In the final minutes, the score was tied. A forward from the home team broke toward the goal, a defender hot on his heels. Arthur saw it clearly: the defender, realizing he was beaten, used his forearm to subtly shove the attacker. It was a "vet" move, the kind meant to look like accidental contact.
The gym erupted. The away coach, a man Arthur had privately dubbed a "choleric knave," charged the sideline, screaming about a "soft call". Arthur ignored him, a skill he’d honed over decades of being told he was blind, biased, or worse. He didn't react to the insults; he simply focused on the safety of the players and the integrity of the laws. The Ref
The air in the gym was thick with the scent of stale popcorn and nervous sweat, a heavy atmosphere that always made Arthur feel slightly claustrophobic. At sixty-four, Arthur was "The Ref"—a title he wore with a mix of pride and weary resignation. He’d spent forty years policing the boundaries of games, a job that often felt more like being a human lightning rod for every parent’s frustration and every coach’s ambition. In the final minutes, the score was tied
As the young forward stepped up for the free-kick, he looked at Arthur, a flicker of doubt in his eyes. "I can take this, right?" the boy whispered. It was a "vet" move, the kind meant