Cherreads

The invincible One

David_Osi
At twenty-eight, Ivan Smith had everything — a blistering career as one of England's most electrifying midfielders, a reputation built on instinct and fire, and the unconditional love of the club he'd supported since childhood. Then, in a single collision, it all ended. Torn ligaments. Surgery. A second surgery. And finally, the words no footballer ever wants to hear: you won't play at this level again. What came next hurt more than the injury itself. His boyhood club — the one he'd bled for, the one whose badge he'd kissed with genuine pride — turned on him. Labeled a flop. Quietly discarded. The fans who once sang his name moved on. The board that once promised loyalty stopped returning calls. Ivan was shown the door not with gratitude, but with indifference bordering on contempt. Bitter, directionless, and written off at twenty-eight, Ivan drifts — until a desperate call comes from Manchester Athletic Club, a threadbare outfit scraping along in the fourth division of English football. No budget. No staff. A crumbling ground tucked in the shadow of two giants who own this city. They don't need a manager so much as a miracle. Ivan takes the job because he has nowhere else to go. What follows is a brutal education. He must learn to lead men rather than outrun them — to see the whole pitch from the sideline instead of the center circle. He butts heads with veteran players who don't respect him, a chairman who'd sooner cut costs than dream bigger, and a fanbase too small and too scarred to believe in anything yet. And all of it plays out in Manchester — the city where football is a religion, but the congregation only worships at two cathedrals. But the deepest wound isn't tactical. It's personal. The people who discarded him are still out there — thriving, celebrated, unbothered. Former teammates who said nothing. Club officials who smiled to his face and buried him in private. Every time Ivan picks up a marker and draws a set piece on a whiteboard, every time he drags his squad through a freezing Tuesday night training session, he carries that betrayal like a stone in his chest. It fuels him. And it haunts him. Season by season, through shoestring transfers, long away trips to forgotten towns, and the slow alchemy of turning misfits into believers, Ivan forges something real at Manchester Athletic. The underdog story begins to catch fire. But the higher they climb, the closer they get to the world that spat him out — and the reckoning he's been building toward without quite admitting it. Some men play for trophies. Ivan Smith plays for proof. He was told he was finished. He intends to be Invincible
Latest Updates

Gods of Pangaeos

In the mist before GENESIS, Fate and Chance and Others cast tolls upon their names, while the chalice did burn and churn whose crown should be. And he that won strode through the mist unto YOD-VAV-HEH and cried: “Lo, wake upon the mist and create the heavens and the earth and make gods for me, for I have won over the crown and thy mist is mine to rule.” And so as the cry was heard Fate and Chance and Others bowed, But whether it was Fate or Chance or Another that won the cast of the tolls before GENESIS—none-knoweth. .............................................................. Welcome to Gods of Pangaeos. ​This work is a reimagining of the creation myth, written as a stylistic marriage between the liturgical structure of Genesis and the high-fantasy, rhythmic prose of Lord Dunsany’s The Gods of Pegāna. ​In this world, the Creator is a sleeper, and the world we know is merely a "Game" played by smaller, whimsical deities during His slumber. You will find echoes of our own earth’s deep past—Pangaea, Panthalassa, and Gondwana—woven into a tapestry of myth and "The Word." ​A Note on Style: The text uses archaic phrasing and repetitive structures to mimic ancient holy books. If the gods seem cruel or indifferent, remember: to them, we are but the pieces on a board. ​I hope you enjoy the "Game." ​Art Disclaimer ​Cover Illustration: "MANA-YOOD-SUSHAI" by Sidney Sime (1906). ​ ​Note on the Artwork: The illustration used for this cover is a masterpiece by Sidney Sime, originally created for Lord Dunsany’s The Gods of Pegāna. As this artwork was published over 100 years ago, it resides in the Public Domain. ​While the image originally depicted the deity Mana-Yood-Sushai, it has been chosen for this work to represent the Great Stillness of YOD-VAV-HEH. I use this art as a tribute to the golden age of mythic illustration that inspired the tone of Gods of Pangaeos.
Kai_The_Author · 4.4k Views