14-0
The rain fell on St. Martin’s College field in a cold, steady curtain, the kind that soaks through jerseys and chills bones. Edwin stood in the center of it, mud streaking his face like war paint, his breath coming in ragged clouds. The scoreboard at the far end, a hulking digital ghost in the grey afternoon, glowed a merciless, impossible number: 0 – 14.Fourteen. It wasn’t just a defeat; it was an erasure. For eighty-nine minutes, the champions of last season’s Secondary School Intercol, the Red Axe, had conducted a brutal, beautiful symphony of football. They moved with a telepathic understanding, a blur of red and gold that turned that blue and burgundy of St. Martin’s, Edwin’s beloved, scrappy team of misfits and try-hards, into frantic spectators in their own nightmare. Edwin was just an average player. He knew this. He had average pace, an average foot, an average sense of positioning. But what he had in surplus was a dream. A big, fragile, luminous dream that he carried not...