Harbinger Of Glory-Chapter 59: Second Baby Steps

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Chapter 59: Second Baby Steps

The door shut behind Dawson with a soft, deliberate thud — louder than any words had been so far.

The room didn’t speak but it was loud with tension.

A few players leaned forward, arms on knees, sweat streaking down their faces. The sound of deep breaths filled the silence.

A kitman dropped fresh water bottles in front of the bench and slipped out wordlessly.

Dawson stood near the centre of the room.

He didn’t speak for several seconds and just stared at his men.

The starters.

The ones who were meant to be setting the tone.

"You lot need to hear something," he said finally, voice even but cutting through the air like a whistle on the pitch.

"I’m not your mate."

A few heads lifted.

"I’m not here to laugh with you in the corridors. I’m not here to post birthday messages on the club socials or make things feel warm when they aren’t."

He took a step forward.

"I’m your boss. You work for me."

Another pause.

"And I work for someone bigger."

There was a flicker of recognition as a few players nodded.

"You think I’m talking about the board?" Dawson asked, raising an eyebrow.

"The chairman? The suits upstairs?"

He shook his head, slowly.

"I’m not. I’m talking about the only people in this sport who can’t be replaced with a cheque or an order."

He pointed his thumb toward the tunnel.

"The fans."

"The people who drove six hours to get here and are sitting out there with half a voice left after thirty-five minutes of shouting. The ones who bought shirts with your name on the back, hoping you’d give them a reason to wear them. The ones who go home miserable when you don’t turn up."

The room was silent now.

Not just quiet — listening.

"I’ve said this once already this season, and I’ll say it again: football without fans is nothing. Without them, this club is a shell. Without them, this badge doesn’t mean anything."

He looked around again, making sure no one had dropped their gaze.

"If you’re in that eleven right now, and you don’t feel like you’ve got it today — I don’t want pride, I don’t want lies — I want a hand raised. Say it now, and I’ll swap you. There’s no shame in it."

He waited for a second or two but no movement happened.

Dawson nodded, lips pressed into a thin line.

"Alright."

He turned his head toward the subs bench.

Leo didn’t move, but his eyes had been locked on Dawson the entire time.

"There are lads sitting over there — some with barely ten minutes of senior football under their belt — who are starving for a chance."

Now his voice started to climb, not in anger, but in edge.

"If I see a single one of you drop your head, walk instead of sprint, dodge a tackle, lose a ball and not fight to win it back — I will make a change. Not to make a point. To improve this team."

His eyes lingered on Leo now, just long enough for the kid to feel the weight of that sentence land.

"You earn minutes," Dawson continued.

"And if you’ve got them, you protect them with your lungs."

He looked back at the group.

"Now — I’m not here to spit and scream. You’ve played alright. But alright doesn’t travel home with three points. You want to go back to that away end with something more than a nod? Show them in the next 45."

Dawson turned away, walking to the edge of the room.

One of the assistant coaches, besides Coach Nolan, stepped in, ready with a clipboard, but Dawson held a hand out to stop him.

"One more thing," he added, over his shoulder.

"Five minutes. Use it. Get water. Get your legs back."

Then, more quietly, but still clear as day:

"And get your f*cking heads right."

He pushed open the door and left, boots thudding down the tunnel, coat flaring out behind him.

The door had barely closed behind Dawson when McClean stood up, hands on hips, expression sharp.

He didn’t yell at first.

Didn’t need to.

His voice was gravelly — low and clipped.

"Well," he said, glancing around the room, "you heard the gaffer."

He started pacing slowly between benches, shoulders rolled back, like he was shedding the silence.

"No more heads down. No more safe passes. No more f*cking waiting for someone else to fix it."

Then came the roar.

"Wake the hell up!"

A few players flinched — not in fear, but in focus.

The fire in McClean’s chest caught the room like dry tinder.

He clapped his hands once — sharply — then nodded toward the door.

"Let’s go. We fight now."

Naylor stood up first.

Then Cousins.

Then Whatmough, Fletcher, Jones — like pieces on a board moving with new intent.

Leo stayed seated for a beat longer, watching it unfold.

Then he grinned to himself, leaned forward, and muttered just loud enough for the nearest few to hear:

"McClean would’ve made a great war leader if he were born a few hundred years earlier."

Chris, tightening his boots beside him, snorted.

"Only if there were no treaties involved."

Laughter rolled lightly through the line as the rest of the squad filed toward the door, tension loosening just enough to breathe.

The sound hit them the moment they stepped out.

The away section — compact but alive — erupted as soon as the first Wigan player emerged from the tunnel.

Flags waved in tight fists, and voices lifted through layers of concrete.

They were calling.

Singing.

Demanding a response.

The players jogged onto the pitch in formation — the starters first, then the subs fanned out near the bench — each movement tighter, more urgent than before.

They knew the situation. 1–0 down.

But the second half was theirs to write.

The referee checked both keepers, signalled to his assistants, and brought the whistle to his lips.

Then, the sound.

And the second half began.

...

"And we’re back underway at Vicarage Road. Wigan trailing by one but pushing early, trying to get a foothold in the game."

Wigan started sharp — sharper than the first half.

McClean was already buzzing down the left, full of that usual engine, skipping past the full-back before checking back and laying it to Broadhead, who hadn’t had much room in the first forty-five but was now seeing more of the ball.

"Wigan with the ball! Broadhead cutting inside, looking up — here’s McClean again! Driving at Watford with pace and intent!"

The space opened suddenly and Watford too slow to shift across, faltered as McClean used the gap, ducking his shoulder and pushing into the final third.

Will Keane followed, arcing his run toward the outside.

The ball came wide, and Keane didn’t wait — one touch to steady, then a whipped cross.

Perfect.

Fletcher rose between the centre-backs, strong in the air, and guided a header toward the near post.

It looked in.

It felt in.

But the Watford keeper stretched low and clawed it away with a fingertip save.

"What a stop! Fletcher thought he’d scored! And that was the chance Wigan needed!"

The rebound bounced wide, rolling out for a corner as McClean jogged over to take it.

The away fans behind the goal were on their feet, scarves held, urging something to happen.

The corner came in low — meant for a flick — but Watford read it, intercepted, and immediately broke.

Two passes, three, and Wigan were backpedalling.

Tom Naylor scrambled while Cousins tracked wide, but it was McClean — sprinting half the pitch — who caught up, slid in hard and clean, and stopped the counter with a perfect challenge that sent the ball spinning back the other way.

But he got up with a limp.

"Brilliant recovery by McClean... but he’s limping a bit as he gets back on his feet."

He tried to run it off, waving his mates away, but his left leg didn’t quite hold the same weight now.

Some of the Wigan fans picked up on it first — not in panic, but in empathy.

A few of them started limping in mock frustration, like they were willing to absorb the knock for him.

Dawson, arms crossed near the dugout, didn’t hesitate.

He turned.

"Leo — warm up."

Leo blinked, eyes fixated on the game blinked once after hearing his name.

He glanced at the scoreboard.

51:34.

Then asked himself if it was meant for him?

Then a voice: "That’s you, Calderón."

The kitman tossed a bib at his chest without ceremony.

Nolan waved him toward the touchline, voice calm but firm.

"Let’s go. Get dressed."

Leo snapped out of the daze and pulled the bib over his head, fastening the strap at the bottom as his breathing quickened.

He pulled his socks up and trotted toward the sideline where Joe Bennett and Chris Sze were already moving through warm-up stretches.

"Looks like we might have a change coming for Wigan... and it’s that young man again — Leo Calderón, the seventeen-year-old who made his debut against QPR just last week." frёewebηovel.cѳm

"Clearly Dawson sees something in him. He’s bypassed more experienced options again, and it looks like Calderón’s going to get more minutes here."

"He’ll be excited — but make no mistake, this isn’t a token appearance. The kid has to deliver."

A/n: late but here it is. Have fun with this.

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