Richard is on fire!
Since the weekend match had been played in the evening and the Christmas rush was about to begin, Richard had already been notified that Robertson and his staff had granted the team a day off following the December fixture congestion.
As usual, he woke up early and got ready to head to Maine Road. But the moment he opened his front door, he was met with a blinding barrage of camera flashes.
Click! Click! Click!
Paparazzi. A whole wall of them. Shouting, shoving, fighting for position like predators in a feeding frenzy.
"Mr. Maddox! Did you host a sex party at the Chorlton Hotel last week?!"
"Were any Manchester City players involved in the party?"
"Besides flirting with Stephanie, who else are you seeing?"
"What time did you get home last night?"
"What
is
your relationship with Stephanie exactly?!"
Richard stood frozen for half a second. His eyes narrowed, stung by the camera flashes. The air buzzed with questions, half of them scandalous, most of them completely fabricated.
âPerfect.â
The British paparazzi are relentless, especially when it comes to breaking news. They can turn someone into the center of attention in no time, using the most vicious words, provocations, and shameless tactics to make their subject lose composureâeven sanityâin the process. Thatâs how they capture the most sensational photos.
Facing the malicious questions, would Richard lose his temper and act irrationally?
If he exploded in angerâregardless of whether the news was trueâhis reputation would be immediately tarnished. A single outburst, or worse, if he threw a punch, would only escalate the chaos.
Richard took a few steps outside, confronted by a swarm of microphones and cameras. He paused in surprise for a second. Then, with a disarming smile, he slowly stepped back inside. As he retreated, he pointed to the threshold of Cityâs dormitoryâsilently warning them: cross this line, and itâs trespassing.
With a calm grin, he gently closed the door.
The building Richard currently occupied in the Manchester City dormitory complex was unique in its positioning. Unlike the other team housing blocks, which were tucked behind fences or landscaped courtyards, his building faced the street directlyâboth at the front and the back.
It was the only structure in the entire dormitory layout that had immediate access to public roads. From his front steps, one could hear the distant hum of traffic or the occasional honk from a delivery truck. Out back, another street ran parallel, just beyond a row of slim trees and a narrow loading alley.
It was both a convenience and a curse.
Convenient, because it allowed Richard to come and go without weaving through the maze of internal security gates or cutting across training grounds. But also a curseâespecially now. With the paparazzi lurking on both ends of the street, his dorm had become the easiest target for intrusion, surveillance, and unwanted attention.
The paparazzi sighed in frustration and retreated to their cars, though their high-powered lenses remained trained on the door, waiting.
Inside, Richard sat on his couch, deep in thought. His computer couldnât keep up with the speed of tabloid news. But he already had a rough idea of what had happened. It was probably the gold digger striking backâafter he had cleverly manipulated her.
He picked up his phone, intending to retaliateâbut before he could dial, a call came in.
CLICK.
"Hello?"
"Richard, where are you?"
It was Adam Lewis, the lawyer representing Maddox Capital.
"Me? Iâm at the City dormitory."
"Stay there. Donât go anywhere, and donât talk to anyone outside. Unplug your landlineâIâm on my way."
"Alright."
Richard ended the call and waited. The home phone started ringing non-stopâreporters trying to get a statement. Instead of unplugging it, he simply picked it up and slammed it back down, leaving it off the hook to block further calls.
Eventually, Lewis arrived, dressed sharply in a suit with two men in their 30sâlikely from his legal team.
As Richard opened the back door, the reporters swarmed again. Aside from a few photos, they got nothing substantial.
However, just as he was about to close the door, someone shouted at the reporters angrily: "You bunch of flies! How can we train if youâre blocking the gates?!"
Startled, Richard peeked outside and saw Scott Parker holding a football, standing outside with Wayne Bridge, Owen Hargreaves, and Gareth Barryâall looking furious.
The reporters hesitated. Some tried to snap photos, but Richard quickly called out, "ADAM!"
Lewis acted instantly. One of his assistants stepped out and barked at the media, "Theyâre minors. If you publish even a single photo, expect a court summons!"
The second assistant nodded before rushing toward the boys, intent on pulling them inside before slamming the door shut.
Richardâs expression darkened. He called Torrent and asked if the U-17s could train indoors for the dayâat least until the press cleared out. Fortunately, theyâd had a youth league match the day before, so todayâs session was light.
With that resolved, Richard sat back down. Lewis pulled several tabloid papers from his briefcase and handed them over.
They were full of scandalous headlines.
One in
The Sun
stood out: one side showed Richard calmly sipping orange juice in the VIP box at Stamford Bridge. The other showed a blurry photo of the "gold digger" in plain clothes.
âBillionaire Richard Maddox Caught in Steamy Scandal with Mystery Model at Chorlton Hotel!â
Richard couldnât help but laugh at the headline. He flipped to the next page, curious.
The story quoted the woman directly.
"Everyone knows I admire Richard. I wanted to be friends with him, so when he reached out, I was surprised. I thought something romantic might happenâit wouldâve been wonderful.
But when I walked into the suite he booked at the Chorlton Hotel, the handsome image I had of him shattered. He was disgusting. There were half-naked men everywhere, clearly ready to have a good time. Iâm not that kind of girl. I left immediately. Nothing happened. But I donât know what they did afterward. I turned them downâbut they were clearly ready for someone. Right now, Richard Maddox just makes me feel sick."
Luckily, his parents were away on vacation. The news hadnât reached them.
Lewis let him finish the stack of articles before calmly crossing his arms.
"Alright. What actually happened? Tell me everythingâfrom the beginning."
Now speaking not as a friend, but as a lawyer, Adam Lewis was serious.
Richard told the truth. When he finished, Lewis stared at him in disbelief and sighed.
"Richard, what are you doing? You couldâve ignored her, played alongâanything. There was no need to escalate."
"What do you mean?"
"I mean, my friend, youâre a billionaire now. You have money, influenceâand zero bodyguards, again? Donât tell me you ditched them."
"..."
"Exactly," Lewis muttered, shaking his head. "Look at you. Girls will throw themselves at you. Some will be amazing. But what do you do? Shut them all outâand now you get involved in something like this."
Richard sighed, then stood up and walked over to his drawer. He retrieved a document and handed it to Lewis.
"To be honest, the whole thing was improvised. I had to make a decision on the spot."
Lewis, confused, opened the document. His eyes scanned the pagesâthen widened in realization.
"Wait... youâre targeting the hotel?"
Richard shrugged. "What else could I do? They practically served it to me on a silver platter. So Iâm serving them back."
He pointed at the map in the folder. The Chorlton Hotel sat across the River Irwell, directly facing Manchester city centre.
"What really caught my interest is... itâs right across from East Manchester. The hotel sits perfectly opposite a stretch of land I already own."
Lewis blinked, then finally laughed, beginning to understand the other partyâs mindset.
"Tell meâwhat do you have in mind."
"Well, thereâs something off about this," Richard began. "This isnât just some random scandal. It all happened too fast, too coordinated. The letter was planted. And why target me, of all people? Why not the playersâwho are far more prone to scandals like this? Then the paparazzi showed up before anything even happened? Nah."
Lewis folded his arms. "Do you have someone in mind?"
"Probably
The Sun
, or it could be the hotel... or even the media working together."
Lewis was taken aback. "You think itâs connected to the hotel?"
Richard shrugged. "It could be. I heard the Chorlton Hotel only opened last year, and only their staff knew what room I was in. Thereâs a chance theyâre the ones behind this."
"But why would they want to discredit you?"
"It could be that," Richard replied, "or maybe they just want the publicityâriding the wave of a scandal with my name attached."
He took a breath, then gave his instruction clearly. "Alright. Help me handle this quietly."
Then Richard stood up, told Lewis about the recording he had, and looked around before sighing. "I think Iâll be working from this room for the time being."
KNOCK KNOCK KNOCK
Just as he was about to continue speaking, a knock on the door startled him. It was unusualâif there was anything urgent or worth reporting, it would typically be handled through the office. No one ever came to seek him out in his room at the dormitory.
He figured it must be Lewisâs assistant returning after checking on Parker and the boys.
"Come in," he said.
Unexpectedly, it wasnât the assistantâit was John Robertson, the current caretaker manager of Manchester City.
"Sir, I need to talk to you about something."
Hearing the unusually formal greeting, Richard frowned.
Something was about to happen.