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 6: Spain stay at St George's Park Other Parts
Word Count: 7.6k
This one needs to come with a bit of a warning for the ending.
⚽️
The queue for food stretches toward the end of the room, trays clattering, girls chatting, familiar noise filling the space like steam.
You’re last in the line moving slow, distracted, gaze caught behind you, because they’re there. The Spanish squad, gathered loosely at the back of the room, hovering like they were going to join the line but not quite in it.
They look unsure not out of place, just... hesitant. Like they’ve stepped into someone else’s routine and don’t want to get it wrong. You catch it instantly, you pause, hand on your hip, and glance back scanning instinctively until your eyes find Alexia.
She’s not at the front of the group, she’s off to the side arms crossed loosely, scanning the scene ahead like she’s trying not to overthink it. And you watch her. Not subtly. Not secretly. Just openly, willing her to look back. It takes three heartbeats and then her gaze flicks up like she could sense someone was watching.
Right into yours, your stomach flips, your breath catches, but your face stays calm. You give her a smile, soft, closed-lipped, silently asking if everything was ok, the edges of her posture ease almost immediately.
She mutters something to her team and stars in your direction, quiet, graceful, stops in front of you like it’s the most natural thing in the world.
And then voice soft, English careful “What do we do?” She’s looking at the line, the trays, the cutlery, the way people are moving through but her eyes keep darting back to yours, like she’s checking whether this is okay.
You nod once, matching her low tone. “Get in line. Grab a tray. Go down the line. Take what you want.” You gesture subtly. “It’s… chill. Sit where you like. By the looks of it, the girls have left some empty tables so you can sit together"
Alexia’s eyes track the movement of your hand, then flick back to your face. "Gracias," she says quietly.
You nod again, but don’t say anything else. You don’t have to she steps back toward her team, then speaks in Spanish and they all filter towards her.
You turn forward again. But you feel her still in the space behind you, in the warmth in your chest, in the slow, steady way she was lingering.
Georgia infant of you in the line turns, then clearly she spotted the figure behind you, smirks and turns back to the front.
Your phone buzzes, you pull it out your pocket enough to see what it is, it's Gee.
Gee: Looks cozy
You roll your eyes shoving it back in your pocket using your foot to nudge the back of her knee, earning you a back hand.
The line’s moving slowly trays clinking, steam rising from silver containers, the buzz of two languages folding over each other.
You’re focused ahead hand on your tray, eyes scanning what’s left of the roasted veg when you feel it. A shift behind you. Tone, not volume. Sharpness, not sound. Spanish rapid, clipped, a little too loud for how close she’s standing. You don’t know the words, but you don’t have to. You feel it in your spine.
Montse Tomé, Spain’s coach, has joined the line just behind. She’s talking quickly to Alexia something that sounds like instruction but lands like criticism. Not raised, but tight.
You glance back, Alexia’s face is composed, but her shoulders have gone slightly still. Around her, a couple of the Spanish girls shift uncomfortably. One glances at the food like it’s suddenly very interesting.
You watch Montse a second longer, then turn back to your tray, grabbing a spoonful of something without seeing it.
You keep your voice casual quiet enough that only those just behind can hear. “Does she always have an attitude,” you murmur dryly, “or has she reserved that for our benefit?”
There’s a beat of silence behind you. Then a soft, barely stifled snort from someone near the front. A giggle from another. And then Alexia’s laugh, quiet, warm, caught in her throat like she hadn’t meant to let it slip.
You don’t look back. You just smirk down at your tray and add, still facing forward: “I don’t need subtitles to clock that energy.”
Another laugh this time from Mapi, somewhere behind Alexia. Montse either doesn’t notice or chooses to ignore it, stepping out of the line to take a call. You finally glance back over your shoulder.
Alexia’s looking at you now tray in her hands, expression very carefully neutral… except for the small tug of her mouth.
You raise an eyebrow. She doesn’t say anything. But her eyes sparkle. And it tells you everything.
⚽️
You’ve found your seat by the time it happens two trays down, the table split half-English, half-Spanish, a soft mix of conversations rippling between the two sides.
The air’s lighter now. Whatever tension Montse brought into the line, your one-liner cleared it like a breeze through fog. You’re sipping from your water bottle when you hear it a soft but clear voice from across the table.
Cata Coll, her English is careful, her tone curious. Not hostile. Not testing. Just… interested. “When you played us…” she says, pausing to find the phrasing, “with your club and with England, you played out of position. Both times. Why?”
You blink not expecting the question. There’s a slight hush near the middle of the table, even the clatter of cutlery softens.
You glance up and find her eyes steady on yours. Beside her, Alexia is speaking, but she’s listening. You set your fork down gently and give Cata your full attention. "Both your coaches publicly said they were worried about me,” you say, voice even. “So naturally, tactically you adjust to best contain and counteract me." You let that hang for half a beat. "Can’t control what you don’t know."
Cata stares at you a second longer and then her mouth curves. She nods. Respect. No pushback.
From a few seats down, Mapi gives a low whistle and mutters in Spanish, just loud enough for you to catch the tone even if you don’t get the words.
Alexia bites her lip to hide a smile. Beth grins beside you, nudging your arm. "Remind me never to play poker with you."
You shrug, picking your fork back up. "Don’t bluff," you say simply. “Just study.”
Leah sat opposite, voice full of that trademark smugness throws out, “So. Would you play for Barça?”
You don’t even get a chance to blink before Georgia cuts in instantly, “She’s not leaving me alone in Germany. Stop putting ideas in her head, Leah!”
The table laughs. You smile slow, controlled and drag your fork slowly between your lips, sucking it clean before resting it on the plate. You glance at Georgia with a small, knowing smirk. “I’m not leaving her in Germany.”
Across the table, Leah narrows her eyes like she’s lining up a shot “Then why were you in Barcelona?” she says, tone mock-sweet. “You’ve still not answered me.”
You don’t blink. “I told you I wasn’t in Barcelona.”
Leah’s already pulling out her phone, tapping the screen. “I literally have the thread open. Pictures. Of you. At a game.”
You shrug, reaching for your water. Calm. Measured. “Wasn’t me. Must have a Spanish twin.”
Beth lets out a high-pitched laugh and claps her hand over her mouth. Georgia groans dramatically beside you. Leah points her fork at you like it’s a knife. “I know you’re lying to me.”
Before you can reply, Millie, who has missed absolutely everything, looks up from her bowl of fruit like it’s the first she’s hearing of this. “Wait— is your contract up at Bayern?”
You turn to her, unbothered. “Not ’til the end of next season.”
Millie frowns thoughtfully. “So you could move on?”
You nod once. “I could.” You stab a bit of sweet potato with your fork. Cool as ever. “We’ll see.”
The table quiets just slightly not completely but enough, because now everyone’s reading into it. The phrasing. The calm. The deflection.
Beth leans back in her chair, shaking her head with a grin. “She’s so annoying when she’s like this.”
Georgia crosses her arms. “She does that thing where she technically tells the truth but also doesn’t say anything.”
You say nothing. Just smile, because they’re not wrong.
⚽️
You’d come down here to be alone. To switch off. Headphones plugged in, controller in hand, Call of Duty loading on the screen.
The match kicks off. You settle into it easily focus narrowing, shoulders loosening, brain finally dialling into something simple and competitive. You barely notice when the door opens. Spanish voices. Low. Familiar.
You glance up, expecting them to pass by but they hesitate. Just inside the threshold, a small group of them hover. Patri, Jana, a couple others you’ve only exchanged nods with so far. They’re dressed in hoodies and sliders, clearly winding down. But they don’t move farther in like they’re waiting for permission.
You pause the game, pull one headphone off, and smile. “Hey,” you say simply, nodding. “Come in. I don’t bite.”
They laugh softly, surprised. Patri mutters something in Spanish to the others, and after a few beats, they drift in. Quiet, casual. Still a little cautious. You realise then they’ve been keeping their distance, not out of disinterest, not out of attitude, but out of respect.
They didn’t want to step into your space unless you made it clear they were welcome. You unpause, fingers working the controller again. Patri lingers near the edge of the nearest sofa, watching the screen.
“You play?” you ask.
She shakes her head with a grin. “Only when I’m bored enough to embarrass myself.”
You laugh properly this time and she grins wider. She sits nearby, not next to you, but close enough. The others do the same spilling onto bean bags and floor cushions, chatting amongst themselves, tossing occasional comments your way as you mow down enemies on-screen.
It’s easy. Light. You’re mid-reload when the door opens again. You hear her before you see her Alexia, finishing a phone call, voice low, Spanish soft and measured as she tucks her phone into the pocket of her hoodie.
You glance up. The second she sees you, she smiles small, effortless. Like of course you’re here. Like this is exactly where she expected to find you. She walks past the others with a gentle squeeze to Patri’s shoulder.
And without hesitation she takes the one spot left on the sofa, next to you there were other cushions. Other chairs, but no one else took that place, not one of them, not even when you’d sat there for fifteen minutes alone.
And now, sitting beside you knee brushing yours, hands resting calmly in her lap Alexia leans back like she belongs there.
And something clicks, they didn’t take that seat... because it wasn’t theirs to take.They knew, maybe not the whole story, maybe not everything. But enough.
You say nothing, don’t look at her, but your chest is warm, your mouth can’t help its curve, and your hands are steady on the controller even as your pulse thunders beneath your skin.
Alexia shifts slightly beside you not speaking, not looking but her leg presses against yours, gentle, grounding.
And for the first time all day, you feel completely still.
You finish the game you were playing, you toss the controller onto the table beside you, stretching your arms overhead with a satisfied sigh as the final stats flash on screen.
The girls around you clap half in celebration, half in sarcasm teasing you for your accuracy, your kills, your body count. You grin through it all, playful and relaxed.
Alexia is still beside you, legs crossed beneath her now, hoodie sleeves pulled over her hands, close without crowding. The Spanish girls have broken off into small conversations Patri and Mapi trading jokes, Aitana curled up with her phone, Jana humming softly to the song playing from someone’s speaker.
It’s quiet. Soft, then in a lull Patri looks up from her spot two cushions over, eyes on you, voice casual but clearly meant to land. “So,” she says, in English, “Why didn’t you tell your team you were in Barcelona?”
The question hangs there not sharp, not cold but deliberate. You feel it land between you and Alexia like a small spark on dry grass.
You glance over, she’s not looking at you, but she’s not pretending not to listen either. You shift slightly, leaning back into the cushions, playing with the hem of your shorts.
You don’t answer right away, you don’t need to, Patri’s gaze is calm. Patient, but underneath it you can feel the pulse of what’s really being asked.
You take a breath. Then you shrug, voice quiet but steady. “It wasn’t their business.”
Mapi raises an eyebrow, amused. “No?” she says. “Beth seems to think otherwise.”
You smirk can't help it, “She always does.”
That gets a few chuckles. The mood stays light but the thread doesn’t slip. Patri’s eyes stay on you a moment longer. “Just curious,” she says, holding your gaze. “That’s all.”
You nod, a beat of silence. Then without looking, without shifting Alexia finally speaks. Quiet. Calm. “Sometimes it’s easier not to explain what people will turn into something else.”
It’s not a question. It’s not even directed at you, technically, but it lands squarely in your chest.
“I didn’t go for headlines,” you say simply. “I went for... time.”
No one pushes after that and somehow the quiet deepens. Not uncomfortable. Just... settled.
Alexia shifts again beside you closer this time, just slightly, her hand brushes yours, and when you don’t pull away when neither of you moves it says more than anything else in the room.
It happens slowly. One by one, yawns, stretches, quiet excuses in Spanish. Mapi glances between the two of you and smirks knowingly before she stands. Jana gives you a warm smile as she collects her phone. Patri lingers the longest, offering a casual "Buenas noches" like she hasn't just left a small ripple in the middle of the room.
Then the door swings shut behind them, and it’s just you and Alexia.
She’s still curled on the other end of the sofa, hoodie sleeves tugged over her hands, eyes flicking between you and the now-idle TV screen. You glance over at her. She looks away. Classic. You smile softly to yourself.
You manoeuvre on the sofa to sit facing her, "Could they be any more obvious?"
She clears her throat, cheeks just a touch pink, she lets out a quiet laugh shy and warm and so her. She pulls one leg up onto the sofa, facing you now, even if she still won’t meet your gaze for more than a second.
She pulls her sleeve over her hand and starts gently picking at a loose thread a tell you’re beginning to recognise now. You watch her for a moment, then say, low and warm, “Did they leave the seat open for you?” Her eyes flick up at that quick and startled. You smile, not cocky, just sure. “You know they did.”
Alexia exhales slowly, the smallest curve at the corner of her mouth, “They’re not subtle,” she murmurs.
You lean back slightly, folding one leg under the other. “No,” you agree.
She goes still at that, just for a beat, then she shifts again, rests her chin on her hand, eyes finally meeting yours properly.
There’s a softness there, not shy, just... unguarded.
“Would you care if I'd told them about me going to see you and you coming to see me?” she asks, barely above a whisper.
It’s not loaded. It’s not even afraid. Just curious. You sit with it. Let it settle in the space between you, because it’s not the kind of question that needs a fast answer.
You shrug gently, voice matching hers in tone. “It's your story to tell I suppose.”
She nods once, thoughtfully. Like that’s enough, you hold her gaze, steady and open. She smiles, small but sure and this time it doesn’t falter. She shifts closer, knee brushing yours now. Not tentative. Not unsure.
Just... there. You let out a slow breath and say, teasing, “You’re still terrible at small talk.”
She rolls her eyes but grins, and this time, it reaches her eyes. “I’m better at passing,” she says.
You huff a laugh. “That’s debatable.”
“Do you want me to prove it?” she challenges, mock serious.
And just like that, the tension lifts, because between the laughter, the teasing, the way your knees stay touching now, she leans back a little, eyes scanning your face, and then quiet again, soft again, “I like being near you.”
You feel it land low, deep, honest. “I like you near me,” you say back.
"When can I see you again?"
You bang your knee to hers, "What? Is this not good enough for you?"
"I've come to love cliches"
You knock your knee against hers again, grinning, she pretends to wince, overly dramatic. “You’ve come to love clichés?” you echo, raising an eyebrow. “Since when?”
Alexia shrugs soft, honest but whatever she’s about to say never lands, because the door bangs open, sharp and jarring.
You both look over as Montse strides in, her words clipped, brisk Spanish cutting through the calm like a blade. Alexia tenses beside you, the moment folds up, you shift back slightly as Montse rattles off something you don’t understand, her eyes never even flicking in your direction.
You’re invisible, but not to Alexia, she’s already pushing to her feet, hoodie sleeves tugged down, chin lifting slightly.
“I have to go,” she says quietly, regret threading through every syllable.
You nod, already feeling the weight of the shift, the loss of her warmth beside you. She reaches a hand out, you raise yours half reflex, half habit and slap it gently in return, but she doesn’t let go.
Her fingers close around yours. A pause. “They’ve sorted us a hotel,” she says, softer now. “We’re going.”
You glance up at her, still seated, suddenly not ready. “See you soon then,” you say hopeful, too much like a question.
She stands over you, gaze fixed on yours, something unreadable moving in her expression.
And then a hand comes on the arm of the sofa beside you, the hand on your hand leaves and finds your chin slow, certain and she tilts your face gently up to hers.
You don’t have time to speak, don’t have time to think, because she kisses you.
Not rushed. Not apologetic. Just sweet. Soft.
Like a promise, like she’s making up for the airport, like she finally let go of whatever was holding her back.
Her lips move slowly against yours, careful, almost reverent her thumb brushing lightly against your jaw and when she pulls back, it’s not far. Just enough to look at you, really look,
“I didn’t want to leave it again,” she murmurs, "I should of done that at the airport"
You just nod, barely. "You should have" you whisper because your heart’s in your throat and her touch is still warm on your skin and she finally, finally did what you'd been thinking about since you came ever so close at the airport,
She finds your hand again and gives it one last squeeze and then she’s gone.
But her kiss stays with you. Like the most perfect cliché. You just had to find Gee and Beth, you counted to ten in the hopes Alexia would not be in the hall way when you left the room.
But of course she was. As you came out the door there she was, with her team Montse speaking yet again, "Sorry" you mutter walking by through the lined corridor of Spanish players.
Your eye connect with Alexia's ever so briefly as you brush by her finger runs over your wrist intentionally, a silent conversation, you bump your hand into her hip in return not missing a step on your way to find just someone to tell. You had to tell someone.
And then you’re gone. Still walking. Still moving. Still trying not to explode.
Your skin’s buzzing, your heart’s somewhere in your throat, and you don’t care where you’re going exactly just that you find someone.
Someone to tell. Beth. Georgia, it doesn’t matter who’s first. You take the stairs two at a time, mind racing, face burning, mouth stretching into a smile you can’t suppress.
You find them in the corridor of the rooms Beth half-asleep on a beanbag, Georgia picking at crisps as she sat her back against the wall. Georgia out of the team spot you first, she narrows her eyes instantly.
“You’ve got that face.”
Beth sits up straighter. “What face?”
Georgia grins. “The something’s happened face.”
You just stand there, trying to keep your voice steady, trying to not grin like an idiot, at this point you don't care the whole team is here.
“She kissed me,” you say.
Georgia’s eyes go wide
“Who—” Beth starts.
“Who do you fucking think!,” Georgia cuts in.
"What?" Millie was paying attention, "What did you just say?"
You collapse into the beanbag with Beth, head spinning, hands covering your face.
“Okay, tell us everything,” Beth demands, already grabbing your wrist.
“Was it good?” Georgia asks at the exact same time, already smirking.
You laugh into your hands. It’s too much. It’s perfect. “She kissed me,” you say again, softer this time. Like repeating it will help you believe it.
The room stills. Like someone hit mute. Beth’s eyes are huge, but her mouth is already splitting into a grin that looks ready to explode.
Georgia’s the only one moving slowly folding her arms, smug as anything, nodding like she’s been proven so right, but the rest pure stunned silence.
Millie’s frowning like you just told her two plus two equals fish.
Tooney finally says it. “Wait. Who kissed you?”
A little sheepish, heart still in your throat, you say, "Alexia"
Lucy nearly chokes on her protein shake.
Keira drops her phone in her lap. “Alexia Putellas?”
You glance at Georgia, who raises an eyebrow and mutters, “Told you this lot weren’t paying attention.”
“No, sorry.” Alex leans forward, hand in the air like she’s at school. “When did that become a thing?”
Beth’s already bouncing next to you, grabbing your arm. “Are you kidding me? This is so exciting!”
“But how—” Ella cuts in. “Like when? Where? How do you even know her like that?!”
You laugh helplessly, because yeah, you get it, to them, this came out of nowhere.
Georgia leans back, arms behind her head, she says smugly. “They were making eyes at the champions League games. And when we played Spain last month. You were all too busy watching the ball.” Beth cleared her throat, "Except Beth, she saw it"
"So you went from making eyes to kissing?" Millie asked
“Erm, no. She uh she came to Germany. She visited me, stayed with me, we hung out for a few days” you say finally, voice soft. “Then I visited her in Barcelona, stayed with her.”
You glance around the corridor at the sea of shocked faces, half in awe, half still short-circuiting.
“She kissed me before she left just now,” you add, quieter again. “It wasn’t dramatic. Just… real. Said she should of done it at the airport yesterday”
And that’s when the chaos starts, "Thats why you were in Barcelona?" Leah exclaimed, "You were seeing Alexia"
"So are you like? Dating?"
You shrug, "I don't know. It's-"
Georgia smiled, "It's giving clueless shy teenager"
"Fuck you Gee" You laugh as she did.
⚽️
It’s only a friendly, that’s what they keep saying.
Low stakes. Rotations. Minutes in legs, but you feel different, there’s something crawling under your skin not nerves exactly, but anticipation.
You step out into the tunnel, boots scuffing lightly against concrete, the murmur of the crowd leaking in from the stands. You roll your shoulders, breathe through it.
Beth jogs up beside you, bumping your elbow. “You good?” You nod, too fast. She squints at you. “You sure?”
Before you can answer, Georgia jogs past, turning back over her shoulder. “You heard? Spain are here nothing else to do so came the came”
You blink. “What?”
Gee's already pointing subtle, just a tilt of the chin toward the lower stand across from the benches. You follow her gaze and there they are.
A block of familiar red hoodies Spain’s internationals still stuck in England. Still!
And right in the middle Alexia. Hair loose around her shoulders, sunglasses perched in her hair, coat undone like she didn’t even think about looking cool and yet still does. She’s watching warm-ups casually, like it’s nothing, but you feel it.
You shake your head, fighting the smile already creeping up your face as you pick up a jog to go join the warm ups in the lovely early afternoon sun.
It dawned on you, she's never watched you play like this, you've watched her, you've played against her, but she's never done this. Sitting in the stands to watch you play. No pressure. None at all.
You knew where they were all sat and the position you were in today, you would be playing right up and down in front of them all the first half.
You finish the final stretch of warm-ups, but peel off before heading inside as you spot them. Your little brothers.
Tiny hands waving over the hoardings, feet bouncing, eyes glowing. Your dad’s standing beside them, and beside him his wife, and her daughter twelve, polite, slightly shy, but smiling when she sees you heading over. You give her a little wave, as you approached.
You slow your jog as you get to the barrier, "DAD!" you shout, he can't hear you. Of course. "DAD!" You motion to Freya to get your dad which she does and you point at the boys and motion for them. You lean on the advertising board as they excitedly rush down the steps past the Spanish team.
“Look who’s here,” you grin, ruffling there hair and kissing there heads.
The six-year-old is practically vibrating. “We saw you on the big screen already!”
You laugh, reaching to squeeze his chin. “You excited?”
The four-year-old thrusts out a drawing, a sign he made, crumpled at the edges, a stick figure version of you in an England kit with arms outstretched like a plane.
“I made this!” he yells.
You press a hand to your heart mock surprise on your face, "I love it, make sure you hold it really high so I can see it"
They’re a little overwhelmed with the amount of people and noise already, but full of joy this is their moment, seeing you out there, and you drink it in like water.
You smile, "I have to go but one question, if I score what celebration should I do?"
They lose it.
“Do the sui!” “No, do a heart!” “Do the cartwheel!” “Backflip!”
You’re laughing, fully gone, hands fixing your hair as you shake your head.
“Okay, okay,” you say. “If I score… I'll pick one.”
They both agree loud and excited and you squeeze their hands before you go, you went to go but spot Freya coming down, you give her a quick side hug check she's ok before sending the boys off with her and sprint across the pitch and down the tunnel now no one else was out here.
But as you turned, brushing your palms on your shorts, you feel it. Eyes. You didn't have to turn to know it was Alexia watching you.
Seated amongst the rest of her team, her arms folded, eyes fixed on you but not in the way she would watch you on a pitch.
It was softer than that, warmer.
⚽️
It’s been one of those starts, they’ve clearly done their homework Portugal’s midfield and defence collapsing on you every time you get the ball, and the ref was letting way too much go.
First it was a late hip-check. Then a clipped heel. Now it’s every possession hands on your back, arms across your chest, studs snapping too close to your shins. You keep shaking them off, keep getting up, until you don’t.
The ball’s played into your feet just outside Englands half, you open your body, try to spin and the moment your touch shifts into space, a challenge comes straight through you. Legs gone. Feet out from under you.
You don’t fall, you hit the ground shoulder first and hard. With a sickening thud, the kind of impact that knocks the breath out of your lungs before you can process the pain.
The whistle doesn’t come, of course it doesn’t. You stay down, not in a dramatic way, not milking it, but because you have to. Just still., trying to breathe, trying to see straight, access if it hurts just because it does or if you were injured,
You hear the crowd screaming at the ref that sharp collective roar, sounds of whistles being made with mouths. Alessia the only one up the pitch shouts your name, but you don’t respond right away.
Your shoulder pulses. Your elbow’s scraped raw. Your ribs feel like they got rung like a bell.
And above all of it you feel her, you don’t look toward the stands, you don’t need to. You know Alexia’s watching not as a player, not even as someone who knows the game but as her. The one who held your chin last night, the one who kissed you like it meant something, the one who sees you, now, folded on the pitch and not bouncing back since it happened right in front of the Spanish team.
You push yourself up slowly, testing weight on your arm, breathe coming through your nose. You hear the bench yelling for the fourth official. You hear Alessia calling across the pitch again, the bench wanting her to find out if you were ok as the ref was still not taking you on stopping the game.
But through all of it, there’s only one person you want to look for you glance toward the crowd, and there she is sunglasses gone, hands clenched in her lap, eyes locked only on you.
You’re up. Barely, but you’re already walking it off, because she’s watching and so is your family. And that’s enough to keep you upright even if you’re hurting.
Down the opposite end of the pitch, stretching the pitch, two passes and they’re in the box.
Before you can even catch your breath, the ball’s in the net.
0-1.
The stadium groans, the bench is shouting. Your teammates throw up their arms in frustration.
You just stop, right there on the pitch, you throw your head back, chest heaving, throat closing tight with exhaustion and heat and pure frustration.
Then you drop, not like before this time, you choose to. You lower yourself back to the turf flat on your back, arms above your head, lungs dragging at air like it’s suddenly gone thin.
Your eyes sting, not from tears not exactly, but from everything. The pain. The helplessness. The way you can feel your family watching. The way you know Alexia is too.
You press the heel of your hand to your chest, try to breathe through it.
It doesn’t work, you squeeze your eyes shut, and suddenly, a shadow cuts across you.
Beth.
She’s already crouching beside you, a hand on your side voice low and tight. “You alright?”
You can’t answer you just shake your head once. Tiny. Honest.
Georgia’s there too now, someone’s signalling to the bench as your team all descend on you making the watching crowd now even more worried it wasn't you to stay down, let alone go back down.
The ref’s finally calling for the physio, but you don’t move. You just stay down, chest rising too fast, eyes fixed on the blue sky overhead.
And all you can think for just a second is whether she’s still watching, and how stupid you look.
You don’t open your eyes when the physios arrive. You feel the soft tap on your ankle, the calm voice saying your name twice, then a third time.
Beth’s still crouched beside you, one hand braced on your shin, her voice close to your ear. “Breathe. Okay? I’ve got you. Just breathe.”
One of the medics asks, “Where’s the pain?” and you gesture toward your ribs with a shaky hand, still not speaking.
The other’s pressing gently against your shoulder now. "Range of motion?"
You nod once. But you’re still flat on your back. Still trying to find a breath that feels full.
Millie's voice comes from somewhere just above. "She’s been getting kicked every five minutes. Are we seriously gonna wait until she can’t stand to protect her?"
You push yourself up, quicker than before, pain flares down your side like it’s laughing at you, but you grit your teeth, get an elbow under yourself, then the other, until you’re sitting. Barely.
Beth’s hand steadies your back. "You’re not weak for coming off," she murmurs.
“I’m not,” you rasp. “Coming off.”
She gives you a long look, not impressed, not unkind.
Then quiet, but pointed, “Saw her stand up when you hit the deck.”
Your jaw tightens.
You get to your feet stagger, then plant them, he physios hover, the ref checks in. You’re not okay, but you’re not done and as the whistle goes to restart, and your waiting on the touchline to be let back on, your hand drifts briefly toward your ribs, grounding yourself.
The pain’s not gone, but your feet are under you and you know she’s still watching and it was time to put on a show.
You’re still feeling every step.
Each sprint tugs at your ribs. Every pivot sends a throb through your shoulder. You’ve gone quiet on the ball not because you’re hiding, but because you’re calculating. Watching, biding your time, you watch as slowly your markers distance, giving you more and more space as you slow to a walk back and to follow the direction of the play but not involved. You know what you’ve got left for this half and you’re saving it.
The board goes up: +3.
There’s a murmur through the crowd not a roar, not yet but people are shifting, expecting whistles, slow jogs, the halftime lull, but you’re still moving.
The ball breaks down the left Beth, of course, fighting through two defenders like she’s got something to prove. She cuts it inside, sharp and low, and Georgia takes the touch on the edge of the box.
You’re trailing, late, not marked, open.
Georgia sees you flicks it your way the pass is bouncing, awkward not clean, but you don’t need clean. A roar of shoot erupted from the England fans and you just hit it.
Left foot, none preferred foot, first time, outside of the boot, top of the laces. It rises fast skipping the turf, arcing, curling away from the keeper. You know it’s in before it even finishes rising.
Top corner. The stadium erupts.
You don’t stop to think you’re already turning, already running toward the touchline with your arms out but halfway there, your ribs bite, and you stop short.
Instead, you slow, you bring your hands up and you make the heart exactly the way you promised.
You glance up as your swamped by your team not toward the bench, not toward the camera, but the stands. And there she is, Alexia, not standing, s smile over her mouth. Not shocked, not disbelieving.
Just… in awe.
Mapi beside her nudges her hard. Patri shouts something you don’t understand. Alexia's just watching you.
You lower your hands, still breathless, still burning, but smiling.
⚽️
Second half starts and you press.
Every time they try to close you down in twos, you draw one in and spin away. Every time they get physical, you use it a shoulder drop, a feint, a switch of pace.
In the 48th minute, the gap opens.
Beth sends it to you from wide overhit slightly, bouncing but you chase it anyway. The Portuguese centre-back goes shoulder-to-shoulder with you.
Big mistake.
You let the contact roll you forward, slip low around her blind side ball sticking to your foot like it's tied there.
Two touches then you bury it.
Low. Near post. Keeper stuck.
2-1.
You don't celebrate wildly you just turn back toward the halfway line, all calm smirk and low nods, like this is exactly what was always going to happen. By the time the 55th minute hits, they’ve stopped pressing you.
And that’s when you go again this time it starts with Keira — ball recovered deep, pinged straight to your feet just outside the box. You drop a shoulder, glide right, and they don’t follow, they’re waiting. Sitting, so you take the space.
One touch. Two. Left foot. Curled. Over the keeper, bottom corner.
3-1.
You don’t even lift your arms, you just turn, eyes sweeping the crowd until you find Alexia as you await the onslaught of your teammates
Standing this time, one hand fisted low at her side like she’s trying not to cheer too obviously, but her eyes shine.
65th Minute
The cross is perfect fast and low skimming past the first defender, bending into that no-man’s-land between keeper and back line.
You see it early. You know the run. You’ve made this run a hundred times. It’s instinct now. You break the line. You dive.
Head low, shoulders tucked, eyes on the ball. You dip and drive forward and connect. It’s beautiful. A flick, just enough, ball sails past the keeper’s hand.
The ball is in, you know it, you felt it glance off your forehead, the weight of it pulling away toward goal.
But you never see it go in, because the defender’s boot slams into the side of your face mid-dive hard, blind, no malice, just collision and your body crumples and twists with the force mid-air.
You hit the ground with a dead weight thud, sparking fears you were out cold instantly with the way you fell, face first, no reaction to try and cushion your fall with your arms, they were just as limp as the rest of your body appeared to be.
The stadium reacts before you can, he gasp the collective inhale rolls like thunder, before that silence you never wanted to hear in a football stadium,
Boots thudding as your teammates swarm, but you don’t move, because your body won’t let you.
The blow rings through your skull, white-hot and suffocating. The sound disappears dulled like you’re underwater, your vision pulses with light and black edges, your jaw slack. Your lips parting. And the blood warm and constant begins to stream from your cheekbone, nose, lip, you taste it.
You're aware of nothing other than pain and the dull weight of your head on the grass.
You hear your name again and again but it feels far away, even Beth’s voice, usually sharp as a knife, barely lands.
The medics reach you in seconds, one is already holding your head, the other’s checking your breathing, murmuring something you can’t follow.
You catch phrases in broken pieces.
"Concussion protocol." "Stay with me." "Bleeding from the orbital..." "Possible fracture."
Your breath shudders, and a timid cry escapes your lips as the medics are rolling you carefully now, stabilising your neck, pressing something against the blood to slow it.
Someone taps your shoulder, tells you to squeeze a hand if you can hear them. You do. Barely.
Your eyes flutter half-open, lashes wet with blood and sweat, and then your eyes move, they find Alexia frozen risen in her seat still as stone.
She’s standing feet braced like she doesn’t trust her own knees eyes locked on you. She’s not shouting, not calling your name, she’s just watching, and she doesn’t move.
You come back to yourself in pieces.
First, the cold. Not the air the grass. Damp and sharp beneath your body. The way it clings to your skin. It smells like dirt and turf pellets and blood.
Then, pain, spiking, dull, all at once.
Your cheekbone throbs with a heartbeat of its own, your jaw’s locked, your eyes won’t open all the way, your nose doesn't even feel like it's still apart of you and your ribs still sore from earlier now ache with the effort of every breath.
You flinch when gloved fingers press gently to your face.
“She’s responding,” someone says. “Pupils reactive.”
Your lips part, dry and cracked, the taste of iron spreads again across your tongue.
You feel pressure on your shin steady, grounding and then a voice, closer, lower, “It’s okay. You’re okay. We’re here.” Georgia.
You can’t see her, but you feel her crouched beside your legs, probably giving the medic hell in her own way. You manage to shift one hand. It twitches against the turf. That’s all.
Still, the physio murmurs, “That’s good. You’re doing good.”
Another figure joins the edge of your blurred vision Leah, maybe, pacing just out of reach. Someone calls for water. There’s shouting you can’t track, the ref speaking to the fourth official.
And still beneath it all that awareness, she’s watching, you don’t see Alexia, but it's like her presence is stitched to your skin. Like the back of your neck can feel the weight of her stillness.
The physio cuts through again. “Hey, can you hear me?” You nod. Barely. “Can you talk?” You try. Nothing comes, just a low breath, half-choked on the edge of your tongue.
Georgia grabs your hand. “Don’t force it. You're doing great, yeah?”
The ref leans in, there’s talk of subs, of time, but you’re not leaving. Not yet. You blink once slow, heavy and drag your gaze toward the sideline.
Alexia is still on her feet, still rooted to the same spot, hands clenched now, hoodie sleeves bunched in her fists.
The voices begin to settle, the urgency in them thins not gone, but changed. Less panic, more preparation. The medic closest to you leans in, voice low and careful. “We’re going to help you sit up, okay?”
You nod. Or something like it.
They count one, two, three and gently roll you, shoulder first, until you’re propped awkwardly onto your side. Your head swims a wave of heat washes over your skin.
Georgia is right there, crouched beside you still, her hand braced against your back.
“You’re alright,” she whispers, her voice thick now. “You scared the hell out of us.”
You let out a breath through your nose all you can manage, another medic moves in with gauze. They press it carefully against your face the bleeding’s slower now, but your face is tacky, red, sticky with sweat and blood.
You can’t quite open your left eye but you’re awake, then they start to lift you one under each arm, guiding your weight, giving you the chance to push with your own legs, it’s slow. Your knees don’t feel like yours at first. The pitch tilts. The lights feel too close.
But you rise, bit by bit, until you’re upright.
The stadium comes into focus blurred edges, crowd murmuring again, then clapping. Louder now, you blink into it, dazed.
You glance sideways Georgia's still at your side, she’s not letting go. You mouth, “Water?” She’s already handing it over, when you’ve swallowed, when your balance returns in shaky breaths you look up.
Alexia is speaking quietly to one of Spain’s staff, eyes only on you and when you look at her, she stops talking, her jaw sets.
Her gaze flickers over your body your limp, your hand pressed to your ribs, the blood still staining, well everywhere.
And for the first time, she looks angry not at you at the game, at the way it takes and takes, no matter how much you give it.
You start the walk.
Flanked by a physio on your left and Georgia still glued to your right, you take that first step off the touchline and immediately, the stadium rises.
It’s not thunderous, not rowdy, it’s steady, respectful, the sound of people knowing what you gave.
You can barely lift your chin your ribs ache with every inhale, your vision still fuzzy on one side, your jaw tight against the throb in your cheek, but you’re walking.
And as you pass the halfway line, they start coming.
Beth is the first hand to your shoulder, a squeeze that says proud. No words needed.
Leah next, touching your back gently, then stepping aside so you don’t have to slow down.
Ella jogs over from midfield, half-breathless, half-emotional. “Don't scare us like that” she whispers as you pass, “Fucking hell.”
You smile with only half your mouth.
Keira’s further down, eyes flicking over your face, her brow tight with worry. “You alright?”
You nod once. Just once.
Lucy, last before the tunnel claps your back, firm. “Reckon that’ll be on highlight reels for years.”
Each touch steadies you, each word softens the ache just a little, but still the tunnel looms. Cool, shadowed. Removed.
Georgia stays close, shoulder brushing yours, “You did it,” she says quietly, only for you. “Even if the rest of us barely kept up.”
You glance toward the crowd again instinctively, your family, your brothers, your dad and just before you vanish beneath the overhang, you glance to Alexia.
Still watching, still unreadable, but you step into the tunnel, the roar fades behind you.
not me having watched them live for the first time on the worst day ever in Turin. i gotta go and watch them win... need it for my mental health (MAYBE NEXT YEAR)🔵🔴
caro reminiscing about the last 4 champions league finals in a row, including one "where she wanted to go home" 😤
source: esport3 on instagram
göteburg 2020-21: raise the cup for the first time
turin 2021-22: the worst. i wanted to go home
eindhoven 2022-23: the first goal because i knew that we would win it
bilbao: 2023-24: irene's stop with her head on the crossbar because yes, it is our day and we will win.
😭❤️🩹
alexia putellas x reader [& r's nephew] after a hectic and rushed morning, will gets sick. r and alexia take care of him. later in the week, r and alexia lose to real madrid, and will tries to help. fluff + hurt comfort 🙂
—
It seemed as though for every obstacle overcome, another one almost immediately presented itself. Every time you were able to push some doubt you had about yourself out of your head, another one replaced it. And every time, Alexia was there to ground you back to reality. She had enough confidence in you that it was okay when you didn’t really feel it in yourself.
And as time passed, your own confidence grew, and it seemed like Alexia’s did too. Until it was shaken.
Mornings in your household were pretty routine. Alexia got up, giving you time to sleep in as she got Will up and ready for the day. At first, you’d felt bad that she was taking the morning with him and you weren’t doing anything. But, as Alexia argued, you did almost the entirety of his bedtime with him, while Alexia pretended not to fall asleep on the sofa. And Ale liked having time with him in the morning, and she was awake anyway.
The two of them had their own special little morning routine, which included a walk around the neighborhood and Will spending 10 minutes picking his outfit out. It was practiced, at this point; Will and Alexia moved through the morning with purpose while you moved through the morning practically half conscious until your coffee kicked in, normally just as you were leaving the house to drop Will at school and head to training.
This morning, however, was neither routine nor practiced. You and Alexia had been up later than you’d intended. Normally, her internal clock woke her up without fail. It seemed that not getting her 9 hours had messed with her internal alarm, and she was roughly shaking you awake just 20 minutes before you had to leave.
“Amor. Amor. We overslept, levántante!” Alexia was almost frantic.
You groaned, batting her hand away from your shoulder. She was usually much nicer when she woke you up, though the circumstances obviously wouldn’t allow for the few minutes she normally spent stroking your hair and kissing your face.
“If you do not get up right now, we won’t have time for coffee.” Alexia called over her shoulder, heading down the hall to get Will up.
And with that, you were scrambling out of bed and stumbling into the bathroom. What followed was a very chaotic and very rushed 20 minutes, but you managed to make it out of the house in time, travel mug of coffee in hand. Will was eating his breakfast quietly in the backseat on the way to his school, Alexia driving calmly like she hadn’t acted like a maniac to get everyone out of the house on time, and you were trying to make your hair look less like Alexia had very clearly had you on your back the night before.
Alexia pulled into the dropoff line, and you reached back to undo Will’s car seat buckles.
“Have a good day, buddy. We’ll see you later.” You told him, ruffling his hair as he gave you a small smile.
“Love you Tia, love you Ale,” he called, opening the door and carefully climbing down out of the car.
You only really had time to think once you were driving towards training, half your coffee already gone. It was more than a little odd that you and Alexia had been allowed to oversleep. Will woke up at roughly the same time everyday, and in the rare event Alexia didn’t get him up, he got her up. Today, though, he’d still been sleeping when she’d gone in to wake him, almost an hour and a half later than normal. It hadn’t struck you as odd until you’d thought about it for more than 5 seconds, but once you had… you were retroactively trying to analyze your nephew’s behavior in the short time you’d been with him that morning.
“Did something seem off to you? With Will this morning?”
Alexia hummed, thinking. “No. A little quiet, I guess. Maybe he didn’t sleep well.”
You nodded, going over Wil’s behavior that morning. Quiet felt like it was only part of it, but Alexia was always more observant than you.
“You’re right. He’s fine.”
“He’s fine.” Alexia echoed, reaching over to grab your hand and lace your fingers with hers. She glanced over with a reassuring smile. “You’re overthinking. He’s okay.”
You returned her smile, trying to convince yourself. There was just this nagging feeling in the back of your head, one you couldn’t get rid of. Will’s face as you dropped him off this morning kept popping into your head, and maybe you were imagining things, but it seemed different than his usual smile. His goodbye had been quieter, and you could have sworn he walked slower into the building than normal.
You shook your head, squeezing Alexia’s hand and trying to focus on her next to you before you began to freak out over nothing. Will was fine.
—
Will was not fine. He’d woken up feeling positively awful, like everything in his body wasn’t working right. His head felt cloudy and his brain felt slower than normal. He’d barely been able to eat even a few bites of his breakfast before he had to give up, his stomach turning. He was warm when he woke up, his dinosaur comforter and matching sheets pushed to the bottom of his bed, but so cold his teeth were chattering in the car on the way to school, even wrapped in his new Barcelona sweatshirt. [Alexia had brought it home for him two days ago, despite you telling her he didn’t need anymore clothes. Alexia was always bringing him home little things she saw that made her think of him, and those were his most favorite things. The brontosaurus ornament from the christmas shop she’d gone to with you, the glow-in-the-dark shoes she’d brought home from a nike photo shoot, the spiderman keychain to attach to his backpack she’d gotten in the airport on the way home from an away game.]
Will wanted nothing more than to go home and burrow under the knit blanket you kept on the couch. He didn’t even care if you didn't let him watch the TV, as long as the icky feeling that filled his entire body went away soon. He thought about saying something, telling you he didn’t feel well.
But then he’d remembered what Alexia had said the night before, about today being an important training session before you played Madrid over the weekend. Will wasn’t quite sure how long training was, but he assumed it was like school, and you’d be gone all day. And Will knew that football was your and Alexia’s job, and his Dad had always told him how important jobs were. When Will still lived with his Dad, he hadn’t been allowed to stay home sick, because his Dad couldn’t miss work.
If anything, your and Alexia’s job seemed even bigger and more important than his Dad’s job. If Will said he was sick, one of you might have to stay home with him and miss training. That would be making way too much trouble, Will had decided. So, he’d put on a brave face and gone to school.
Maybe, when he got home, he could say he was extra tired, and take a nap on the couch with one of you. Maybe you’d lay with him on the couch and scratch his back like you did when he had a bad dream. He had to get through the school day first, a task that was feeling more and more impossible with every passing second.
—
The call came after the gym session. You always kept your phone on you now, as the adult responsible for a small child. It was a beautiful day, the kind that you pictured when you’d signed with Barcelona. Sun shining, warm on your skin. Your muscles ached in the best way, and though your worry for your nephew persisted somewhat, Alexia had been very reassuring. You walked with her now, from the gym out to the pitch, chatting easily about some gossip her sister had told her on the phone. It was funny, how you spent practically all your time together but you never ran out of things to talk about. Your teammates teased you for it, how you were constantly together, attached at the hip.
Your phone rang, but Alexia kept going on about Alba’s horrible co-worker, assuming it wasn’t a call you’d need to take in the middle of training. Yet when you pulled it out of your pocket and saw it was Will’s school calling, and Alexia caught a glimpse of the caller ID over your shoulder, she cut herself off abruptly.
“Hello?” You answered, stopping just off the pitch. You motioned for Alexia to go ahead without you, as Pere was calling everyone to gather around him, but she just rolled her eyes, leaning her head closer to try to listen.
“Hello, is this Will’s guardian?”
“Yes. Is everything okay?”
“Well, we have Will here in the nurse’s office, and…”
You listened intently, as did Alexia, though there was something heavy now weighing on her mind. You’d told her that something wasn’t right with Will that morning. And she hadn’t listened. She’d been more focused on reassuring you and calming your anxiety, not pausing to think whether you might be worrying for a good reason.
The nurse explained that Will had gotten sick in class, and needed to be picked up right away. Alexia was telling one of the assistant coaches who had wandered over that there was a family emergency and you both had to go before you’d even hung up the phone. As soon as you did, though, you turned to Alexia, face pinched with concern.
“Ale, you can stay–”
“No.” Alexia said assuredly, grabbing your hand and pulling you towards the building. “We will both go get him.”
Through your concern, your heart felt like it grew in size. Alexia never missed training voluntarily. Never. But now, she was rushing out with barely any notice to go with you to get Will, and you were reminded of how lucky you were to have her with you in this.
Even if she wasn’t thinking the same thing about herself in that moment.
—
The two of you rushed into the nurse’s office, panicked to a level that the nurse was not unfamiliar with. It was always the same with first time parents, when they had to come get their sick kid from school for the first time. The panic was always the same, you and Alexia practically breaking down her door in your haste to get to your nephew.
“Will,” you sighed, some of the stress and anxiety leaving your body at the sight of him in front of you. He was curled up on his side, tears still falling, pale and shaky, yet you were with him now, and that made it a little better.
“I’m sorry.” Will whimpered, sitting up shakily and wiping at his eyes. “I’m sorry, I didn’t mean to.”
“It’s okay, mi amor, don’t be sorry.” Alexia cooed, crouching down in front of the small cot and leaning in to kiss Will’s temple. She followed up with her hand right after, pressing it to his forehead and feeling the heat of his skin. He had a fever. How had she missed this?
Carefully, you pulled Will into your arms, lifting him easily.
“Please don’t be sorry, Will. I’m sorry we didn’t realize you weren’t feeling well.” You told him, slowly rubbing his back as he cried.
“I threw up in class and everyone saw.” He sobbed, burying his face in your neck. Your heart broke, and one look at Alexia told you hers was doing the same.
“I’ll sign him out.” Alexia murmured, resting one hand on Will’s back for a moment before heading to the desk, Will’s dinosaur backpack comically slung over her shoulder. You began to walk with your nephew out of the building and to the car, hearing his cries begin to slow.
When you finally got him buckled into his seat, after some convincing required to get him to let go of you, you felt his forehead just as Alexia had.
“Oh, buddy, you’re burning up.” You murmured.
Will’s lip was still trembling, but he tried to smile at you. “I’m… I’m okay.”
You could have laughed at how visibly untrue that statement was, but nothing about this was funny. Not even Alexia wearing Will’s backpack out to the car, much too small on her back.
You just kissed the top of his head, shut his door and headed around to the passenger seat. The car was quiet for a minute as Alexia backed out of the parking lot, only just noticing how poorly she had parked in her haste to get to Will.
“Are we going to football?” Will piped up quietly from the backseat. He’d come a few times, when he hadn’t had school, and he was hoping you and Ale would just bring him there so you wouldn’t miss work.
You and your girlfriend exchanged confused glances, Alexia studying him in the rearview mirror.
“No, bud, we’re going home. You’re sick, you need to rest.” You replied.
You weren’t expecting Will to start crying again, but the sound of his sniffling soon filled the car.
“But… but work is important. You can’t miss just for me!”
You twisted around in your seat to look at him, reaching out a hand to rest on his knee. His little face was flushed red, from sickness or emotion you weren’t sure. It shattered your heart that he would ever presume that football was more important than him.
“Will, you are much more important than work. So much more important.” You told him, tilting your head slightly to make eye contact with him.
“Cariño, did you feel ill this morning and not tell us because we had training?” Alexia cut in, the question practically burning on the way out.
A moment passed before your nephew nodded slightly. You half wanted to tell Alexia to stop the car so you could get into the backseat and pull Will into your arms, and half wanted Alexia to just run you over. You weren’t sure where he’d gotten the idea to lie about being sick, but it felt like a massive failure on your part.
“If you’re sick, baby, you have to tell us so we can take care of you. You don’t need to worry about football or training or anything; you come first, okay?”
“Will, you are the most important to us. More than football, do you understand?” Alexia asked, her voice shaking slightly with emotion.
Will nodded, his brown hair flopping into his eyes as he did so. “Okay.”
—
Alexia felt like the guilt could crush her. She never never wanted you or Will to think that football was more important to her. Yet here Will was, so sick his little body was shaking, but he’d tried to power through so he wouldn’t interrupt training.
It was with this guilt in her mind that she hovered uncertainly over the sofa, watching as you tucked Will under her favorite knit blanket, the one she preferred when she was sick, too. Alexia assumed neither you nor Will would want her around in that moment. You, because she’d talked you out of being rightfully worried for your nephew. And Will, for making him feel like he came second to her.
She was minutes away from offering to go to the grocery store and get the ingredients to make soup, just so she could have an excuse to call her Mami in the car and tell her how badly she messed up.
Well, how badly she thought she messed up.
“Okay, buddy. What can I get you? A snack? Soup? Anything?” You wondered, brushing his hair out of his face.
Alexia’s thoughts were still racing as Will’s gaze flicked over to her.
“Pancakes?” He wondered quietly, giving you a half smile. You chuckled, not sure why you thought he’d ask for anything else.
“Of course. I’ll go make them.” You stood, freezing when Alexia cleared her throat and spoke shakily.
“No, I can. You stay here with him.” She said quietly.
You raised your eyebrows, something about your girlfriend’s demeanor throwing you off. She seemed miserable and close to tears, somehow. Frowning, you opened your mouth, ready to ask her to join you in the kitchen for a minute so you could figure out what was wrong.
Will beat you to it, though. “Tia, sit with me?”
Will wasn’t looking at you, though. He was looking at Alexia. Her gaze flickered between yours and Will’s for a moment, completely dumbstruck.
“M-me?” Alexia asked, wringing her hands together. It had been a while since you’d seen her like this, so visibly upset when she was normally the picture of composure.
It didn’t seem to push Will off, though, because he just nodded. “Tia Ale sit with me. Tia go make pancakes.”
Will had called Alexia… Alexia the entire few months he’d been here. Sometimes Ale, but never anything else. You were Tia, and Alexia was Alexia. Until now, apparently.
Alexia could have sobbed, truly. Just when she’d been thoroughly convinced she was a horrible.. guardian or whatever she was, Will had innocently asked for her to sit with him, and fixed every doubt that was gripping her heart.
And you… you were looking at her with tears in your own eyes, a smile on your face. There was no annoyance on your face, no blame in your eyes. You just looked happy.
Maybe she hadn’t messed up as bad as she thought.
Without another word, Alexia sat on the couch, sliding under the blanket with Will and tucking him into her side. He snuggled right against her, his face still slightly pinched with discomfort, but seeming a lot more comfortable now.
After a minute of silence, Alexia now beaming at you from the couch, Will looked away from the TV back to where you were standing, watching the two of them fondly.
“Tia? Pancakes? Please?” He reminded you.
You nodded with a small laugh, leaning down to kiss his temple, and Alexia’s before heading into the kitchen.
You really loved your little family.
—
Will admittedly didn’t know much about football. He knew that you and Alexia were very good, knew that you both worked very hard. He knew Barcelona wore the blue and red colors, and he’d learned the numbers that appeared on the back of your kits. Though he’d yet to attend a match, he’d watched most of them from Eli’s couch while she gave him all the snacks he could ever want.
Will was watching when you and Alexia lost to Real Madrid, and Eli tried to explain to him the significance. All he really took away from that conversation, though, was that you and Ale would be sad, and he should probably give you hugs to make it better.
He’d done so when you picked him up from Eli’s, allowing Alexia time to head home and decompress. Will hugged you tight, Alexia even tighter once he got home and saw the frown on her face. It was late in the evening, already past his bedtime, and the two of you were very quiet.
Will thought he sort of knew how you felt, because he didn’t like losing the games at recess, either. There wasn’t much he could think to do, though. He’d barely been home 10 minutes before you were asking him to go get his pajamas out, so he could start getting ready for bed. You and Alexia walked in a few minutes later, after having a tense whispered conversation in the hall, one that Will did not miss.
He could tell you were both upset, but you tried your best not to let it show that you were somewhat upset with each other. It always happened after a loss, especially one like this. You and Alexia would be tense, snap at each other. It was a different situation entirely now that Will was here, his little face gazing up at the two of you, wide eyed, where he sat tucked under his covers.
He’d put his pajamas on himself, and both you and Alexia cracked smiles when you noticed his shirt was on backwards. He smiled back, wordlessly holding out his favorite book for one of you to read.
You took it, perching on the edge of his bed while Alexia leaned in the doorway, exhaustion causing her eyes to droop. Will looked between the two of you as you opened the book.
“Are you fighting?”
Alexia’s eyes were on you, you could tell, waiting for you to take the lead. You didn’t quite feel like looking at her, so you smiled softly at your nephew, running a hand through his brown curls.
“No, bud. We’ve just had a long day.”
Will looked dubious, even as Alexia nodded along.
“It sounded like you were fighting. In the hall. When you said Alexia was being mean and Alexia said you didn’t care about her feelings.”
You froze at that, not quite sure what your response was supposed to be. You were so tired, too tired to figure out how to explain that you and Alexia were just having a small argument to Will. Every part of your body ached from the physical match that had been played, and you swore you still felt as cold as if you’d stepped out of the rain just a minute ago and not several hours ago.
Just before you were about to stumble your way through some explanation, Alexia cleared her throat.
“We aren’t fighting, cariño. Your Tia and I just care a lot about football, and when we lose, it makes us sad.”
“That’s what Eli said, that you would be sad, and I should give you a really big hug.”
Alexia smiled softly, stepping further into the room, but not quite approaching you. You still wouldn’t look at her.
“She’s right, your hug made me feel so much better. Your Tia and I hate losing, and sometimes we aren’t very nice to each other after we lose. But we aren’t fighting, just… disagreeing.”
Will thought for a moment, his fingers fiddling with his navy blue spiderman pajama top.
“You should be better at losing.” He said finally.
You snorted, and Alexia laughed. Will smiled proudly, even as you shook your head in mock disbelief.
“Says the little boy who flipped the board over when he lost at checkers yesterday!”
Will giggled, and the tension was broken. Mostly.
Neither of you wanted him to carry the weight you were feeling, feel sad just because you both were. You kept his nighttime routine as normal as possible, reading his book and tucking him in, both of you kissing his forehead before heading out.
Alexia didn’t say anything as you headed to your shared bedroom, but to be fair, neither did you. It was a bit early for the two of you to head to bed, but after the day you’d had, both of you knew sleep would be the best thing.
Pajamas on, you and Alexia slid into bed, the room still silent. It only took a minute after you flicked the light off for the bed to shift, Alexia’s warm body sliding closer until she was pressed up against you.
Tired of being mad, you turned into her, resting your head against her chest as her arms encircled you. A deep sigh escaped you, and you felt like it was the first real breath you’d had since the full time whistle had blown.
“I’m sorry. I was harsh, and I shouldn’t have been. I love you.” Alexia murmured, lips pressing a kiss to your hair.
You snuggled closer, inhaling again the scent of her. “I’m sorry too. You’re allowed to be upset, I shouldn’t have tried to fix it when you just needed to feel it.”
“And we both need to get better at losing.” Alexia replied. You could hear the small grin in her voice, feel her chest shake slightly as she chuckled.
“Apparently.” You agreed.
“Goodnight, mi amor.”
“Goodnight my Ale.”
And just like that, everything was fine again. Everything was fixed.
—
Will woke early the next morning. As was his routine, he got up and headed for your room to wake Alexia up. She was an early riser, didn’t mind getting up with him and letting you sleep in. Most of the time, she was already kind of awake, scrolling on her phone.
This morning, though, when Will pushed the door open and peaked his head in, Alexia wasn’t awake. She was out cold, head practically shoved under her pillow, while you slept completely on the other side of the bed, one arm hanging off the side of the bed. You both looked very comfy, and Will remembered last night, how tired Alexia had seemed. She’d practically fallen asleep in his doorway standing up.
Thinking for a moment, Will turned around and headed back to his room. He grabbed his ipad out from his backpack, the one he took with him for the car trip to Eli’s. He wasn’t technically supposed to have it now, but he figured that you wouldn’t mind if he let you sleep. He grabbed his headphones, too, his favorite blanket and his most favorite dino, Robert. As quietly as he could, he crept back down the hall and into your room. Climbing up on the bed, he took advantage of the ample space between the two of you, settling back against the pillows under his blankie. He plugged his headphones in, tucked his dino under one arm, and pressed play on his favorite dinosaur show.
This way, you both could keep sleeping, and he didn’t have to play alone somewhere by himself.
—
You awoke to small, insistent hands pulling at the comforter so it covered more of you. Before you could open your eyes, little hands pushing into the blanket, tucking it in nice and tight around you. Groggily, you cracked an eye, finding Will’s face just a few inches away. He looked… guilty, like he’d looked when he broke the vase on the coffee table, and you were immediately alert.
“What’s up bud?” You whispered, conscious that Ale was still asleep on the other side of your nephew.
“Sorry. Didn’t mean t’wake you.” Will whispered back. “You looked cold.”
“What are you doing in here, hm? You should be in your bed.”
Will pulled a face, tugging his headphones off his head. “But it’s late and I was bored.”
You clocked the sun peaking in between the curtains, startled to realize it was much higher in the sky than it should have been. It was at least 10, and Will always got up before 7:30.
“Oh, buddy, it is late. I’m so sorry, why didn’t you wake one of us up?”
By one of us, you meant Alexia.
Will just shrugged, shyly smiling at you. “You were sad last night. And when I’m sad, you tell me it makes my body tired and that’s why I’m more sleepy. So you needed more sleep too, you and Tia Ale.”
Your heart melted and you pulled the small boy down into your arms, squeezing tight.
“You are the sweetest boy.” You told him.
Will beamed, squeezing you back. “I got my ipad even though I wasn’t supposed to.”
Leaning back, you brushed his messy hair off his forehead. That was what the guilty look was for. As if you’d be upset with him for wanting to let you both sleep, but also not wanting to be by himself. As if you’d be mad he brought his ipad in here and put on his Dino show and wore his headphones and tucked the blankets around you because you looked cold.
“That’s okay, buddy.” You replied. “You are so thoughtful to let us sleep in.”
“Tia Ale says it’s important to be thoughtful and kind.” Will said, echoing something you knew Alexia told him every morning before he left for school. It was something her Mami had always said to her, Alexia had told you once.
“Alexia is right.” You nodded, settling back into the pillows with Will now laid in your arms. Next to him, the mattress shifted, and a raspy voice piped up.
“Alexia is always right.” Ale said sleepily, not even opening her eyes as she blindly reached to pat Will on the head. Will laughed, a sound that was quickly becoming one of your favorites in the world.
For a few minutes, the room stayed silent, Will laid between the two of you, for the moment content to sit still. You were still waking up, and Alexia could probably barely be considered awake.
“Hey, Tia?” Will murmured, breaking the quiet peacefulness of the morning. You hummed for him to continue. “Can I call my Daddy?”
Sometimes you forgot. You shouldn’t forget, but you did, and you knew Ale did too. Sometimes things just went so well, Will fit so perfectly into your family that you forgot the circumstances under which he was here. And when you remembered, you were instantly filled with guilt. Like you were stealing something from your brother. You should be talking more about Leo, calling Leo more often.
Will wasn’t yours, but he was. It was a difficult line to walk, a difficult thing to balance. Will wasn’t your son but you felt like a parent. Alexia felt like a parent, had taken to being one so easily. But Will wasn’t your son. He was your nephew, and the last thing you wanted was to try to take the place of Leo.
As you pulled your phone out, dialling the number for the prison, you wondered if you’d ever figure out how to fit into Will’s life without feeling like you weren’t doing enough, were doing too much. You wondered if you’d ever feel like you were doing right by your brother, and right by Will.
You were torn from your spiral when the call connected. Instead of the usual robotic voice stating you would soon be connected through to Leo, it was the same robotic voice, telling you the call had not been accepted. There were plenty of reasons for Leo not to pick up the phone, plenty of real, valid reasons. For some reason you couldn’t explain, though, your stomach had dropped. Something about it felt wrong, especially knowing that Leo knew Will liked to call Sunday mornings.
You glanced over to where Will was poking at Alexia’s face, where she was pretending to be going back to sleep. He was laughing, and you could see Ale fighting a small smile herself. With a deep sigh, you forced a tense smile onto your face.
“Will?” The boy turned towards you, face lit up with excitement as he reached for the phone. “I’m sorry, baby, your Dad couldn’t pick up. He’s… he’s busy.”
The smile fell from Will’s face, the room suddenly feeling a few degrees colder. Alexia’s eyes flew open, fixed on Will’s face as he tried to hide his disappointment.
“Oh. Okay.” He whispered, fidgeting with his fingers in his lap.
It was like the life had been sucked out of him. You thought hard, trying to think of anything you could offer him or promise him that would lift his mood again. Alexia beat you to it.
“Hey, cariño? Do you want to go out for pancakes?” She suggested, resting a hand on Will’s back.
Still staring at his hands tightly clasped in his lap, Will slowly shook his head, much to your astonishment. Will never turned down pancakes, especially at his favorite breakfast place. You didn’t go often because it was a ways away, and normally, the suggestion would have had him skipping around the room with joy.
“No thank you.” He mumbled, sniffling. His small fist came up to rub at his face and your heart broke even more. Alexia looked like she was in physical pain, fighting the urge to pull Will into a bone crushing hug.
Carefully, you shifted back down in the bed, opening your arms for your nephew. He practically lunged forward, wrapping his arms tight around your neck and shoving his face into your shoulder.
“Oh, buddy.” You murmured, wishing there was something you could say to make it better.
There wasn’t.
Alexia ran a hand through her disheveled hair and moved closer, wrapping her arms around you both as she kissed the top of Will’s head. One of Will’s hands unwrapped itself from around your neck, moving to grab a fistful of Alexia’s sweatshirt. Like he was trying to be as close to the two of you as possible, as if you could protect him from what he was feeling. You wished you could, more than anything.
The three of you sat there in silence, all deep in thought, and you knew neither you nor Alexia would move until Will moved.
What you didn’t know, though, was that this was the first of many unexplained declined calls from Leo. Just the beginning of a sudden complete silence you couldn’t begin to explain to yourself or to Will.
—
:) cranked this out in between studying. hope you enjoyed ❤️🩹
obsessed 😍👀
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 2: You meet again whilst on International Duty
Word Count: 9.6K
⚽️
The engine hums beneath your seat. Your bag is stuffed into the overhead rack. Your boots still stink faintly of grass and adrenaline. Everyone around you is quiet — headphones in, eyes closed, half-asleep grief stitched across their post-match faces.
You’re sat by the window, forehead leaned lightly against the cool glass, her shirt folded in your lap. You’ve run your fingers along the seam a dozen times already. Number 11. You haven’t looked at your phone since you sat down.
Until it buzzes.
Ellie 🧤: What have you done to Alexia?
You blink. Frown. Sit up a little straighter.
You: What? Why? What have I done?
A typing bubble flashes. Then disappears. Comes back again.
Ellie 🧤: Irene told me. Apparently Alexia NEVER asks to swap shirts. Like, ever. And even when she ends up with one, she usually hands it off to staff. But yours she folded and packed straight into her own bag. Shrugged off one of the trainers when they reached for it. Just… packed it like it was gold.
You stare at the screen.
Still holding her shirt in your lap.
Your stomach does that thing — the shift. Like the drop before a fall, but slower. Deeper.
You: Stop.
Ellie 🧤: No. I think she likes you. 😏
You roll your eyes, but your heart flips anyway. You glance around the bus like someone might be watching your reaction — but no one’s paying attention. Everyone’s too tired, too sore, too wrapped in their own silence.
You look back down at the shirt in your lap. Thumb tracing her name along the back.
She packed yours.
Kept it.
Chose it.
And for some of the things she didn’t say on that pitch… maybe that said everything.
You lean your head back against the seat, letting your lips pull into a slow smile — the kind no one else on the bus gets to see.
⚽️
The familiar rhythm of international duty clicks into place the second you arrive — the crisp white kit, the echo of boots in hallways, the early morning call times, the sting of cold water recovery tubs. Different energy. Different badge over your heart. But your body knows the routine.
You’ve shaken the Champions League loss off publicly. But privately… parts of it linger. The ache in your calves. The phantom touch of her hand on your back. The shirt — hers — still tucked away, folded carefully like it’s something sacred.
You haven’t messaged her.
She hasn’t messaged you.
Until now.
You’re sitting in your room, freshly showered, scrolling half-mindlessly through your feed, when you see it — a notification that pulls your breath short.
alexiaputellas11 sent you a message.
You stare at it for a beat. Then tap.
The message is short.
Alexia: So I hear we’re doing this again soon… 🇪🇸🏴
Your lips twitch. That subtle stir in your chest kicks up again. You type back.
You: Afraid so. Home and away. Still time to switch sides though if you fancy it. We’ve got good biscuits in camp.
There’s a pause — a long one — like she’s reading it slowly, maybe smiling at it. You hope she is.
Alexia: Tempting. But I think I’m exactly where I need to be. Besides… I quite like chasing you around.
You inhale through your nose, deep, slow.
That’s not just banter. That’s loaded. That’s deliberate.
You: Chasing me? Bold of you to admit it. We’re 1–1, by the way. Just saying.
Alexia: I know. So let’s settle it.
Three words, and suddenly the fixture means more than points, more than friendlies, more than form.
It’s you and her again.
But this time, it’s in the sunburned air of Seville. Or the rain-soaked grass of Wembley. New battlefield. Same electricity.
And for the first time since the miss…
You’re itching for kickoff.
⚽️
The dinner hall’s a soft hum of laughter and plates, steam rising from trays, conversations criss-crossing down long tables. You’re in training kit, hair still damp from the post-session shower, hunger gnawing at your focus. You leave your phone face up on the table next to your water bottle, already halfway turned toward the food line.
Behind you, Beth Mead’s dropping into the seat next to yours, tray in hand, chatting with someone at her shoulder.
You don’t notice the buzz.
Not until you’re halfway back to the table, plate full, when you spot her eyes flick down to your phone — then up at you.
Just a flick.
Then, as you sit, she leans in slightly, lowering her voice.
“Your phone lit up,” she says softly, like she’s saying something far more dangerous than she is.
You shrug. “Ok, will look later, probably just my sister.”
Beth raises a brow, unimpressed.
“Nope. Didn’t say Poppy.”
She tilts her head, voice still low, barely above the clink of cutlery.
“Saw the name. Alexia Putellas Dm'ing you on Insta.”
Your stomach flips. Just a little.
You glance down at the screen — already faded to black again. But you know what it said. You felt it. Her name alone carries heat.
Beth’s watching you now, her grin subtle but sharp.
“Anything I should know?” she whispers, nudging your foot under the table.
You keep your voice steady, casual. “Just football talk.”
Beth gives you a look that says sure it is.
You shrug, eyes back on your plate. “She’s… friendly.”
Beth leans closer. “Friendly how?”
You smile into your fork. “The international rivalry kind of friendly.”
She smirks, shakes her head, and whispers, “You’ve got game, also a sly one, wouldn't think that of you” before returning to her food like she didn’t just poke a hole through your cool exterior.
You glance once at your phone, then again. Still dark. But it might as well be glowing. Because her name is still there. You wipe your fingers on a napkin. Eyes down. Discreet.
Beth’s still next to you, half-eating, half-smirking like she’s not paying attention. But you angle the screen away from her line of sight and unlock your phone, heart giving one subtle stutter as the screen lights up.
Alexia: Montse’s worried about you for next week.
You blink. Of all the things she could’ve said.
You stare at it, a slow smile tugging at the edge of your mouth. Beth, ever-curious, leans in slightly — not enough to be rude, just enough to let you know she’s very aware of your shift in posture.
You type back, careful and quiet.
You: Should you be telling me that? Bit of inside info, no?
A moment passes. Then the dots appear.
Alexia: It’s not a secret. She said it in a press conference this morning. Said you’re dangerous. That you know how to hurt us. She used the word clinical.
You stare at the screen for a moment, heart thudding — just a little heavier. Beth eyes you sideways.
“You okay?” she mumbles, poking a green bean with her fork.
You nod without looking up, thumb tapping the screen again.
You: Montse has good taste. I take it you didn’t correct her?
Alexia: No. I just smiled and pretended I wasn’t already picturing you breaking through our backline again giving me a headache.
Your eyes snap to the screen — heart officially off the rails. You swallow hard, and try — fail — not to smirk.
Beth whispers under her breath, “You’re so blushing.”
You shove a bite of food into your mouth just to distract yourself, eyes glued to the words glowing softly in your hand.
You: Tell her she’s right. I’m feeling a little dangerous this week.
Alexia: Good. I want your best.
And even though the dining hall is warm and full and noisy… You feel suddenly, completely alone with her again.
You’re trying to be subtle. Really.
Your phone’s tucked low in your lap, screen tilted just enough for your eyes only. You're answering slowly, carefully, but every few seconds, a ghost of a smile keeps tugging at your lips — you can feel it there, betraying you.
And of course, it doesn’t go unnoticed.
You hear the first one from across the table — Keira, of course.
“You’ve got that look,” she says, pointing a fork at you like it’s a truth detector. “That soft smile, eyes-down, texting someone you shouldn’t look.”
You blink up from your food. “What look?”
Keira raises her brow. “That look.”
Millie Bright leans in next. “Yeah, it’s giving ‘new crush’ energy.”
Ella adds through a mouthful of food, “I bet it’s someone in camp. That’s why she’s all hush-hush.”
You roll your eyes, trying to shrug it off. “It’s just a message.”
But the smile’s still there. And it’s not going anywhere.
You glance at Beth beside you. She hasn’t said a word. Just chewing, casually sipping from her water bottle, eyes low, completely unbothered.
Except… she knows. You can feel it in the side-eye she sends you — that quiet, satisfied smirk that says, I saw the name. I know exactly who you're smiling at.
But she doesn’t say a thing. Not to the team. Not to anyone.
Just meets your eyes for half a second, mouth twitching, and then goes back to her food like she’s never heard the name Alexia Putellas in her life.
You make a mental note: Beth Mead, queen of chaos and loyalty.
Meanwhile, Georgia’s getting louder.
“I’m starting a sweepstake,” she announces. “Whoever figures out who’s got her smiling like that first wins my snack stash.”
“Tenner says it’s the physio,” says Ella.
“It’s not the physio!” you groan, trying to hide your laugh. There was a new physio on this camp and you apparently blushed profusely when you first met her.
Across the table, Beth leans in slightly, voice low, only for you to hear.
“You’re welcome for me keeping your little secret by the way,” she mutters, a quiet grin playing on her lips.
You bump her knee under the table.
And you go back to your phone — where her name still glows.
Alexia: I'll pre-warn my keepers and defence you're feeling dangerous.
You smirk — openly this time. Yeah. Let them guess. Let them wonder.
Because this whatever it is. That’s just between you and her.
And Beth. Apparently.
⚽️
You’re the first one out.
Track jacket zipped halfway up. Head down, earbuds in, taking slow steps onto the pitch as the stadium breathes around you — quiet, clean, still holding its breath.
Except, you’re not alone out here.
Spain’s already out.
Clustered near the halfway line, talking lowly in little spin off groups. You don’t look directly at them — not right away. You keep to your side of the line, walking the perimeter like it’s habit, trying to stay in your bubble.
But you feel it. That stare. Her. You don’t need to look to know, Alexia’s watching.
You keep your head down a second longer than necessary before finally giving in — lifting your eyes just enough to glance across the pitch.
And there she is. Jacket undone, hands on her hips, speaking to no one in particular. But her eyes? Locked. On. You.
You quickly look away — too quickly. Cheeks warming, heart knocking against your ribcage like it’s trying to escape.
You take a breath. Try to shake it off. Stretch a little more, try not to smirk.
Then you hear footsteps behind you — fast ones. “Oi.” Beth.
Jogging ahead of the rest of the England girls, warmup jacket flapping behind her, face already halfway between outrage and disbelief.
She slows beside you and gives you a look. The kind of look that demands answers, no escape. “I’m sorry,” she starts, voice sharp and low, “but what the actual hell was that look she just gave you?”
You blink, innocent. Too innocent.
Beth crosses her arms. “Don’t do that. Don’t go all wide-eyed ‘who me?’ on me. That girl was burning holes through you. Like, not even subtle. I thought she was gonna sprint across the halfway line.”
You try to play it cool. “You’re imagining things.”
“I’m not!” she hisses. “I literally had to slow down just to watch it happen in real time. It was charged. Like, capital ‘C’ Charged.”
You laugh under your breath, brushing your hands down the sides of your thighs, trying not to let the blush hit your ears.
Beth steps in closer. “You’re not telling me something. And I’ve let you get away with it until now, but no. That look? That look was not casual. That was not football. That was something else.”
You raise a brow, amused. “Bit obsessed with me, aren’t you?”
Beth snorts. “Don’t flatter yourself. I’m obsessed with drama. And you’re clearly serving.”
She glances back across the pitch, where the Spanish team is still gathered — Alexia no longer staring, but definitely aware.
Beth leans in again, lower this time.
“Just tell me this,” she says. “Do I need to buy a hat?”
You grin. “Oh fuck off” You laugh as the other girls catch up, "You're so fucking dramatic, it was a look. It's just a respect thing, professional"
She groans. “So there was a look”
You just laugh, finally letting yourself glance across the pitch again.
Alexia’s already turned away. Talking with teammates. Calm, collected. But you know what you saw. And Beth knows it too.
⚽️
You’re in the rhythm now.
One-touch passing drills. Sprint bursts. Finishing patterns. The kind of movements your body knows by muscle memory — but today, your mind isn’t cooperating.
Even without looking, you know where she is. You know the timbre of her voice when she calls for a ball. You know the way her ponytail flicks over her shoulder when she checks a run.
Spain’s warming up on the other half of the pitch, but somehow it feels like she’s still beside you. Not talking. Just… watching.
You’re doing a terrible job of pretending you haven’t noticed. Beth, of course, has noticed.
She’s jogging beside you during a passing drill, jogging backward now just so she can stare at you while you try to stay focused. “You’re being so obvious,” she mutters between touches.
You don’t even look at her. “I’m literally doing the drill.”
Beth gives you a look. “You’re doing the drill like a lovesick teenager hoping your crush sees you execute a textbook give-and-go.”
You snort. “Don’t flatter her.”
Beth grins. “Oh, I’m not flattering her. I’m mocking you.”
A stray ball rolls across your path from Spain’s half, and you instinctively jog over to knock it back. Just as you look up to return it-
She’s there. Alexia. Jogging to meet the same ball. You reach it before she does, as your eyes lock. And suddenly the air feels thinner.
She gives you a look — unreadable, but charged. Not a smirk. Not playful. Something steadier. Like she sees everything you're trying not to say.
You pass the ball and it falls right to her feet, she looks impressed, "Gracias,” she says lifting a hand, and you swear her accent clings to the word just for you.
You jog back to where you're supposed to be, immediately regretting the flush crawling up your neck.
Beth is waiting. “Oh my God,” she groans dramatically. “The tension. You could cut it with a bib.”
“Please stop,” you mutter, trying — failing — to keep your face neutral.
“She literally just thanked you and I felt like I needed to leave the stadium.”
“I’m begging you.”
Beth jogs ahead of you now, calling over her shoulder, “Don’t worry! I’ll let Wiegman know you’re emotionally compromised!”
You glare, but it’s no use — she’s too far gone, laughing now, looping into the next drill. You catch a few of the girls asking whats going on she simply shakes her head as you glance back across the pitch one last time.
And she’s looking again.
⚽️
The tunnel in Seville is narrow, warm with tension and humming from the speakers overhead — a thudding bassline pulsing through the concrete, vibrating in your ribs. Somewhere out there, just beyond the mouth of the tunnel, the crowd is already buzzing. You can feel it. Taste it.
Kickoff is minutes away.
You’re locked in.
Hands flexing. Boots shifting weight. Eyes forward.
The lineups are tight. Players shoulder to shoulder. You’re not near her — not today. She’s toward the front of the Spanish line, talking quietly to their keeper, shifting side to side like she’s been here a thousand times. Her captain’s armband gleams even under the fluorescent tunnel lighting.
You keep your eyes down. Focused. You’ve done everything right this week — prepped, trained, run drills until your legs begged you to stop. You’re here to play. To win.
But then, you feel it. You don’t even know why you glance up. But you do. And she’s looking. Alexia’s head is turned, speaking over her shoulder in quick, quiet Spanish — something clipped and serious. Probably tactical. But her eyes don’t leave yours.
Not for a beat. Not for a breath. You don’t look away either.
Your pulse skips. The music blurs behind the moment. You feel something like static in your spine — not nerves. Not quite.
Just her. And then a hand on your back. Light. Teasing. Beth. Of course it’s Beth. She leans in from behind, voice just low enough that only you can hear. “Saw that.”
You let out the softest exhale through your nose, barely a smile, still trying to keep your head in the game.
“I’m focused,” you murmur back.
Beth grins. “Oh yeah. Tunnel vision, clearly. Just with a little… detour through the Spanish lineup.”
You elbow her lightly, eyes back ahead. You have to be locked in now. The official’s whistle sounds from just beyond the tunnel.
The players start to move. Boots echoing against concrete.
You step out into the roar of the stadium, lights burning above, thousands of eyes fixed on the field. But the only eyes you’re still thinking about are hers.
The night air is warm, thick with the buzz of thousands of voices bleeding into one. Flashbulbs blink through the stands like fireflies. The stadium is alive, pulsing. But when your boots touch the grass, everything slows.
Your place in the lineup is already marked — far side, second from the end. You walk the stretch in a line of lionesses, shoulders square, chin high. The England anthem will come second. You know the rhythm of this.
You take your place. Hands behind your back. Chest lifted. Head steady.
The Spanish anthem begins. You don’t usually watch the opposing team during this part. But tonight… you do.
Your gaze slides — carefully, subtly — until it finds her
Standing at the beginning of the Spanish line. Armband snug around her bicep. Shoulders straight. She doesn’t look at the crowd. Doesn’t look at the flag. Her eyes are straight ahead, at nothing in particular. And you can’t stop looking.
The music plays. Unapologetically proud. Fierce. And she embodies it — calm, resolute, carved from something stiller than the storm that surrounds her.
She doesn’t move her eyes until the final notes fade. And when she does, she leans forward clapping, her eyes glance down the England line and find yours. Just for a moment. Not a glance. A connection. Then it's your turn.
“God Save the King” rises from the speakers, strong and sure. Your teammates belt it out. You sing, but quieter — not out of nerves. Not even distraction.
Just focus. Just weight. Just her, still there on the edge of your vision.
When the anthem ends, applause breaks out. Whistles. Cheers. A brief burst of fireworks somewhere in the distance.
Now comes the walk.
Your team moves — captain first, then the line trailing behind, handshakes down the rows. You start forward, your body moving through routine, but your eyes scanning ahead.
You’re doing well — composed, steady, locked in.
Until it’s her. You reach her first. Alexia.
She’s half a step in front of you now, offering her hand before you even lift yours. Her grip is firm — not aggressive, but certain. Familiar.
Her eyes hold yours just a second longer than they should, your head having to move to maintain the gaze as you move by.
You try to read them — but you don’t have time to. Your lips twitch — the faintest smile, gone before anyone else can catch it.
You move on, heart pounding in your ears like a second anthem.
Beth’s behind you. As you get past Alexia, Beth mutters, not even looking at you, “You two need to get a room.”
You elbow her gently, but don’t stop walking. Not now. Because kickoff is coming. And you’ve never felt more ready. You however caught the look on one of the Spanish players had on there face before leaning forward catching Alexia's attention.
"I'll kill you" you mutter to Beth as you headed into your half to the huddle Leah going to the coin toss.
⚽️
The whistle blows. You don’t ease in. You explode.
From the second the ball rolls, you're in motion — a flash through the midfield, one-two pass with Georgia, touch out wide, then slicing through Spain’s line before they can blink.
The crowd barely has time to register what’s happening before you’re in the box, the ball bouncing kindly, keeper surging out—
You strike it. Not perfect. But close. Too close. It brushes the outside of the post.
The net ripples just enough to make half the crowd rise in anticipation — only to fall back with collective breath held.
You exhale hard, adrenaline pounding, hands on hips for a half-second before you’re already jogging back into shape. That was twenty seconds. Twenty seconds into the game and you nearly ripped it wide open.
You hear the crowd murmuring. And then you feel her. Alexia.
You pass her around the halfway line. She's turning, resetting, face unreadable — but her eyes flick to yours and don’t leave. There's a flicker there, something caught between admiration and awareness.
You hold her gaze. Then you wink. Not cocky. Just a little too casual, it borderlines cocky. Intimate even.
Her lips twitch. The smirk blooms slowly — like she wants to hide it, but couldn't. She shakes her head slightly, just enough to say you're unbelievable and keeps jogging.
You glance over your shoulder, smirk still playing at your mouth, and mouth one word, “Dangerous.”
She catches it. The cameras catch all of it. Somewhere, a commentator clears their throat. Somewhere else, a hundred phones clip the moment in real time. You fall back into shape, heart still racing — not just from the near goal. But from her.
After that electric opening burst, the game turns.
Spain take the ball. And they don’t give it back.
One pass, two passes, five — they’re stitching threads of movement like embroidery, pulling you left, then right, then back again. It’s beautiful football. If it weren’t being used against you, you might admire it.
But right now, you’re defending like your life depends on it.
And you’re good. You show it.
You press. Track. Intercept. You drop deep and slide clean, clipping the ball off boots before they can even load a shot. You shield with your back to goal, swing possession out wide, and sprint to recover before Spain recycles their shape again.
You feel Beth behind you, shouting, organising. You feel Keira lunging, Georgia grinding. You’re all under siege — but you’re holding. Until you don’t.
The 29th minute.
You know the build-up before it’s even complete. You see the triangle form between midfield and the wing. You sprint to cover — too wide. They slip inside instead.
Ball into the box. A flick. A stumble. A shot. 1–0. Not from her. Not yet. But she played her part.
You reset. Jaw tight. Breathe loud in your ears. No panic. Just work. The pressure builds. Spain push again. Tighter now. Crisper.
And this time… you see Alexia coming. Floating at the edge of the box like she’s not even part of the play. Hands down. Face calm. You should’ve known.
You close the gap, just as the cross starts to curl in.
You’re there. You think you’re there. But she’s already moving. One touch. One turn. Left foot. Back of the net. 2–0.
The crowd erupts — red flares of noise across the stands. She doesn’t scream. Doesn’t celebrate wild. Just lifts her arms, turns, and welcomes her team into her.
You’re frozen. Not in awe. Not in defeat. Just frustrated. Because you know better. Because you read the play. And she still found the space.
You shake your head, hands on your hips, and breathe deep — trying to focus, trying not to look at her as she passes you again on the jog back to her half.
But she glances. Just once. Not smug. Not showy. Just knowing.
⚽️
You step back onto the pitch after half time with your heart in your mouth and fire in your legs.
Down 2–0. But you’re in it. You feel it in your chest — that tight, magnetic pull of unfinished business.
She scored. But now it’s your turn to answer.
Spain press high again, confident, sharp — but this time, you don't just absorb it. You counter.
49th minute. You pick up the ball on the right side, deep. Alexia is drifting to cover — late, wide. You feel her shift in behind you, ready to close off the inside lane.
So you show it to her. You drop your shoulder — once, left — and she bites. You flick it right. Gone. You hear her boot slide across the turf as you vanish down the flank, leaving her weight shifting the wrong way.
The space opens. You take three touches. Look up.
One clean pass across the box. Perfect weight. And Alessia Russo buries it.
2–1. Game on.
The away end roars. You don’t celebrate hard — just turn back upfield, nodding once, jaw set.
But your eye find hers. Alexia is already repositioning, breathing hard, lips pressed tight. Before shouting orders to her team as the defence hold a mini meeting.
She meets your gaze. Just for a second. Then looks away. You grin — just barely.
56th minute. It happens again. Different side. Same instinct.
You receive the ball near midfield. She's tighter this time, right on your hip. You can feel her reading, adjusting, trying to anticipate the same movement.
So you switch it. This time, a little half-touch with the sole, then a cheeky back heel into space. Gone. She’s turning the wrong way again.
You don’t even hear the crowd anymore — just the rush in your ears, the snap of the ball, the clean crack as you find your teammate’s feet.
This one’s even sweeter. Low shot. Bottom corner.
2–2. Bedlam. Your team swarms you — but all you’re doing is scanning across the pitch. And there she is. Hands on hips. Breathing heavy. Watching you. This time, you smirk. She shakes her head.
But there’s that flicker again — behind her eyes. Admiration. Frustration. Something else. You're even now. On the scoreboard. And in the story between you.
⚽️
The scoreboard reads 88:17.
You’re soaked in sweat, shirt clinging to your back, every muscle in your legs screaming for a break you’re not going to give them.
It’s 2–2.
Spain are pressing again, but not as crisp now. Not as sure. Your team has clawed its way back into this — you have clawed it back. One pass at a time. One feint. One drive. One stolen breath.
But it’s not over. Not yet.
Alexia is moving deeper now, floating like she always does, finding spaces that barely exist. You feel her near you again — not marking, not chasing, just there. Orbiting.
You intercept a pass in midfield. Ball sticks to your boots like it knows where to go.
She steps forward. You see her coming — read the angle, the pressure, the attempt to funnel you wide.
You cut inside instead. Your shoulder brushes hers. It’s not intentional — not fully — but it’s enough.
For half a second, your eyes meet in the tangle. And she knows.
She can’t stop you this time. You surge forward. The stadium rises with you.
You drive. Cut right. Another defender dives in — too late. You glance up. One teammate is peeling wide, calling for it.
But the angle is wrong. You take it yourself. Shot. Rising. Clean.
And— The keeper stretches. Fingertips. Just enough. The ball clips the bar. Over. The crowd gasps. So do you. Not out of disappointment — out of proximity to glory.
You fall to your knees for a second, hands on your head. 90:05.
No stoppage miracle. The ref’s whistle blows. It’s over.
Draw.
But it doesn’t feel like one.
You stay on your knees for a moment, the world spinning, heart pounding against your ribs like it’s trying to break out.
Then — footsteps. Quiet, close. You lift your head, already knowing.
It’s Alexia. Not smiling. Not smug. Just… there. Hands on her hips. Hair damp and sticking to her forehead.
She looks at you like you’re both made of the same breathless moment. “That was close,” she says softly, Spanish accent curling around the words.
You rise slowly, chest still heaving. “I don't like your keeper,” you murmur back. Cata struck again.
She tilts her head, just a little. That same smirk tries to rise — but it’s tired now. Honest.
She steps in close, as you both move in sync towards the post match handshakes. Just enough for her hand to brush yours. And this time, you don’t pull away.
You don't move apart more than a few centimetres milling around making sure to connect with each player on your team and hers.
You're still catching your breath.
Hands on your hips. Boots heavy with grass. The bar's clink still ringing in your ears like a cruel echo. You barely feel the ache in your legs anymore — just the weight of what almost was.
Then, there's a tap back on your back, Alexia steps in front of you, already tugging gently at the hem of her shirt.
“Again?” you ask, voice quiet, eyes narrowing slightly.
Her brow arches, but the corner of her mouth lifts. That same look — not a smirk, not a smile, just hers. Under the stadium lights, with the noise behind her and the heat between you.
She doesn’t answer with words. She just pulls her shirt over her head in one smooth motion.
And that’s when your breath actually catches.
Not just because of who she is. But how she looks in this moment, collarbones slick with sweat, and beneath all of it, the sharp definition of abs that look like they’ve been carved with care and discipline.
She holds the shirt loosely in one hand, like it’s nothing at all — like the moment doesn’t hang heavy in the space between you.
You try to keep your face neutral, try not to let your eyes linger too long. But you know she sees it, and she says nothing. Just steps a little closer.
You pull your own shirt off in return, matching the silence, feeling the night air hit your skin as you fold it and hand it over.
She takes it gently. No words. No fuss. Her fingers brush yours, intentionally.
And for the first time all match — for the first time in weeks — she lets her gaze drop. Just for a second. Down. Over you.
Then back up. “I like collecting things,” she says, her voice quiet enough that it barely survives the wind.
“Two now,” you say, nodding toward the first shirt you know she kept.
Alexia smirks. “Just the important ones.”
And just like that, she’s turning — shirt slung over her shoulder, hair pulled free, walking away with your shirt bold across her shoulder.
And you're left there — shirtless, heartbeat thudding, her sweat still warm in your hands.
The crowd is still thick with noise — cheers, whistles, music blaring faintly over the tannoy — but for the first time since kickoff, the tension has lifted.
It’s just noise now. Not pressure. Just atmosphere.
You’ve got her shirt in your hands, soft and damp, clutched loosely as you make the slow walk toward the away end where the travelling England fans are still singing. Still clapping. Still holding up flags like they’re proud of you — because they are.
You glance at her name stitched across the back Alexia. And with a quick glance around, you slip it on.
It fits looser than yours — hangs differently. But there’s something grounding about it. Like the match isn’t really over yet. Like some part of it is still here, wrapped around you.
You’re only a few steps in when you hear the softest voice beside you.
“Another one for the collection, huh?”
Beth. Of course.
You glance sideways to find her at your shoulder, arms crossed, trying — and failing — to suppress the grin on her face. “I didn’t say a word,” she adds, lips twitching. “But this?” She gestures vaguely to the shirt now draped across your body. “This says everything.”
You roll your eyes, biting back a smile as you keep walking. “You’re so annoying.”
“I’m observant,” she corrects, feigning innocence. “You’ve swapped shirts with her twice now. That’s basically flirting”
You glance over at her with mock exasperation. “Do me a favour and don’t bring this up in front of anyone.”
Beth laughs, loud and sharp. “Oh please. They've definitely clocked it.”
You’re nearly at the away end now, pulling the sleeves straight, waving up at the crowd.
Beth leans in one last time. “You can’t keep pretending these swaps are 'football friendly'”
You don’t answer her.
You’re too busy turning toward the fans, hand raised, smile soft, Alexia’s name warm against your back.
⚽️
It’s past midnight.
The room is dark except for the soft blue glow of your screen. One arm behind your head, your hair still a little damp from the shower. Your suitcase half-open across the floor. Boots drying in the corner.
You’re tired. But not enough to sleep. You’ve watched your assist three times. Rewatched her goal twice as many. The cameras caught too much — the wink, the look, the shirt swap — and your name’s already trending in two languages.
You close Instagram. You close your eyes. Your phone buzzes. You don’t move — not right away. Just let it sit there on your chest for a second, until the screen fades to black again.
Then you check.
AlexiaPutellas11 sent you a message
You swipe it open.
Alexia: Still awake?
You stare at it for a moment. Then reply.
You: Obviously. You scored on us. I’m traumatised. Can’t sleep.
The typing bubble appears almost instantly.
Alexia: It was a beautiful goal though. Admit it.
You: Fine. It was very annoying how beautiful it was.
You pause. Then:
You: You meant it, right? The run, the finish. You knew I’d be half a second late.
There’s a pause. Long enough for your heart to notice.
Alexia: Of course I meant it. You’re the one I timed it for.
You sit up slowly, your heart suddenly louder than the quiet around you.
You: That’s unfair. That’s like psychological warfare.
Alexia: You started it. You winked.
You grin, can’t help it. Thumb hovering over the screen.
Then she sends another.
Alexia: You looked good in my shirt, by the way. I like the way it fits you.
You exhale through a smile, cheeks warming even in the dark.
You type slowly.
You: You going to keep asking for mine after every game?
Alexia: Only if you keep giving it to me.
And then one more message follows — this one simpler, quieter.
Alexia: I liked today. Even if it wasn’t a win. I liked being across from you again.
You lie back down. Let the silence settle. You stare at her words. You don't reply right away. Because you're thinking the exact same thing.
⚽️
The bus is rolling slow through the city streets — lights flickering across windows, the low hum of Spanish voices rising in bursts of laughter. Kit bags rustle. Boots thud softly against the floor. Headphones hang loose around necks.
They won the moment — didn’t lose the match, but they saw it happen. And they’re not letting her off easy. Alexia’s sat in her usual spot, third row from the back, by the window. Hoodie up. Arms crossed. Staring out like she’s untouched by the chaos around her.
But her teammates they’ve clocked everything. “Did anyone else see that wink?” Irene says, loud enough for the whole bus. “I nearly asked the ref if it counted as a foul as that was bold.”
The girls burst into laughter. Patri nearly chokes on her water. Alexia doesn’t move. She’s still gazing out the window.
Cata Coll leans over from the seat across the aisle, grinning like she’s been waiting for exactly this moment. “She’s not denying it.”
Alexia finally sighs, turns just enough to glance at her.
“I’m ignoring it.”
“Are you ignoring this too?” Cata says, holding up Alexia’s phone, where she’s clearly got your message open. “Just casually got her DMs open. Apparently your girl’s teammate can see it all too.”
Alexia arches an eyebrow. “What?”
Cata grins wider. “Beth Mead. Said it right there in the lineup — told her she needed to ‘get a room.’ You were staring too hard, apparently.”
The bus howls. Alexia lets her head fall back against the seat with a groan, covering her face for a second with her hand. “I was not staring.”
“Yes you were,” Salma sings from a few seats up.
“You stared,” Mariona confirms, practically bouncing in her seat.
“You telepathically confessed your feelings,” Irene adds. “And then swapped shirts. Again.”
Alexia’s face is pink now. Not quite blushing — but for her, it’s obvious. She lowers her hand slowly. Looks at Cata.
Cata shrugs. “You’re trending.”
Alexia shakes her head. But she’s smiling now — quietly, under it all. Because even with the teasing… Even with the firestorm they’re stirring up…She’s thinking about you. In her shirt. Wearing her name on your back. Smiling at your phone the same way she just did. And somewhere, in that space between the window and the chaos… Alexia wonders if you're thinking about her too
⚽️
You’re out early.
Wembley feels massive beneath your shoes — open and echoing in the way only the biggest stadiums can be. The arch curves high above, slicing the sky. The lights are already warming up. Cameras tracking movement. The first fans are filtering into their seats, waving flags, holding signs.
You’re in your jacket, headphones slung around your neck, doing your usual slow pitch walk — clearing your head, steadying your breath.
Trying not to think about her. But then you feel it. Before you even see her. That shift in the air. You glance up. And there she is. Alexia. Walking casually across the halfway line, her warmup top zipped halfway, sleeves pushed up. She moves like she’s done it a thousand times — comfortable, quiet, composed. But she’s coming straight to you.
You stop walking. Pull your headphones off, let them hang loose around your collar. She reaches you with no preamble. “Big stadium,” she says softly, glancing around, eyes sweeping over the empty seats.
You nod. “Feels like it stretches forever when you’re chasing the ball.”
Alexia smiles faintly, but doesn’t look at you right away. Just takes in the expanse — the history hanging in the air, the roar that’s not there yet, but soon will be.
“I’ve not played here for years,” she says. “Feels different.”
“It is,” you reply. “It swallows you up a little. In a good way.”
Finally, she looks at you. “You love it here?”
You don’t have to think. “I do.”
She nods once, like she already knew that. Her gaze lingers on the pitch. “I watched film from your last game here,” she says. “You played higher. More aggressive. You broke the press with one run.”
You glance at her, a small smile tugging at your lips. “Studying me?”
Alexia shrugs. “Preparing.”
You walk a few steps together in silence, shoes crunching against the turf. She breaks it again, voice softer now.
“I like how you move. You see things before they happen. Wembley suits that.”
You glance sideways. “That a compliment?”
She meets your eyes. “It’s the truth.”
There’s a pause — a long one. Then she adds, “Not going to make it easy for us today are you?.”
You grin, looking down at your boots. “Wouldn’t dream of it.”
Alexia smirks. “Good. Montse’s already nervous.”
You laugh lightly, the tension in your shoulders easing — just slightly. She doesn’t say anything else. Just gives you a small nod, then turns back toward her half of the pitch.
And as she walks away — sleeves pushed up, hair pulled tight, name already echoing in the stadium speakers — you watch her for a second longer than you should.
Wembley is big. But somehow, with her in it… It feels smaller.
⚽️
The tunnel is loud in that weird, hollow way — boots echoing against concrete, staff voices layered under stadium music thudding from above. The lineups are forming, captains already briefing with officials. The buzz is rising like a wave about to crest.
You’re not in line. You’re a sub tonight. Track jacket zipped, shin pads tucked in place, heart beating somewhere between frustration and focus.
You keep your head down as you walk the length of the tunnel, weaving between your teammates. Focused. Calm. Trying to look like this was always the plan. Then you feel a hand.
Fingers on your arm. Light. Just enough to make you stop. You look back, it’s Alexia.
She's already in position with her team, but she’s turned to face you, brow furrowed just slightly, eyes searching your face.
“You’re not starting?” she asks, voice low, confusion laced into the syllables of her accent.
You blink. You weren’t expecting her to notice. Weren’t expecting her to care. “Not this time,” you say quietly, shrugging.
She nods — slowly, eyes flicking down your body, like she’s double-checking, like maybe she’s trying to figure out why. There’s a pause, something uncertain in the way she presses her lips together.
Behind you, Beth slides in close and nudges your back gently. “Keep walking,” she mutters under her breath with a smirk, you roll your eyes and keep walking, pulse pounding harder now for entirely different reasons. Before following Beth turned to Alexia and adding sweetly, “Don’t miss her too much.”
Alexia’s lips twitch. Just slightly. Behind you, the confusion spreads. Leah turns her head just enough to whisper sideways to Mary Earps and Millie Bright. “What am I missing?”
Millie shrugs. “Dunno.”
Mary just raises her brows, clearly intrigued but out of the loop. They all look after you like you’re a puzzle piece they haven’t been handed yet. Meanwhile, up ahead, you glance back once — quick, quiet — and find her eyes still on you. She doesn’t look away. Not until you move out of sight.
⚽️
You’re sat on the bench, jacket zipped to your chin, legs bouncing lightly as you try — and fail — to still the restlessness coiling inside you. You’ve always hated watching. Always. Especially games like this. Big. Tight. Pulsing with energy. And she’s out there.
Already dictating tempo, pointing, shifting the lines with her fingertips, her voice cutting through the noise. She moves like the match belongs to her — like she’s not playing in it, but shaping it. Every touch is smooth, precise. She’s not flashy — she never is — but she’s everywhere.
You can’t stop watching her.
Your eyes track her automatically. Like gravity. Like instinct. The way she turns with the ball. The way her brow creases when she spots a space no one else has seen yet. The way she lifts her head just after every pass to check if you’re watching.
You think she’s doing it more than usual. And she knows exactly where you’re sitting.
Beth is on the bench next to you, pulling her water bottle from under her seat, catching your line of sight without even trying.
“She’s playing well,” she says casually, voice low.
You don’t reply.
“You’re watching her like she does you.”
You sigh.
Beth grins. “It appears mutual whatever this is, at this point.”
Back on the pitch, Alexia receives the ball near the touchline and twists — sudden and sharp — sending your teammate the wrong way before slotting a pass through two defenders. A near assist. Nearly cruel.
The crowd gasps. She jogs back into shape, tucking a loose strand of hair behind her ear, breathing steady, unfazed.
You swear she glances at the bench again.
You shift forward slightly, elbows on your knees now, jacket suddenly too warm, boots tapping at the grass. You want in. Not because you need to stop her. Not even to score.
But to meet her in the middle of it. To play the game you’ve been playing since that first glance. That first tackle. That first encounter.
Not from the sideline. With her.
Sarina's voice barks your name down the bench. You look up. And everything in you stands. "Y/N, Beth! Go warm up, you're coming on after half time!"
⚽️
You’re along the sideline now, jacket peeled off, as you jog small circles up and down the touchline with Beth.
The crowd’s roaring behind you — full-throated, relentless — but it’s all white noise compared to the pressure unfolding on the pitch.
Because Spain is pressing. And Alexia is at the center of it all. You watch her glide through midfield like she belongs to the turf — weightless, elegant, always in space. Her passes are scalpel-precise. Her vision is five seconds ahead of everyone else.
She gets the ball, checks her shoulder once, twice, and releases it like it’s nothing. Like the shape of the game bends around her.
“Jesus,” Beth mutters beside you, breathing hard. “She’s everywhere.”
You don’t respond. You’re too busy watching her again — how she receives under pressure and turns, drawing two midfielders like it’s a game of tag she’s already won. She barely even looks your way, but somehow that makes it worse. Because you want to be in there. You want to feel her steps against yours again.
“You okay?” Beth asks suddenly, flicking her eyes sideways toward you.
You nod, jaw tight. “Just want to be out there.”
She hums. “Yeah, well. You’re not the only one thinking you should be.”
You glance over, confused. Beth jerks her chin subtly toward the pitch. And sure enough — in one of those rare lulls between plays, when Alexia turns to scan her positioning… Her eyes flick toward the sideline. Toward you. Just for a second. No expression. No smile. No nod. But it’s intentional. You feel it like a wire snapping beneath your ribs. She turns away again before anyone else can see.
Beth grins. “She’s watching you.”
You exhale hard. “Yeah. Probably just wants a reaction, and to be fair she’s got the upper hand right now.”
Beth stretches her quads dramatically. “Not for long.”
And as you roll your neck and shift your weight forward, listening to Sarina barking from the sideline and glancing toward the fourth official... You get the sense that your time’s coming. And when it does? You’re not just stepping into the game. You’re stepping into the fire.
⚽️
You’ve been flying.
Your touch is sharp. Your legs are light. You’re playing like you belong here — not just in this game, but in this moment.
Beth finds you with a threaded pass just as you ghost between two midfielders, the space opening up in front of you. One touch, two. You see the top corner. You see it—
Then it happens. You don’t see her coming.
You’re focused — ball under your feet, cutting in toward the box, one touch ahead of the defender, eyes on the corner of the goal.
Then everything stops.
Olga Carmona slides in hard. Full weight. Too late. Too low. The contact is sharp. Blunt. Wrong.
Your knee twists under you, a white-hot shock up your leg, and you drop before the ball’s even gone. A cry tears from your throat before you can stop it — not frustration.
Pain. Real pain.
You clutch your knee instantly, curling inward, breath punching out of your chest in ragged, panicked gasps.
The whistle blows. Everything stops. Wembley falls silent.
It’s eerie. Like someone hit mute on 90,000 people at once.
The ref’s arm goes up. Spanish players freeze. Your teammates rush toward you — some shouting, others pale. You can hear Beth’s voice, strained and close. “Stay down. Don’t move. Medic! Now!”
You’re trying not to cry. The physios are sprinting on. You’re gripping your knee like if you don’t, it’ll fall apart in your hands. Pain pulses through you in waves. Blinding. Crippling.
A shadow falls across you, You don’t need to look. Alexia. She’s standing a few feet away, arms stiff at her sides, face tight with something that isn’t confusion or shock — it’s fear.
Not for the game. For you.
She takes a step forward, but a physio blocks her path, kneeling by your side.
“Just let us look,” the medic says, gently pulling your hands away.
You can barely focus, barely breathe, but out of the corner of your eye, you see her still standing there — not moving. Watching. Beth kneels at your side now, brushing sweaty hair from your forehead.
“You’re okay,” she says, voice low. “Just let them check. It’s okay.”
You nod — barely. Alexia hasn’t moved. Not until the ref walks over and gestures her back toward her half. She hesitates. Then finally, reluctantly, she turns. But not before her eyes catch yours.
You sit up slowly, hands still gripping tufts of grass, breath shallow, knee throbbing. But it’s holding. And more than anything — it’s not broken.
The physio looks you in the eye. “You want to come off?”
You shake your head instantly. “No. I’m fine.”
“Are you—”
“I’m taking the free kick.”
Beth is already helping you to your feet, her arm steady around your back. The crowd is rising with you — slowly, all at once, voices lifting, 90,000 people on their feet because they saw the pain and now they see the refusal.
You limp a step. Then another. Then jog back toward the ball.
The referee checks on you once more — you wave her off. Your focus is already zeroed in. The ball is placed. The wall is set. Cata’s lining up, barking instructions.
You stand over it. Maybe 23 yards out. A few steps left of centre. A little too far to shoot, a little too close to ignore.
The angle's awkward. Unless you're you. They’ve called you the female Beckham since your spectacular viral free kick in the Euros in 2022.
But this is your moment. Another Wembley moment.
You take four steps back. One to the left. Plant your right foot. Deep breath. Wembley holds it with you.
Then you strike. It bends. Wide. Too wide. For a second it looks gone. Then it curls. Back. Arcing around the wall. Gliding over two defenders’ heads. Swinging like it’s got a magnet in the top corner.
Cata dives. Too late. The net ripples.
GOAL.
1–0.
Wembley erupts.
You stand frozen for half a second, eyes wide, chest heaving, and then your teammates swarm you — Beth first, grabbing you from behind, lifting you off the ground even as you stumble with the landing.
The bench clears. Coaches shouting. Crowd losing it.
From the penalty spot, Alexia stands still. Watching. She doesn’t move. Doesn’t shout. Just breathes.
Her eyes never leave you. As the crowd chants your name, as your teammates pull you toward the sideline, as England finally leads… You meet her gaze. And her smile is small. But it’s real. She’s not surprised.
She knew.
The pace slows. Just for a breath.
The ball’s been cleared long, chased into a corner, Spain momentarily regrouping, England pulling shape. Everyone’s catching their breath — you included.
You’re jogging back into position, legs heavy, the sting in your knee still alive but manageable. You bend slightly, tug your sock back into place over your shin pad, heart still pounding, your breath fogging in the chill air.
She appears beside you. Close. Quiet. You don’t look at her. But you hear it. “You good?” she mumbles — just loud enough for your ears only.
Not dramatic. Not showy. Not even particularly soft. Just real. You nod. “Yeah,” you say, breathlessly. “I’m alright.”
She doesn’t say anything else. Just walks beside you for a few strides, both of you tracking the play, scanning the field like nothing passed between you. And then her hand brushes lightly against your back. A single pat. Firm. Reassuring. Acknowledging. Accepting your answer.
Then she keeps moving. No glance. No smile. Just a touch. But it lingers.
Like her hand is still there long after it's gone. And for all the intensity, for all the weight of the game, for the score, the pressure, the world watching. It’s that moment you’ll remember the most.
⚽️
The whistle blows.
The noise is instant — a wave crashing over the pitch as Wembley erupts behind you. 1–0. You held it. That free kick wrote the script, and you saw it through to the final line.
Teammates close in from all sides, arms around shoulders, heads bumping yours, laughter, relief, euphoria. The roar from the crowd is still going — high, rising, full of pride.
But your eyes are already on the other half of the pitch. Spain regrouping. Hands on hips. Heads bowed. Respectful. Composed.
You peel away from your huddle, weaving through the blur of bodies. You tap shoulders. Shake hands. Pat backs. Every “good game” automatic but genuine.
And then you see Alexia.
She’s moving toward you too, head held high, still all grace even in defeat. Her shirt clings to her back, sweat-dampened and brilliant under the lights. Her expression unreadable — until she locks eyes with you.
You smirk before she can say anything. “You’re not having my shirt again.”
Her brow arches — the smallest flicker of amusement in her eyes — but she says nothing. Just reaches her hand out. You clasp it. Firm. Familiar. Yours.
Your fingers wrap around hers — and they don’t let go right away. Neither of you rush it. The moment hangs. Not long enough to be obvious. Just long enough for her to know you let it.
Your thumb brushes against her knuckles. She smiles. Only just.
Then she releases. Keeps moving. So do you. You pat her back. Once. Firm. As you both pass each other like you didn’t just speak a language no one else in the stadium understands.
No shirts traded. No words left hanging. Just the echo of her skin on yours.
⚽️
Your room is dark except for the soft glow of your phone screen. You’re lying flat on the bed, one arm behind your head, the other scrolling through post-match clips and photos — and trying not to watch that free kick for the seventh time.
Your body aches. A good kind of ache. But your mind it’s still with her.
The pat on your back. The lingering handclasp. That barely-there smile. You’re about to close your phone when it buzzes. AlexiaPutellas11 has sent you a message
Alexia: You’re probably still replaying that free kick.
You smirk.
You: What, jealous?
Alexia: A little. But mostly just annoyed I couldn’t stop it.
You: You weren’t even in the wall. Weak defending, honestly.
A pause. Then another message comes through — slower, different. Weighted.
Alexia: That’s it for us, for a while. No more me v you. Not until the Euros this summer.
You stare at the screen. There’s no emoji. No flirtation. Just truth. She’s not just talking about fixtures.
You: Feels weird. Like we just found a rhythm.
Alexia: We did.
Another pause.
Alexia: And now we wait.
You lie there, letting those words settle into your chest. She’s not pushing. Not asking for more. Just naming it. The gap. The pause between this and whatever comes next.
You: Guess you’ll just have to miss me.
You’re halfway through typing something back — probably a joke, something to lighten the tension — when another message pops through.
Alexia: I don’t have to miss you. I could come see you. In Germany. If you want.
You freeze. Staring at the screen. At those words. Not flirtation. Not suggestion. A gesture. An offer.
Germany — where you play your club football. Your other life. The one she’s never been a part of. Not until now.
You read it again. She wants to come to you. And suddenly, your room feels warmer. You sit up, heart hammering in a way that has nothing to do with match fitness.
You type slowly, thumb hovering just a second too long.
You: You serious?
Alexia: You think I’d joke about flying to a different country just to see you?
Then — another one.
Alexia: I’d like to. If you’d have me.
That last sentence lands deep. Not just in your chest — lower. Quieter. Truer. You let yourself smile as you bit your lip. Then answer. One you wouldn't normally be so brave to send
You: I’d have you.
lucy really meant it when she said she’s lucky to play with her for both club and country bc 😮💨😮💨
Capi Mami - Alexia Putellas x barcelona femini
Summary: Alexia swears she’s not the team mom… and yet she’s the one confiscating phones, doling out granola bars, and keeping this locker room from imploding.
Word count: 1.5k
This is part of my 1k commemoration blurb! <3
a/n: a single mama who works two jobs
Masterlist
..
The locker room was a mess. Water bottles were scattered across the floor, shoes were everywhere, and a few jerseys had been tossed carelessly on the benches.
The younger girls were in full gossip mode, laughing and talking over each other, completely oblivious to the chaos they had created.
Vicky was sitting on one of the benches, animatedly chatting about some TikTok challenge, while Salma and Jana were having a loud conversation about the training session they had just finished.
Pina’s laughter echoed through the room as Esmee said something dry and hilarious.
Y/n and Sydney were livestreaming on Instagram–very much against team rules–talking about their training routine and casually throwing shade at the referee from their last match.
Marta walked in first. Her eyes widened as she surveyed the scene. She shook her head with a sigh and muttered, “What is this, girls?”
She took one step and nearly tripped over a bag lying in the middle of the floor.
“Okay,” Marta said angrily, lifting the bag into the air. “Whose bag is this—and why do I have a bunch of stickers glued on my locker?”
“Do you like it?” Vicky asked brightly, the only one acknowledging Marta’s presence.
“I hate it,” Marta replied flatly. “Take it off.”
Vicky rolled her eyes and continued chatting. The others kept pretending Marta didn’t exist.
“You might want to clean this up before Alexia gets here,” Marta warned, but the girls barely looked up.
Marta rolled her eyes and muttered something under her breath before walking out.
She walked down the hall to find Alexia stretching on a bench, prepping for another round of training. Marta couldn’t help but chuckle.
“Tus nenas están causando problemas,” [Your girls are causing problems], she said with a teasing smile.
Alexia raised an eyebrow. “Qué?” [what?]
"They’re making a mess in the locker room again. And I’m pretty sure I saw Y/n going live on Instagram ranting about the ref being bought."
Alexia sighed, her expression shifting from confused to fondly exasperated. "You know what they’re like," she muttered, standing up. "I’ll handle them, and then I’m confiscating Y/n’s phone."
The moment Alexia stepped into the locker room, her gaze swept across the chaos. Water bottles, jerseys, shin guards, and random clothes covered the floor. Not a single head turned.
Alexia didn’t speak at first.
She simply stood there in the doorway, arms crossed, expression unreadable. After a long pause, her voice finally cut through the room.
"Nenas, qué es esto?" [Girls, what is this?]
Y/n jumped to her feet, face paling at the tone. The room fell silent in an instant.
Vicky, Salma, and Pina all sat up straighter. Y/n very discreetly hid her phone behind her back while nudging Sydney to sit properly and kick a rogue boot under the bench.
“Hi, Ale!” Vicky greeted sweetly, putting on her most innocent baby voice.
“Mi reina!” Pina chimed in, springing up and reaching for a hug.
Alexia sidestepped her without missing a beat. “What is all of this?” she asked, gesturing at the chaos with one unimpressed sweep of her hand.
“Nothing! We were just… talking,” Jana said quickly, voice shrinking. “It, uh… got a little out of hand?”
Alexia’s eyes scanned the room like a laser. Her lips pressed into a thin, disapproving line.
“Is this how we treat a shared space?” she asked. Her voice didn’t rise, but the warning in it was sharp.
“No,” they chorused, voices barely above a whisper.
“Is the locker room where we throw our stuff around like toddlers?”
“No.”
“Should I start labelling your bottles and jerseys like you’re in daycare? Or can we act like professionals?”
“We can act like professionals,” they muttered in unison, chastened.
Alexia took one slow step forward. The shift in the room was immediate–every breath held, every eye on her.
“I don’t like doing this,” she said quietly, the calm in her voice somehow worse than yelling. “But this? This is not okay. I expect better from all of you.”
Y/n shifted awkwardly, guilt written all over her face. “Are you mad at us?”
“I’m not mad,” Alexia said, her pause deliberate. “I’m disappointed.”
The words hit harder than anything else could have. The silence that followed was thick.
“We’re sorry, Capi,” Y/n said, her head ducked. “We didn’t mean to mess up. We just got carried away.”
Alexia’s gaze softened, but only slightly. “You should’ve known better. I trust you girls. Don’t make me regret that.”
“We’re really sorry, Alexia,” Salma added quickly, voice sincere.
“Sorry isn’t enough,” Alexia replied, crossing her arms. “I better not hear another complaint. Understood?”
“Yes,” they all said, truly meaning it this time.
“Clean it up,” Alexia ordered, turning to walk out. “And next time? Think before you act.”
As soon as the door shut behind Alexia, Sydney let out a dramatic exhale. “I really thought she was gonna make us run laps again.”
“My feet still hurt from last time,” Y/n groaned, flopping back onto the bench.
“Obviously,” Pina snorted. “It was yesterday, genius.”
“We are never doing this again,” Vicky said, voice solemn like she was making a blood pact.
“Nope,” Jana chimed in, hand raised like she was swearing an oath. “From now on, we will clean up before she walks in.”
“We should actually stop throwing stuff the second we get here,” Salma added thoughtfully.
Y/n suddenly sat up, panic dawning on her face. “Wait. Do you think she saw me go live?”
“Yes,” everyone said in eerie unison.
Y/n groaned and buried her face in her hands. “I’m so screwed.”
“You two are a disaster,” Jana muttered, nudging Sydney.
“We are not,” Sydney defended. “The world just needed to know how rigged that ref was.”
“You need to stop,” Esmee said, already starting to clean up the bottles.
Sydney shot her a look. “You’re just mad you didn’t join the live.”
“No,” Esmee said dryly. “I just don’t enjoy being yelled at. Call me crazy.”
Their chatter continued as they cleaned, a little more subdued now. Just outside, Alexia leaned against the wall, listening.
A soft smile tugged at her lips.
Y/n leaned back on the bench, phone in hand, muttering just loud enough for the others to hear, “One day, I swear, I’m gonna figure out how to get away with this. Maybe I’ll just block the older girls on Instagram and on Twitter–problem solved.”
A few of the girls snorted in laughter.
But then…
A voice, calm and deadly precise, cut through the moment.
“You think I’m gonna let that happen?”
Silence.
Alexia had stepped into the room like a shadow. Everyone froze. Y/n especially.
"Phone. Now." Her palm was out, her stance unyielding.
Y/n clutched her phone like a lifeline. “Ale… come on. Please.”
Alexia didn’t budge. “Now. You’ll get it back after training–if you survive it.”
A dramatic sigh escaped Y/n, but she reluctantly handed it over, placing it in Alexia’s open palm like a guilty child surrendering contraband.
Alexia smirked, tucking it safely into her jacket pocket. “You really think I don’t hear everything? I’m always watching.”
As she turned and walked off, Vicky whispered, “She’s got ears like a hawk.”
“No,” Jana said with a grin, “she’s got mom-radar.”
From across the room, Alexia called out, “I heard that, too.”
As soon as she left, Vicky whispered, "Okay… maybe we should behave."
"Maybe," Jana said. "But I doubt it’ll last."
After cleaning everything, the door opened again. Alexia stepped back in and surveyed the room.
"Well done," she said. "Now get ready. Training’s going to be tough."
As they moved, Alexia pulled a small bag from her backpack and began tossing sandwiches and granola bars at them.
“Eat,” she ordered, hands on her hips. “No one’s stepping onto that pitch with an empty stomach.”
“But we already had lunch,” Y/n mumbled, catching hers mid-air.
Alexia raised an eyebrow. “And?”
“You’re serious?” Vicky asked, halfway through peeling the wrapper.
“Sí,” Alexia replied, voice firm but laced with affection. “You need it. You’ve all been dragging your feet since drills this morning.”
Y/n took a bite and sighed. “Okay, you’re right. I was kind of sluggish.”
“You always try to avoid eating before training,” Jana chimed in, smirking. “No more excuses.”
“I’m eating, aren’t I?” Y/n grumbled around a mouthful.
Alexia gave her a knowing smile. “Good. You need the energy to keep up with the rest of them.”
“Okay, mamí,” Y/n teased, raising an eyebrow.
Alexia paused mid-step. “What did you just say?”
“Mamí,” Y/n repeated, grinning now. “You act like a mom. You scold us, you take our phones, you pack our snacks. You’re literally parenting us.”
“I am not,” Alexia scoffed.
“You are,” Vicky said through a mouthful of granola. “This is full-on mom behaviour.”
“Keep calling me that and I’ll ground you,” Alexia warned, but her lips twitched, threatening a smile.
“See?!” Y/n pointed dramatically. “Mom threat.”
Alexia rolled her eyes but didn’t deny it. Instead, she watched them finish the bars and sandwiches, making sure every last bite was gone.
Once the wrappers were tossed and silence settled back in, she straightened, captain mode back on.
“Alright. Let’s go. Hydrate, boots on, and meet me in five. We’ve got work to do.”
She turned, but not before one last glance over her shoulder at the girls–her girls.
Their chaos, their charm, their energy. They might not be hers, not really, but her love for them was unmistakable.
Strict? Always.
Soft? Only when they weren’t looking.
..
a/n: Just really wanted to write something platonic haha
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 walked into the locker room for a home game, you eyed Maya and Liv in the corner giggling away as you walked through the locker room to your spec. They were scrolling through Twitter reading comments, laughing at posts, and occasionally shoving their phones in your face.
“Oh, this one’s gold,” Liv snickered. “‘Alexia Putellas watching from the gym window like a Disney princess longing for her forbidden love.’”
Maya nearly choked on her drink. “They did not say that.” Liv turned the screen so she could see. “Oh, they definitely did.”
You shook your head, suppressing a smirk. “You two have way too much free time.”
“And you have way too much restraint,” Liv shot back. “I mean, come on, you could really mess with her right now.”
Maya nodded enthusiastically. “Exactly! She’s already halfway to losing her mind over you, might as well push her the rest of the way.”
You leaned back, sipping your drink. Liv nodding “Oh, 100%. You should’ve taken your shirt off sooner.”
You smirked. “I like to keep things interesting.”
Maya and Liv exchanged a mischievous look before both leaning in closer, eager to fuel the playful tension between you and Alexia. “Alright, alright,” Maya grinned. “But you have to admit, you’re making her suffer a little. Just imagine, if you gave her just a little more…” she trailed off, letting her words hang in the air like an open invitation.
You raised an eyebrow, trying to keep your cool. “I’m not here to make anyone suffer.”
Liv gave a playful snort. “Sure, sure. Just don’t pretend you don’t enjoy the game. I mean, she’s practically dying to get you alone.”
A small, knowing smile tugged at your lips. “Maybe, but she’s gotta work for it.”
Maya leaned back, eyeing you with a mixture of admiration and curiosity. “You know, you’re playing this way too well. I’m not sure whether to be impressed or worried for her.”
You shrugged nonchalantly. “It’s all about balance. Can’t let her think she has it all figured out.”
Liv raised her eyebrows, leaning back on her chair. “Well, if she’s watching through the gym window like some Disney princess, you might want to start acting like Prince Charming soon.”
You chuckled, shaking your head. “Maybe I’ll just let her keep guessing.”
The room fell into a comfortable silence, the teasing atmosphere fading as you settled back into your spot. But as you glanced across the locker room, your gaze lingered for just a moment longer than usual, wondering if this game was really just a game at all.
This wasn’t basketball. This was a warzone disguised as a game.
Madrid came to hurt you tonight. Not just with the score but with every shove, every elbow, every late hit the refs somehow missed. And if you hadn’t already known how dirty they played, you would’ve thought they had a personal vendetta against you.
The first quarter set the tone.
A hard screen blindsided you, knocking you off balance before you even had a chance to see who hit you. The impact rattled your chest, but you bit down on the sting and kept moving, refusing to give them the reaction they wanted.
Then came the second quarter, and it only got worse.
You went up for a rebound, body fully extended, only to get yanked backward mid-air. Your feet never landed properly, someone made damn sure of that. Your back hit the court with a thud, a sharp pain shooting up your spine. The whistle blew, but the damage was done.
By the third quarter, you were seething.
Another drive, another cheap shot, this time, an elbow straight to the ribs just before you went up for a layup. The contact knocked the wind out of you, the sharp ache in your side lingering as you lined up for the free throws. You exhaled slowly, ignoring the burn in your lungs.
Madrid played dirty.
You played harder.
By the fourth quarter, your body was screaming at you to stop, but there was no chance in hell you were letting them win. You pushed through, ignoring the bruises, the sore ribs, the stiffness in your back. You were tired. You were pissed off. But you weren’t done.
And when the final buzzer rang, the only thing louder than the cheers from the crowd was the sound of your own heartbeat, still hammering in your chest.
Your team had won. Just.
But you’d paid for it.
You stormed off the court, ignoring the lingering stares from reporters, the murmurs from the coaching staff. You didn’t even wait for the post-game team talk. Right now, you didn’t care about anything except getting the hell out of there.
You were beaten up, bruised, and exhausted.
But more than anything,
You were angry.
The locker room was dead silent.
Your teammates had come and gone, the post-game celebrations cut short by the bruises littering your body and the tension still sitting heavy in your chest. The only sound was the distant echo of the arena outside, fans still lingering, reporters still chasing interviews.
You sat on the bench, head resting against the cool metal of your locker, trying to breathe through the dull, aching pain radiating from your ribs. Madrid had done a number on you tonight. Every muscle in your body felt tight, sore, overworked.
You needed ice. You needed a shower. You needed—
A knock on the door.
You didn’t move.
Another knock, firmer this time. Then—
"Are you decent?"
You recognised the voice instantly.
Your jaw tensed as you straightened up, wincing slightly at the sharp pull in your ribs. "Come in."
The door pushed open, and there she was.
Alexia.
In casual clothes, hands tucked into the pockets of her jacket, her sharp eyes scanning the room before locking onto you. For a second, she just stood there, her expression unreadable.
“You alright?”
You let out a slow exhale, wiping a hand over your face before tilting your head at her. "Why do you care?" She didn't deserve your attitude but she seemed to take it in her stride.
Alexia scoffed, stepping fully into the room and letting the door swing shut behind her. "Because I saw what they did to you out there. Looked like they were trying to take you out."
You smirked, though it lacked your usual confidence. "Yeah? Well, they failed."
Alexia didn’t look amused. She took another step closer, eyes flickering down to where you were still absentmindedly pressing a hand to your ribs. "That bad?"
You rolled your eyes. "I’ve had worse."
She didn’t seem convinced, crossing her arms as she studied you. "You sure? Because you don’t look too good."
"Wow, thanks," you deadpanned, shifting slightly but instantly regretting it when a sharp pain shot through your side. You gritted your teeth, and Alexia noticed. Of course she did.
"Let me see," she said, already moving forward.
"I’m fine."
"You’re stubborn," she shot back, unfazed.
You leaned back slightly as she crouched in front of you, closer now, her presence filling the space between you. Her gaze flickered up to meet yours, something unreadable in her expression. "Just lift your damn shirt."
Your breath hitched.
Not because of the request because of the way she said it. Low. Firm. With that no-nonsense authority she carried so naturally.
You hesitated. Then, with a quiet sigh, you relented, slowly lifting your shirt just enough to reveal the bruising already forming across your ribs.
Alexia’s jaw tightened.
She didn’t say anything at first, but her expression darkened, her fingers twitching at her sides like she wanted to do something but wasn’t sure what. "They really went after you."
You simply hummed in response.
Alexia shook her head, muttering something under her breath in Spanish before exhaling sharply. "And your staff just let you sit here like this? No medics?"
"I told them I’d deal with it."
"Right. Because that’s smart," she shot back, sarcasm dripping from her voice.
You smirked despite yourself. "You’re really this concerned?"
Alexia met your gaze, unflinching. "Yes."
The air between you shifted. For the first time all night, you weren’t thinking about the game, the bruises, or the way your body ached. All you could think about was her. The way she was looking at you. The way she had showed up for you.
Your voice came quieter this time. "Why?"
She didn’t answer immediately.
Instead, her gaze softened—just slightly, just enough for something unspoken to pass between you. "Because I don’t like seeing you like this."
You swallowed, your heart hammering in a way that had nothing to do with the game.
Alexia stood up slowly, taking a step back like she needed to put distance between you. "Go home, get some rest. And don’t be stupid about your recovery."
You watched her, searching her expression for something—anything—that would tell you what this really was.
But before you could say anything, she was already turning toward the door.
"Alexia."
She paused, glancing back at you over her shoulder.
You held her gaze. "Thanks."
She nodded once. "See you around."
And then she was gone, leaving you alone in the locker room and with a whole new problem.
Because now, you weren’t just pissed off about the game. Now, you were thinking about Alexia.
The locker room felt colder after Alexia left. You weren’t sure if it was because the adrenaline from the game was finally wearing off or if it was something else entirely—something to do with the way she had looked at you, the way she had shown up after a brutal game like this.
You let out a slow breath, leaning forward with your elbows on your knees, staring at the floor as you tried to process it all.
Alexia cared.
She shouldn’t, not like that, not enough to show up in your locker room unannounced, demanding to see your injuries. But she did. And now, she had left just as quickly, leaving behind an unmistakable tension that wouldn’t leave your chest.
With a shake of your head, you finally forced yourself up, wincing at the stiffness in your ribs. You needed ice. A long bath. Sleep.
You also needed to get your mind off Alexia.
Easier said than done.
You woke up sore. Your ribs ached, your back was stiff, and every bruise Madrid had gifted you last night throbbed as you sat up in bed. You groaned, running a hand over your face before reaching for your phone on the nightstand.
Notifications flooded your screen—texts from teammates, messages from your coaching staff checking in, and, of course, social media blowing up with reactions to last night’s game.
One unread text from Alexia.
You stared at it for a second before swiping it open.
Alexia: You alive?
A smirk tugged at your lips as you leaned back against the pillows, thumbs hovering over the screen before you typed a reply.
You: Barely. You gonna keep checking on me like this?
The message was delivered, and almost instantly, those three little dots appeared.
Alexia: If you keep playing like you don’t care about your body, sí.
You rolled your eyes but couldn’t stop the amused grin that formed.
You: I do care. I just have a high pain tolerance.
Alexia: Or you’re stubborn.
You: You sound like my coach.
Alexia: Maybe your coach is right.
Your smirk grew.
You: Didn’t know you cared this much, Capitana.
This time, there was a longer pause. You could practically see her debating how to respond, which only made you more entertained.
Finally, the dots reappeared.
Alexia: Don’t get used to it.
You chuckled to yourself, locking your phone and tossing it onto the bed beside you. She could say that all she wanted.
But after last night, you weren’t sure you believed her.
The bruises from the Madrid game were still fresh, but they didn’t stop you from hitting the gym first thing in the morning. If anything, they only fuelled you more. Pushing past the ache in your ribs, you increased the speed on the treadmill, jaw tight as you focused on each stride. The game still replayed in your head, every hard foul, every shove that went uncalled. It pissed you off all over again.
Your phone vibrated on the bench next to you, but you ignored it.
Another buzz.
And another.
With a frustrated sigh, you finally hit the stop button on the treadmill and grabbed your phone. Three notifications.
Two from your teammates.
One from Alexia.
You swiped them open, starting with the first one from Maya.
Maya: You cleared for the training session later?
The second was similar.
Claudia: You good after last night?
Then, Alexia’s message.
Alexia: Did you actually rest, or are you already being stupid?
You exhaled through your nose, shaking your head.
You: Define stupid.
Her response was instant.
Alexia: If you have to ask, you already know.
You bit back a smirk.
You: You’re really keeping tabs on me now?
The dots appeared, then disappeared. Then appeared again.
Alexia: Someone has to.
That one made you pause. The air between you both was changing, and neither of you had acknowledged it directly. It had been playful before, just online flirting and teasing. But now she was showing up at your games. Calling you out. Checking in.
And you liked it. Maybe too much.
Shaking your head, you typed back.
You: Good to know I have Barcelona’s finest watching my every move.
Her reply was just as quick.
Alexia: Don’t flatter yourself.
You chuckled, tossing your phone back onto the bench before grabbing a towel and slinging it around your neck.
She could deny it all she wanted.
You weren’t fooled. You weren’t the only one who noticed the shift. The fans had picked up on the lull in online interactions, but now that Alexia had subtly made her presence known again, you figured it was time to really give them something to talk about.
After finishing your gym session, you took a mirror selfie drenched in sweat, muscles tense from the workout, towel draped around your neck. Muscles black blue and prominent on your torso and arms. You stared at the picture for a moment, debating, before typing out the caption:
“Apparently, I need supervision. Any volunteers?”
You hit post and locked your phone, moving on with your day, but it didn’t take long for the internet to explode.
Thousands of comments flooded in within minutes, fans tagging Alexia, demanding a response. It took her a while, but when she finally caved, her reply was short.
Alexiaputellas: Your decision-making is questionable. Supervision is necessary.
That was all it took. The fans lost it, and your notifications became a never-ending stream of chaos.
You smirked, leaning back in your chair as you typed back.
Yourusername: Didn’t realise Barcelona offered those kinds of services.
Her reply was instant.
Alexiaputellas: We don’t. You’re a special case.
That made you laugh.
The comments kept rolling in—your teammates jumping in, her teammates fueling the fire.
vickyylopezz._: Alexia, just admit you’re obsessed.
MayaSmith: At this point, either date or shut up!
Random Fan: JUST DATE ALREADY!
The engagement skyrocketed. Articles started circulating again. Even the club's official page liked the interaction, which you were excited to point out the to the PR director when you next saw him.
And you just sat back and enjoyed the show. Alexia wanted to play this game. You were more than ready to match her move for move.
Later that evening, you posted another photo—this time, a clip from your latest training session. Mid-shot, arms tense, expression sharp. The kind of picture that made it clear you weren’t just messing around.
The caption
“Still waiting on that supervision. Thought Barcelona was reliable.”
You barely had time to blink before Alexia responded.
Alexiaputellas: Some of us have actual jobs.
Your smirk grew as you fired back.
Yourusername: Right, right. Must be tough sitting in the gym watching me train.
It was a bold move—one that let her know you saw her earlier in the day. That you knew she had been watching, even if she thought she was being subtle. And judging by the pause before her next response, you had definitely caught her off guard. She tried to hide at the back but by wearing a cap and sunglasses she stuck out like a saw thumb.
When she finally replied, it was much simpler than you expected.
Alexiaputellas: Watch yourself.
It wasn’t her usual witty comeback. It was more like a warning. Which only made you push further.
Yourusername: Or what? You’ll come supervise me yourself?
Again, the pause. The fans were losing their minds in the comments, but all you cared about was whether or not Alexia was going to take the bait.
Alexiaputellas: Try me.
Your breath caught for a second, but you covered it with a smirk.
She was getting bolder. You were definitely not backing down now.
Alexia’s last message sat on your screen, daring you to make the next move.
Try me.
It was bold, even for her. You weren’t sure if she meant it as a challenge, a warning, or something else entirely. But one thing was clear—this game you had been playing wasn’t just harmless flirting anymore.
You were both toeing the line. So, naturally, you decided to see just how close you could get.
You typed back.
Yourusername: Careful, Alexia. People might start thinking you actually want to supervise me.
The fans were already running wild with speculation, so you figured you might as well fuel the fire.
For a while, there was nothing. No reply.
Then, a notification popped up.
Not a text.
Not a comment.
A like.
Alexia had liked your message but said nothing.
Which only made it worse. The internet exploded again, theories running rampant in your mentions. Was she ignoring you? Was she flustered? Was she plotting her next move? Had you taken it offline like the fans already speculated you had with the interactions fewer and further between.
Then, finally, a response. Privately
Alexia: Some things don’t need to be said.
Your stomach did something it definitely shouldn’t have, but you ignored it. You refused to be the one caught off guard.
You: So you’re admitting it?
Alexia: Admitting what?
You huffed a laugh. She was good.
You: That you want to supervise me. Personally.
The three little dots appeared. Stopped. Appeared again.
Then, finally—
Alexia: You talk too much.
That one hit differently. Maybe because you could almost hear her saying it, almost see the way she’d look at you if this conversation was happening in person. Maybe because, for the first time, it wasn’t just playful. There was something else underneath it now.
And for the first time, you weren’t sure who was actually winning this game. You had her cornered. Or at least, that’s what you thought.
Alexia’s last message sat on your screen, just taunting you.
You talk too much.
It wasn’t playful like before. It was something else. Something heavier. You weren’t sure why it made your skin feel warm or why your mind kept replaying it as if it meant more than just shutting you down. You could answer right away. Keep the back and forth going, keep the fans screaming, keep playing this game where neither of you admitted anything but made sure everyone knew something was happening.
But instead, you waited. For the first time since this whole thing started, you made Alexia wonder what you were thinking.
An hour passed.
Then two.
The internet had already dissected every interaction from earlier, debating what it all meant. But you said nothing.
Then, late that night, a message appeared.
Alexia: Cat got your tongue?
A slow smirk tugged at your lips. She had cracked first. Now you had the upper hand.
You: Just making you wonder. Seems like it worked.
The typing bubbles appeared immediately. Stopped.
Started again.
Alexia: Dangerous game you’re playing.
Oh, this was fun.
You: Good thing I like danger.
This time, she didn’t reply right away. You imagined her staring at the message, deciding whether she wanted to take this further or let it settle.
But Alexia had never been one to back down from a challenge.
Minutes later, a new notification popped up. Not a text. A picture.
You clicked on it, and—
It was a picture of her.
A post-training one, similar to yours from before. Alexia was in a sports bra, abs tight, sweat glistening along her skin.
No caption.
No words.
Just that.
Just to you.
Your fingers hovered over the keyboard.
You had started this game, but now she was playing by her own rules.
And for once…
You had no idea what to say.
Bebita - Alexia Putellas
Summary: Turns out the captain’s toughest rival isn’t on the pitch-it’s her own baby, who smiles for the squad but not for her.
Warning: One adorable baby, one jealous Alexia, and two exhausted parents who are definitely too tired for anything even remotely sexy.
Word count: 2.7
a/n: This is a scheduled post, I'm sleeping.
MASTERLIST
..
The VIP area sat a few rows up–quiet except for the distant thump of the ball and the soft murmur of the crowd. Y/n settled into the seat, baby Clara balanced on her lap.
Clara’s tiny brunette pigtails bobbed as she wriggled against Y/n’s chest, her hazel eyes fixed on the green pitch below. She was always like that, always trying to move away from Y/n and Alexia, even though she had barely learned how to stand on her own.
Out on the field, Alexia knelt on one knee, cycling through her familiar pre‑match stretch, every motion precise and powerful.
Clara watched, leaning forward as though she understood that the woman in the Barça kit was her other mama.
“Look, mi amor,” Y/n whispered, angling Clara so she could see. “Do you see Mami?”
Clara squealed happily, reaching out to point. In her other hand, she clutched the battered cat‑culer teddy Vicky had given her.
It had been a gift for Clara’s first birthday, which had happened just weeks ago. How did a one-year-old manage to take off the cat's tails, bite down its ear and unsew its eyes? Y/n wasn’t sure, but she was sure that Clara loved the thing dearly.
Y/n brushed a strand of hair from Clara’s forehead. “She’s getting ready to play for you today.”
Clara shifted, trying to stand. Her little legs wobbled, and she toppled onto Y/n’s thigh with a surprised giggle.
“You’re going to fall,” Y/n laughed, scooping her daughter, sitting her on her lap. “You just learned how to do that–be patient.”
Clara patted Y/n’s cheek, then lifted Cat, pressing it against her cheek as if comforting herself–and everyone else too.
Through the railing, Y/n watched Alexia rise and take a final glance toward the stands, her eyes briefly meeting Y/n’s.
Alexia gave a single nod, smiling shyly.
Y/n smiled and took Clara’s small hand and waved at Alexia. “Say hi to mami, Bebita.”
Clara babbled excitedly, watching her mom.
Y/n pressed her lips to Clara’s pigtail. “Ready to see Mama in action? The game’s starting.”
Clara kicked her legs and clutched Cat tighter.
Y/n put earmuffs on Clara, and they both waited for Alexia’s first touch of the ball.
..
Y/n stepped down onto the pitch, Clara cradled in her arms, the roar of the crowd fading into a soft hum now that the final whistle had blown.
Alexia jogged over from midfield, still in her game‑worn kit, sweat-slick hair plastered to her forehead, a smile on her face, both from seeing her little family and from winning the game as well.
Clara’s hazel eyes gleamed–not at Alexia, but at the Cat teddy Y/n held.
Y/n had just pried it away to stop Clara from yanking out its last button eye, but the little one was too quick; she snatched it back, buried her face in its floppy ear, and squeezed it as if it were the only thing in the world.
“Hey, mi amor–where’s my big winner's smile?” Alexia called softly, holding out her arms for Clara.
Clara peeked over the teddy.
Y/n wasn’t sure, but somehow Clara has mastered the deadpan face at only one year and two weeks.
Alexia’s brow furrowed.
Alexia’s brow creased in confusion. “Why so serious, bebita?” she asked, reaching to lift Clara into her arms—but each time she tried, Clara twisted away.
“She didn’t even give me a single grin,” Alexia said, casting a pleading glance at Y/n. “Do you think… is she mad at me?”
Y/n chuckled, rocking Clara gently against her. “She’s not mad, amor. I think she’s just tired.”
“Tired?” Alexia scoffed. “I saw her napping from the pitch.”
“Sleeping surrounded by thousands of people isn’t the same as snoozing at home,” Y/n replied, stepping closer. “But now, can the captain give me some attention?”
Alexia grinned, leaning in for a quick kiss, only to feel something wet against her cheek. Clara was pushing her face away,
“Okay, wow,” Alexia said, feigning offence. “What’s put you in such a mood, huh? Did Mama not breastfeed you today?”
Y/n rolled her eyes. “Of course I did.”
Before Y/n could even get a word out, Vicky and Jana appeared at the edge of the pitch, grinning like they’d just won the lottery.
“Bebita!” they called in perfect unison, spotting Clara from a distance.
Clara’s deadpan expression shattered instantly into a bright, gummy grin–her two little teeth front and centre like she was showing them off.
As the two girls jogged over, she actually started to wiggle in Y/n’s arms, arms flailing in excitement.
Vicky scooped her up with practised ease, plopping Clara into her lap like they were old besties.
Jana was already fussing with her pigtails, smoothing them down and cooing sweet nothings that had Clara giggling, soft and high-pitched, the kind of sound that made everyone around them melt.
Y/n and Alexia shared a long, stunned glance.
Alexia crossed her arms, deeply offended. “Wow. Amazing. My own filla [daughter] ignores me but loses her mind for these two.”
Y/n patted her shoulder with exaggerated sympathy. “Don’t pout, campeona. She does love you–just maybe not right now.”
Alexia sighed deeply, leaning over to tousle Clara’s hair in an attempt to salvage her dignity.
But Clara, nestled happily in Vicky’s arms, gave her a very unimpressed wave–one lazy, pudgy little hand–and turned right back around to cuddle her beloved teddy and friend.
Y/n could swear she saw her daughter frown at Alexia. A warning frown.
Alexia looked wounded. “Did… did she just glare at me?”
Y/n bit back a laugh. “Maybe. A little. You might have messed with her giggling privileges.”
“I hope she doesn’t expect me to pick her up from parties when she’s older,” Alexia muttered, arms wrapped lazily around Y/n from behind.
Y/n snorted. “Oh? So you’re already planning to let her go to parties now? Because last I heard, you said she wouldn’t be out of our sight until she turned 23 and a half.”
“Shut up,” Alexia grumbled, chin on Y/n’s shoulder, eyes narrowed as more players started to swarm their tiny queen. “She’s supposed to be obsessed with us, not… them.”
Clara, meanwhile, was thriving. Surrounded by teammates, she sat like a baby monarch on Vicky’s lap, accepting all compliments and forehead kisses.
Alexia checked her Samsung watch. Fifteen minutes.
“That’s ridiculous,” she huffed. “I carried her for nine months!”
Y/n said grumpily. “No, you didn’t. I did.”
Alexia rolled her eyes. “Fine. But I’m the one who wakes up every night to change her diaper.”
Y/n gave an exaggerated shrug. “Yeah… that’s fair.”
Alexia had already had enough. She pulled away and marched toward the huddle of players, determined to reassert her maternal dominance.
By then, Clara had migrated from Vicky to Patri, who had Pina crouched in front of them playing peek-a-boo with the intensity of a professional entertainer.
Every “boo!” sent Clara into high-pitched giggles, her tiny arms flailing like she was trying to fly.
Off to the side, Salma had somehow gotten hold of the Cat Culer plush and was cradling it like a kitten, complete with exaggerated ‘mrow-mrow’ sounds and purring noises.
Clara was enchanted. She squealed and reached both hands toward Salma.
She swivelled from Patri to Salma, a wide smile spreading across her face. It was a deadly combo: Patri’s over-the-top silly faces and Salma’s soft, ridiculous lullaby cat impressions.
Alexia barely made it back to the group before Clara let out a delighted squeal.
Too much. That was too much joy for one player circle.
Without warning, Alexia swooped in and plucked Clara right out of Patri’s arms.
“Come on, Clara,” she muttered, hoisting Clara onto her hip like a protective mama bear. “You’re ours.”
“Noo!” Patri gasped, hands dramatically outstretched. “Our amiga!”
“She was smiling!” Jana chimed in from seemingly nowhere.
Alexia blinked. “Where did you even come from?”
Jana just pouted and pointed. “She likes me more than you.”
Alexia raised her brows. “She drooled on your shoulder last week.”
Alexia ignored them all, bouncing Clara gently on her hip and muttering like a dramatic villain, “Your amiga needs to sleep in one hour, chicas. Back off.”
And that’s what did it.
Clara’s big eyes blinked once… twice… and then her lip wobbled.
The betrayal hit her in full force.
She let out a wail so dramatic, so raw and heartbroken. How did a baby have so many emotions? Who knows?
Alexia’s face fell in real time.
“Oh, come on, bebita…” she cooed, trying to adjust her hold, bouncing Clara with expert panic. “Don’t cry. Mama’s sorry–”
“Give her back,” Vicky said, deadpan.
“No!” Alexia turned, spinning away like she was protecting Clara, “She’s mine. I made her.”
“You did not!” Y/n called after her. “I made her, remember? Forty-three weeks?”
Alexia didn’t turn around. “Fine, but I clipped her nails yesterday. Let me have this!”
Y/n stepped forward without a word and plucked Clara from Alexia’s arms.
“Shh, what’s going on with you today, huh?” she asked, settling Clara against her chest. Instantly, Clara melted into her, the cries slowing as she rooted for the breast like nothing had happened.
Alexia folded her arms and watched the scene unfold, tapping her foot. “She hates me today.”
Y/n leaned in and kissed her cheek, still swaying with Clara. “She doesn’t hate you. She just wants to party with the girls.”
Alexia’s pout softened. “Next time, she should save a giggle or two for me.”
Clara was nearly asleep by the time Alexia guided them toward the locker room, collecting her things so they could finally go home.
The walk to the car was slow, careful not to wake the tiny diva—but Clara, ever the drama queen, cracked her big hazel eyes open as Y/n buckled her into the car seat.
“Hi, Neneta,” Y/n cooed in a baby voice. “I bet you're gonna stay up the whole drive and absolutely not fall asleep at bedtime, huh? Yeah, of course you will.”
Clara giggled, like she was absolutely planning to sabotage their night.
Y/n frowned, struggling with the seatbelt–it wasn’t going over the right way, and it looked like it was pressing into Clara’s belly.
“Ale, I need help,” she called, glancing over her shoulder.
Alexia appeared behind her, now in a soft, oversized shirt, hair down and still damp from her shower. “What, amor?”
She leaned in to take a look–and that’s when it happened.
Clara smiled. Not just any smile. A big, two-toothed, gummy grin, arms shooting up toward Alexia.
Alexia gasped. Literal tears sprang to her eyes.
“Oh, el meu tresor, has tornat a estimar la mameta, eh?” [Oh my treasure, have you come back to loving mommy, huh?]
She scooped Clara out of the car seat with no hesitation, kissing her all over while Clara giggled and wrapped a chubby hand in Alexia’s hair.
“Alexia, put her back!” Y/n scolded. “It’s cold! She’s gonna catch a cold!”
“My bebita,” Alexia crooned, ignoring her. “Mine.”
Y/n squinted. Something wasn’t adding up. Then her eyes narrowed in on the baby's fist, twisted lovingly in Alexia’s damp hair.
“Alexia,” she said slowly.
“What?” Alexia asked, still too busy baby-cuddling to notice the growing danger.
Without another word, Y/n stepped forward, gently took a handful of Alexia’s hair, and lifted it up into a mock ponytail.
Instantly–cry. A full-body, soul-deep shriek from Clara that echoed off the parking garage walls.
“What the-?”
Before Alexia could finish, Y/n let her hair fall back down. Clara stopped crying on a dime. She blinked twice, then went back to calmly playing with Alexia’s nose.
“She doesn’t like your hair up,” Y/n deadpanned. “She’s been mad at you all day because you put it in a ponytail. Diva behaviour.”
Alexia stared at her daughter in disbelief. “Is that true, bebita? I’m gonna have to figure out how to play football with my hair down, huh?”
Clara gave her a sleepy little grunt and patted her cheek, as if to say, finally, someone’s catching on.
The car ride home was full of Clara's babble–her favourite form of post-bedtime rebellion.
“She’s giving a full concert back there,” Alexia mumbled, one hand on the wheel, the other holding Y/n’s thigh.
“She’s practising for her world tour,” Alexia said with a small yawn.
From the backseat came a joyful “DA! and “MA!” followed by a long, dramatic sigh…Clara’s version of a mic drop.
Y/n twisted in her seat to look at her. “Clara, it’s sleepy time.”
Clara kicked her feet.
Alexia glanced at her in the mirror. “Bebita, no kicking mami.”
“Maybe she just needs to wind down,” Alexia offered. “You know, like a little story, some quiet time…”
“She just yelled at her own toes,” Y/n said hopelessly. “We’re not sleeping today.”
By the time they pulled into the garage, Clara was still going strong, waving her arms as if she was saying hi to a crowd, but Alexia didn’t care because she was giving her a gummy grin every time she looked back.
Y/n unbuckled her with a sigh.
“We have ten minutes before she realises she’s a baby and not a woman in her twenties at a club,” she muttered.
Inside, Alexia took Clara while Y/n dealt with the diaper bag and Alexia’s game bag.
Clara was clinging to her again, arms tight around Alexia’s neck, one hand firmly rooted in her hair like she was personally in charge of keeping it down.
“She’s obsessed with your hair,” Y/n said as she walked into the nursery.
“She has taste,” Alexia replied, swaying slowly with Clara in her arms.
“She has control issues.”
“She gets that from you.”
Y/n shot her a glare, but was too tired to keep it up. Instead, she leaned against the doorway, watching the two of them.
Clara was slowing down now, her lids heavy as Alexia quietly hummed a lullaby in Catalan, her hand rubbing soft circles on Clara’s back.
It was quiet for a moment, just the gentle and occasional creak of the floorboards under their feet.
Y/n felt something melt in her chest.
“You’re really good at this,” she murmured.
Alexia glanced over at her, surprised. “At what?”
“Being her mom.”
Alexia’s mouth tugged into the smallest, most fragile smile. “Only when my hair’s down, apparently.”
“She just missed you,” Y/n said, crossing the room to stand beside her. “You’re her favourite, you know.”
Alexia looked down at Clara, whose tiny hand was still tangled in her hair, her face finally tucked into her mom’s neck. “She’s my favourite, too–well, you and her.”
Y/n leaned her head on Alexia’s shoulder, both of them swaying now in the half-lit nursery. Clara let out a soft sigh–peaceful this time–and went limp in Alexia’s arms, fully asleep.
“Victory,” Y/n whispered.
“Don’t jinx it,” Alexia whispered back.
They waited another few minutes, just to be sure, then moved into the quiet routine that every young parent had.
Alexia laid Clara in the crib. Y/n pulled the blanket up. Neither of them breathed until they were sure she was down for real.
Back in the hallway, Y/n pulled Alexia into a long, slow hug, burying her face in the damp hair. “I vote you never wear a ponytail again.”
Alexia chuckled, kissing her temple. “Deal.”
They padded off to their bedroom, tired and tangled in each other, both grateful that Clara had finally called it a night.
Y/n flopped face-first onto the bed with a groan. “Okay, but we both agree we’re too tired for sex, right?”
There was no answer.
Y/n turned her head slightly. Alexia was already on her side, eyes shut, breathing deeply, completely out cold.
She snorted. “Okay. Guess that’s a yes.”
She reached out blindly, grabbed the blanket, and yanked it over both of them, grumbling softly as she burrowed in beside Alexia.
“You better be dreaming about me,” she mumbled into the pillow.
..
Hope you guys enjoyed it!
i’m dead 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Indexical Reminder of a Morning Well Spent
i sent a little of this to @wosofutbolfan and it apparently passed the test so here it is
-
The goal was fucking beautiful.
A pure, uncut masterclass in footballing telepathy.
Alexia had barely looked before she whipped the ball into the box. You were already moving, already there, like you had a GPS tracker embedded under your skin, waiting for the exact moment to strike. One touch, a ruthless finish, and the net rippled like it was bowing to your greatness. The crowd went feral. Commentators lost their minds. Pundits called it art.
Now, in the changing room, your teammates are still reeling.
“Okay, but what the actual hell was that?” Mapi demands, pulling off her tape.
Pina shakes her head, throwing a towel over her shoulder. “It’s not normal. You don’t even look at each other. It’s like—like she breathes, and you just know.”
Patri squints at you. “Do you practice that at home?”
Irene folds her arms. “Be honest. Do you two have, like, a shared consciousness?”
Kika points at you. “Are you some kind of footballing hive mind? Because I refuse to believe that was just instinct.”
You stretch out your legs, completely unfazed. “It because we fuck all the time.”
Silence.
Alexia, who had been mid-sip of her water, chokes.
Coughs. Gags. Almost dies.
Mapi slaps the locker and cackles. “That explains a lot.”
Pina’s eyes widen. “Excuse me?”
Patri grips her towel like it’s a seatbelt. “What does that have to do with football?”
You shrug. “Everything.”
Alexia is still spluttering. “No, no, no. Stop.”
You ignore her completely. “When you have sex as often as we do, you develop a kind of… connection.”
Alexia lunges, slamming a hand over your mouth. “Don’t you dare.”
Mapi grins. “Oh, no. She has to.”
Alexia glares at her. “She doesn’t.”
Kika leans forward. “No, I think she should.”
Pina nods, barely suppressing her laughter. “For scientific purposes.”
Patri crosses her arms. “If we’re going to be subjected to your disgusting public displays of on-pitch chemistry, we deserve the full explanation.”
You lick Alexia’s palm.
She yelps and jerks away like she’s been electrocuted.
You wipe your mouth. “As I was saying—”
“No. No,” Alexia pleads.
You continue, unfazed. “I know her body. Every inch of it. The way her muscles shift. The exact moment she tenses before she—”
Alexia actually grabs you. Tries to physically drag you away. “We’re leaving.”
You dodge, side-stepping like you’re evading a stubborn defender. “I just mean, when you’ve had someone clench around your fingers enough times—”
Alexia lunges again.
You bolt, darting around the physio table.
Mapi screams with laughter. “OH MY GOD.”
Kika has tears in her eyes. “Please, keep going. This is the greatest thing I’ve ever witnessed.”
Alexia is desperate. “Stop talking.”
You dodge her again. “It’s pure instinct at this point. Like how I know exactly when she’s about to—”
Alexia dives. Misses.
Pina has collapsed onto the floor. “I cannot breathe.”
Patri is crying. “Make it stop.”
Irene wipes her face. “No, keep going, I need every detail.”
Mapi is wheezing. “Wait, wait, wait—are you saying that every time you score a goal off her pass—”
You smirk. “It’s basically an extension of our sex life, yes.”
Alexia grabs you, shakes you like she’s trying to reset your brain. “You. Are. Deranged.”
You grin. “Fong pretend you don’t love it.”
She shoves you. “I’m not pretending, I loathe it.”
Mapi is practically convulsing with laughter. “You’re telling me every single assist—”
“—is just an echo of last night’s activities? Oh definitely.”
Kika collapses onto the bench. “I need an exorcism.”
Alexia physically hauls you toward the showers. “We are leaving this conversation.”
You plant your feet. “Wait, wait, just let me finish—”
“No.”
“I’m just saying, it’s good motivation, you know? The more I score, the more assists she gets, the better the reward.”
Mapi screeches.
Pina is on the floor.
Patri is pleading with the universe.
Kika throws her water bottle at you. “LEAVE.”
Alexia shoves you through the doorway. “You’re done.”
Mapi wheezes. “This is the best day of my life.”
Alexia looks at the team like she’s asking for divine intervention. “This is the worst day of mine.”
Such a good, well written and well thought story! Loved the banter. Need more fics like this..
About when, on a Wednesday in a restaurant at Barcelona, you watch it begin again
》 Alexia Putellas x Reader
》 words count: 12.8k
》 fight a losing battle [idiom]: also known as “losing game”, to try hard to do something when there is no chance that you will succeed, a failing effort or activity
Your last relationship ends so badly that you consider abstinence from everything – processed sugar, alcohol, and even people. A period of deep cleansing, as if you could purify every cell of your body, like a celebrity spiraling from rehab to full-blown identity crisis.
This emotional state explains why you find yourself on a one-way flight to Barcelona, all your things crumbled in a backpack. A rash impulse led you to declutter your belongings, a wishful attempt of turning into a completely new person just because your closet is now half what it used to be.
The decision to straight-up flee is rushed and quite terrifying, much like many of your recent choices.
Elena, your best friend since you were barely old enough to share made-up stories and Barbie-like careers, thinks you’re going mental. She nearly cries when you decide to donate your vintage Christian Lacroix jacket, but you’re convinced it’s the only way to get a new lease on life, so she mourns in silence.
The loudest reaction comes from your brother, who, if you could be mature enough to admit it, is the only voice of reason that almost resonates in your head.
Almost.
Despite your stubbornness, you accept the offer of hospitality from one of his university friends, who gives away a spare room. You don’t plan on staying in a hotel for gods know how long, and you certainly don’t have the patience to search for an apartment. You’re not completely out of mind, if they want to help, so be it.
Barcelona is brighter and feels as welcoming as you hoped, though that might just be the nicer weather and the fact you’re far from your problems. And your ex.
The first month flies by in a rush of Catalan cafeterias, art galleries, and little boutiques that refill both your closet and your spirit.
The people here are kind enough to put up with your attempts to speak the language, humoring you since you’re oh-so-sure that eleven consecutive days on a passive-aggressive app have made you fluent.
The places you visit and the ones strangers recommend are loud enough to ignore the voices of reason in your ear that start to sound a lot like your brother’s.
Still, there’s only so much one can do to avoid responsibilities and self-consciousness.
“You need a job”, Ricardo states one morning, finding you in the kitchen eating cold pizza, still in the clothes you wore two nights ago.
Your closet isn’t as limited anymore.
“I’ve saved enough money to enjoy my vacation, thanks for your concern”
“I thought that was the money saved to buy a house with your ex”
“I do not have an ex nor a house to worry about, do I?”
As soon as the pizza starts to taste like regret, you’re ready to end the conversation to sleep the rest of day away.
Ricardo means well, you know that.
He’s a nice guy and a good roommate, but, like your brother, he’s overprotective and likes to gossip a little too much. Sometimes, it’s surprising how much he knows about you. Most of the time, it’s just annoying.
“I’m want to say– maybe a routine could be good for you”
“I have a routine”, you retort, knowing it’s a fat lie.
You’re out of the bed before eleven only if you didn’t sleep through the night before, wandering around the city with no real destination until something, somehow, catches your attention.
It’s not a bad thing per se, but it’s not a sustainable lifestyle.
“You quit a well-paid accounting job, right?”
“Ricardo, I swear, I’m this close to reporting you for stalking”
His laugh is too loud this early in the morning, but the comfort of bantering with someone who knows you is too familiar to ignore. Even if most of his insight comes from your nosy brother.
They both need to find a hobby that doesn’t involve judging your questionable life choices.
He sips his coffee while studying you, assessing how risky it would be to keep pushing the subject.
Apparently, he feels brave enough.
“My friends’ restaurant could use some help”
~
You’re not sure if Ricardo downplayed it or if he’s just blissfully unaware, but his friends don’t need some help – they need a miracle.
That’s what happens when you get scammed by your bookkeeper.
Despite not being really familiar with Spanish tax laws and regulation, it’s clear as the day someone exploited every possible loophole in the profitable business run by three way-too-trusting men. The truth becomes evident as you examine their accounting ledger, your frown deepening with each passing moment.
You have been to their restaurant before, and have loved it.
The place is cosy and carefully maintained. The food is prepared by a grumpy man from Puerto Rico named Paco, who, after twenty years in Barcelona, learned just enough cursing in Catalan to run the kitchen. Local bands play live on the weekend and someone’s mom made sure everyone is nice and well mannered. The worn wooden tables are witness of countless shared meals.
Pedro and Paul, the other two owners, can only be described as a comedy duo with a really questionable sense of style and even worse jokes. But they’re nice enough, definitely good company when you have a bad day. They can turn it upside down so quickly, for the better or the worst.
However, Ricardo tells you how much the restaurant means for his friends and the local community, guilt-tripping you into helping them to fix their finances.
The truth is, you love math and numbers so much that a challenge like this excites you more than it’s appropriate to admit.
Hence, you agree to help them for far less money you could have asked anyone in the same situation.
They take it as a promise to make sure the business keeps running and organise a dinner with way too many people to celebrate your help.
“I’ve barely started looking into it, Pedro”, you complain, not used to such enthusiasm.
“¡Cállate y bebe tu sangría!”
You meet Alba that same night.
She’s nice and quick-witted, no one is safe from her clever remarks. It feels nice, the way she makes sure you’re included when everyone seems to forget you’re still learning Spanish from a green bird on your phone, and that, in most conversations, you relate more to vibes than actual words.
Flirting is a universal language, though.
If her hand brushes on your arm a couple of times you make sure to smile and get closer, and if you lean into her with the excuse of needing a translation she makes sure to whisper right into your ear. There’s a note in her voice that makes you feel at ease.
Of course, Ricardo ruins everything.
“I’m starting to think you’re running from tax collectors, not your ex”
It’s a good joke, you know it is nothing more than that. But it suddenly reminds you how messy your life is and how out of place you feel sometimes.
Not just far away from home, but also far away from everything familiar.
A job for a company you hated but paid good money; friends you didn’t see as you’d liked, but who knew damn well when to drag you out of your apartment – and out of your own head. A boyfriend who barely tolerated your love, but somehow always managed to say and do the right things at the right time.
Every morning, you wake up knowing what to wear for work, what numbers to punch into the computer to get the needed results, and how to act to be sure you’re not too much.
You’re not running away from just your ex, you’re running away from your life as known until finding out about the cheating.
“¿Todo bien?”, Alba asks, noticing how you miss the opportunity to jab Ricardo.
It takes you a moment to register her reassuring hand on your arm and the talks moving to a completely different topic.
“Yeah, sorry, just tired”
“You better get used to the Spanish nightlife”
“It’s pretty much all I’m doing so far”, you admit, slowly sipping a beer and making sure your annoying roommate doesn’t hear a word about this.
The rest of the dinner passes without too much trouble, despite not remembering most of the names and following even less of the conversations.
Alba stays close and you blame the spicy food for the way your face reddens when she bids her goodbye with three kisses and a promise to meet up with less people.
“It’s a surprise”, Ricardo comments, his grin spreading across his face as soon as you settle onto the couch to debrief the day’s events.
It’s starting to look a lot like a new routine, a tradition in the making.
“What? Something my brother didn’t mention?”
“¡Ay, claro!”
“I hate you”
“I had no idea Alba is your type”
You have to give credit where due, he displays incredible reflexes. He dodges the pillow you throw at him, your punch barely grazes his arm, and your kick misses his shin by a mile.
To be honest with yourself, you’re not really sure who is your type.
Not even getting in the mind-space to think about your ex, the past relationships you care about to recall all look pretty different. There’s no consistent pattern, not a clear preference in haircuts or any kind of colours, not a style that catches your attention more than another.
The only thing most of your exes have in common is tiring you to the bones and leaving your life making you trust less and less in others.
Maybe you do have a type.
~
It’s not a date, you both agree on that.
She doesn’t ask about the infamous ex, she’s good company and even a nicer distraction.
But your mind drifts and, as you recount the highlights of how that relationship crumpled in slow motion, it becomes clear as the day you shouldn’t be with someone until you’ve committed to a good therapist.
It’s not fair to anyone, but it’s definitely not fair to Alba.
You kiss her anyway, and she makes you promise to let her be your first date as soon as you’re ready to get back into the game again.
~
“Ricardo told me your ex is un cabrón”
If not for the possibility of blemishing your otherwise spotless record, you could have shoved Pedro down the hill you’re currently struggling to climb, losing too much dignity.
The guy looks like he had one beer too many, but he’s surprisingly in shape and apparently unaffected by the whole hike so far.
“Am I the only topic of conversation he has?”, you ask, mostly to buy a few more seconds to catch your breath.
“Creo que sí”
You raise the finger as you outpace him to keep going.
The sun has set, casting a warm, golden hue across the clear Barcelona sky. Despite Pedro knocking on your door when it was barely socially accessible to be at someone’s place, it takes the two of you more time than necessary to reach this point of the trail.
Not close enough to the top yet, but definitely too late to turn back without regrets.
It’s mostly his fault.
The view is impressive, and the Catalan knows too many fascinating details to not be amazed by the nature around.
“¿Estás bien?
“Cabrón is a nice word”
“It’s not”
“No, it’s– I mean it’s not a bad enough word to describe him”, you clarify with a faint smile as Pedro slows his pace.
Your final destination is just a few steps away.
It may be the pleasant company, a good friend you’ve discovered in an unexpected place at the most unexpected time of your life. It may be the warm rays of sunshine that tickle your skin or the ache making your legs feel alive. It may be the weight on your chest, the one that crushed good intentions and caused too many sleepless nights, now becoming smaller under a new sense of resolve.
It may be for many different reasons, but for the first time in more than you’re comfortable looking back, it feels better.
“It was a good relationship”
He gives you a moment, sitting on the slightly damp grass next to your sprawled figure.
“It was good, until it was really bad. But it’s hard to do anything about it when you’re doing such an impressive job at hiding all the signs”
“A bad relationship can’t be blamed on just one person”, he tries to reason.
“It can”
“Guapa, mira–”
“No, it can. He was controlling, aggressive, and incredibly talented at making me take all the blame and the shame”, you admit, for the first time out loud, “My only fault was pretending to ignore when I finally saw it all for what it really was”
As you gather the strength to rise to a more dignified position, you almost expect Pedro to hug you or be the over affectionate Spanish stereotype he usually is.
Instead, he’s looking somewhere away in the sky, pensive.
You feel the need to reassure him, “I’m fine now, I–”
“No, lo siento, lo siento”, he turns with a small, yet genuine smile, “We don’t know each other that well”
“You’re hurting me now, I thought we were friends”
“We are, tonta!”
Pedro raises and his large hands, marked with tiny cuts, extend to pick you up. He paves the way down the hill with no words, and for the first time since you meet the man, the silence it’s a surprise.
It’s not uncomfortable, maybe just a little unsettling.
And short-lived.
“We don’t know each well”
“You already said that”
He shoves you playfully, not impressed by your attitude, but used to it.
“Lo que quiero decir es que– you’re a good person, I can tell, even if we don’t know each other for long”
“Don’t get soft on my right now”
“You’re a good person and you love good, you have to keep loving”, he states, so casually, “Once you know love, you should never try to forget”
~
“At this point, I’m pretty sure you hit your head hard enough to go mental and somehow no one noticed”
“I miss you so much, Elena”
Your phone is precariously balanced on a glass of wine as you cook a recipe Paco scribbled on a piece of paper. In Catalan.
It makes less sense than his finance decisions, but you’ll take it.
Your best friend’s face is half out of frame but you can clearly point out every step of her beauty routine. It’s a grueling and painfully long process, her boyfriend is way more patient than you about it.
But tonight Ricardo is out for his bi-weekly pottery class, and you’re happy to indulge her just for the sake of spending some time together, even if it’s through a screen.
Not like there’s a slight chance you’d say it out loud.
“What are you trying to cook?”, the eyebrow in frame raises skeptically.
“No idea”, you admit, coming to the conclusion the number you’re looking at is five and there’s no way this dish needs so many onions.
“Good, now, let’s track back to your mental instability”
“And you ask why I am in different country?”
The wasp she lets out is so loud, and the silence that follows is so deafening you look at the screen to make sure the call is still on. She can be so dramatic.
“Don’t joke about it, I’m still grieving”
“I’m still alive”
“Barely”, she mutters.
Elena is a good friend, despite the theatrics.
When the world seems a little too much to handle, she turns into a safe space for you to be at peace. When you’re overthinking the stupidest choices, she always has a comforting, new point of view.
To people who don’t have the privilege to know her well enough, she may look shallow and too noisy. The truth is, you’ve never met someone so aware of herself and her life that she perfectly understands how to give due weight to even the smallest things.
And she doesn’t keep quiet, she loves loud and proud.
You learned to hold yourself back. You were forced to.
That’s the biggest lesson she’s still teaching you.
“Just saying, you’re surrounded by hot, Spanish people–”
“Happens when in Spain”
“You’re allowed to have fun!”
“I have plenty, thank you very much”
A strange smell comes out of the pan as the lid is lifted, prompting you to close it and pretend it’s not even there for the rest of the night. Not planning to call a poison center, ordering takeout is how you opt to end this cooking attempt.
If Elena thinks you paused the video to piss her off, it is on her.
When your best friend’s face pops up on the screen again it’s so serious you’re tempted to hang up for real.
“I mean it in a good way, don’t get me wrong, but taking a leave of absence and flying to Barcelona is the most selfish thing I witnessed you do in forever”
“I’m actually thinking of quitting for good and going freelance”
“See?”, she gushes, although she can’t be taken seriously with a panda-shaped face mask on, “You like to do your nerd-numbers-shit again, you’re trying new things, even if you clearly can’t be trusted in the kitchen–”
“Fuck you, that man can cook, but for sure can’t write”
“You’re making friends, not as amazing as me, but we’ll take it!”
Trying to argue could be useless and, honestly, you have no arguments.
“You’re fine, you’re doing good”, she smiles, and you miss her a little bit more.
This time you say it out loud, and she cries.
~
The guys are planning something.
By now, you know them well enough to sense trouble the moment you step into the restaurant.
Paco wears a grin that’s almost creepy, a beam blasted across his face, while Pedro is cleaning the tables with unnecessary vigour and his usual commitment is taken to an unusual level.
They’re clearly waiting for something to happen, lingering around as you try to explain to Paul, the musketeer you pointed as the most reliable when money is on the line, how to delay a payment reminder.
“Okay, what is wrong with them?”, you ask, trying to recall a single reason why you put up with these people’s ethics.
You only need one.
“No te entiendo”
“Tú me entiendes perfectamente”
“Your español is getting so good, ¿lo sabes?”, Pedro chimes in, and you’re sure whatever they want, you’re not going to like it.
Paul is usually the voice of reason, the emotionally adult one. Why is he looking at you like he’s about to commit the worst betrayal?
“We were thinking–”
“I’m scared when you guys think”
“We are allies, feminists, and strong supporters of women in male dominated fields, equality–”
“Please, shut up”, you interrupt as if the conversation is physically hurting you.
“Barça is playing the Copa on Saturday. We organise una fiesta every year when they come back, es una tradición”, Pedro cuts in, feeling like the best way to get to the point is to dive straight into it.
“What if they lose?”
“Ellas no pierden”, Paul’s voice is so final you don’t dare to object.
“Cool, fine, why are you acting like this party is something I’ll not like?”
“We pay for it all”
It’s nice.
It is a really nice gesture, knowing how much they care about their community and their friends and apparently the women’s side of their favourite club.
Then you remember they have a huge debt to pay up because an asshole took advantage of their kind hearts and the accounts are just starting to make sense again.
“It’s a good thing”, you admit out loud, “But–”
When Paul starts a passionate rant about the team’s season so far and how sure he is they are gonna win those trophies all over again, apparently setting a new record for the sport itself, it’s not strange to feel thrilled too.
Even Paco joins the excitement at the prospect of adding another title to the collection.
You have been in Barcelona long enough to understand football is a big deal here, and you can’t deny it’s really wonderful to see three big guys hyping up their club – women’s and men’s side alike.
Pedro looks at you like he knows you’re about to crumble.
“They better win then”, you agree, pretending it takes a lot of thinking.
They wrap you in a group hug so welcoming you don’t have the heart to tell them the restaurant can’t really afford to pay out an entire party right now, on a weekend, literally planned for a football team and their mothers.
You’ll make sure the numbers check out later.
You meet Alexia that same night.
Alba makes the introductions, and you shake her hand a moment too late and too long than socially acceptable.
You’re busy shifting your gaze back and forth.
They look alike. A lot. But somehow, they’re also so different.
You make a mental note to dig up some old pictures of a younger version of yourself and your brother.
“She’s the reason this party won’t bankrupt the guys”
“I’ve heard only good things about you”, Alexia admits.
If a slight redness tints your face it’s due to the compliments, not the feeling of her eyes on you, or the way your body seems to jolt awake.
“All lies, probably”, you try to compose yourself – get a fucking grip, “They’re just impressed ‘cus they can’t count to save their lives”
The laugh that leaves the older woman’s lips is the most melodic sound you’ve ever heard. Something in the way her face lights up and her features relax makes your chest ache with a surprisingly comfortable feeling.
A desire to make her laugh again.
And that is what you do all night.
The girls are way too excited – deservedly so, after another title added to their already impressive collection. The live music is loud, the food and the drinks come in flows. You’re too busy to mentally estimate the costs.
When one of Alexia’s teammates decides you’re her new favorite person in the whole restaurant, you’re perfectly fine with it. Just because she’s funny, not because she seems to have an impressive amount of stories to tease her captain with.
When Paul hands you another beer, you sip it without a care of keeping count. Just because you’re allowed to get loose, not because you noticed Alexia is making sure everyone will not regret a drink too much tomorrow.
When Alba drags you to the makeshift dance floor, you let yourself feel the music and the bodies around. Just because the party is definitely worth it, vibrant, not because her sister joins the group at the same time.
You go home, much later than intended, with an unfamiliar feeling prickling beneath your skin and a somehow familiar pair of eyes stuck in your head.
~
The first time you end up in the stands for a football game is purely by accident.
An unmistakable electric buzz fills the air, lingering all the way from the parking lot to the seats that seem to keep filling. Everyone is smiling and chanting, sporting just two different colours but expressing their support in an unique way.
The games you endured watching on TV to spend a few hours with your brother as a kid can’t compare to the real thing.
You never imagined finding yourself in such a place, but when in Rome. Or, well, when in Barcelona.
It’s all on the Putella sisters, to be honest.
You meet Alba in the most unusual place you could think of, or being yourself in the first place. A sports shop.
Planning to go on the hike a stranger at the restaurant pointed out, you need appropriate trekking shoes. Since the decluttering phase is officially over, you looked up one of those obnoxious places that sell overpriced sports-related shit.
Not the kind of shop you’d picture Alba willingly entering.
“Mind you, I actually like sports”, she objects.
“Do you?”
She giggles as your head tilts in a mocking way, “Vale, I like watching more than doing the sports”
“No way!”
The bags she’s dragging out of the shop are the only thing stopping her from not-so-playfully smacking you. It’s surprisingly easy to tease each other.
She reminds you of Elena, who called this morning to discuss how to act now she discovered where her boyfriend hides the ring. As if she hasn’t been snooping around for months.
Not entirely her fault, the poor guy left the jewelry’s receipt with the car keys at the entrance.
“Are you?”, the younger woman asks.
“What?”
“A sports person”
“My brother used to kick footballs at me when we were kids, the only sport I ever pretended to be remotely interest in”
Her smile dims slightly.
For some reason, that seems to have been the wrong thing to say.
“Have you been to a Barça game yet?”
“What if I’m a Madridista?”
That’s even worse, apparently, since Alba dramatically drops the bags to gasp in shock. Her acting of a heartbreak is surprisingly convincing.
A second voice chimes in out of nowhere, “Don’t even joke about it”
Alexia’s comment is dead serious, you can tell, with just the hint of a grin on her lips as a clear giveaway that she’s more than comfortable teasing a person she barely knows.
You’re definitely not going to complain.
The hat she’s wearing hides half her face, but you can see her lighting up behind it.
“What if I’m not joking?”
“Alba, you said she is a nice person”, the midfielder complains, a huff escaping her lips as she adjusts the weight of the bags she’s carrying.
Did they just raid the whole shop?
“Bold to you to assume I can’t be a nice person and a Madridista”
“Please, don’t fight her on this, she’s gonna be insufferable”, Alba complains, playfully rolling her eyes at her sister’s antics and your teasing.
“No, she needs to be educated. She’s coming to El Clásico with us”
As simple as that.
You find yourself in the home section of the stadium for one of the most anticipated games of the season.
Or that’s what Alexia is ranting about all the way to your seats, going off about the rivalry and basic football knowledge you have to thank your borther for drilling into your brain against your will.
It’s all worth it when her blush spreads across her face as she realises, in the middle of her fourth attempt to explain with yet another example, that you actually do know what offside is.
Alba watches the interaction closely, amused by how easy it is for you to tease Barcelana’s captain and how comfortable she seems to be around you, despite not having known each other for long.
A couple of minutes before kick-off, Alexia returns from wherever she went – one mission in mind. She takes her place on your side, handing you a Blaugrana jersey, “You can’t sit here without wearing the right colours”
Maybe wearing a white t-shirt was a bit too much.
You burst out laughing, opting to put in the item immediately to avoid upsetting the filled seats around you, “How’d you find your own at a men’s game?”
“I happen to be pretty beloved around here”
“Did you hear that, Alba? La Reina is bragging!”
The only reason she doesn’t retort is due to the referee’s whistle announcing the start of the game, followed by a surprisingly enjoyable night with the two sisters.
~
Summer in Barcelona is nothing like you pictured it.
The streets are filled with tourists, too many people crammed in too little spaces. Complaints about the crowds and the chaos drown out any excitement. You have to remind Pedro that it’s awful, but it’s good for business.
Sometimes, it’s too hot to even think of leaving the comfort of your place. Fans blow in every room because, of course, the air conditioner broke the day it was turned on.
Sometimes, it’s so loud you don’t need to ignore the voices of doubt in your head, subdued by everything that’s happening around you.
Sometimes, it’s exactly the kind of life you can see yourself living.
Your brother came to visit for a week, spending more time teasing you with Ricardo than doing anything else. You hate it, but you missed him too much to complain.
Maybe you pulled some strings to make his dream of visiting Camp Nou come true, just so you could look cool, but then what?
He’s as happy as a kid in a candy store, and all you have to do is endure an overexcited guided tour and bribe Alexia with overpriced drinks the night after. Totally manageable.
Your therapist announces her vacation like it’s not the worst news she’ll be sharing, leaving you with tasks to occupy the time. You dutifully completed them all, never quite managing to shake the nerd label off, and, quite frankly, you pay her too much to not do her homework.
Some tasks seem a little over the top, though – signing up for a dating app is definitely not how you’ll get over your ex.
You started hanging out with a group of passionate excursionists. Perhaps a bit too excited about life in general, but nice enough to follow during their hikes.
Pedro joins when he can, most of the time, someone from the Barcelona team manages to invite themselves.
Since you and María aren’t allowed to be on your own, Ingrid or Esme supervise. It may be an overreaction, but the last time you two were alone, you sprained your ankle and the defender got nasty cuts on her legs before the trip even started, so you can’t really judge them.
If you say Alexia is a better hike partner than most is just to piss María.
That summer in Barcelona makes you miss your family and friends back home a little more than usual, but it’s also the first time in months that you feel like you’re actually living your life – not just letting it flow right through you.
~
When the new school year starts, Irene and her wife come to the restaurant a couple of times before Paul suggests that you could be the perfect person to help their son with his math homework.
Your attempt to explain that you really are not qualified to teach in a different language goes completely ignored.
They’ve already tried different tutors, and Mateo seems to hate them all. You accept, mostly because of the kid’s puppy-dog eyes.
The two of you fell into an easy routine. Once a week, he would lend you basic grammar school manuals and children’s books to help with your Spanish, and you would explain math to him in the simplest way possible.
It goes well.
Mateo decides pretty soon you’re his new favourite person, and you basically become one of Irene’s as well.
That’s how you find yourself on the sideline during a Barça training session, reading a book about a dog that doesn’t know how to bark while Mateo is too pleased with himself, checking all the math exercises he nailed.
“Good one?”
You raise your gaze, shielding your eyes from the sun enough to point out Alexia’s silhouette.
The weather is still too warm for your comfort, making you question the girls’ mental stability for running lap after lap under such conditions with a smile on their faces.
Sports people are scary.
“You look too good to be someone who just finished training”
“Is that supposed to be a compliment?”
“Derogatory”, you clarify, pushing your stuff aside so that Alexia can sit beside you on the sideline.
She’s drinking some sort of sport drink like she’s just eaten sand, and this close, she looks human. She’s grinning, enjoying the sun picking at her skin and Mateo’s passionate explanation of the math exercises he’s done all by himself.
The training session is wrapped up, she stays until Irene comes back from the changing room, washed and dressed, ready to take the little boy home.
The blonde lingers a bit longer, talking about books she loved growing up and how she takes management courses when she can. You find out Penélope Cruz is both your favourite actress, but the midfielder acts shocked when you tell her you haven’t watched her favourite film.
That night, you put it on and change the language setting, live-texting Alexia all your reactions.
Halfway through, you’re pretty sure she’s watching it too.
~
Almost nine months after booking that life-changing one-way ticket to Barcelona, you buy another one to go back home.
With a return ticket in hand.
It’s your mother’s birthday, so you kind of have to.
Recently, she’s been repeating a new favorite line, rambling about the uncertainty of life and the precariousness of old age. She’s barely in her 60s and has less back pain than most people of your generation, but she’s not willing to listen to reason.
You come to the conclusion you can’t lose any more points against your brother in the unspoken sibling race for your parent’s love. So you book the flight, pack a suitcase big enough, because you literally have nothing to wear left behind, and mentally prepare for the investigation your family will conduct.
The tension in your shoulder melts away the moment your brother wraps his arms around you in the airport terminal.
“You grow up so much”
And, just like that, he’s your annoying, stupid older brother again.
“I didn’t miss you at all”
“I can see you holding back tears”
“You’re literally crying!”, you accuse with a grin on your lips, lightly punching him.
“Just wait until mum sees that new tattoo”
The truth is, your mother is too busy peering deep into your soul to care about the tattoo.
It takes two days of constant reassurance that you’re working, eating, and sleeping properly; a ceramic salamander figurine – maybe overpriced, but a gift meant to make an impression; and Elena backing up your story to calm her worries.
Barely enough to get you through the rest of the week unstretched.
“She’s just worried”, your best friend tries to reason, sipping a flashy pink drink that you’re not even sure is made from real fruit.
“I moved to Barcelona, not a war zone”
“Oh, so now it’s permanent?”
The shit-eating grin spreading across her face should annoy you, but you have to admit she has a point.
At first it was just an impulsive decision, an urge to run away from everything and everyone. Then, without really realising it, the Catalan city started to feel a lot like a place to settle in, to let your wings spread wide open.
Now you almost call it home.
The waitress interrupts your flow of thoughts, saving you from Elena’s pointed gaze long enough to be properly distracted by the huge amount of food presented. He leaves with a charming smile, but you’re genuinely too focused on the salty chips to notice.
“Are you pregnant?”, you ask, looking as she almost chokes to avoid comically spilling her drink on you.
“The Spanish heat fried your brain?”
“What? You didn’t even have soft drink when we were underage”
Elena pauses for a moment, weighting if knocking over you the rest of the pink beverage could be worth it. It takes genuine pondering.
She decides to take the highest road.
“Are you dying?”
“Are you taking comedy classes in Barcelona?”
The last time your best friend was this over the edge it was because of a pregnancy scare. First year of university, and her boyfriend at time wasn’t really the guy you’d take home for Christmas. A memory that doesn’t help her case right now.
You slip under the dim lights of the bar, a classy spot where she hangs out with the women from her pilates class. A shiver runs down your back, a bad feeling overcoming deep inside you.
Then, she speaks up.
“I’ve already bought a wedding dress”, she admits, as if she’s confessing a crime, “It’s a size smaller and I have to–”
“Elena, for fuck’s sake, I thought you were actually dying!”
“It is, indeed, a tragedy”
“He hasn’t even proposed yet”
“Details”, she chugs the rest of the drink, smirking and grabbing the last chips you’re too shocked to care about.
The same waitress hovers around your table, drawn in by the loud exchange and your clear distress, “Excuse me, is everything okay?”
He’s young, charming enough for this to be just a gig while he waits and hopes for his acting career to take off. However, he looks genuinely concerned, his gaze shifting between the deep frown and your friend amused grin.
“All good, she’s just dramatic”, Elena points at you with the straw, before delivering the final blow, “And she is single”
The poor boy’s face lights up, naively thinking the commotion was a creative way to play matchmaker.
What a mistake.
You don’t even dignify her with a glance, rolling your eyes before addressing him directly, “Excuse her, she’s panicking because her long-time, overly in-love boyfriend still hasn’t popped the question”
“That’s not–”
“And I’m not interested”, you finish, kind but firm.
He leaves with a nod, cheeks slightly red.
Elena watches him disappear as you sip your own drink, studying you the way she used to when you were confused teenagers who didn’t know how to deal properly with all those feelings and real-life emotions.
“Oh”
The reason you still encourage her goes beyond your understanding.
You’re not starting to question it now, “What?”
“You like someone”
“Elena, I swear–”
“No, no, it’s just–”, her gaze softens as she looks at you, teasing and playful attitude making space for her most supportive side, “It’s good to see you, you know, welcoming back some happiness”
It doesn’t matter how she’s always capable of reading you like a book, like you’re a poem she knows by heart but she’s never tired of.
After all the years and the lessons you’ve learned together, it feels so comforting to know there’s someone out there who deeply understands you. Who truly sees you.
You don’t deny it, you don’t retort to her observation.
That's not the point right now.
~
You break the promise made to Alba.
Kind of.
It’s early in the morning, the sun has barely risen in the sky, but it’s the perfect time to arrive at the little market. It arrives every two weeks, with vibrant stalls full of everything – though you understand half the things the vendors say. The freshness of the fruit and the unique clothing finds you always manage to come home with are totally worth it.
Alexia is buying vegetables and, judging by the passion she shares with the old lady in front of her, discussing important geopolitical questions.
You enjoy the exchange, taking a moment before approaching.
She jokes about the fact you’re up before the clock even hits double digits, laughing at your retort about fighting with the elderly over groceries.
The footballer suggests breakfast in a cosy place not far from the market, the promise of fresh bakeries enough to convince you.
It’s not a date.
But you walk side by side, bags lightly colliding sometimes, and before you know it, you’ve arrived at the café. Alexia holds the door open, pointing out her favorite pastries. She scoffs, unamused, when she realizes your questions distracted her long enough for you to pay for both your orders.
It’s not a date, obviously.
But you sit at a table in the far corner of the café for almost three hours, talking about everything and nothing. The bubble you find yourself in bursts when Ricardo calls, complaining that you’re late for lunch, despite insisting on making a reservation.
“We should do this again”, she says as she hugs you goodbye, a smile lighting her entire face.
It’s not a date, but it definitely feels like it.
You remembered the promise you made to Alba, to save your first date for her once you feel ready, just a second after realising how badly you wish to go on a real one with her sister.
~
You refuse categorically to celebrate your birthday at the boys’ restaurant.
They could make a big deal out of it, insist on paying for everything, and you couldn’t let that happen. After months of knowing them and the “Barcelona way” of celebrating loved ones, you can’t let them be in charge of this.
Also, the bills are finally adding up. They can afford it, you can’t let them do it – at least, not emotionally speaking.
So you host a little party at your place – your place, because Ricardo says you basically own it as much as he does after the bathroom’s makeover.
The small kitchen quickly turns into chaos the moment Paco takes charge and ropes Ricardo into helping. Pedro shows up with decorations and a banner that was most likely used for his little sister’s. Paul, however, closes the restaurant that same afternoon, brushing off your protests and reassuring you that your birthday is more important than the evening’s earnings.
You can’t find it in yourself to fight them.
The apartment fills with laughter and a vibrant energy that eases the weight pressing on your chest when overthinking takes hold. Balloons cover nearly the entire floor, raised voices and the scent of spices travel from the kitchen.
Your friends from the hiking group arrive in waves, immediately hitting it off with some of Barcelona’s team. You’ve grown close to a few of them through your relationship with Irene’s family and the one Ingrid and Frido practically forced on you.
Some regular customers from the restaurant also show up, people you’ve grown pretty comfortable with after spending so much time there during the first weeks of taking over the accounting job.
There’s also a nice girl you met at a concert, who Elena stalks on social media to make sure she’s not a serial killer.
Alba and Alexia are the last ones to arrive.
Your life in Barcelona is full of new people, new experiences and adventures.
At your lowest point, you’d almost forgotten what it felt like to be loved out loud.
And those people are the loudest you ever met.
The noise around the apartment subsides just as most of the guests leave. The music is turned down to a minimum, because of the late hour and Pedro’s questionable taste, as he hasn’t let go of the speaker once all night.
The small group gathers around the couch, drinks in hand, still willing to celebrate with you.
“I’m just saying, I think they taste the same”
The entire room erupts in protests at Ricardo’s comment.
“Absolutely no”, Pedro chimes in, seated on the edge of the armchair with a half-drunk beer in hand, “Black olives are made to be a pizza topping, green ones are perfect for everything else”
“What do you even know about pizza topping?”, you interrupt with a grin, “You put pineapple on yours”
Somehow, the complaints grew louder, the room buzzing with indignation.
“What’s wrong with that? Pineapple is a great pizza topic, you’re just too pretentious to admit it!”
“Can we move on from the pizza argument?”
“Oh, no, let’s get into it!”, you wave your hand dismissively, “Pedro, please, tell everyone what you put on first, cheese or sauce?”
“Fuck you”
“You work in a restaurant”, Alba says, her voice laced with disbelief.
“I’m not the one cooking, am I?”
“Thank God!”
The conversation quickly turns on poor Pedro, who now finds himself defending his questionable taste and own belief.
Alexia, who’s been quietly sipping from her glass, looks at the scene with a raised eyebrow before turning to you, relaxed on the couch beside her, “Honestly, I never imagined pizza to be the thing that ends a friendship”
“I’m just happy we’re not talking about pineapple anymore, that’s a sin”
“You started this”, she points out, giggling.
Ricardo shrugs from his spot on the floor, amused but staying out of it for now.
“It’s my birthday, I can do whatever I want”
“Oh, por favor”, Alexia says with a playful roll of her eyes, nudging the paper crown still perched on your head, “This must have cut off circulation to your brain”
You gasp, your dramatic antics in full display, fueled by the time, the alcohol, and, likely, the footballer’s shoulder still brushing against yours.
“You’re just jealous you’re not the only reina in the room”
“Keep dreaming”, Alexia responds with a grin.
The proximity lingers in a way that’s not just playful. It’s comfortable, like an inside joke no one else is allowed in on.
Ricardo watches the interaction from the corner of his eye, his gaze lingering on you and the blonde for a moment longer than necessary. He notices how her cheeks redden slightly, the way you look a little different – softer, at ease.
Alba catches the moment too, still pretending to be involved in the pizza argument. She notices the quiet exchanges and private moments that have unfolded all evening. The way you and her sister have fallen into a different rhythm, a different world.
She’s seen it before.
There’s something between you two, something unspoken, but not quite hidden. She wonders how long it’s been there, how long it’s been that way.
But, like Ricardo, she keeps her thoughts to herself.
The rest of the group laughs, the debate seems to fade into a more relaxed conversation that doesn’t involve food or questionable life choices.
As the night goes on, the teasing continues, but, underneath the surface, there’s something deeper.
There’s the way you lean in a little closer to Alexia when someone says something ridiculous, how your eyes linger on her when Pedro makes a joke and you think no one is watching.
There’s the way Alexia’s knee brushes yours when you laugh, how her fingers dance on your arm simply because you’re close enough to.
There’s the exchange of gazes and smiles, quiet signs of complicity in the loud room.
~
Ricardo waits to the tune of three days before cornering you.
You mention being a bit homesick after your birthday and the Putellas sisters literally drag you to have dinner with them at their mom’s. Eli is the sweetest woman ever, going above and beyond to the point of making that one pie you mentioned once being your favourite.
The house is filled with memories and tender gestures, a haven of support and a desire of caring for your own that squeezes your heart with a bittersweet beauty. Spending the night there makes it clear how Alexia and Alba were raised, revealing the roots of their kindness.
“You had fun?”
It’s a miracle you don’t drop dead on the floor right there, Ricardo’s voice echoing from the middle of the couch in the dark room.
“Why are you lurking like a fucking killer?”, you shout at him when your heartbeat slows down enough to let you come up with proper words.
“I was waiting for you”
You don’t even dignify him with a response, watching how he’s sipping from a mug like a scene from the shittiest b-movie you can think of.
Crossing the room to sleep the unease away, the guy’s next words make you stop right where you are, “You need to come clean with her”
“What are you talking about–”
“You like Alexia”
It’s not a question, there’s no doubt in his voice.
There’s not a single reason to even try to fight his assumption or your own overthinking.
You reach for the seat next to him on the couch, noticing the second mug just when he offers it to you. It’s a fruity tea you enjoy hot, with way too much honey and not a drop of milk – exactly like the one in your hands.
The silence wrapping around is comforting in a way that makes sense just because it’s the two of you, sipping tea in the quiet darkness of the room.
“I do”, you admit after a while, even if you don’t need to.
“I know”
“That obvious?”
“Yeah”, your roommate confirms with a soft smile.
He doesn’t tease, he doesn’t accuse you of anything.
It’s so typically Ricardo that you feel a surge of affection, a need to embrace him and accepting the support of someone who, in a twisted and brotherly way, looks out for you – and your heart. So you do just that, jumping into his arms without a care of your reputation or of the almost-empty mugs.
The man, despite the surprise of your reaction, is ready to hold you for how long you need.
Turns out, you need it a lot.
“Sorry, sorry”, you say after a couple of minute, trying to pull yourself together, “I didn’t see it coming”
“Me being so observant and clever or you falling in love with Alexia?”
“I’m not in love with Alexia”
“Yet”
He’s lucky the tea is not hot anymore.
“I’m not in love with Alexia”, you repeat.
Not yet, resonates in your head – your own mind betraying you.
Yes, Alexia is beautiful. Yes, you two apparently clicked perfectly right the moment you met. Yes, recently the time together doubled the time spent with anyone else. You can admit you like Alexia, the therapy is worth the commitment and the money put into it.
But being in love?
It’s a good feeling, the one that makes her cheeks flush crimson when your smile catches her gazing. Even better, the one that fills you with pride when Alexia’s laugh resonates in the room because of something you say or do.
It’s an exciting force, the one that unsettles your stomach when she reaches for you just for the sake of touching – of feeling you close. Even better, the one that makes you two sure of finding the other in a room full of people just when needed.
It’s so terrifying close to love, what it’s blossoming.
You want to fall in love with Alexia.
Ricardo raises from the couch, taking the mugs and putting them on the sink to be dealt with tomorrow. An annoying habit you’re sure he keeps up with just to annoy you.
He returns a minute later, “Are you going to do something about it?”
You don’t miss a bit, “Yes”
“Let Alba know first”, he says with a serious note in his voice, “She liked you”
~
The stadium buzzes with the loud roaring of fans and the sharp, clean scent of freshly cut grass under the rain. Barcelona dominates the pitch, their control of the midfield a suffocating grip as the opponents scramble, desperate for a counterattack.
Between miscalculated slides and short passes, Alexia weaves through defenders in a blur of motion and focused energy. She’s calm when the ball is glued on her feet, sparkling to light, her presence igniting the pitch, as soon as her teammates take over.
Patri finds her captain just outside the box and you lean forward, smile tugging at the corner of your lips.
You may be new to the whole thing, new in the Blaugrana’s home stands, but you learn quickly and you know exactly what Alexia’s movement means.
The shot curves perfectly, the stadium exhales a collective gasp as the goalkeeper’s fingertips fail to reach it. The ball hits the bar loudly, the sound echoing before it flies out of the pitch.
Beside you, Alba lets out a whoop, clapping her hands with a grin stretching across her face, “She’s out for blood”
You laugh, not like anyone could disagree.
Barça is winning by three goals, outrunning the defence and shooting as if they need to score at least three more to sleep peacefully tonight.
The poor goalkeeper will have nightmares for sure.
“She really want to take home that ball”
“She’s playing to impress”, Alba points out, not so subtly.
You chuckle, her remark flying over your head, “She’s just– good, I guess”
“Good? ¡Por favor!”, the younger Putellas scoffs, rolling her eyes, “She’s acting like a ballet dancer out there, doing pirouettes and running around like she has two sets of lungs”
As to prove her sister’s point, Alexia nutmegs another midfielder and executes another perfect movement, clearing the field for Aitana to set up Vicky for a chip goal.
The crowd erupts, but Alba’s attention remains fixed on you.
“¡Mirala!”, she says, pointing at the pitch where the team is hugging and celebrating, “That was another ‘look at me, soy la Reina’ moment!”
“Your sister is the most competitive person I’ve ever met”
“Competitive? Chica, she’s showing off! And don’t even get me started on the way she keeps looking up here, fixing her hair between plays– It’s ridiculous”
You watch as Barcelona’s bubble dissipates and they get back at their positions, Alexia waves towards your seats, her face illuminated by a radiant grin.
Your cheeks flush slightly, a mixture of amusement and something else.
The game keeps on with the same level of excitement, and even more shots on target. They win narrowly, unconcerned by their soaked clothes, lingering happily in the rain to sign autographs and chat with supporters.
Alexia immediately seeks out you and Alba, trying to embrace you both despite your not-so-playful protests. The damp material of her kit clings, accentuating her defined muscles, and your thoughts stray to less innocent territories.
Alba sends her sister to the changing room, accepting the kiss landed on her forehead and watching as you nod like an idiot when she leaves with the promise to be back in no time, her hand lingering on your arm.
“¡Ay, esto es increíble!”, she interrupts your thought flow, tilting her umbrella just enough for a stream of rain to drop on your face.
“Alba!”
“You’re not exactly subtle either, ¿sabes?”
The stadium noises fade into a distant hum. The air between you thickens, the playful banter morphing into something more charged and intentional. Your fingers fidget with the edge of your jacket, avoiding the younger woman’s gaze.
“How long have you known?”, you ask.
“The moment I introduced the two of you, idiota!”, she says, her voice teasing, “But I knew for sure at your birthday’s party”
“Nothing happened between us”
Alba’s smile softens, a gentle understanding dawning in her eyes, “I’m not blind and I know my sister pretty well. And honestly? I think it’s cute, you two glow when you’re together. She likes you. A lot. And you like her too"
Your shoulders relax, “I do. I really like her, Alba”
The wave of relief that washes over you is comforting.
You don’t owe her anything, and Alba definitely doesn’t owe you anything. But it’s good to know this love growing between you and Alexia is real, people around you see it too. People you care about support it.
Your smile spreads naturally on your face when you spot Barcelona’s captain approaching, hair still wet but changed in warm clothes.
Alba doesn’t miss it, nudging you with her elbow just before her sister’s close enough to hear, “It’s good you feel ready to date again, and I’m happy it’s her”
~
“I’m going to say it just once, so listen carefully”, you stop in the middle of the road with a stoic face, “Please, don’t make me regret our entire friendship”
The grin on Elena’s lips tells you everything you need to know, but you give her the benefit of the doubt. Because she’s your best friend, because she knows how to behave.
But she’s your best friend, and she’s not going to behave.
Her visit is not unpleasant, just unexpected.
It’s barely six in the morning when loud bangs on the front door wake you up and almost scare Ricardo to death. He takes it well enough, greeting Elena and going back to sleep the shock away. You, on the other hand, think of leaving her waiting outside until it’s socially acceptable to show up. Her immediate embrace is a clever attempt to smooth your annoyance.
She booked a red-eye flight for a hit and run, so you take her around Barcelona all day and agree to a late night out in a club Alba suggested you join with some of her friends.
“Relax”, she says, skipping steps like a kid as you approach the place.
“Elena, I’m serious”
“Why are you so stressed? Oh– oh, I know!”
She turns around in her heels, too graciously for someone with shoes so high and such low alcohol tolerance – you two may not be in your early 20s anymore, but you figured pregame was necessary this time around.
Her good resolution of not drinking alcohol crumbled as soundly as it started.
“Is she here too?”
“I don’t know what–”
“This mysterious woman you can’t shut up about, who is so great you have heart-shaped eyes but I can’t know her name”, she interrupts, grabbing you by the shoulder as you approach the club’s entrance.
It’s not like you’re hiding Alexia, or your feelings for her.
She’s a frequent topic of conversation with your best friend, you’re comfortable sharing the moments between the two of you and the way your heart beats at a completely different rhythm around the Barcelona’s captain.
But Elena can be protective, and curious.
All she needs is a name, and she’s going to find out if Alexia has ever got a bad grade in primary school. The teasing for liking a football player? You aren’t ready for that either.
“Yes, she’s here and I need you to–”
“This is the best day of my life!”, she doesn’t even let you finish, leaves you right there, flashing the bodyguard at the entrance a huge smile and sweet talking her way in – even though they have your names as vip guests.
“This is going to be the worst day of mine”, you mutter to yourself, following after her.
The energy in the club is charged with a dangerous combination of freewill and alcohol. The place is packed and colored lights go on and off with the music, bright enough to see who’s in front of you, but not enough to make your decision clear. Not tonight.
Alba sees you first, waving her hand to catch your attention so you join them in a secluded table in a corner of the place.
You don’t even ask how Elena is already seated in the cool leather booth, talking animatedly.
“She’s funny”, Alba comments after greeting you with a hug.
“Don’t believe a word she says”
The younger girl’s laugh mixes with your best friend’s, and you know your fate is sealed when a guy hands her a drink.
You look around the table, noticing some people from Alba’s close circle and some you met in passing at the restaurant or at a Barcelona’s game.
“She’s in the bathroom”
Your body betrays you before a coherent thought can leave your brain, your cheeks redding to the tips of your ears.
“Told you, you’re not subtle”, Alba comments, too amused at your reaction.
As if she knows you’re talking about her, as if a magnetic energy forces your body to get closer and closer, Alexia’s gaze locks with yours as she approaches the table, followed by a vaguely familiar face.
She greets you with a dimpled smile and a welcoming hug, it may look like months passed but it’s been a matter of days. The black top she’s wearing emphasizes her toned stomach, and your fingers itch to trace the subtle sheen of sweat crossing her back – a sign she’s been dancing for a while now.
You’re fashionably late, regardless of the time Alba suggested you to be here. Spanish people are stragglers, you have learned it at your own expense.
“Are you ready?”, the footballer asks.
“For what?”
“You owe me a dance”
“Absolutely not!”, you protest, trying to escape her hug.
“Oh, yes”, she smile, her arm around your waist dragging you even closer, “You made fun of my dancing moves, now you have to prove yours”
Next time, you will think twice before sending the blonde every single comment you found online about a TikTok video one of her teammates posted after a huge win. In your defence, you find it very cute.
The dance floor is filled with people, dancing in fluid movements like you learned Spaniard are comfortable with. A sea of arms fling around, bodies smoothly moving to feel each other. The music vibrates with a bass so deep that your ribs pulses at the same rhythm.
Alexia guides you in a less crowded section, far enough from the table so Alba and Elena can study every single movement, but out of earshot.
You try to ignore the thought of your best friend gossiping with Alba.
Thinking, however, is the last thing you do when Alexia’s hand finds the small of your back, skin waking up by the slight hint of touch.
It doesn’t really matter how you managed to get this close, how the music runs through your bodies with an unmistakable energy and desire to get even closer. Your arms rise to frame the blonde’s face, her grin growing as soon as she notices your reaction.
It’s not like either of you is hiding the attraction, the pulsing needs to be together. To talk, to touch, to be around one another. It’s always been there, you just never acted on it.
“Are they like that all the time?”, Elena asks, still studying the way you seem to speak a different language with Alexia.
“I’m thinking about locking them somewhere until they kiss or whatever”
The disbelief is clear in Elena’s voice, “Are you sure they haven’t kissed yet?”
“If I know my sister, she must be really fucking scared”
“If I know my best friend, she must be really fucking stupid”
The two nod before bursting in a loud laugh, clicking their glasses.
Almost an half an hour later, you find them like that, giggling and talking as if they have known each other for years and not just met. Alexia raises an eyebrow, silently questioning if she needs to hold back Alba’s enthusiasm – Elena is matching it without a problem, and that’s what really worries you.
“And that’s how she ended up with the sister of her blind date”
“That’s not how it happened, at all”, you complain, hitting your best friend’s arm as she decide telling the worst stories possible is the best way to spend the night.
“Must have been a great date”, someone jokes.
“I’m a fantastic date, thank you so much”
“I can confirm”, Alba says with a teasing grin, raising her empty glass as you flip her off with an equally open smile on your lips.
Alexia, on the other hand, straightens up a bit at the exchange, switches her gaze between the two of you, almost taken aback, “You two dated?”
“I told you”, the younger girl retorts.
“I thought you were messing with me”
The change in her posture is subtle, but you’re close enough to feel it. Close enough to notice the way she moves her knee, breaking contact with yours, her fingers toying with the ring on her pinky.
Alba is a bit too drunk to pay attention to the footballer’s dampened mood, not affected anymore by that one date with you so long ago.
She told her sister about it when she first clocked in her interest for you, hoping to clear the way for her to do something about it – a sort of blessing.
Turns out, Alexia’s so sure she was teasing her, lying about it just to annoy her.
Thankfully, your best friend reads in your face the panic and drifts the conversation on a completely different topic.
The rest of the night passes in a blur of laughs, questionable drinking choices, and more dancing.
Every single attempt of catching Alexia’s eyes fails miserably. She’s not ignoring you, she doesn’t leave her seat next to you, and her touch is light but grounding. Your mind, however, spirals in a way it hasn’t in months.
It’s late when the group decides to call it a day, stumbling out into the cool, damp air of Barcelona. No one is sober enough to even think of driving, the decision to summon taxis rather than risk the roads is unanimous.
A strange intimacy settled inside the car. You and Alexia sit in the back, while Alba, in the middle, sleeps on the older woman’s shoulder with soft snores. Elena is deep in conversation with the Catalan driver, despite not speaking a word of the language. The city lights flash outside, blurred by a light drizzle that you trace with a finger against the window.
Upon reaching Alexia’s apartment, you insist on helping her carry her sister inside, ignoring her half-hearted protests. Your best friend, armed with a winning smile and a ‘thank me later’ attitude, somehow manages to convince the driver to wait for you outside.
The place is quiet when you enter, amplifying the tension that crackled between you, but it’s not uncomfortable. It’s never uncomfortable.
You and Alexia carefully settle Alba onto the bed, the soft glow of a bedside lamp casting long shadows across the guest room. Each gentle adjustment of her sister’s blanket, each soft whisper to ensure her comfort, stretched out the delicate balance.
It’s minutes later, right by the front door, that something snaps.
Before you can reach the handle on the way out, the footballer’s fingers wrap around your wrist.
There’s urgency in the way her body feels stirred by an electric discharge all of a sudden, her voice low, “You dated?”
“What?”, your confusion is mostly prompted by Alexia’s distressed tone.
“You dated my sister?”
“No, we– I mean, we went out like one time and I was, clearly, still fucked up by my ex– It’s not like we actually dated or something”
“She said–”
“She was joking”, your hands cupping the blonde’s face seems to do wonder at calming her, but you still feel the need to clarify the situation, “I kissed her, once, then found a good therapist and said to her I wasn’t interested like that”
“Are you interested like that?”
“Alexia, I just said–”
“No, no”, she interrupts shyly, never dropping her gaze, “Are you interested in me like that?”
Despite the voices still filling doubts in your head, kissing her is the easiest, most natural thing to do at that moment.
Her lips are soft, warm, and taste faintly of sweet drinks. Her breath mingled with yours, a shared rhythm in the quiet intimacy of the kiss.
A current of interest, desire, and care pulls you closer. There’s complicity and belonging, mingling with curiosity, and the thrill of uncharted territory.
And there’s Alexia, right in front of you, vulnerable and exposed and trusting enough to lay her emotions in your hands. Making you feel so safe that you don’t even have to think about doing the same.
So you kiss again, trying to convey how sure you are about your feelings. Because the insecurities and the questioning silence when Alexia’s heartbeat syncs with yours and her hand caresses your face.
The sharp honk coming from the taxi outside is the only reason why you separate.
~
The late afternoon sun drapes over the Barcelona streets as you and Alexia stroll, fingers laced together.
It’s a familiar feeling now, holding hands after a date.
You have explored hidden hikes, shared tapas after her games, and even attended a couple of flamenco lessons. Nothing too different from what you’ve already experienced.
Except, of course, for the kissing.
And there’s been a lot of that.
Your phone buzzes, interrupting Alexia’s recall of Vicky’s last attempt of convincing her to do another stupid trend. You drop her hand, your fingers flying across the screen, muttering in concentration.
The footballer raises an eyebrow, complaining playfully, “Am I annoying you?”
“It’s this stupid bird!”
“Still fighting with ser y estar?”
“I’m sorry, my Spanish teacher is a tease and gets distracted five minutes after promising to help me study”
“She sounds like an incredible teacher”, she counters, too pleased with herself as she hints at your last private tutoring.
Despite your best effort, the other woman had other plans. The sentences she whispered right at your ear, with a raspy voice and a note of teasing in every single movement of her lips, made your resolution crumble in a matter of minutes. The books, not even opened, fell off the bed with a kick of her foot.
You do, however, learn some new words.
Your cheeks flush at the memory, “Shut up!”
“I said nothing”
You ignore her grin, still welcoming her embrace as she pulls you closer to help with the lesson.
“This app is useless! Why do those Spanish animals always do weird things? It’s making me questioning my entire existence”
“Tan dramática”, Alexia snorts, nudging you with her hip, “Why are you even using that thing? You can learn everything you need from me”
“I’m trying to actually learn something here”, you retort, faking annoyance, “Besides, you’re not always available for Spanish lessons. I want to get better, impress the locals”
“After more than a year?”
“Never too late”, you grin, “Just wait, I’ll be ordering in flawless Catalan in less time than it took you to ask me out”
Alexia stops in her tracks at your teasing, taken aback by your admission and by way of calling her out for the stalling after the first kiss you shared. She may have needed a little push then, trying to find the best moment to ask you for a real date to just blur it out in the rush of a late game night you attended.
You continue walking, too focused on the lesson to acknowledge the blonde’s momentary pause.
“Wait, I thought you were taking Spanish lessons”
“Yes, from you and the stupid bird, but I have an actually tutor for Catalan”
“You’re learning Catalan?”
“I live in Barcelona”, you say, matter of factly, but the flush creeping up on your cheeks betrays you.
The truth hangs in the air, a silent acknowledgment of the unspoken. It isn’t about fitting in, not anymore. It’s about her.
To understand her better, wrapping deeply into the fabric of her world. It’s commitment, to the city and to a future that you can’t picture without her in. It’s a promise, somehow, to bridge any gap and to learn her culture, her soul.
Alexia’s gaze lingers, the weight of your growing feelings both exhilarating and inevitable.
She told herself she set a pace comfortable for you, respecting your need to get better with loving yourself and trusting others.
But you’ve been ready for this love for quite some time now.
The way you open up with her, hold her after a long day, and gently kiss the creases around her lips when she smiles. The way you not just proudly wear your heart on your sleeve, but you hand out your emotions to be seen. The way you make her feel safe enough to be vulnerable, to be taken care of.
The way you’re learning to love her by learning to love everything that makes her who she is.
A nervous flutter, like trapped butterflies, stirred in your stomach as Alexia catches up to you. You could feel the energy radiating from her, the subtle scent of her perfume, a mix of wood and something undeniably her.
“Estic enamorada de tu”, she confesses, cheeks slightly tinted but her voice so firm, so sure.
“I know what that means”
A smile, genuine and carefree, grows on both your lips. You study her face for a moment, finding nothing but pure care and a force that feels like arms keeping you safe and warm.
Nothing but love.
The way you kiss her is almost too intense for a late afternoon in the streets of Barcelona, but barely enough to convey all the emotions that you discovered and learned to welcome in your life again.
You may not be ready to say out loud you’re falling in love with her too, not yet. But the firmness of your hands on her face, the happiness lightning in your eyes, the resolution conveyed by your kiss.
She knows.
~
On the day you declare the restaurant officially debt free, Paco lifts you up off the ground, spins you around with ease and plants a loud kiss on your forehead.
Paul’s reaction is a bit tamed, even if he declares he’s going to name his firstborn after you. Still single and hopeless romantic, you’re not sure how much to read into his words.
Pedro cries, of course he does, but he also hugs you in a way that conveys almost too much not to shed a few tears yourself.
It’s not difficult for you to admit you own them more than they own you.
Taking care of the restaurant’s ledger and the guys’ enthusiastic opinion about your accounting job opened a lot of small businesses’ doors. The idea of opening your own office never even crosses your mind, not planning on entangling yourself in a structured system anytime soon. The new apartment you rent has a small room that works just fine as a study.
You will still keep an eye on them, though, not sure enough your finance lessons really drilled in their heads.
“So, you’re finally letting us treat you with dinner?”, Paul asks, serving you up with way too many pleasantries.
“I already have someone who pays for me”, you retort, playful smirk on your lips.
“¡Ay, I thought you were taking me out tonight!”, Alexia complains next to you, keeping up with the joke as she pretends to not be interested in the food anymore. She can be such a dork.
“Wait, am I crushing a date?”, Alba intercepts from the other side of the table.
“You’ve been crushing our dates since the day we met!”
The laughs that erupt are loud enough to catch the attention of the other patrons, thankfully not really annoyed by the chaos. The truth is that, despite being a menace of a group, it is not like you can drag your friends in any other place without the risk of getting banned forever.
It’s a familiar scene. The restaurant feels like a second home now, one that you built on your own around people that truly see you, support you and never miss a chance to tease you.
So you shake your head at Ricardo’s antics and glare at Alexia when she keeps teasing her sister, effortlessly distracting her with light movements of your fingers on her knee.
The conversation flows between shared memories and inside jokes, carrying the night away until your table is the only one left. Not planning on leaving the place anytime soon. And as you sit there, surrounded by your friends, questionable recalling of stories, and the magnetic pull of Alexia’s presence, you just know that this is it.
This is your life, your love, your chosen family.
Then Pedro has to ruin the moment, persuading everyone you have to make a toast for whatever reason. You try to fight it, embarrassed and quite frankly taken aback by the respect and genuine admiration this people seems to feel for you.
A subtle nod of your girlfriend’s head, her hand finding yours beneath the table, is all you need to indulge with their antics.
“To us”, you say, raising a glass, “To finally getting our shit together!”
Laughter and cheers fill the restaurant, everyone congratulating each other for the most random things and joking around as if life could always be this simple.
Alexia’s hold tightens, her eyes meeting yours. Her face lights up in a way that never fails to make your own heart grow.
“T’estimo”, you whisper, just for her to hear.
Your love is usually so loud. A love that grows unexpectedly, but burns with a fierce and tender flame. But your promises are quiet. A silent acknowledgment of commitment that goes beyond, that stretches confidently into the future.
Together.
actress reader and alexia please 🥺
that’s why you’re getting dw!
just putting some finishing touches on it