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 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. The Ref
"Of course," Arthur replied, his voice a steady anchor in the chaos. In the final minutes, the score was tied
Arthur’s whistle shrieked, slicing through the roar. He pointed to the penalty spot. It was a "vet" move, the kind meant
Tonight was the U-15 regional finals. The crowd was a wall of noise, their boos and cheers pressing in against the 4:3 frame of his vision. Arthur moved with the practiced efficiency of a man who knew exactly where to stand to see everything and be hit by nothing. He kept his notebook in his back pocket, the names of the captains and the tallies for goals already neatly prepared.
The boy chipped the ball over the goalkeeper’s reaching hands. The home crowd went wild. Arthur didn't celebrate; he simply turned toward the halfway line, his mind already reflecting on the call. He knew that later, in the quiet of his car, he’d replay the moment, wondering if his positioning had been perfect or if doubt, a referee’s worst enemy, would creep in.