Gold vs Regency — I. The Entrance
THE GOLDEN KNIGHT — STADIUM BUILD-UP
By the time the Golden Knight (@polo-drone-084) took his place, the stadium was already awake.
Grayden stood in full regalia, gold armor catching the light as it always did, helm secured, posture squared. The weight of the costume was familiar now — not a burden, but a reminder. Mascot. Standard-bearer. Anchor. He did not pace. He did not perform. He held the space, which was his role before anything else.
The stands filled in layers.
Gold rose first in the upper tiers, chants forming early and rolling outward in practiced rhythms rather than noise. Lower sections followed more gradually — banners unfurled with coordination, flags passed hand to hand, colors settling into place like a formation completing itself. It was loud, but not chaotic. The crowd knew when to shout and when to wait.
That discipline mattered.
Across the pitch, the Regency delegation arrived as a unit. Compact. Ordered. Stewards guided them into their section with quiet efficiency, spacing adjusted, aisles kept clear. Additional staff lined the borders — hands behind backs, eyes forward. No hostility yet. No provocation. Their mascot, the Regent is not there yet, not bothering with preparation, delaying its appearance for maximal ‘’gravitas’’.
This was still the phase where civility held.
Grayden’s attention shifted as movement in the concourse caught his eye.
They entered without announcement.
Seventeen figures. Two files. Identical stride length. Shiny black tight suits, silver accents catching the stadium lights just enough to mark difference without demanding it. Their posture was immaculate. Their timing exact.
Some carried a Golden Army flag, but some carried a black flag with "SERVE" written in silver.
The contrast was immediate.
Gold fabric against black polymer. Movement without flourish. Support without spectacle.
They did not arrive as guests.
They arrived as a statement.
The SERVE delegation, led by SERVE-425 (@serve-425) and SERVE-302 (@serve-302), took position near the Golden Knight’s platform — close enough to signal alignment, distant enough to preserve autonomy. Spacing precise. Angles matched. The flags rose together, not waved, not shaken, held at regulation height and perfectly still.
A statement, not a celebration.
Against the sea of gold, they looked almost severe, and the contrast only sharpened their impact.
A murmur passed through the stands.
Shocked silence and confusion in some quarters suddenly gave way to recognition and boisterous applause. SERVE was known for many things, but public alignment was typically not one of them.
Grayden noted the moment with a flicker of approval.
This had not been assumed. It had been agreed.
Invitations extended. Conversations measured. Terms clarified without spectacle. Trust built not through promises, but through demonstrated restraint. SERVE did not lend their presence lightly.
That they were here now — in this match, on this night, holding Gold’s colors with disciplined intent — mattered.
Grayden inclined his helmeted head once toward the delegation.
Nothing more.
The SERVE drones did not respond.
They didn’t need to.
Alignment, once achieved, did not require affirmation.
From a distance, the formation read unmistakably: gold at the center, black at the flanks, banners behind them all.
Grayden turned back toward the pitch as the noise swelled behind him — Gold loud and alive, SERVE still and exact, stewards holding the margins with quiet authority. Different disciplines. Different cultures. Occupying the same moment without friction.
He allowed himself one brief thought, then set it aside.
This cooperation would matter later.
For challenges not yet visible.
For now, there was a match to anchor.
Everything was in position.
The Golden Knight remained still as the final preparations continued around him.
The stadium was ready.
MAXIMUS — GOLDEN ARMY LOCKER ROOM
The Golden locker room was warm in a way that had nothing to do with temperature.
It smelled like menthol spray, clean rubber, tape adhesive, and sweat that hadn’t happened yet. Benches were half-claimed, gear scattered with familiar mess — boots knocking together, shin guards clacking against the floor. Music thumped low from a speaker someone had definitely brought against instructions, bass steady enough to feel in the chest.
Maximus (@polo-drone-070) stood near the center of it, rolling his shoulders, energy humming just under the skin.
This was his favorite part.
Not the walk-out. Not the whistle.
This.
Polo-drones and water staff moved through the room in clean, practiced lines — bottles placed exactly where hands would reach, towels folded and refolded, tape reapplied without instruction. Organic noise layered over mechanical precision.
And somehow, it worked.
Wells (@wells-gold58) finished taping his wrists and flexed his hands, testing the tension. Controlled violence, fully contained. He caught Maximus looking and smirked once.
“Ready?” Wells asked.
Maximus laughed. “Bro, I been ready since Tuesday.”
Nate moved (@polo-drone-166) down the line with a crate, checking bottle temperatures by touch. “Cold. Cold. Too cold. There — that’s money.”
“Hydration king,” Maximus said.
Nate didn’t look up. “Culture.”
Nils (@polo-drone-034) aligned the crate once it was set, nudged it a centimeter, then went still. Job done.
Near the lockers, Jibril (@polo-drone-075) sat hunched forward, elbows on knees, laces already tight — then tightened again. Jaw set. Leg bouncing. He tried to keep the grin down and failed.
First start. This big. Everyone knew it.
Maximus dropped onto the bench beside him and nudged his knee. “You good, striker?”
Jibril exhaled, sharp and honest. “Yeah. Just—” He shook his head, smile widening despite himself. “Just hype.”
“Good,” Maximus said. “Means you care.”
“Means I’m gonna score,” Jibril shot back.
Across the room, Trey (@hero21us) stood apart from the noise, one boot up on the bench, retaping an ankle he absolutely didn’t need to retape. His eyes weren’t on anyone in the room — they were already walking the first five minutes, already mapping Julian, Noah, Liam.
Christian (@polo-drone-055) leaned against the locker beside him, close enough to be incidental, deliberate enough to matter. He didn’t interrupt. Didn’t crowd.
After a moment, Christian reached out and flicked Trey’s lace once — a tiny correction, unnecessary and precise.
“Too tight,” he said quietly.
Trey glanced down, then up at him. A breath released he hadn’t noticed he was holding.
“Yeah,” Trey replied, loosening it a fraction.
Christian nodded. Nothing else. He stayed there anyway.
Wells passed and gave Trey a short knuckle tap on the arm. Trey returned it automatically — bonds forged in training, shared trust against pressure.
Christian adjusted his own kit with the same care, methodical and calm. Not starting today — and fully locked in regardless. He checked Trey’s posture once more, subtle as a mirror.
Ready if needed. Ready if not. Ready together.
That mattered.
Alton (@alton-gold77) stood a step away from everyone else, hands loose at his sides, scanning the room the way he scanned the pitch — not for people, but for shape. No armband, no display. Just gravity. When he shifted, others adjusted without realizing they had.
Maximus drifted closer.
“Same plan,” he said.
Alton nodded once. “Same plan.”
Kasper (@pdu-090) was already fully dressed, boots laced, standing straight like inspection might happen at any second. He checked the spacing between benches, stopped himself, hands dropping.
Maximus laughed. “Relax, spreadsheet. Geometry’s locked.”
“Optimal readiness requires verification,” Kasper replied.
Devon (@polo-drone-767) leaned against a locker, visor off, calm as static. “Verified yesterday. And the day before.”
“And again today,” Kasper said.
“Again today,” Devon agreed.
Near the benches, Daniel (@danielgold-16) paced, rolling his neck, jaw clenched like he was chewing on the idea of the opponent.
“Polite smiles,” he muttered. “All that clipped little nonsense. Can’t wait to wipe it off their faces.”
Wells bumped his shoulder lightly as he passed. “Legal ways only.”
Daniel snorted. “Obviously.”
Captain Brody (@brodygold) stood when it was time.
Not elevated. Not dramatic. Just central enough that everyone could see him without looking.
The room quieted without being told.
“We don’t rush this,” Brody said.
A pause.
“We trained for this. Together.” His gaze moved once around the room — not lingering, just counting. “Extra sessions. Hard sessions. The kind nobody else sees.”
Several nods answered him immediately.
“The first five minutes aren’t a surprise. The pressure isn’t improvised. Trust the work. Trust the people you did it with.”
He let that settle.
“Now go use it.”
The response was immediate — not loud, but clear.
Kasper and Devon exchanged a quick look. Kasper tapped two fingers against his thigh — the same signal, every time. Devon mirrored it without comment.
Jibril caught Maximus’ eye and mouthed it, silent but unmistakable: First five.
Maximus nodded once.
Across the room, Trey rolled his shoulders, energy coiling. Wells stepped in and pressed his hand unto his shoulder — grounding, familiar.
Trey exhaled. “Yeah.”
Alton glanced over, caught the exchange, and gave a single approving nod before looking away again.
Wells sat for half a second longer than the rest.
No one rushed him. No one said anything.
At the far edge of the room, PDU-039 stood apart from the benches, stock-still. Optics trained on Alton.
Alton didn’t move.
Maximus felt it click — not hype, not nerves.
Alignment.
Outside, the stadium was already roaring.
Inside, Gold was locked in.
Someone killed the music.
Boots hit the floor.
It was time.
OLIVER — REGENCY ELEVEN LOCKER ROOM
The Regency locker room was already complete before anyone spoke.
Kit hung evenly spaced. Boots aligned beneath benches. Bottles placed at identical angles, labels outward. Nothing hurried. Nothing excessive. The room carried the quiet confidence of a place that expected to be occupied this way.
Oliver Kensington lounged on the bench nearest the aisle, one leg crossed casually over the other, sleeves already rolled. He was smiling at something on his phone — not laughing, just amused — when a steward passed and set a final towel into place.
Oliver looked up and met the man’s eyes.
“Cheers,” he said, warmly.
The steward nodded, faintly startled, and moved on.
Oliver didn’t watch him leave. The interaction had already served its purpose.
Around the room, his teammates moved with practiced ease. Sebastian Hawthorne stood near the tactics board, listening rather than speaking, arms folded, posture immaculate. He adjusted nothing. He didn’t need to. His presence alone stabilized the space.
Julian Ashcroft was lacing his boots, methodical, jaw set tighter than usual. He glanced at the board, then at the clock, then back down. Already thinking three phases ahead. Always slightly irritated by time’s refusal to hurry.
Across from him, Charles Whitlock sat still, shoulders relaxed, hands resting on his thighs as if waiting for something that was already guaranteed. He didn’t look anxious. He didn’t look excited.
He looked entitled to arrival.
Oliver’s smile deepened a fraction as he took them in.
Different styles. Same outcome.
He stood, finally, stretching with an unhurried roll of his shoulders. The movement drew a few glances without demanding them. That was the trick — never needing the room to look, only allowing it to.
He caught Charles’ eye briefly.
“Big crowd,” Oliver said lightly. “Good for us.”
Charles nodded once. Of course it was.
Julian snorted quietly. “Crowds don’t play the game.”
Oliver grinned at that, adjusting his sleeve.
“No,” he agreed. “But they do react.”
He let the thought hang for half a beat longer than necessary, then added, conversational, almost idle: “So. What do we make of Gold tonight?”
The question wasn’t sharp. It didn’t challenge. That was why it landed.
Julian finished tying his boot before answering. “They’ll push early,” he said. “Noise. Pace. Make a point of it.”
Sebastian inclined his head a fraction. Agreement, not endorsement.
“They won’t wait,” Oliver said, still easy. “At least one of them won’t.”
A pause — brief, attentive.
Julian glanced up now. “Left side, #59?”
Oliver nodded once. “Keeps moving. Doesn’t check if it’s time yet.” A small smile. “Pulls the game wide with him.”
Sebastian’s gaze shifted, thoughtful rather than concerned. “Then we make the space smaller”
“We got this,” Noah replied, with a slight nod to Hugo and Benedict. “We’ll cut their paths.”
The exchange ended there. No notes taken. No urgency introduced. The information settled into the room the way everything else here did — quietly filed.
At the far end, Liam Harrington was pacing, bouncing lightly on his toes, testing his studs against the floor. He looked sharp. Alert. A little too eager.
Oliver clocked it instantly.
Liam had been listening. But he was focused on himself more than the opponent. Liam wanted to be seen tonight.
Interesting.
Sebastian finally spoke again, voice calm, clipped, carrying without effort.
“Same principles. Same patience. Let them show us who they are.”
No one argued. No one needed to.
Oliver slipped his boots on and tied them with neat efficiency, finishing with a small tug that felt more ceremonial than functional. He rose again, rolling his neck once, then twice, eyes scanning the room.
This was a good group.
Polished. Composed. Ready.
He felt it — that familiar hum in his chest, the one that came when attention, pressure, and expectation aligned just right. Not tension. Anticipation.
Across the room, Julian finally looked up and met Oliver’s gaze.
“Try not to make it a performance,” Julian said dryly.
Oliver’s smile widened, unbothered.
“No promises.”
A few quiet exhales. A flicker of amusement. Even Sebastian’s mouth twitched — barely.
The steward at the door called the five-minute warning.
Oliver grabbed his warm-up top and slung it over his shoulder, already moving toward the tunnel. As he passed Liam, he clapped him lightly on the back.
“Enjoy it,” Oliver said. “First touches matter.”
Liam nodded, sharp and fast.
Oliver didn’t look back.
He could already hear the crowd now — Gold loud, organized, alive. He imagined the spectacle waiting outside, the reactions yet to be earned.
Good.
Let them look.
Let them respond.
Oliver Kensington stepped toward the tunnel smiling, perfectly at ease with the idea that tonight would not resolve easily.
That was where the fun lived.
TUNNEL — COMPRESSION
POV: Maximus Gold
The tunnel smells like concrete, rubber, and adrenaline pretending to be calm.
Maximus rolls his shoulders once and settles. This is the part where everything shows early.
Gold lines up first. Not stiff — ready. Brody at the front, still as a post driven into the ground. Kasper already measuring angles without moving his feet. Alton a few steps back, hoodie off now, gloves on, eyes low.
Footsteps behind them.
Regency enters.
Different quiet. Polished. Controlled. The kind that thinks it owns the space because it’s never been told otherwise.
Maximus clocks them fast — Charles composed, Sebastian scanning, Julian mid-sentence.
And Liam.
Liam comes in half a step hotter than the rest. Chest a touch forward. Head up. Looking for where the eyes will land.
Before Maximus can finish the thought, Alton lifts his gaze.
Just once.
Not a stare. Not a challenge. Acknowledgment.
It’s enough.
Liam feels it.
His posture tightens — not defensively, but like he’s been noticed when he didn’t plan to be. His mouth opens, like he’s about to say something casual, something light, something that proves he belongs in the center of this moment.
Alton’s eyes drop again.
Done.
Liam swallows. Resets. Shoulders roll back a fraction too deliberately.
Maximus watches the eagerness flicker — the need to respond, to be included, to turn recognition into relevance.
There it is.
Not nerves. Not aggression.
Involvement hunger.
Liam drifts a half-step inward, closer to the center channel than the formation strictly needs. Too early. Too obvious.
Maximus exhales through his nose.
Alton already got to you, he thinks. Didn’t even have to say a word.
A steward steps forward. “Thirty seconds.”
Maximus cracks his neck once.
Let’s see how loud you get.
POV: Oliver Kensington
The tunnel compresses everything — sound, space, attention.
Oliver enjoys this part.
He stands loose, comfortable, like the lights and the cameras are furniture he’s used to leaning against. Pressure hums around him, and he wears it easily.
He notices things because he’s not busy managing himself.
Like Liam.
Liam is usually immaculate here. Presentable. Engaged. Performing belonging with the ease he’s practiced his whole life.
But right now?
Liam’s distracted.
Oliver follows the line of sight and finds the reason immediately.
Gold’s captain.
Brody stands like a wall that doesn’t need guarding. Eyes forward. No performance. No interest offered.
Oliver watches the exchange — or rather, the lack of one. The way Liam holds the look a beat too long. The way nothing comes back.
That absence lands.
Liam’s jaw tightens. Not sharply — just enough to register. He shifts his weight, smooths it over, restores the posture he knows is expected of him.
Not rivalry, then. Personal.
Oliver leans in, voice warm, friendly — the kind that sounds supportive and never is.
“You good?” he asks.
Liam cuts him a sharp glance — quick, controlled, gone as soon as it appears, then nods. Too fast, snappy. “Yeah. Fine.”
Oliver hums, amused.
Of course you are.
Still checking. Still needing it to land on you first. As if the shape changed just to spite you. As if sharing the front line took something instead of asking something different.
Mistaking attention for weight again. As if losing one meant losing the other.
It doesn’t.
If it needs to be granted, it isn’t strength.
Liam settles back into line. The formation closes. Composure restored.
Oliver looks ahead again, satisfied. Hope you adjust — this isn’t the match to come apart.
A waterboy raises his hand.
“Ten seconds.”
Oliver rolls his neck once, easy.
This match is already asking its first questions.
THE GOLDEN KNIGHT — PITCH ENTRY
From outside the tunnel, the noise is already building.
Grayden stands at his platform in full Golden Knight regalia — armor steady, helm fixed, posture squared. Mascot, anchor, standard-bearer. He does not pace. He holds the line.
The SERVE delegation stands nearby, black suits sharp against the gold sea, flags held perfectly still. Discipline rendered as support.
The crowd doesn’t roar yet.
It waits.
Grayden watches the tunnel entrance.
This moment matters.
Not just for the match — but for what it shows. Gold and Regency. Earned unity and inherited authority. Two systems stepping into the same light.
The teams emerge.
Gold first.
The response is immediate.
Chants don’t explode — they form. Rhythm before volume. Sections locking in like they’ve practiced this all week.
Regency follows.
Applause, measured and traditional. Respectful. Confident.
SERVE pivots in unison to face the pitch. Flags rise together. Still.
Movement stirs at the far concourse.
Grayden catches it immediately.
The Regent chose this moment to arrive.
Not hurried. Not discreet. A white lion emerging at the edge of the gold sea, pace measured, posture elevated — not toward the stands, not toward the pitch, but above both. He does not wave. Does not signal. He simply takes his place, as if the moment had been waiting for him to arrive.
A ripple passes through the Regency section. Not noise. Recognition.
Grayden watches, unmoving.
This is how they mean it, then.
Where Grayden gives himself to the crowd — voice, gesture, presence — the Regent withholds. A mascot as symbol, not service. Authority expressed as distance.
Not support. Superiority. Acting like a king, not a standard-bearer.
Grayden’s jaw tightens behind the helm, remembering how this Regent acts with other mascots, addressing them not as a peer, but as something to be moved aside.
He steps forward and raises his fist.
The stadium answers.
Not chaos.
Commitment.
Waterboys finish their work along the touchline — bottles placed, caps loosened, labels aligned. Stewards hold the margins. Everything where it should be.
Grayden lowers his arm.
He thinks briefly of the conversations that made this alignment possible. The restraint it required. The trust earned slowly.
This will matter later.
For now, it is enough that it holds.
FINAL MOMENTS — KICKOFF
Wells glances at Brody.
Brody nods once.
Alton looks across the Regency half — then down at the grass.
Trey adjusts his stance.
Jibril exhales.
The referee checks his watch.
The whistle rises.
Everything tightens toward a single point.
And then—
The match begins.









