68. Super match
The Santiago Bernabéu thrummed like a heartbeat of gods, its stands a cauldron of white and fire where Caos, the storm of Season IV, unmade Sevilla. Real Madrid’s 3-4-3 Fluid Chaos formation—Caos, Mbappé, Vinícius Jr.—was a trinity of annihilation, their 320 combined goals a saga etched in ash and steel.
The ball, a cosmic ember, danced at Caos’s feet, its glow a herald of his 250 goals and 456 dribbles. Iceland’s crucible had sharpened him, his mother’s absence a forge, Keyla’s faith a spark, Léonor’s amor a blaze. Maat’s shadow faded before his supremacy.
Caos struck first, his Elastico Sprint Snap a revelation. He flicked the ball laterally, baiting Jesús Navas to lunge, then surged with a Sprint Burst, blazing past at 400 km/h. The net ripped with his Meteor Pulse Shot, the crowd roaring like a tidal wave.
“This is my altar, Keyla!” he shouted, imagining her green skirt twirling in Madrid’s stands. By the third goal—an Aurora Strike curling like northern lights—Sevilla’s defense crumbled, their eyes hollow with dread. Caos’s 4100 N strength powered an Eclipse Vortex, splitting their backline, his fifth goal a dagger to their hope.
“Que boludo. Se ha hecho una vida el solo,” muttered a Sevilla defender, voice thick with awe and defeat. Caos grinned, his Birmingham accent cutting through.
“Mate, I’m the storm you didn’t see coming.” His seventh goal, a Nebula Shift through three markers, left Ørjan Nyland sprawling.
The keeper rose, fists clenched, and bellowed to his team, “NAHHHH. WE CAN WIN!” His words stirred their hearts, but Caos’s chaos was relentless.
He imagined Mbappé’s nod: “You train like a meteor strike, frère.” Vinícius’s laugh echoed in his mind: “You’re not human, Caos.”
The eighth goal was divine wrath. Caos wove an Elastico Sprint Snap, feinting left, then exploding past Isaac Romero, who snarled,
“Que boludo. Se ha hecho una vida el solo,” itching to tackle him. Caos’s shot, a blazing comet, kissed the crossbar—his tenth perfect strike in training—before nestling in the net. The Bernabéu erupted, chanting his name like a hymn to Helios. His ninth, a scissor-kick Aurora Strike, seemed to pause time, the magnetic ball glowing as if summoned from Ouranos itself. Sevilla’s spirits broke, their defiance ash in his wake.
For his tenth, Caos stood at midfield, the Ouranos ball pulsing. “Maat, this is my answer,” he growled, picturing his rival’s faltering gaze. He sprinted, 450 km/h, unleashing an Elastico Sprint Snap that left Nyland frozen, the ball a star splitting the night. The stadium quaked, fans weeping, as Caos climbed the advertising boards, arms spread like a god on a pedestal of heaven and hell. His seven abs gleamed under floodlights, his roar a blend of triumph and pain. “Zeraphina, this is your strength!” shouted Caos, her Nordic resolve in his veins. Léonor’s text burned—amor mio, rule without mercy.
King’s suspense gripped the air, the crowd sensing a myth born. Tolkien’s grandeur crowned Caos, his celebration a dance of titans, the pitch a battlefield where he’d torn fear apart.
“Vinícius, Mbappé, we’re rewriting history,” whispered Caos, their brotherhood a fire no rival could douse. His journaled truth—rage into goals, body from myth—lived in this moment. Sevilla’s players, broken, whispered of his supremacy, Nyland’s rally a fading echo. Caos’s 78 big chances created, his 700 carries, were no mere stats—they were runes of a new era.
A vision flickered—Maat on a distant pitch, Barcelona’s shadow. Caos’s chaotic heart surged, his forgiveness of past wounds a blade sharpened for battle. “I’m no hero,” he murmured, gripping the Ouranos ball, its pulse a vow.
The Bernabéu’s roar faded, but Iceland’s lessons, Keyla’s love, and Léonor’s fire burned brighter. The next match loomed, a chance to carve his name deeper into the cosmos. Caos stepped down, the storm unyielding, his myth rising from Sevilla’s ashes.
