acchikocchi: (stock // chaos theory (credit fluidic_ic)
acchikocchi ([personal profile] acchikocchi) wrote2012-01-02 11:30 pm
Entry tags:

fic: origin stories (zaida villa, gen)

I was hoping to finish this before the year was out, but the last two hundred words just wouldn't come out right until today. I'm pretty sure there's an audience of probably about three people out there for gen second-generation futurefic, but this fic has come to mean a lot to me, and I think it's one of the better things I've written, so.

Thanks as always to [livejournal.com profile] nahco3 for betaing, hand-holding, and the canon I stole from her own fic. Spoilery notes here.


Origin Stories
Zaida Villa, gen
5426 words


Zaida picks up a card in the fourteenth minute and the coach takes her off in the sixty-fifth, which is a stupid decision because they're only up by two and it's not like Sweden aren't more than threatening enough to come back. Which is exactly what happens: she watches, horrified, as first Engstrom scores, then Larsson, and now it's going to penalties and she's stuck on the bench—

She wakes up panting, shirt damp.

*

For as long as she can remember, Zaida's known she wants to play football. No, she doesn't just want to play -- she wants to be good, better, the best. She's never stopped to question whether or not it's possible: she knows it is. She just has to make it happen.

She never even thought about playing any position but striker. She's there to score.

*

The World Cup's still three months away. They -- the U-21 team -- are in Bucharest for a friendly. It's a miserable match: grinding, labored, flat. Romania scores twice on set pieces. Zaida takes a long cross down with her knee, jinks it between two of the Romanians, fakes out the right back who's managed to stay on her and slides the ball past the keeper, their only goal.

She calls Olaya afterward, tells her about the game, listens to Olaya talk about exams and planning a trip to the coast with her friends.

In the middle of Olaya's description of their mother giving some creep the shutdown of his life, a voice says something in the background. Olaya, muffled, answers; then she says to Zaida, "Dad wants to talk to you." Zaida closes her eyes, just for a second, and then opens them again.

"Okay," she says.

"Hey, sweetheart," her father says, a little softly. He's always been soft with them. "How was the match?"

"Okay," she says. "I scored. We lost."

Her father snorts, a sound of ironic familiarity. "Tell me about it."

Her father has three league titles, a Champions' League medal, European Championship and World Cup trophies, but he still talks like that, like the world won't give him anything he doesn't force it to. Zaida doesn't understand why: he's got a chip on his shoulder, but nothing to fight. He got everything, in the end. He's David Villa.

She tells him a little more about the match, because he always wants to know. It makes her feel awkward, like she's giving him a match report, and underneath, a little resentful: their matches aren't as good and she knows that, she doesn't need reminding.

"Olaya told me about her trip," she says, when she's tired of explaining how badly they sucked.

"Maybe," her father says, darkly. "We'll see."

"You should let her," she says. "She's old enough."

"We'll see," he repeats. He'll let Olaya go, in the end; they both know that.

She hears voices in the hall outside. It's close enough.

"Hey, dad, someone's here, I've got to go."

"Okay," her father says, after a minute. "Watch out. I love you."

"Love you too," she mutters, and ends the call.

*

One of the earliest things she can remember is playing football with her father -- just passing the ball back and forth in the yard. Sometimes she couldn't hit it any farther than halfway between them; sometimes he forgot to hold back and the ball would go zooming past her and all the way to the house. He always laughed, then, and raced her to regain possession. Of course he let her win.

By the time she was in primary school it was serious, or sort of serious. Her father taught her to pass, to trap, to control, to find the ball with her head, with both her feet. Her attempts to score took on the beginnings of obsession. Around the same time, she began to figure out that playing football with her father wasn't like the boys in the park playing with theirs. She also began to figure out why they never went to the park themselves.

When she first started to play for real, for a team, her mother said why didn't Zaida use her second name on the jersey, because it would probably be more fun without the extra attention. She said yes. She wanted the number 7, because she was too young to know better, but every kid wanted a seven. They assigned numbers alphabetically, and Zaida González was 13. She stuck with both until she got called up to Rayo's senior side. That was when the papers finally picked it up, and she decided if they wanted a story, they could have one. So she put Villa on her shirt -- it was her name, too, and just because someone else had it first didn't make it their leftovers or something. But she kept her number.

They offered her the 7 last season, after Luisa Valle left to have a kid. She didn't take it.

*

Back in Madrid, they split up, back to their respective cities and clubs. Four to Valencia, three to Barcelona, four more to Donostia, five to Bilbao. Zaida takes a cab home.

Her mother greets her with a kiss on the cheek. Her father pats her arm and says, "Good goal."

Olaya comes home later and pokes her head around the door to Zaida's room, where Zaida's polishing her boots. "Nice goal."

Zaida scrubs a scrap of cloth across the toe. "That's what dad said."

"It's still true." Olaya comes all the way in and sits next to Zaida on the bed. She looks at Zaida's boots. "How long have you been home, exactly?"

"It's important," Zaida says, unruffled. She's used to Olaya's teasing. She still can't resist adding, "You'll understand when you're older."

"Sure," Olaya says, reaching out and ruffling her hair, "little sister," and flees before Zaida can retaliate.

No one can figure out where Olaya got her height: she's the only one in three generations on both sides, tall and lanky as soon as she hit thirteen. Zaida never did; she's short and compact, like -- the rest of their family. For a while her teammates called her la bala, the bullet; now they call her la terminadora, the terminator.

She's been the youngest more than once, but no one's ever called her kid.

*

When people ask her where she's from she usually says Asturias, because that's where she was born and that's where they went back for the summer, every year. But she didn't live there again until she was nine, and it's not where her earliest memories are from.

Carles and Gerard always told her that she cried every day after leaving Valencia, until they gave her a stuffed Barcelona mascot and then she slept with it every night. She remembers the doll -- she thinks it might be in a box somewhere in her room, still. But moving to Gijón was even harder, because by then she was old enough to have a school and a team and a home and real friends. She didn't cry, that time; when her parents told her, she stomped up to her room and slammed the door and didn't come out for the rest of the night. She refused to speak to either of them for three days, saving her most furious glares for her father. She'd learned, by then, that it was easier to be angry than to cry.

(Her mother sighed, often, and didn't indulge her tantrums at all; her father, Zaida realized much later, avoided her, because he couldn't turn down the move and he couldn't see her unhappy.)

In the end, it was just as bad leaving Gijón for Madrid. But by then, it was because of her.

*

Grecia and her family come over for dinner the week after the team gets back from Romania. They live in Barcelona, now, and come down to visit often.

Zaida's never gotten along that well with Grecia, even though she's always known her father would have liked it -- both of their fathers. It's not her fault. Grecia's nice enough, she guesses. That's sort of the problem.

Nora's a little better. She followed Zaida everywhere when they were kids and their dads got called up together. Or when Zaida's family went to England: sometimes her parents would take them all for a visit and all the girls would have to play together, Zaida and Grecia and Nora and Alma and Olaya. Nora always took Zaida's side.

She and Nora don't really talk these days, but she has Nora's number. Nora's in school, still; last thing Zaida heard she wanted to do biology in university. Zaida got a text from her after the U-21 team qualified for the World Cup. She'd told her dad, and he'd grinned.

They're talking about people whose names Zaida knows but doesn't really care about, so she tunes them out for a while, running over the next game in her head. Zaida's mother asks Grecia and Alma about school and their boyfriends. Then their dad says, "Zaida, girl, you were playing in Bucharest last week, no?"

She can see Alma and Grecia exchange a look just behind their father's back. Olaya catches them, too, and gives them a glare as fierce as anyone's. It runs in the family.

Zaida shrugs. "It was a bad game. We'll have to do a lot better at the World Cup."

"She's the only one who scored," her father says, with the sort of half-belligerent pride that always makes her want to slide under the table, because she doesn't know what to do with it.

"Just like her dad," Grecia's father says, grinning at Zaida's, who rolls his eyes but somehow looks like he's smiling even though he's not.

Zaida stands up abruptly. "Sorry, I have to leave early," she says. "I'm supposed to meet a friend." Her mother gives her a look but she pretends not to see it. She does add, "It was nice to see you again."

Since she's not actually supposed to meet anyone, she calls Mery and they meet in the park near Mery's place and kick a ball around for a while. There's a group of kids doing the same nearby so Zaida can't help showing off a little, while Mery laughs at her. The boys are too little not to be impressed.

She gets a tongue lashing from her mother when she gets back home but she doesn't mind.

*

It came down to Espanyol or Rayo, when she was fourteen. She almost picked Espanyol just to see if she could get away with moving back to Barcelona by herself, maybe stay with Uncle Pepe's family, but in the end Rayo was the better choice. Besides, she wouldn't have put it past her parents to move with her anyway and Olaya didn't deserve that. Instead, they waited until the school year ended, and the next week Zaida started training with Rayo's junior team.

They've got a new coach this season who's pretty good. She -- it's a she, for only the second time -- played pro herself, around the same time Zaida's father did. She wins points from Zaida by never mentioning it.

Most of the time she takes the metro to practice, like the rest of the team. She's not a very good driver: Olaya is much better. (Technically Olaya's not supposed to be behind the wheel yet, but what their parents don't know won't hurt them as long as it stays that way.) Rayo's grounds aren't that great but at least they get to use the same ones as the men's team. They're more successful, after all.

The coach has them doing fitness drills today, which Zaida always finds a detestable necessity. She's in a lot better shape than she was last season, though, she can't deny that. Patricia falls in beside her as they jog around the field for the cool down and says, "Saw your goal last week."

Zaida lets herself grin at that. "Pretty nice, huh?"

"Stay away from my record, brat," Patricia mock-growls, knuckling her under as Zaida cracks up until the coach calls, "Ruiz, Villa, calm down."

Maybe it should be strange to think of people fifteen years older than her as friends, but that's what a team is like. Patricia's not exactly old enough to be Zaida's mother but she's old enough that she probably wouldn't be playing anymore if they were the men's team. She still has a great touch, though, which is what matters. She also has the all-time scoring record for both the U-21 and senior teams -- but not for long, if Zaida has anything to say about it.

It's an open secret that the federation's just waiting for the World Cup to be over before Zaida gets her call up to the senior team. They tend to do that with the women's teams, graduate the players from one level to the next, rather than mixing it up like the men do. Zaida doesn't care. She's got plenty of time to score for both.

The next home game is the cup derby against Real Madrid: Real finally set up a women's team a few years ago, after the senior internationals qualified for the World Cup and made it all the way to the semifinals. It was years after they should have done it. Now, of course, they're about to win the league. Zaida rolls her eyes every time anyone mentions them, on principle.

Her team wins this time, though, 5-4, two goals from Zaida. She almost gets her hat trick: the ball ricochets off the crossbar in the 87th minute and for a minute she's so frustrated she wants to hit something. She settles for kicking the turf, once, and giving it her most forbidding scowl.

She finds her family after she's showered and said goodbye to her teammates. Her father's signing someone's shirt. At least it's been long enough that no one comes to the games just to see him in the stands, she sometimes thinks resentfully.

"Good game," he says, when they see her. It was, so she can't really deny it. She just shrugs, and he slides a hand over her hair and squeezes her shoulder, a little awkwardly.

"Maybe I'll come to the next game, too." Olaya doesn't come to many games, between school and her friends, one of whom Zaida's pretty sure she's actually dating. "They said it was against Atlético and we hate them, right?"

Zaida knows Olaya's making fun of her, but she still says, "Right."

"Who else do we hate?"

Zaida ticks them off on her fingers. "Athletic. Espanyol. Barcelona. Oviedo. Collerense. Levante. Sociedad -- "

"So," Olaya says, interrupting, "everyone who isn't us."

Zaida grins at her. "Right."

*

They go away to Oviedo and Zaida's grandmother comes to the game. Zaida's never been entirely sure how much her grandmother really likes football, but she comes to watch Zaida play, every time. For years she let Zaida practice kick ups against the wall of the house her son bought for her, even after the first time Zaida cracked a window, even after the second. When she says Zaida's just like her father, Zaida doesn't mind as much. It's what grandmothers are supposed to say.

Zaida's grandfather died when she was nine, from lung cancer. Zaida doesn't remember him very clearly anymore; mostly she remembers how tall he seemed, and his bristly mustache when he kissed her on the cheek. It made her giggle. They watched every game of the World Cup together the summer before he died, the last year her father was in it.

Her mother told her some things, when she was older, that made her second-guess her own memory. Or see, unwillingly, what she barely remembered: twin raised voices, father and son, piercing her sleep; her mother, tight-mouthed with anger; her grandmother murmuring another rosary under her breath and stroking Olaya's hair. Maybe it was worse than she thought, maybe her imagination isn't reliable, maybe she misunderstood. Either way, she's glad she never knew any of it while he was alive.

In Oviedo they win again, barely. Mery's the one who gets the game winner, but Zaida scores, too, making it six goals in five games. By now it's clear that she's having a good season, a really good season, even better than usual. It's two months to the World Cup.

They win away at Atlético, draw Espanyol at home, lose to Athletic. Zaida comes home looking for something to take out her anger on but Olaya takes one look at her and says, "Go kick a ball at someone else."

"You're too alike," her mother always said, when Zaida was in a mood.

"So are you," Zaida shot back once, "and you're still married."

Her mother raised one eyebrow so sharply that Zaida shut up without even thinking about it.

They almost never fight, though. The one thing her father never, ever does is push back.

*

There's a picture in her other grandparents' house of her mother standing with one foot balanced on a grubby football, grinning at the camera and missing two teeth. The first time Zaida saw it she asked her mother if she'd gotten in a fight and her mother laughed so hard she nearly cried. So Zaida must've known for a long time that her mother had played football but it never really felt like she had, not until Zaida was much older.

Later, she asked her mother if she ever wished she hadn't quit playing. Her mother, looking thoughtful, took a minute to answer.

"I think I did, a little bit, later. But it wasn't the same, you know, even when I was your age. It was fun, and I liked to compete, and I liked the game. But that's all it was for me. I had school and your father and in the end I figured out I'd rather be doing that instead."

Zaida frowned. "But didn't you want to win something yourself?"

Her mother smiled a little. "Sometimes what you want changes."

Zaida looked at her, uncomprehending.

Her mother rolled her eyes and said to the sky, "No, of course, she must be the milkman's child." When she looked back down, though, she was smiling.

*

The team does an ad with some of the U-21 boys, who've got their Euros coming up. "Get me Soriano's number," Olaya tells her. "He's cute." Zaida gives her a shove and Olaya falls over giggling.

The guys their age are actually a pretty good group; they're more used to their sisters and cousins playing the same game and going to the same matches and idolizing the same stars than any of their older counterparts are. Some of them are still stupid assholes, but that's just a thing about teenage boys in general, Zaida's pretty sure.

She goes over to Soriano during a break and tells him, "My sister's a big fan."

"Oh yeah?" he says, brightening. "Villa, right? Tell your dad I think he's awesome. He was, like, my hero when I was a kid, he was the grea--"

González, a couple feet away, reaches over and smacks Soriano across the back of the head, not gently. "Shut up," he hisses, and glances at Zaida, giving her an apologetic grimace.

Zaida shrugs, but she can feel her mouth flattening out. González probably gets it, but that doesn't make it any better.

Afterwards, Cuatro does interviews for a big segment on the team's World Cup preparation. The federation's rep tells them to be sure to answer "enthusiastically." What he means is be positive, upbeat: like good girls. It's bullshit, so Zaida says what she feels like saying, like always. Out of the corner of her eye she can see Laura and Mery a little way beyond the cameraman, making faces of exaggerated shock at her.

At the very end they ask her. "Are you going to follow in your father's footsteps and bring a title home?"

She looks right into the camera. "I'm going to do better."

*

Four weeks to the end of the season. They've got the away game against Real coming up, and it's a big deal, maybe the league decider. In the meantime, there's another international game, this time at home, against Germany. In other words, they're going to get crushed. Zaida tells her parents as much, but her father insists on coming anyway.

They don't get crushed, exactly. They lose 3-1, and it doesn't matter that the third goal was a penalty or that Zaida's goal came out of nowhere was because it's not the goal difference, it's not the defeat, it's how easy it was for them.

No one says much in the locker room afterwards. Zaida keeps her head down. A couple of her teammates pat her on the shoulder as they go out; Mery, she thinks, and someone else. She doesn't look up.

When she finally leaves, her father's waiting.

Neither of them speak until they're almost home. Then he says, "It was a tough fight."

"No, it wasn't," she says, short and acid. "It wasn't hard at all." It's a friendly but she doesn't care. It won't be a friendly next month. There's no such thing. "We could have done better. We could have tried."

Her father starts to speak, and she opens her mouth and hears herself say, "Maybe I should go to America."

She doesn't know where it comes from. She's never once thought about moving: she'll win, she'll be the best, on her terms, at her club, in her country. She'll make everyone acknowledge her. She looks at her father and he's staring at her, as much at a loss as she is.

"You want to go abroad?" he says.

She shrugs, a short, jerky motion. "Maybe I'll have to." She knows, even as she says it, that she doesn't want to, but she keeps going anyway. "I'm old enough to decide for myself."

She knows, deep down, that if it weren't for her father, if she were born into any other family, she'd have had to fight twice as hard for what she's got. Which just makes her more frustrated, fills her with the perverse urge to push and push and push and make him stop holding back. She's not a kid and she's not a little girl. She's going to deserve what she gets.

She holds her breath, waiting.

"We should talk about this later," he says. "Not after a defeat."

Suddenly she's so furious she can barely see straight.

"Sorry we're not the men's team," she bites out, voice nearly shaking. "Sorry we don't win everything."

Her father looks at her blankly, like he has no idea what she's talking about, which only makes her angrier. His brows go down. "You should never make big decisions after a loss," he says. "Listen, I know what--"

She cuts in. "Since when?"

She sees him start to answer and then clamp down on his own reply. "We'll talk about this later," he repeats. "If this is really what you need to -- we'll talk about it."

She can't even explain why she's so angry, so frustrated, only that it's stinging, choking her throat, bringing tears to her eyes. She can't hit anything, she can't yell, she can't speak. "Stop -- stop -- " He reaches out, and she jerks away. "Stop coddling me!"

"No one's coddling you," her father says harshly, his voice rising at last. "Like it or not, you're my daughter and there is no f -- no way I'm -- "

She hears her own voice snap, "I never asked to be!"

Her father recoils and for a desperate second she thinks no, no, I take it back. Then his face hardens and so does her resentment.

"You can't always get what you want," he says. "Better get used to it."

*

They barely speak to each other for the next few days, only the minimum of surface courtesies, requests, responses. "You don't have to come," Zaida says to her mother the day before the Real game. "It's no big deal."

"Don't be silly," her mother says. "Of course we're going." She looks at Zaida, their eyes at a level, then reaches out and touches her cheek. "I want to see you win, too."

When Zaida comes downstairs, bag in hand, boots over her shoulders, her father's in the kitchen. Her mother and Olaya are nowhere to be seen. Their eyes meet, neither of them giving so much as an inch, and Zaida wonders, with a chilly mixture of belligerence and nausea, if he'll stay silent.

But he doesn't. He says what he always says:

"Show them what you've got."

*

When she remembers that night later, his words are always first.

*

It's no one's fault. It's been raining all evening and the grass is slicker than usual. It's a great game, fast, electric; Zaida takes a fierce delight in it at the same time she wishes they were seven up and stomping Real into the ground. But in reality they're still one down, except Laura's through on goal, outpacing Real's center back. It's no good; she's off-balance. She goes down and the ball bounces away from her, rolling temptingly out alone, down the field from Zaida. The keeper's completely out of position and Zaida tucks her head down and launches into a flat-out sprint. Codina's converging on her from the left. Zaida lunges in a slide, because she's faster, she always has been. Her foot connects with the ball and she knows it's going in the moment she touches it, before she actually sees it skip across the wet grass, past the keeper's outstretched fingers, into the net.

Only Codina isn't pulling back, because she's slipped, Zaida realizes, momentum sending her hammering forward and Zaida sees her coming in like a bad tackle, sees it before it happens. She has a moment to brace herself, and then --

She nearly blacks out at the crack. It's skewers of iron, tongues of fire shooting up her leg, like nothing she's ever felt before. She cries out before she can stop herself, and somehow she's on the ground and she doesn't even know how she got there.

Somewhere there's the whistle, voices, running feet; she can barely tell, trying to curl in on herself and in too much pain to do even that. Everything comes in flashes: one of the voices urgently asking her a question she can't understand, unfamiliar hands lifting her. The stretcher jolts and she can't bite back the whimper. Deep breaths. One. Two. Three. Four. She concentrates everything on the in, out, in, out. Distantly, she's aware the stretcher's on the ground again. With every scrap of effort she can muster, every reserve she can draw on, she manages to keep her face from twisting up and opens her eyes.

There's a hand gripping hers.

His face is white. She's never seen him look scared before, not her father.

"Don't worry," she tells him, or tries to. She has to let him know it'll be all right, has to get that look off his face. "I'm okay."

Then she passes out.

*

When she opens her eyes, it's to white and stainless steel.

She has to blink twice before the fuzzy edges go away, lightheaded. There's no pain, just a vague floating sensation, which must mean they've got her on the good drugs. A nurse beside her bed is making soothing sounds, and as Zaida pushes herself upright she sees that her leg's immobilized.

The nurse hands her a plastic cup of water, which she manages to take with a mostly steady hand. As she drinks, the door opens, and a tall doctor comes in.

She puts the cup down.

He introduces himself, and goes on for a while about where they are and how she'll be in good hands. She only absorbs about half of it, but she's pretty sure he hasn't actually said anything about her leg yet. Finally she has to to interrupt. "Is it broken?"

The doctor nods. She slumps back against the pillow, already resigned to a recovery period. "So how long til I can get back on the field?" At the doctor's subtle change of expression, she feels her heart skip. "More than a couple months?"

"Yes," the doctor says. "Well."

Then they tell her.

*

They let her father in right afterward, while she's still staring at the wall, trying to swallow the panic.

"Hey, sweetheart," he says in that gentle tone so incongruous with the outward appearance. "How are you?"

She wants to say something reassuring, she wants so badly to be able to pretend it's just another sprain. But all she can hear, over and over again, is I'm afraid there's no chance.

She can't speak lest a traitorous waver betray her -- lest she cry. That's not what she does, she doesn't need -- she --

Her father, brows drawing together, takes a step forward and she meets his eyes.

"Zaida," he says.

Her face crumples and her father's gathering her in his arms.

"Papa," she says, muffled, and clutches at his shirt as she soaks it with tears.

"Shhh," her father murmurs in her ear. He's stroking her hair. "Shh, I know. It's gonna be okay."

He keeps saying that, over and over, as she sobs into his shoulder. Her entire body's shaking. She can't look at him. "It'll be okay," he says. "I know. I promise."

She has to take several gulps, for air, to fight down the rest of the tears. "They said I can't -- I can't play -- "

"Bullshit," her father says, and it's so far from what she's expecting that she physically starts.

The doctor said, she feels like she should say, or But they'll have to operate, I might not even-- Instead she doesn't move, waiting, trying to choke back even the smallest shudder: unable, try as she might, to stamp out the wild flare of hope.

"Listen to me," he says into her ear, fierce and savage. "Fuck them. They don't know what the fuck they're talking about. It's not over unless you want it to be."

His arms tighten and he gives her a little shake.

"They don't think it's worth it. They think it's too much, too much money or too much work or too much time. They don't know you. Understand? You can do it. It'll be hard but if you want it, we -- you can do it. I can get the right people, they'll work with you, or -- " He takes a breath.

"Or me," he says. "Every day, if you want. I swear. I swear."

She just nods into his shoulder.

*

"I'm going to miss the World Cup," she says, when she can speak again without crying.

The smile he gives her has a feral edge. It's not a parent's: it's a player's.

"Don't worry," he says. "You'll win the one that counts."

*

She comes back.

Of course she does.

*

She scores her first goal sixteen months later, on a rainy day in September. They're playing Athletic, and Nuria's put them up one-nothing thirty minutes into the first half. The ball from Mery couldn't be any better served if she'd handed it to Zaida on a plate: all Zaida has to do is shoot.

The keeper doesn't have time to do anything but turn her head and watch the ball rocket by. The yell of triumph comes from deep within Zaida's throat and for a second she just raises her arms in the air and glories in the feel of her ball in the back of the net, a feeling that never dulls no matter how many times it happens. Then she takes off running.

Her teammates are converging on her from all corners of the field, but she goes straight for the stands. He's not smiling. The expression is one she knows from tapes, photos, newsreels: the rictus of raw, visceral triumph.

Everyone in the stands knows what her story is; they're cheering louder than if she'd won them a trophy final. It's not the Bernabéu, but it'll do. Zaida skids to a stop in front of his corner, on the far right, by the goal. She pumps a fist in the air and the cheering swells. Then she cocks her arm back over her shoulder, thumb pointing down, and turns her back to the stands so they can see her name. So everyone who saw that goal knows who she is.

VILLA
7



[identity profile] nahco3.livejournal.com 2012-01-03 08:38 am (UTC)(link)
THIS FIC.

I SWEAR TO GOD. I FEEL MY SOUL CRYING OUT WITHN ME TO LEAVE A GOOD COMMENT.

god. i can't even mer. how is this so good? dskfjdlkfgjdfklgjkdf i am consumed with envy also PRIDE mostly PRIDE also some JOY IT IS GREAT.

[identity profile] worldcoup.livejournal.com 2012-01-03 09:00 am (UTC)(link)
sdkfhsdfksjdfkhsdlkjsdklfjsoiglksldgljsdlksdf COHERENT THOUGHTS ARE HARD FOR ME TO FIND BECAUSE THIS FIC IS SO FUCKING FLAWLESS.

Honestly, everything about it. Zaida is such a fierce female character, and this is the perfect reaction I think of her fierce to dealing with being the daughter of a famous footballer. It's obviously a relationship of love but at the same time there is that resentment- THOUGH DV TRIES HIS HARDEST TOO BLESS HIS HEART. Everything about her characterization is strong and bold and her own person and yet like her father and kldfjksdf PERFECT.

AND THE TRANSFORMATION OF THEIR RELATIONSHIP WAS SO, SO SATISFYING. It was exactly the relationship they're supposed to have: unrelenting and competitive and fierce and yet loving and understanding. It's flawless.

THIS FIC I CANNOT DEAL SDOFJ:LSDFS:DLFSDGJS:LDG.

Also. Where is the DS-filled version of this? :P

[identity profile] elemersglue.livejournal.com 2012-01-03 10:45 am (UTC)(link)
Oh, lovely lovely parallelism to David's life.
& the last scene <333333333 So perfect!

[identity profile] liberta.livejournal.com 2012-01-03 10:52 am (UTC)(link)
Jesus Christ this is so good.

/incoherent

[identity profile] naanima.livejournal.com 2012-01-03 11:13 am (UTC)(link)
Reading friend's list.

Just wanted to say thank you for writing this fic. This is the fic of my heart. The ways Zaida and David's relationship are so thorny because she wants to be more. Just - this is amazing.

Thank you so very much for writing this.

[identity profile] meretricula.livejournal.com 2012-01-03 12:34 pm (UTC)(link)
gotta go to work pretty much now so this is not the epic comment the fic deserves, but this is gorgeous and perfectly prickly and I love it. you should be really proud.

[identity profile] myscheherazade.livejournal.com 2012-01-04 12:15 am (UTC)(link)
I've been sitting here for hours it feels like, trying to give you a proper comment. I still don't think I've got it, but here goes anyway:

Sometimes when you read a fic, it shatters your expectations and perceptions of characters and their world.

Then there are times when you read a story, and it completely rebuilds everything you already knew - but obliquely, uniquely, anew. I can't describe it. It's somewhere between vindication, affirmation and wonder at the possibilities of storytelling.

Your Zaida is one of the most compelling characters I have read in a long, long time. And just from some 5,000-odd words. That's incredible. You can see how much she's like her father, a mini DV almost, but she's so much her own person. She's so vividly human it takes my breath away. Her limited perspective is so brilliantly executed, not only draws us into her mind but but opens windows onto the rest of her world. And, dear god, what a world. How you manage to lower ambition to the level of intimacy, and domestic life to the highest levels of drama - all on the turn of a phrase. A single word.

David and Zaida. The father-to-daughter, player-to-player relationship is gorgeous.

This is so, so good. Your gen honestly blows me away.
ext_471285: (Default)

[identity profile] flywoman.livejournal.com 2012-01-04 01:52 am (UTC)(link)
I think you may have underestimated the size of your audience.

This is wonderful gen, and yes it's second generation but also first because David is here too, and he's wonderful, and from now on, every time I see a picture of him being adorable with his girls, I am going to think of this fic. I'm not going to quote every amazing line because [livejournal.com profile] nahco3 already took a stab at that, but it was really, really well-written, and I love Zaida as a young female version of David in some ways but also very much her own person, and you made me cry. Twice.
ext_475658: (Default)

[identity profile] distira.livejournal.com 2012-01-04 04:00 am (UTC)(link)
i need to go to bed now so this is my placeholder but you are gonna get an essay lengthed comment from me on the morrow

[identity profile] pronoe.livejournal.com 2012-01-04 09:44 am (UTC)(link)
This is amazing, it's wonderful.
I loved it a lot and when she broke her leg, I sat there with tears in my eyes and just thought 'no, no, this can't be possible'

I love how she wears the 7 after her comeback. :)

[identity profile] the-beanster.livejournal.com 2012-01-04 09:21 pm (UTC)(link)
This is so good! I loved Zaida's relationship with her family, esp David. And the end was absolutely lovely.
ext_475658: (Default)

[identity profile] distira.livejournal.com 2012-01-04 11:34 pm (UTC)(link)
okay are you ready for this?


basically what i want to convey to you is that this fic, this beautiful fic, filled me with such an achy sadness for the state of women's football. even being a female athlete, the situation of professional women's sports isn't something i think about a lot, probably because it would depress me too much, but this just hit home. obviously there was zaida trying so hard to avoid comparisons to her dad, not only to not be her dad, but because, in my interpretation, at any rate, it's a totally different playing field, hers and her fathers, and it was so raw and evident in passages like these-

González probably gets it, but that doesn't make it any better. - of course he gets it, his dad being who he is, but it's not the same, it doesn't make it better, because he's more or less got the same opportunities to be great as his father had, whereas zaida just - doesn't. she can become the most brilliant female striker in the world and it still won't be enough, and the way i read this, that was one of the main reasons she tried so hard to stay away from her father's (enormous) shadow

and "Sorry we're not the men's team," she bites out, voice nearly shaking. "Sorry we don't win everything." - god, just. my heart. how awful it is for her to have so much talent and so much potential and to see firsthand, from her father, that it can be done, everything she wants can happen, but knowing that she won't ever be able to get it just because she's a woman, and how she blames herself a little bit and her dad a little bit, it's just so. it's breathtaking, the way you've written this.

and through it all there's never the inclination that she wishes she was on the mens team, or anything, but this is her chip on her shoulder, this is part of what makes her fight and work so hard. and there's also hints at her thinking that she has to, i dunno, prove to DV that she can be as great as he was without any of the titles. and she knows he'll see it, and she knows he'll be proud of her, but she wants to earn it, and she's never quite sure if she has.

When she remembers that night later, his words are always first. - despite her desire to be different from him and the ways she pulls away, subtly, throughout, there's this, that says so clearly how much she loves him. gorgeous.

[identity profile] looneyluna.livejournal.com 2012-01-05 06:02 am (UTC)(link)
Oh. My. I found myself completely over come when her father tells her it's not over unless you want it to be. I loe the resolve that both Zaida and her father share. The grim determination to always do better. This fic is particularly brilliant with characterization and pacing. I didn't expect the broken leg until the moment Zaida realized that the defender was going to collide with her. There was a brief moment where I hoped it wouldn't happen while knowing it was inevitable at the same time.

The relationship between Zaida and David is really well portrayed. I like how some of their issue is feeling resentful about the impact of his success on her game, it also that she's sometimes just a bratty teenager who wants to roll her eyes at her father. I'm so impressed by how you created a family dynamic between all of the Villas that felt genuine.

I have to ask if you're a former player because you seem to have an innate understanding of what it's like to take the shot, tucking it into a corner. Years out of playing true competitive soccer that feeling is still really familiar to me, and I've never come across a fic that so vividly is able to capture that feeling. Completely blown away by this piece, and really look forward to reading other things by you.

Xx

[identity profile] winterspel.livejournal.com 2012-01-05 09:23 pm (UTC)(link)
"I'm going to miss the World Cup," she says, when she can speak again without crying.

The smile he gives her has a feral edge. It's not a parent's: it's a player's.

"Don't worry," he says. "You'll win the one that counts."


That last line there, it's like a riflecrack in silence. And straight on through to the end. Crying, Mer. At my desk. Crying.

You're right - it's definitely among your best, and it's a story that makes me really proud of you (...and also proud I know you!). ♥♥

*I haaaaaate this new icon selection thing - it doesn't work!*
Edited 2012-01-05 21:24 (UTC)

[identity profile] kfunk22.livejournal.com 2012-01-09 08:34 pm (UTC)(link)
this fic blindsided me. i didn't think that it would be something i'd want to read, but now that i have, i must tell you that i can't imagine a future in which this does not actually happen, word for word.

really well done.

[identity profile] thelichen.livejournal.com 2012-01-12 04:45 am (UTC)(link)
I hardly ever comment on fic and I need to change that so, this? this was incredible. I wish there were more fic like this in fandom, I really do.

(and honestly reading this reminded me of the fierce sense of pride I felt last summer watching the WWC. and the frustration. but mostly the pride.)

that's all - looking forward to reading more from you :)
ext_12082: ([football])

[identity profile] draconic-voices.livejournal.com 2012-01-13 11:01 pm (UTC)(link)
This is amazing. I'm a bit of a sucker for second generation stories in most of my fandoms but I don't think I've ever encountered one which rings so true, both in terms of projected characterisations or realistic possible futures.

The father-daughter dynamic is fantastic and the way that it changes when Zaida is forcibly made aware of his past as a player is great. It's as if for the first time in her life, she can take what she knows about his playing career and move it from the academic (what he won, where he played) to the experienced, if that makes sense.

I love the way that all the tiny details about the realities of being a female footballer, both good and bad, are really well incorporated, so that they flesh out the world without having to add too much description. As someone said in an earlier comment, the realities of being a woman allow Zaida's experiences to parallel her father's and yet be wholly her own.

Anyway, this got a little long, I just wanted to say I loved it :)

[identity profile] zanoranna.livejournal.com 2012-01-15 02:48 am (UTC)(link)
This was brilliant -- and I wish I could say more but my mind is blown. Just, absolute hearts-in-my-eyes for your Zaida.

[identity profile] obbel.livejournal.com 2012-01-16 04:33 am (UTC)(link)
I have goosebumps. This hit all the right buttons for me, and I apologize for not being more articulate. This left me speechless.

Others have said this far better than i can, but I love the portrayal of Zaida's relationship with David. Her struggle to escape his legacy and establish herself on her own terms but still remain faithful to who she is, and being his daughter is a huge part of that... Wow. It was really a joy to read.

[identity profile] san.livejournal.com 2012-01-17 06:12 am (UTC)(link)
ALSKFJOAIGJA.L;KNVOPAIJVLASKGJA!!!!!

I love this so much you have no idea and AGGHH MY EYES WELLING UP WITH TEARS and your Zaida YOUR ZAIDA SHE IS PERFECT and your David HE IS PERFECT TOO and how you wrote her relationship with her papa TEAR MY HEART INTO PIECES AND THEN PATCH IT UP AGAIN and the punchlines OH GOD THE FANTASTIC PUNCHLINES and your beautiful, vivid, detailed, witty writing that makes everyone fall in love with it I swear to god AND THE ENDING IT MAKES ME SQUEAL IN JOY AND NOT STOP GRINNING and for a brief moment I've seriously forgotten it is a fic because it's just so real, it is so awesome.

THANK YOU for sharing this fic (and of course all your other fics). Thank you, thank you, thank you. ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥

[identity profile] the-summer-tree.livejournal.com 2012-01-20 11:36 pm (UTC)(link)
WOW...this is a spectacular piece of writing. I mean, I've read some of your other stuff (and adored it, just so you know, like, I think you're brilliant), but i'm the worst of lurkers, usually, so I'm not sure if I've ever commented on anything you've written. This, though...I couldn't let this pass without saying something. Everything about this is perfection. I love the way the father's names are never actually said, it's always "Zaida's dad" and "Grecia's dad", etc., because it's not about them, and Zaida especially is trying SO hard to make everything not relate back to her father, not knowing that she is more like him, and her trajectory is more like his than she can ever know. I saw in another comment that you didn't think you got across how David feels about Zaida's career, but I think you totally do. I perfectly understood that he would do anything that would help her succeed, especially with his response to her saying she needed to go to America. I really really wanted Villa to explain to her though, make her understand how he knows exactly what she's going through, what his earlier history was, because it's clear that all she sees is the later glory, and not her father's struggle to get there. And on that note, my absolute favorite scene is the two of them in the hospital, and him reassuring her that it doesn't matter what the doctors say, all that matters is what she wants and what she needs, and he'll do anything to help her achieve that. I think this is a fabulous story of triumph, and it made me insanely happy that at the end Zaida realized she didn't have to run away from that name, because he's certainly not judging her, and she doesn't have to be overshadowed by his legend, and nothing else and no one else matters really. And, of course, I love all the cameos. So, just saying thank you for sharing this piece of brilliance with us. It's much appreciated :).

[identity profile] ellamoonie.livejournal.com 2012-01-24 05:54 am (UTC)(link)
Omfg this was absolutely gorgeous. Zaida is a fabulous fabulous character in this AU and this has now become my canon (seriously. So. So. Amazing)

Gen fic doesn't get enough love in this fandom, thanks for sharing this <3

[personal profile] ex_sparksfly744 2012-01-24 06:07 am (UTC)(link)
I am like, bowing down at this and almost crying and mentally fist pumping along with Zaida. THIS. IS. SO. AWESOME.

I love how you can tell immediately that Zaida is David's daughter, she has that same fire and strong will and...Villa-ness, I'm just going to call it :P I love reading strong female protagonists like her, because there just aren't enough of them in football (and basically everything else) these days.

David is such an awesome dad. He's not a coddling, oh-honey-I'll-let-you-braid-my-hair-and-sing-lullabies-to-you father and I never expected him to be and because he's not, because he has moments when he has nothing to say and he wants to reassure his children and yet he doesn't know how to do it, but he loves them so much and that love just clearly shines through. He is just such a wonderful dad - for a second, I was like, oh I wish he was my Dad and then I'm like o_O no, wth, I want him to be my hubby, where did that thought come from? I blame you for writing dad!David so awesomely

She has to take several gulps, for air, to fight down the rest of the tears. "They said I can't -- I can't play -- "

"Bullshit," her father says, and it's so far from what she's expecting that she physically starts.

The doctor said, she feels like she should say, or But they'll have to operate, I might not even-- Instead she doesn't move, waiting, trying to choke back even the smallest shudder: unable, try as she might, to stamp out the wild surge of hope.

"Listen to me," he says into her ear, fierce and savage. "Fuck them. They don't know what the fuck they're talking about. It's not over unless you want it to be."

His arms tighten and he gives her a little shake.

"They don't think it's worth it. They think it's too much, too much money or too much work or too much time. They don't know you. Understand? You can do it. It'll be hard but if you want it, we -- you can do it. I can get the right people, they'll work with you, or -- " He takes a breath.

"Or me," he says. "Every day, if you want. I swear. I swear."


I am just in love with this whole...giant chunk of fic. Amongst many other giant chunks of fic.

The smile he gives her has a feral edge. It's not a parent's: it's a player's. I just love lines like this. And that other one about him not smiling. Because David is a footballer, and that shines through very clearly as well. He's a father and he's a footballer and because football is so much a part of him, sometimes Zaida resents him for it, because people see her as "David Villa's daughter" rather than "Zaida Villa", and yet it is precisely because of all that football in him that he understands Zaida so much. And they can bond in a special way because they both love something so passionately. And I think, that message just really, really shows in this fic with every other line, and I love how you do it. The way you write - you don't have to state something to show it so clearly, and it's just amazing.

btw, is Gonzalez Raul's son? (I'd like to see him dating Zaida and then coming over for dinner with Raul to David's house :P)

sorry for this essay-like comment. I really loved this :) although you really scared me with the Zaida broken leg thing (and it reminded me of David's tibia </3), but hell yeah, she did not back down and she came back as amazing as ever :D Like father, like daughter. and now...off to finish English at 1 in the morning. sigh...why can't I write fanfiction for my English assignments?

[identity profile] buyamattress.livejournal.com 2012-01-27 01:47 am (UTC)(link)
This is amazing, amazing, amazing and it made me cry. I love it.

[identity profile] tinymich.livejournal.com 2012-02-15 05:12 am (UTC)(link)
I am not a good commenter, I am not a good commenter at all, but this fic made me cry, and I thought you needed to know that. She is SO MUCH LIKE HER DAD, I say channeling her mom & grandma, but she is probably a lot like her footy-playing mum too, her mum that people often overlook in their rush to compare her to her dad. She's prickly and a fighter and resents that people think things have come easily to her, because on some level she fears they have because of her name, so every day she works hard so that she will never have to question that about herself.

And the parallel with the broken leg -- oh, of course we know it is to David's childhood injury (and how his own father leaned him up against a wall and kicked balls at him until he could play again), but can we hope and pray that it will prophesy Guaje's recovery from this latest setback too? For him and for Spain - please make it so!

Thanks for this fic. Great stuff. *swallows lump in throat*

Page 1 of 2