddenly too tired to fight.
Alexia, who’s been watching from the driver seat, finally speaks up. “I’m taking her to the pitch.”
Olga hesitates but nods. “Go. Just— be careful.”
The second Alexia nods toward the passenger seat, you perk up.
The Barcelona training grounds are quiet, bathed in the soft amber glow of the setting sun. You’re in your element the second you step onto the pitch, your body relaxing as you lace up your cleats. You and Alexia stretch in silence before falling into a one-on-one. The rhythm is familiar, the tension in your chest starts to melt away.
She’s good, obviously, but you manage to dust her with a ridiculous feint and spin move that has her stumbling, arms flailing as you laugh and tuck the ball into the net.
“Not bad,” she says, grinning as she shakes her head.
“You’re getting old,” you tease, jogging backward toward the penalty spot.
“Oh, please.”
Now she’s in goal, sleeves rolled up, expression focused as you line up your shots. One by one, you fire them in. She saves a few, but not all. The pop of the ball hitting the back of the net fills the air.
As you take a breather between kicks, you speak again. “I feel out of place at school. Like I don’t belong. It’s not just the language… it’s everything. I don’t talk like them. I don’t think like them. And there’s no football team. No girls to play with. I feel like I’m wasting my time.”
Alexia watches you carefully from the goal, nodding. “That’s not fair. School’s supposed to be a place that supports you.”
“It’s not,” you mutter. “I don’t even want to go anymore.”
Alexia stands up, brushing her hands on her thighs. “Don’t worry about that part.”
You blink. “What?”
“Just keep playing. We’ll figure the rest out.”
You take your last penalty kick, driving it hard into the top corner. The sound is clean, crisp, perfect. You grin.
Unbeknownst to you, two figures sit higher in the bleachers: Joan Laporta and Pere Romeu. They’ve been watching in silence, tracking your every move.
“She’s raw,” Pere murmurs. “Rough around the edges. But you can’t teach instinct like that.”
“She plays like she’s been fighting her whole life,” Laporta adds. “Because she has.”
“Alexia says she’s a winger, no?” Pere asks.
“Could be more than that, if someone gives her the right support.”
They keep watching as you and Alexia walk off the pitch together, sweaty and smiling, shoulders bumping. You don’t know it yet, but everything is about to change.
Back in the locker room, you clean up side by side, tying your hair back and trading casual banter. Your body aches, but your mind is calm for the first time in days.
The sound of your alarm blaring through your room was what, unfortunately, ripped you from sleep. You groaned, rolling over and slapping your hand against the snooze button with more force than necessary. Your eyes were crusty, your body stiff, and for a moment, you considered staying in bed and faking a stomachache. But you knew Olga would never fall for it.
Dragging yourself out of bed, you shuffled to the bathroom, splashed cold water on your face, and slowly made your way down the hallway toward the kitchen. Your hoodie was hanging half off your shoulder, socks mismatched, and your curls were a disaster. Typical school morning. You already dreaded the day.
What greeted you in the kitchen, though, made you pause. Alexia was standing by the counter, humming softly to herself as she tossed fruit into a blender. She was dressed, calm, and already looked like she had been awake for hours. There were slices of toast on a plate, eggs still steaming, and fresh juice already poured. You blinked slowly at the surreal domesticity of it all.
“Morning, ’Lexia,” you mumbled, rubbing at your eyes as you crossed the kitchen. “Have you seen my backpack? I swear I left it by the couch.”
Alexia didn’t even turn around at first. You heard the whir of the blender as she held the top down, blending with ease. When it finally stopped, she looked over her shoulder at you and that’s when you saw it. The smirk.
“You don’t need it today, nena,” she said coolly, pouring the smoothie into a cup. “You’re coming with me.”
You squinted at her. “Huh?”
She just handed you the smoothie. “Drink this. Get dressed.”
You stared at her like she had grown two heads. “Wait, what do you mean I don’t need it? I have school.”
“No, you don’t,” she said simply. “Not today.”
“Okay… am I in trouble again?”
She snorted and shook her head. “Just get dressed.”
The cryptic vibes were off the charts, but you went upstairs anyway, tugging on some joggers and a fresh hoodie, brushing your teeth quickly before grabbing your sneakers. When you came back down, Alexia was already at the door, keys in hand, sunglasses on like some undercover spy. The whole thing was sketchy—and a little exciting.
In the car, you peppered her with questions.
“Where are we going?”
“You’ll see.”
“Why can’t you just tell me?”
“Because it’s a surprise.”
“Is it good or bad?”
“That depends.”
You rolled your eyes dramatically. “You sound like Olga.”
“She learned it from me.”
You pouted, leaning your head against the window as you watched the city blur past. The sun was barely up, streets still quiet. Your nerves were growing by the minute.
When the car finally pulled up to the FC Barcelona training facility, your brows furrowed.
“What are we doing here?” you asked, genuinely confused now. “Am I in trouble for playing here the other day?”
Alexia just gave you a tight-lipped smile and stepped out of the car. “Come on.”
You followed her slowly, legs stiff, anxiety kicking up. It was one thing to kick the ball around with Alexia when the place was empty— it was another thing entirely to walk through the main building in broad daylight. Your eyes darted around as you passed by trainers, staff members, and a couple of players you recognized. No one stopped you, though. Everyone just nodded at Alexia and let her through.
Finally, she led you to a quiet room off one of the main hallways. It looked like an office, kind of. You hesitated at the door, but Alexia gently nudged you forward.
Inside sat a man you recognized from TV—Pere Romeu. He stood when you entered, smiling warmly, gesturing to the seat in front of his desk.
“Buenos días,” he said kindly. “Alexia told me you go by Azulita”
You nodded slowly, heart pounding.
He motioned for you to sit. “I’ve heard quite a bit about you.”
You looked from him to Alexia, then back again. “Um… okay?”
He chuckled. “Relax. You’re not in trouble. Quite the opposite, actually.”
You sat stiffly in the chair, hands fidgeting in your lap. Alexia took the seat beside you, legs crossed casually.
“So,” Pere said, folding his hands. “The other day, Joan Laporta and I were here late, handling some administrative business. On our way out, we noticed someone playing on the pitch. You. With Alexia.”
Your mouth went dry.
“We watched for a while,” he continued. “And what we saw was raw talent. Instinct, drive, creativity, all of it. You play like it’s the one place you feel safe. And when we see a player like that… we pay attention.”
You blinked. “Wait… you were watching?”
He nodded. “Yes. And we’d like to offer you a place here. Not just training— on the senior team.”
Your jaw dropped. “What?”
“We’ll handle all of your schooling through La Masia’s internal academic program. You won’t need to return to your current school unless you want to. You’ll train, you’ll play, and you’ll study here with people who understand what it means to be an athlete. You’ll be surrounded by others like you. And more importantly, you’ll belong.”
You couldn’t speak. Your brain had stopped processing words somewhere around senior team.
“I know it’s a lot,” Pere added. “But we believe in you. And we want to help you grow not just as a player, but as a person. So… what’s your decision?”
He leaned back in his chair, patient, while your heart thundered in your chest. Alexia turned to you with a soft smile.
And all you could do was sit there, wide-eyed, the weight of everything hanging in the air.
this story isn’t even over yet and i already know i’ll be rereading it at soon as it ends 🔥🔥🔥🔥
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 should’ve known this was coming. It was Barcelona, after all. And when one of the biggest clubs in the world holds a formal function there are cameras are everywhere capturing every moment. You and Alexia hadn’t exactly been hiding at the event, but you also hadn’t expected the club to be the first to push things into the spotlight. Because the next morning FC Barcelona’s official account posted a picture. A sleek, high-quality shot from the event. The one the Club President insisted on you both posing for.
Two of Barça’s best, on and off the pitch. 🔥🔵🔴 #ForçaBarça
Yeah. That alone was enough to set social media on fire. But then, the real storm hit. Because a few hours later unreleased photos from inside the private function started circulating online. And those. Those told a very different story. Less professional, they were gritty like someone was using a camera phone from 2012.
The Leaked Photos It was a mix of shots. Some just casual, like you and Alexia standing way too close at the bar. Others, more… suggestive. A photo of Alexia leaning in to whisper something in your ear.
Another of you both sharing a look across the room, her expression unreadable but intense. And the one that really sent the internet spiralling.
A shot taken from behind Alexia’s hand lingering just on the small of your back as you took the picture together. It wasn’t blatant. But it also wasn’t subtle. And the internet. The internet lost it.
By the time you woke up properly, your phone was flooded with messages. Your teammates had already started teasing you in the group chat.
Claudia: Soooooo… should we start preparing for the wedding? 👀💍
Marta: I’d like to formally request an invite, please.
Even your coach had thrown in a comment:
Coach: Try to keep the media circus down before the next game, yeah? 🤨
Then there was Alexia’s team. They weren’t exactly being quiet about it either.
Mapi: You two have zero chill.
Aitana: Couldn’t even keep it lowkey for ONE event? 😂
Before you even had time to process all of it, your club's press officer called. "So, uh… have you seen the pictures?" they asked, voice already exhausted.
"Yeah," you muttered, rubbing your temple. "Kinda hard to miss."
"The media's all over it. They’re gonna bring it up in the next press conference."
Great. Fantastic. You were barely ahead of Alexia in this game, and now? Now, the world was watching.
The world was waiting for a reaction. The media, your teammates, Alexia’s teammates, hell, even your coach was watching to see how you’d handle this.
But instead of playing into it you did nothing. No comments. No cryptic tweets. No liking or unliking posts. Just silence.
And that made things so much worse.
Your name was everywhere. Fans analysed every single leaked photo like they were solving a damn crime scene. Some were convinced you and Alexia had been secretly dating this entire time. Others thought this was the beginning of something.
Then, of course, there were the wild conspiracy theories:
"They’ve been together for MONTHS, just look at their body language!!"
"Y/N ignoring the rumors? That’s GUILT."
"Alexia is playing the long game. Just wait."
"They’re in love, they just don’t know it yet."
And your personal favorite—
"Y/N and Alexia are secretly MARRIED, WAKE UP SHEEPLE."
…Yeah. The internet was not handling this well.
The funniest part? Alexia was loving every second of it. She wasn’t fueling the fire directly, but she was being… bold. She liked one post. Just one.
A tweet that said: "Alexia Putellas and Y/N’s tension is something out of a rom-com."
And that sent things spiraling even more.
Your teammates were dying over it.
Liv: Yo, she’s TAUNTING you. 😂
Maya: She knows exactly what she’s doing.
And the worst part. She did.
You’d let things run wild long enough. The theories. The analysis. The insanity of it all. You weren’t about to hand anyone answers. But you also weren’t about to sit back and let Alexia have all the fun. So, after days of radio silence, you opened your phone. Typed out a single message. And hit post.
The Tweet That Sent the Internet Into Chaos
Everything isn’t always as it seems.
No context. No clarification. Just enough to throw gasoline onto the already raging fire.
And within minutes the meltdown began.
Social Media Explodes
"WHAT DO YOU MEAN BY THIS???"
"Don’t be cryptic, just drop the wedding invite."
"EVERYTHING??? What part isn’t what it seems??? I NEED DETAILS."
"They’re either dating or gaslighting us and I don’t know which is worse."
"This saga is better than any Netflix show I’ve ever watched."
Even your teammates weren’t letting you off the hook.
Liv: Bro, you are a MENACE. 😂 Maya: You just woke up and chose CHAOS, huh? Coach: Just don’t let this end up as a distraction… or a PR nightmare. 😑
And then the moment you were waiting for. Alexia saw it. And she liked it. You smirked. You weren’t giving her the satisfaction of a direct challenge. No, this was a test. A chance to see if she’d take the bait. Because now, she had to decide what happened next.
You knew the media wouldn’t let this go. You knew it the second you hit post. And yet, seeing Alexia actually have to answer for it? That was something else entirely.
It was just supposed to be a normal post-match interview. Barcelona had just won comfortably, and Alexia had put on another masterclass. The journalists were running through the usual questions, her performance, the team’s form, the upcoming fixtures.
One reporter leaned into the microphone, a smirk already on their face. "Alexia, I have to ask… did you see Y/N’s recent tweet?"
The room stirred. Alexia, who had been answering with her usual calm, paused. She definitely saw this coming. "Which one?" she asked smoothly, already playing for time.
The journalist wasn’t backing down. "The one that said, ‘Everything isn’t always as it seems.’"
There was an immediate reaction from the room. A few chuckles. Some knowing glances. And Alexia did nothing for a moment. Just tilted her head, as if considering her answer. "I did see it." A smirk. Barely there. But it was there.
The journalist leaned forward. "And? Any thoughts on what Y/N meant by that?"
Alexia shrugged, feigning innocence. "I guess you’d have to ask Y/N."
The reporters ate it up. "So, you have no idea?"
A small pause. Then, the smirk deepened. "I didn’t say that."
Social Media Loses It
"SHE DIDN’T SAY THAT??? WHAT DOES THAT MEAN???"
"Oh, she’s enjoying this."
"Alexia playing the media like a violin."
"THEY ARE TOYING WITH US."
"Someone lock them in a room together and don’t let them leave until we get answers."
And just like that the ball was back in your court. Alexia wasn’t denying anything. But she wasn’t confirming it either. She was waiting.
Your move.
You knew this was getting out of hand. The media wasn’t letting it go. The internet was in shambles. And now, the club was stepping in. Your phone buzzed with a message from the team’s PR director.
We need to talk.
Yeah. You definitely saw this coming.
The next morning, you were called into a very official sit-down at the training facility.
On one side of the table, the club’s PR team and your coach. On the other. You. Your coach looked… amused. But the PR director not so much.
"You do realise this is all anyone is talking about, right?"
You fought the urge to smirk. "I might’ve noticed."
The PR director sighed. "Look, we’re not here to tell you how to live your life. But we do need you to be aware of how this is playing out publicly."
"Which is…?"
"A complete and utter media circus."
Your coach finally spoke up, leaning back in their chair. "We’re not saying stop" she glanced at the PR director, who sighed again. "Okay, maybe PR is saying stop. But at least tone it down."
"It’s all just banter," you argued.
"That’s the problem," the PR director shot back. "It’s getting bigger than just banter. We have sponsors, media obligations, and, oh yeah actual basketball games to focus on."
Fair point. Still, you couldn’t help yourself. "Has Alexia gotten the same talk?"
Your coach chuckled. "Oh, I guarantee it." Good to know you weren’t alone in this.
You left the meeting with a clear message:
Cool it.
Did that mean stopping entirely? No chance. But maybe it was time to be a little more calculated about your next move. And something told you Alexia was thinking the exact same thing.
There was no way this public game you were playing was over. Far from it.
For the first time in weeks, you said nothing.
No cryptic tweets. No subtle likes. No bait for the internet to feast on. And Alexia?
She did the same. The silence was deafening. Fans were losing their minds.
"NO POSTS? NO INTERACTIONS? THEY’RE PLAYING A DANGEROUS GAME."
"They really got in trouble huh 💀."
"I hate this. I need my daily dose of chaos."
"This is the worst punishment possible. TALK TO EACH OTHER."
Your teammates kept stealing glances at you during training. Maya finally caved.
"So… are you just gonna ignore her forever?"
You just smirked. "Who said I was ignoring her?"
You had to be calculated now. The club wanted you to cool it, not stop entirely. Fine.
You could do subtle. That night, you posted a completely normal picture.
Just you at the training facility, ball in hand, captioned:
"Locked in. Eyes on the prize."
No mention of Alexia. No obvious bait.
But… you might have chosen the angle where the tiny number 11 on your shorts was clearly visible.
And of course, the internet noticed.
"Not even subtle. Just straight-up taunting at this point."
"THE 11. DON’T THINK WE DIDN’T SEE IT."
"This is the kind of petty I respect."
Alexia didn’t comment. Didn’t like it. But you knew she saw it. Now, it was just a matter of seeing if she’d take the bait.
You thought maybe she’d stay quiet. Maybe she’d play it safe.
Yeah.
No.
Alexia never played it safe.
And you realized that when you checked your phone after practice to see her latest post.
A picture. From your game. She was courtside, arms crossed, a knowing smirk on her face.
Everything isn’t as it seems, right?
Oh, she was bold. Your teammates lost it.
"Ohhh, she’s coming for you." "You gonna let her get away with that?" "I can feel the club’s PR team crying right now."
You just shook your head, grinning. This wasn’t over. Not even close.
You weren’t surprised Alexia made a move.
You were surprised at how bold she was about it. The picture. The caption. The very intentional dig at your own words. It was calculated. It was challenging. And worst of all? It was working.
The Internet Goes Wild (Again)
"SHE DID NOT JUST THROW HER OWN WORDS BACK AT HER."
"Oh, this is a straight-up declaration of war."
"PR teams everywhere are sweating."
"This is no longer flirting. This is a full-blown chess match."
"They’re both SO ANNOYINGLY SMUG AND I LOVE IT."
Your teammates had plenty to say too.
"I thought you were supposed to be the one keeping her on her toes." "She flipped the script, huh?" "Bro. You have to respond."
“Thought you were warned to cool it”
You weren’t about to let her win that easily.
But you also weren’t about to react the way she expected.
You didn’t like posts. Didn’t comment. Didn’t even acknowledge it. You just went about your day, letting the tension simmer. You cooled it. And sure enough that night, your phone lit up.
Alexia: No thoughts on my post?
Oh, she was impatient. You smirked, typing out a response.
You: I thought you’d let your game do the talking?
A few dots appeared. Then disappeared. Then, finally
Alexia: Maybe I just wanted to see if you’d finally stop running.
Your heartbeat jumped. Okay. So this was where she was taking it. Now the question was did you let her win? Or did you push her further?
It was supposed to be a routine media day for Barcelona. Alexia was there, giving her usual composed answers talking about the team, the season, the next match. And then, of course, a journalist decided to stir the pot.
"Alexia, you’ve been quite active on social media lately. Particularly when it comes to a certain basketball star… any comment on that?"
There was a ripple of laughter in the room. Everyone knew what they were really asking. Alexia didn’t shy away. She just smirked. "I don’t know. I think you should ask her why she’s so quiet lately."
The room buzzed. Oh, she was calling you out. And when the journalist pressed "So, are you saying Y/N is avoiding you?"
Alexia leaned back in her chair, crossing her arms. "I’m just saying, she usually has a lot to say. Interesting that she doesn’t now."
That clip was everywhere within minutes.
"SHE CALLED HER OUT ON LIVE TV."
"This isn’t even subtle anymore."
"Y/N, GET UP AND RESPOND."
"Oh, she’s SICK of waiting."
"They better not let this slide."
Your teammates were already throwing hella looks your way in training.
"You’re not actually gonna ignore that, right?" "Damn, she’s got you cornered." "You started this. Now finish it."
“Just be careful with PR on your back yeah?”
And yeah. They weren’t wrong. Alexia had just put you in check.
Now, you had a choice.
You didn’t waste time.
The moment Alexia’s press conference clip started blowing up, you marched straight to the club’s PR office, barely knocking before stepping inside.
The PR director barely looked surprised. If anything, they seemed tired.
"I was expecting this," they sighed, gesturing for you to sit.
You didn’t.
"So," you started, crossing your arms. "You told me to cool it. But clearly, Alexia didn’t get the same message."
The PR director exhaled. "She did."
You narrowed your eyes. "Really? Because it doesn’t look like it."
They leaned forward, hands clasped. "She’s been spoken to multiple times. She just… isn’t listening."
That threw you off slightly. Alexia was just outright ignoring them? "But I have to listen?" you challenged.
The PR director didn’t even hesitate. "Yes."
Your frustration spiked. "Why? Because I’m new? Because I play basketball and not football? I’ve brought in viewership, ticket sales, engagement—"
"And that’s exactly why we need to manage this properly," they cut in. "You’ve been great for the club, Y/N. But this…this is getting too big. If Alexia wants to ignore requests, that’s on her. But you? You need to be smarter. Alexia doesn’t fall under me, you do. You’re my concern and responsibility”
It felt like a slap in the face. "So I play by the rules while she gets to do whatever she wants? And i look the fool online?”
"I’m not saying it’s fair. I’m saying it’s how it is.”
You clenched your jaw. "Understood."
You turned on your heels and walked out before you said something you really couldn’t take back. “I’m sure she’ll stop whatever you two are doing soon” he called after you. But if they thought this was over? They had another thing coming. You could ignore requests just as boldly.
If the PR team thought Alexia was going to back down, they clearly didn’t know her at all.
Because instead of cooling it like they wanted, she started baiting you harder.
It started small.
A picture of her working out, casually wearing a basketball jersey—not yours, but close enough that the internet noticed.
"She’s not even being slick anymore."
"She WANTS her to react."
"Alexia, blink twice if you’re being forced to behave."
Then, during an interview, she was asked about the viral press conference moment.
"Did you get an answer from Y/N after calling her out?"
And Alexia, with the cockiest smirk, just shrugged. "Not yet. But she’ll come back online soon.”
The reporter laughed. "Sounds confident."
Alexia leaned back in her seat. "I usually am."
That clip exploded online. And your teammates they were having way too much fun with it.
"Damn, she’s locked in." "At this point, just let her win." "Is she really gonna leave her hanging?"
Enough was enough. Alexia clearly wasn’t going to stop until she got a reaction out of you. And you’d now had a very formal email from the basketball PR team. So, instead of giving the internet another viral moment, you went straight to the source.
You opened your messages and typed:
You: Are you done?
She replied almost instantly.
Alexia: Oh, look who finally decided to say something.
You exhaled, already knowing she was enjoying this way too much.
You: You’re not exactly being subtle.
Alexia: Subtlety is overrated.
You could practically see the smirk through the screen.
You: Our PR team is on my ass, by the way. You can keep ignoring yours, but I don’t get that luxury.
Alexia: They told me to stop too. I just chose not to listen.
You: I’ve heard. Must be nice to get away with everything.
There was a longer pause this time.
Alexia: I don’t get away with everything. Just the things I really want.
You stared at the message. Because there was no mistaking what she was saying. Or rather, who she was saying it about. Your fingers hovered over the keyboard. What now? Did you shut this down? Call her out? Play into it? Alexia had made her move. Now, it was your turn. Yet again.
You leaned back against the couch, staring at Alexia’s last message. She wanted a reaction. She wanted to push you into playing her game. But you weren’t about to make this easy for her. Your fingers hovered over the keyboard before you finally typed:
You: That so? And what happens when you don’t get what you want?
She didn’t even hesitate.
Alexia: Hasn’t happened yet.
You smirked. Cocky as ever.
You: Maybe it’s about time it does.
This time, there was a pause. You could feel her thinking.
Alexia: Interesting choice. Let’s see how long you last.
You exhaled through your nose, shaking your head. She was infuriating
You: You talk a big game, but all I see is you hiding behind social media.
That got an immediate response.
Alexia: Hiding?
You: A smirk at my game? A comment here and there? You’re playing it safe, Alexia. But I don’t think you actually have it in you to do more than that.
This time, the pause was longer.
Alexia: Challenge accepted.
Your eyebrows lifted slightly. Oh? You had no idea what she had planned. But something told you? You were about to find out. And soon.
oof this is so good 🔥
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.
When you reached Estadi Johan Cruyff, the atmosphere was electric—every pulse in the stadium throbbed with raw energy. The crowd roared in anticipation, chanting, hoisting banners high, all set to witness another blazing Barcelona masterpiece.
But for you? It was all about one singular presence. You hadn’t come for just the spectacle of the game—you were there for her. Alexia Putellas. With Maya and Liv tagging along, their eyes wide with amusement and intrigue at the public sparking between you and Alexia, the stakes were impossibly high.
"So, how are we feeling?" Liv pressed, nudging you as you sank into your front-row seat—exactly where Alexia had directed you. Wearing a cap to blend in proved futile amidst the contrasting white Nike hoodie chess move blazoned across your chest and cap that screamed for attention. Smartphones thrust in your direction, recording every moment of your bold stance. Front row wasn’t just a seat; it was a declaration.
"Nervous? Excited? Sweating a little?" Liv prodded.
You smirked, a hint of challenge in your eyes. "She’s the one who should be nervous."
Maya scoffed. "You talk as if she isn’t about to go full Ballon d’Or just to impress you."
And you weren’t hidden at all. The crowd’s buzz, with Maya and Liv flanking you from either side, was relentless. Despite your low profile—hood up, hands buried in your jacket pockets—it wasn’t long before gazes locked on you.
Not solely from the crowd.
From her.
The instant Alexia stepped onto the pitch for warm-ups, the atmosphere charged further. Every stretch, every pass, every jog was precise, yet her eyes inevitably wandered toward your section. She knew you were there.
A smug grin curled your lips as you leaned back, relishing the anticipation building just before kickoff.
The game exploded into life, and Alexia was a blur of speed and purpose. From the very first whistle, she was consumed—each move calculated, each touch a masterstroke. Every motion was deliberate as she dominated the midfield with an intensity that was impossible to ignore.
You leaned forward, elbows locked on your knees, poisoned with admiration and raw anticipation as she sliced through defenders as if they were mere phantoms.
"Jesus," Maya gasped, half in awe, half in disbelief. "She’s insane."
Liv burst out laughing. "She’s putting on a damn show."
You couldn’t tear your eyes away as Alexia collected a pass at midfield. A single, piercing glance upward, and then—like lightning—she burst into action. Effortlessly, she ghosted past one defender, spun with unreal grace, then twisted her hips to leave the next flailing in empty air.
By the time she stormed into the box, the crowd erupted in a deafening roar. A thunderous strike—top corner, a missile that sent ripples through the net like an explosion. The stadium convulsed with energy. Without a second thought, you sprang to your feet; the shot was seismic. And then, as if electrified by the moment, Alexia turned. She didn’t celebrate immediately.
Instead, she locked her gaze onto you—a small, impish smirk playing on her lips that screamed, I did that. It cut through you like a jolt. Your heart pounded uncontrollably as you clapped slowly, your applause a mixture of pride and challenge.
Liv whistled beside you. "Oh yeah, that was definitely for you."
Maya teased, nudging you. "Still think she should be the nervous one?"
You sank back into your seat, arms crossed as you feigned cool detachment. And if you thought Alexia’s performance had peaked, you couldn’t have been more mistaken.
For the remainder of the match, she unleashed a barrage of jaw-dropping moves—impossible one-touch passes, laser-accurate through balls, flicks and turns that mocked the bewildered struggles of defenders. It was an onslaught, as if she was playing in a realm where gravity didn’t exist, while everyone else fought a losing battle.
Each spectacular feat was punctuated by a glance thrown in your direction—as if daring you to react, as if stoking the flames of a private duel. And, yes, you were reacting fiercely. But you refused to let her see the depths of your admiration and desire. So you maintained your cool. You smirked when she executed a flawless pass. You nodded when she navigated through chaos. You tilted your head ever so slightly when she caught you staring—a silent conversation woven into the game itself.
And Alexia reveled in it.
As the final minutes neared, a decision formed in your mind. You weren’t going to stay until the final whistle.
Just before full-time, you surged upward, preparing your exit strategy.
Maya’s eyes lit up immediately. "Oh my god, you’re running away."
You grinned wickedly. "Strategic retreat."
Liv snorted. "This is diabolical."
You simply shrugged. "Let her wonder where I went." Let her chase the elusive mystery. Because this game? It was far from over—never even close.
Outside the stadium, you resisted the urge to check your phone. You knew that the moment you did, notifications would flood in—teasing texts from your teammates, maybe even a message from Alexia herself.
Instead, you let the silence build. Let her pace her thoughts. Even as you returned to your place, messages began appearing.
Maya: You’re actually evil.
Liv: Alexia was looking for you after the game lmaooo. She looked pissed.
A smirk tugged at your lips. Then another message popped up.
Alexia: So you left.
Short. Direct. The unimpressed tone practically sizzled through the screen. You paused before replying.
You: Front row or nothing, right? You saw me.
Alexia: I did.
Leaning back against your couch, you savored the rising smirk on your face. She wasn’t done yet.
Alexia: And yet, when I looked again, you weren’t there.
Her irritation was palpable, but so was the thrill—she was still texting you.
You: Had to leave you wanting more.
Alexia: Dangerous game you’re playing.
Your stomach churned with a delicious mix of adrenaline and anticipation. You were relishing every moment. After all, nothing was ever going to happen—at least not the way the game was played on and off the pitch.
The three dots appeared, disappeared, then reappeared as Alexia composed her response. You held your breath without realizing it.
Alexia: Did you at least enjoy the show?
Your fingers hovered over the screen. Of course you'd enjoyed it—every mesmerising second. But admitting that would shift the power balance too far in her direction.
You: I've seen better.
Three dots appeared immediately, disappeared, then reappeared, again. She was crafting her response carefully.
Alexia: Liar.
The single word sent a jolt through you. She saw right through your facade, and that both thrilled and terrified you.
Your phone buzzed again before you could respond.
Alexia: I scored a hat trick for you today. To prove my point.
You hadn't stayed to see the third goal. The realisation hit you like a physical force. She'd continued her rampage even after you'd left—perhaps driven by your absence.
You stared at the screen, the revelation of her hat trick leaving you momentarily speechless. Three goals. For you. The audacity of it made your heart race.
You: Trying to impress me, Putellas?
The response came almost instantly.
Alexia: Did it work?
You bit your lip, considering how to maintain the upper hand in this delicious standoff.
You: Maybe if I'd stayed to see all three.
Alexia: Your loss.
Alexia: Did you at least notice how I don’t just play. I dominate.
Heat rushed to your face. The double meaning wasn't lost on you. You shifted in your seat, suddenly aware of how dry your mouth had become.
Alexia: You should have stayed.
Something in her tone made your stomach flip. You imagined her face as she typed it—that determined set of her jaw, the slight furrow between her brows.
You: Why? So I could watch you take your victory lap?
The response came faster than you anticipated.
Alexia: No. So I could find you afterward.
Your heart stuttered. The directness of her reply left no room for misinterpretation. She'd wanted to see you—to find you in person after the game. You swallowed hard, your fingers hovering uncertainly over the keyboard.
You: And what would you have done if you found me?
The three dots appeared, disappeared, then reappeared. The anticipation was excruciating.
Alexia: I guess you'll never know.
The challenge in her words was unmistakable. You could almost see her smirking on the other end, confident in her ability to make you regret your early departure.
You: Maybe next time I'll stick around.
Alexia: Maybe next time I'll score four.
A laugh escaped your lips. Her competitive nature was relentless, even in text form.
Your phone buzzed again before you could respond.
Alexia: There's a team celebration tonight at La Mar. Private room.
It wasn't a question or even an invitation—just information dropped casually into your conversation. Your pulse quickened as you considered your options. Going would mean surrendering some ground in this delicate game you were playing. Not going would mean missing an opportunity to see her again.
You: Is that an invitation?
Alexia: Take it however you want.
You bit your lip, weighing your response carefully.
You: Congrats on the hat trick. Truly impressive.
There. A small concession that acknowledged her skill without fully surrendering.
Alexia: You haven't seen impressive yet.
The boldness of her reply sent a rush of heat through your body. This was beyond flirting now—this was a declaration of intent.
You: Careful, Putellas. Your confidence is showing.
Alexia: It's not confidence when it's fact.
A knock at your door startled you from the exchange. You glanced at the time—nearly eleven. Who would be visiting at this hour? With a sigh, you set your phone down and that was this evenings interactions over with when your teammates had arrived with pizza and wine for a self invited movie night at your place.
The next morning greeted you with a whirlwind of chaos. The internet had erupted over your absence during the match's climax. Everywhere you looked, clips of Alexia’s breathtaking goal flooded the digital world, accompanied by heated speculations about the way her eyes had lingered on you after she scored. Twitter threads, TikTok videos, and Instagram comments meticulously picked apart every second of the exchange. Yet, perhaps most compelling was the footage capturing her scanning the stands at the match's end, unmistakably searching for someone.
That someone was you.
And when she failed to spot you, the brief flicker of disappointment that crossed her face? It was a moment the fans relished and replayed.
"Alright, so when’s the wedding?" your coach quipped the moment you stepped onto the practice field.
You groaned, exasperation evident. "Not you too."
Laughter erupted from Liv, Maya, and half of your teammates. Your coach, arms confidently crossed, remained unfazed. "What? It’s all over social media. ‘Alexia Putellas left searching for Barcelona basketball player after stunning performance.’ That’s you, by the way."
You shook your head in denial, picking up a basketball and dribbling it lazily to divert the attention. "She wasn’t searching for me."
Maya, ever perceptive, arched an eyebrow. "Wasn’t she, though?"
You chose to ignore her. However, your coach wasn’t finished. “Invite her to our open training session, she can run some drills.”
You smirked at the thought. "She’d probably crush them."
"That’s what worries me," your coach muttered, a trace of concern in her voice as she shook her head.
Later that day, while scrolling through Instagram, you saw it. A new post. Alexia, mid-game, in full focus. The second photo? A replay of that smirk after her goal. And the caption?
Always front row
Your eyes widened. You knew exactly what she was doing. The comment section was already going insane. So, naturally, you had to comment.
@yourusername: Didn’t think you noticed.
@AlexiaPutellas: You should know by now. I notice everything.
Your teammates were going to have a field day with this one. But at this point? You didn’t care. Because this wasn’t just some casual online banter anymore. This was a full-on game. And neither of you were backing down. The second you hit send on your comment, you knew it was over. Not the game. Not the tension. Over in the sense that you were never going to hear the end of this from your teammates.
Because within minutes, your reply to Alexia’s post had gone viral. Fan accounts were already reposting it, making edits, analysing every single word. People were invested. And Alexia? She was definitely enjoying this.You could tell by the way she waited.
She let your comment marinate for a little while. Let people freak out over the interaction. Let the suspense build. And then her notification popped up.
@alexiaputellas: Pinned your comment.
You stared at your screen.
She pinned it.
Maya was the first to send a message in the lively group chat you shared with the two Americans, with whom you were swiftly forming a close friendship. Her text arrived with the familiar ping that signalled the start of another engaging conversation, and you could almost picture her typing away, her fingers dancing over the screen with excitement.
Maya: Oh, she’s COOKING you now.
Liv: You gonna let her get away with that?
You exhaled slowly.
No, you were not.
You scrolled through Alexia’s tagged photos fans had already clipped your interactions into threads, debates, and ridiculous theories.
And then you saw it. A perfect opportunity. A fan had posted a slowed-down video of Alexia’s goal celebration, zooming in on the exact moment she smirked at you.
Their caption?
She knew EXACTLY what she was doing. This is pure flirting.
So you took your shot. You commented on it with three simple words:
Did she, though?
Not even five minutes later Alexia fired back. You had no idea how she had even see your comment until you checked your replies on your comment and every single one she had been tagged in.
She had found a different clip of the goal, this time, it was a wide-angle shot, clearly showing you standing and reacting in the background. She tagged you in her comment,
I’d say so.
You almost choked on your drink.
Your teammates, once again, were all over it, but this time Maya stupidly found her way into the teams group chat, engaging the rest of the team into making comments and screenshots galore firing into the chat when some were clueless
Maya: NAH SHE’S ACTUALLY INSANE FOR THIS.
Liv: She just destroyed you in 0.2 seconds lmfaoooo.
Your coach: I don’t know what’s happening, but please don’t start missing layups.
You just stared at your screen, heart racing. Because Alexia wasn’t just matching your energy. She was escalating it.
And now? You had to respond. You took your time, scrolling through your camera roll. And then you found it. A photo from your first game with Barcelona.
You, mid-celebration, number 11 bold on your back.
And the caption you chose,
11 looks good on me, don’t you think? @alexiaputellas
You hit post.
And you waited.
The world exploded. People lost their minds in the comments. You weren’t sure if Alexia was going to reply immediately or let it sit—let the internet spiral first. But then, a new notification popped up.
Alexiaputellas: Liked your post.
Alexiaputellas: Commented: I prefer it on me.
You actually gasped. Because holy shit.
Liv called you immediately, cackling. "Oh, you’re DONE for."
Maya was losing it in the team group chat. Your coach just sent a 😐 emoji.
But all you could do was stare at Alexia’s comment. Because this? This wasn’t just a game anymore. This was personal.And now, you had to figure out what came next.
The rush of adrenaline hit you like a well-timed screen, leaving you dizzy with possibilities. Your fingers hovered over the screen, reply options racing through your mind like fast breaks.
Direct message? Too private.
Another comment? Too expected. You opted for something different. Opening your Instagram stories, you snapped a picture of your practice jersey draped over your locker, your name clearly visible.
With steady fingers, you typed: Some things look better in person. Open practice tomorrow, 3PM.
No tag.
No direct mention.
Just an invitation hanging in digital space. Within minutes, your story had been screenshot and circulated across fan accounts.
The basketball facility's social media coordinator messaged you almost immediately. Just a heads up, we've had an unprecedented number of inquiries about tomorrow's open practice. Should we... prepare for something?
You sent back a casual Probably just the usual, knowing full well it was anything but.
That night, sleep evaded you. Your phone continued to buzz with notifications, each one a reminder of the public spectacle unfolding. Maya and Liv had transitioned from teasing to strategy sessions, sending you potential outfit options and suggesting pre-practice hair appointments.
You: This isn't a date
You insisted in the group chat.
Maya: Not yet it isn't.
Liv: Wear the black compression shorts. Trust me.
Morning arrived with your coach calling an emergency team meeting before practice. "I've just received word that we'll have additional security tomorrow," she announced, eyeing you specifically. "Apparently, we're expecting quite a turnout for our humble little practice." The team erupted into knowing laughter and whispers. "I don't care who shows up," your coach continued, "we run drills as normal. We're professionals." She paused, then added with the hint of a smile, "Though perhaps we'll showcase some of our more... impressive plays."
Practice that day was intense, everyone performing as if scouts were watching. You pushed yourself harder than usual, aware that tomorrow carried stakes beyond basketball. Later, as you scrolled through social media, you noticed Alexia had been conspicuously quiet. No response to your story. No new posts. The silence was more nerve-wracking than any reply could have been. Just as you were about to put your phone down for the night, it vibrated with a notification.
Alexiaputellas: Viewed your story.
And then, moments later,
Alexiaputellas: Posted a new story.
You tapped on it immediately. It was a simple image: a clock showing 3:00, with the caption Some invitations are impossible to decline.
Your heart hammered against your ribs. This was happening.
The next morning dragged endlessly. You spent an embarrassing amount of time on your appearance before reminding yourself that you'd be sweaty and disheveled within minutes of practice anyway. When you arrived at the facility two hours early, the staff was already setting up additional seating.
You nearly laughed at the absurdity of it all, extra seating for a practice that usually drew maybe a dozen die-hard fans and curious tourists. "We've never had this many RSVPs for an open practice," the facility manager explained, looking both stressed and excited. "Social media team is setting up additional cameras too."
"There's media outside," one of the assistant coaches informed you, eyebrows raised. "ESPN, local stations, even some international press."
"You've got to be kidding me," you muttered, Maya sudden voice from behind making you jump.
"This is what happens when two elite athletes flirt publicly," Maya said, appearing beside you with a knowing grin. "The world wants a love story."
"We're not—" you began, but the protest died on your lips. What exactly were you doing? The line between playful banter and genuine interest had blurred somewhere between her goal and your invitation. You nodded, trying to appear casual while your stomach performed Olympic-level gymnastics.
The locker room was unusually quiet when you entered—your teammates all paused mid-conversation, watching you with barely concealed amusement. "So," Maya drawled, "just another Thursday practice, huh?"
You rolled your eyes, pulling your practice jersey over your head. "Can we please act normal today?"
"Define normal," Liv chimed in, "because I just saw three news vans in the parking lot."
Your coach entered, clipboard in hand, expression unreadable. "Listen up, team. Whatever circus is happening outside those doors, in here we're basketball players. Focus on the game." She paused, then added, "That said, management has requested we run some of our more... crowd-pleasing drills."
By 2:30, the facility was humming with activity. The usual trickle of spectators had become a flood. The bleachers filled with fans, students, and—most intimidatingly—media. You kept your eyes averted during warm-ups, concentrating on the familiar rhythm of your dribble, the perfect swish of the net. Your teammates were unusually focused during warm-ups, occasionally stealing glances at the rapidly filling stands. Your coach maintained a facade of normalcy, but you caught her instructing the team to run their most visually impressive drills.
At 2:55, the doors opened for the final wave of spectators. You kept your eyes deliberately fixed on the ball in your hands, refusing to look up despite the increasing murmurs rippling through the crowd.
At precisely 2:58, a ripple of excited murmurs swept through the crowd. You didn't need to look to know what had caused it. Or rather, who.
"Don't look now," Liv whispered as she smirked, "but your girlfriend just walked in with half the FC Barcelona women's team."
"Don't you dare look," Maya whispered as she jogged past you. "Make her wait."
So you didn't.
Through passing drills and shooting exercises, you maintained your focus on the court, on your teammates, on anything but the section of bleachers where you knew she must be sitting. The weight of her gaze felt like a physical touch across your skin.
Coach called for a water break, and Maya nudged you none-too-subtly. "She's in the third row, centre section. Wearing your number." Your hands fumbled the ball, and it bounced away traitorously. When you straightened up after retrieving it, you allowed yourself one quick glance toward the entrance.
Alexia stood there, flanked by several teammates you recognised instantly. She wore casual clothes, jeans and a jacket, but somehow managed to look more put-together than anyone else in the building. Her eyes scanned the court methodically before your eyes connected.
Alexia Putellas, football royalty, casually dressed in a Barcelona basketball t-shirt with your number prominently displayed. When your eyes met, she offered that same smirk from the football match, and raised her water bottle in a small toast.
The gym seemed to hold its collective breath.
You raised your own water bottle in return, allowing yourself a small smile before turning back to your teammates.
"Oh, you're good," Maya approved. "Very cool, very collected."
Coach blew her whistle, signalling the start of a scrimmage. "First team versus second team. Full court, game conditions." As you took your position, your coach passed by with a final instruction: "Show her what you've got." Your coach clapped her hands loudly. "Alright, ladies, let's show our guests what Barcelona basketball is all about!"
The practice session began with standard drills, but there was nothing standard about the energy in the room. Every move you made felt magnified, every successful shot drawing louder cheers than usual. You were hyper-aware of Alexia's presence, feeling her eyes track your movements across the court. The scrimmage began, and something electric took over. You played with a ferocity and precision that surprised even yourself, no-look passes that threaded between defenders, drives to the basket that left the defence scrambling, and shots that seemed to defy gravity before swishing through the net.
During a particularly intense sequence, you stole the ball, dribbled behind your back to evade a defender, and launched into a perfect fast break. As the last defender approached, you executed a spin move that had the crowd gasping, finishing with a layup that even your coach applauded.
You couldn't help it then – you glanced toward Alexia.
She was leaning forward, elbows on knees, watching with an intensity that matched your own. When she caught your eye, she didn't smirk this time. Instead, she offered a slow, appreciative nod that felt more intimate than any verbal compliment. The scrimmage continued, your team pulling ahead as you distributed the ball with precision, finding teammates in perfect position.
In the final minutes, Maya set a screen that freed you at the three-point line. Without hesitation, you received the pass and launched a perfect arc that sailed through the net just as the buzzer sounded. Without thinking, you glanced over. Alexia was on her feet, clapping with genuine appreciation, her teammates beside her looking equally impressed. She was watching you intently, that competitive spark in her eyes that you recognised from her matches.
She gave you a small nod, one athlete acknowledging another's skill, and something about that simple gesture felt more intimate than any flirtatious comment. Coach called for a final water break before the last segment of practice.
As you wiped sweat from your forehead, Liv sidled up beside you. "She hasn't taken her eyes off you once," she whispered. "And I'm pretty sure there are at least three photographers who haven't taken their lenses off either of you."
You rolled your eyes but couldn't suppress your smile. "Let them look."
The final portion of practice was designated for individual skill showcases. When your turn came, you felt a surge of boldness.
Instead of your usual routine, you incorporated moves you'd been perfecting privately, a crossover that had defenders stumbling, a step-back jumper from well beyond the arc. Each successful demonstration drew appreciative murmurs from the crowd, but you found yourself caring only about one spectator's reaction. As practice wound down, Coach gathered everyone for closing remarks. "Thank you all for coming today. We appreciate the support and hope you enjoyed seeing what these incredible athletes can do."
Coach called an end to the practice with a satisfied smile. "Cool down and stretches, then you're free to go," she announced, adding under her breath to you, "Nice work today. Funny how motivation works, isn't it?"
As the team dispersed for cool-down exercises, you noticed a small commotion near the bleachers. Several fans had approached Alexia for photos and autographs, which she was graciously providing while her teammates formed a protective semicircle around her.
You deliberately took your time with your stretches, uncertain of the protocol for this unprecedented situation. Was she going to approach you? Should you go to her? The questions buzzed in your mind as you towelled off the sweat from your face.
(I hate the fact that in english everything sounds drier. The translator takes away all the flavor)
○ alexia putellas x teen reader (reader has a name in this)
↳ warnings: no warnings.
pt. 1
The Barça B dressing room had that unmistakable sound of every training session: the dull thud of boots hitting the floor, the rustle of jerseys being hastily changed, the constant murmur of overlapping conversations. Some players laughed, others debated plays, and a few simply changed in silence.
Maya was in the second category. The silent one.
Sitting on the wooden bench in front of her locker, she slowly untied the laces of her boots, letting the sound of the loosening leather fill her head instead of everything else. Her jaw was tight. Lately, it had been like that almost all the time.
Because things at home weren’t going well. Because she wasn’t sleeping well. Because she was sick of hearing the same thing over and over again.
"It’s just ridiculous," Nuria Gómez’s voice cut through the general noise, clear as day. "She hooked up with him for one night, and now she acts like he doesn’t exist. Not a glance, not a ‘how are you.’ Nothing."
Maya didn’t lift her head, but her fingers tightened around the leather of her boots.
She knew exactly who Nuria was talking about. She knew who all that venom was meant for every time she opened her damn mouth.
It was for Helena.
Helena Ferrer, who was at the other end of the locker room, her back turned, stuffing her things into her backpack with too much concentration. Maya knew that gesture. That one that said, I’m pretending not to hear, but every word is scraping against my skin.
And Nuria, of course, knew it too. She knew it and wouldn’t stop.
"I don’t know, I couldn’t live with a clear conscience after doing something like that," she went on, letting out a nasal laugh that turned Maya’s stomach. "Playing with someone and then acting like it never happened. That’s just being a shitty person."
Maya closed her eyes for a second.
Breathe. It’s not your problem.
But that was a lie. Because she heard it every single day. Because Helena never defended herself. And because Nuria wasn’t talking out of some sense of justice or wounded pride. She was talking out of spite.
Maya unclenched her jaw just to grit her teeth even harder.
"Don’t you ever get tired?"
She didn’t say it loudly. She didn’t yell. But the locker room wasn’t that big. And Maya never had to raise her voice to be heard.
The murmur of conversation died down. Not completely, but enough for her to feel several people paying attention. Nuria stilled for a moment. Then she turned toward her with a forced smile, the kind that barely covered the thinly veiled hostility underneath.
"Excuse me?"
Maya took her time straightening up and closing her locker before turning to look at her. Her gaze was calm, but there was something dangerous flickering in her eyes.
"I asked if you don’t get tired," she repeated, her voice low but clear. "Of saying the same shit every day."
Nuria narrowed her eyes, as if she couldn’t believe Maya was getting involved in this. "I didn’t know you had to approve my conversations now."
"I don’t care about your conversations," Maya replied, tilting her head slightly. "I care that you’ve been repeating the same thing for weeks, and honestly? It’s getting old."
Nuria let out a laugh, but there was no amusement in it.
"Right. Because defending Ferrer is your new favorite hobby, isn’t it?"
Maya felt Helena shift uncomfortably to her right, but she didn’t look at her.
"I don’t need to defend her. She didn’t do anything wrong."
"Oh, really? Nothing wrong?" Nuria crossed her arms, leaning forward slightly. "You’d be okay with someone using you for a one-night stand and then acting like you don’t exist? Just like that?"
There it was.
Maya sighed.
"This isn’t about what I would or wouldn’t do."
"Oh, it’s not?"
"No. This is about the fact that you keep bringing it up every chance you get, like you can’t let it go."
The locker room was almost completely silent now. Just the sound of a few bags zipping up, the distant echo of water running in the showers.
Nuria smiled without humor.
"I don’t know why you’re getting involved in this, Maya."
"Because it disgusts me." Maya didn’t blink. "It disgusts me to watch you walk around here, looking for her, waiting for an excuse to throw some snide remark her way. Like a damn dog."
Nuria’s face darkened, her hands clenching into fists.
"Eres una gilipollas."
"Y tú una resentida."
Silence.
Helena let out an almost imperceptible breath.
Maya ran a hand through her hair, not taking her eyes off Nuria.
"You hooked up. It didn’t work. Anyone else would move on. But you, Nuria…"
She took a step forward, just one, enough to lower her voice and make it sharper.
"You have to tear her down every single day because you can’t stand the fact that she used you for one night and never looked back."
The tension in the air was thick, almost suffocating. Nuria’s face was flushed red, but she had no words.
Maya leaned in slightly, her gaze unwavering.
"And if it weren’t for the trouble I’d get into, I’d smash your head against the wall."
Helena let out a breath. Not a gasp, not a 'Maya, stop'. A fucking breath. Like those words had been the only real shield anyone had given her in weeks.
Nuria said nothing.
She couldn’t say anything.
The entire locker room had frozen. No one moved, no one dared to step in.
Maya waited. She gave Nuria the space to respond, to say whatever she wanted. But she didn’t. So Maya shrugged, slung her backpack over her shoulder with the same usual calm.
Then she turned, not bothering to look at anyone else, and walked toward the door.
She left unhurriedly.
The door clicked shut behind her.
And for the first time in a long time, the dressing room was left in complete silence.
🫛🫛🫛
The hallway smelled of liniment and damp grass, filled with that muffled echo of footsteps and murmurs that only lingered after training sessions—when the team was scattered between showers, massages, and unexpected meetings. Maya walked with her jaw clenched, hands shoved into the pockets of her hoodie, and the distinct feeling that this meeting wasn’t going to bring her anything good.
She wasn’t entirely sure why she had been called in. Or maybe she was. The incident with Nuria in the locker room had been too public for it not to reach the coach’s ears.
She stopped in front of the office door and took a deep breath. Counted to three. Knocked twice with her knuckles before pushing the door open without waiting for a response.
The coach was sitting behind his desk, arms crossed, with an expression that didn’t foreshadow anything good. But it was the person sitting to his right that made her frown for a second.
Alexia Putellas.
Maya controlled her reaction. Just the slightest raise of her eyebrows before her face settled back into its usual neutral expression. Don’t get paranoid. Maybe Alexia was just there for something unrelated, maybe they had just finished discussing something before she arrived. Or maybe—and she liked this possibility less—it was about her.
She closed the door calmly and leaned against the wall, arms crossed over her chest, as if she were anywhere else and not in an office about to get a lecture.
"If this is about what happened with Nuria the other day," she said before anyone could speak, "I was just following the message you always give us: ‘personal issues don’t mix with football.’"
Silence.
The coach frowned.
"Excuse me?"
Maya didn’t move. Something didn’t add up.
"I had no idea anything happened with Nuria," he continued, looking at her with more interest than she liked. "But now I do want to know."
Shit.
Maya rolled her eyes. In trouble for talking too much.
"It was nothing," she shrugged. "Stupid stuff. Dumb teenage drama, you know."
The coach held her gaze for a moment longer but didn’t press. He just ran a hand over his chin and got straight to the point.
"I called you in because of what happened with the Espanyol player."
Her body tensed instantly.
"Alexia told me what happened."
Maya clenched her jaw. And there it was. She knew it. Her mind went straight to the most obvious conclusion.
Great. Not only did I get a red card during the match, but now they think I was going to start a fight afterward.
She straightened up slightly, arms still crossed.
"Nothing happened," she said flatly. "I didn’t hit her, if that’s what you’re thinking."
Alexia lifted her gaze, looking at her with the same calm she had when analyzing the field before making a decisive pass.
"No one said you hit her."
Maya turned toward her.
"Oh no?" She tilted her head, skeptical. "Then what exactly did you tell the coach?"
Alexia remained relaxed, unbothered.
"I told him about the lack of control you showed during the match," she explained evenly. "About how the Espanyol player was provoking you the entire time and how you reacted."
A prick of discomfort settled in Maya’s chest. She didn’t like being analyzed like that.
"Oh, right. She provoked me, I reacted, and somehow I’m the bad guy."
"No one said you’re the bad guy," the coach interjected. "But you do have a problem."
Maya scoffed.
"My problem is that I don’t let people walk all over me?"
The coach narrowed his eyes, resting his elbows on the desk.
"Your problem is that you let yourself get taken out of the game over nothing."
Maya averted her gaze, biting her tongue to keep from saying the first thing that came to mind.
"Do you think you reacted the right way?" he pressed.
"If the referee isn’t going to do his job, someone has to."
The coach let out a long sigh, as if he were exhausted from having the same conversation over and over again.
"Maya…" He ran a hand down his face. "In football, there are provocations all the time. If every time someone messes with you, you respond with a foul like that, you’re going to get sent off in every match."
Before she could reply, Alexia spoke up.
"If you let them get you out of the game with provocations, you’re giving them exactly what they want."
That comment irritated her more than it should have.
"I didn’t let them take me out of the game. They took me out of the game." She paused. "Which is different."
"It’s not," Alexia countered, still infuriatingly calm. "Porque si cada vez que te tocan un poco los cojones, pierdes la cabeza, entonces te van a manejar como quieran." (Because if every time they push your buttons, you lose your head, then they can control you however they want)
Maya frowned.
She didn’t like how that sounded. Like she was some animal that could be controlled with a few cheap tricks. Like she didn’t have self-control.
But most of all, she didn’t like it because there was some truth to it.
The coach watched her patiently, waiting.
"Do you understand?"
Maya stayed quiet for a moment before answering, her tone clipped.
"Yes."
The coach nodded, though he didn’t look entirely convinced.
"I hope I don’t have to bring this up with you again."
Maya didn’t respond. She simply turned and left the office with the same calm as always, no rush, no sign of anything. But the moment the door shut behind her, she felt something strange in her chest. A part of her was still angry. Angry that they had treated her like she didn’t know what she was doing. But another part, one she preferred to ignore, knew that Alexia and the coach were right.
And that pissed her off even more.
🫛🫛🫛
The night air was cool, but Maya felt like she was burning under her skin. She walked with long, quick strides, her jaw clenched, her backpack slung over one shoulder. As if each step could help her leave behind the coach’s office, the damn conversation, and, most of all, that patient voice of Alexia Putellas repeating things she already knew but didn’t want to hear.
Football was about provocation, sure. Football was about keeping a cool head, too. Pero que no jodan. (But give me a break)
As she stepped past the club’s entrance, her eyes landed on the bus stop across the street. At this hour, the night buses took forever, and the last thing she wanted was to sit around doing nothing, letting her mind spiral over the same thoughts.
She took a deep breath and adjusted the strap of her backpack. Maybe she could walk to the next stop. Maybe that would get rid of this burning feeling in her chest.
Then, a car horn.
Maya frowned, irritated by the sudden noise, and turned her head, ready to ignore it. But she recognized the car before she could.
A black Audi. And behind the wheel, Alexia Putellas.
The passenger-side window lowered with a smooth hum, and Alexia’s voice, calm as always, cut through the night.
"Get in. I’ll take you."
Her first reaction was automatic: say no.
Because she didn’t like being told what to do. Because she still had her pride stuck in her throat after that conversation. And because, honestly, she wasn’t in the mood to spend more time with Alexia.
She crossed her arms and raised an eyebrow.
"I’m fine. I don’t need a ride."
Alexia didn’t react. She didn’t look surprised or impatient. She just tilted her head slightly and repeated,
"Maya."
Just her name. Said in that low, steady tone—not quite a command, but not a request either.
And Maya, for some damn reason, didn’t have the energy to keep refusing.
She huffed through her nose and muttered something unintelligible as she stepped toward the car. She pulled open the passenger door and dropped into the seat unceremoniously, shutting the door with more force than necessary.
She didn’t say thank you.
Alexia didn’t seem to expect it.
The engine purred quietly, the only sound in the car besides the distant murmur of nighttime traffic.
Maya stared out the window, arms crossed, her gaze lost in the city lights flashing past. The silence was so thick it was becoming uncomfortable. Suddenly, she was aware of her own breathing. Of every small movement. Of how unnervingly calm the car felt even if her head was hell.
She didn’t dare move a muscle, wondering if Alexia felt the awkwardness too—or if she was just immune to it.
Then, Alexia’s voice broke the silence.
"So, you like smashing heads against walls, huh?"
Maya blinked.
What?
Her first reaction was pure internal panic.
How the hell does she know?
Worse: Did she tell the coach?
She turned toward Alexia, her back suddenly tense.
"Who told you that?"
Alexia kept her eyes on the road, only shrugging slightly. "Vicky told me."
Maya exhaled, rolling her eyes.
Of course.
If there was anyone who knew everything that happened in Barça B, it was Vicky López. And if there was anyone she shared it with, it was Alexia. Ever since she started training with the first team, their relationship had become inseparable. Fans even called them “mother and daughter.”
Maya pressed her lips together, uncomfortable.
"I wasn’t actually going to do it. I just said it."
"Sure."
Alexia smiled slightly, not even looking at her, as if she didn’t believe her for a second.
Maya sighed and slumped further into the seat, annoyed. "Did you pick me up just to give me a lecture on anger management?"
"No," Alexia replied casually. "But if you want me to, I can."
Maya turned to her, half incredulous, half exasperated.
"I’ll pass."
A brief silence settled between them. But this time, it wasn’t uncomfortable.
Maya noticed the atmosphere had shifted. Less tense. Less hostile. And though she didn’t want to admit it, Alexia’s attitude—calm, not pushing her, not lecturing her—was making her anger simmer down.
They reached her building a few minutes later. Alexia pulled up in front of the entrance without a word, simply letting the engine shut off smoothly.
Maya unbuckled her seatbelt and, without looking at her, muttered quickly, "Thanks for the ride." Like it physically hurt to say it.
Alexia didn’t answer right away. When she did, her voice was steady. "See you, Maya."
Maya gave a small nod and got out of the car without another word.
She closed the door with less force this time.