Gerbil World Cup HQ: England vs. Discworld
Trickery?
Nobody expected this to be close, and for the wrong reasons entirely, everyone was right.
England arrived as favourites, as they always did at this stage, kit pristine, confidence intact, expectation sitting on the squad the way it always sat on England — heavy, familiar, mostly ignored. Discworld arrived without ceremony. Granny Weatherwax walked out first and didn’t so much take the pitch as inform it she’d arrived. Nanny Ogg followed, already talking to the England bench like she’d known them all for decades and hadn’t much cared for any of it. Vimes walked the perimeter once before kickoff, slowly, as if the pitch itself were a crime scene she hadn’t been told about yet. Errol, the dragon, breathed a small, polite plume of smoke by way of a warm-up. The Luggage trundled out last, on its many legs, and sat itself down just behind the goal, for reasons nobody asked about twice.
Death arrived precisely on time, which everybody found, in retrospect, the least surprising thing about the entire afternoon.
Minute 5: England pressed with real purpose — sharp, direct, exactly the football that had got them this far. The ball never quite arrived where it was meant to. Not blocked, not intercepted — simply not there when it should have been, as though the final pass had been quietly reconsidered mid-flight.
Minute 18: Vimes broke up an England move with a tackle so precisely timed it looked less like defending and more like an arrest. “CAUGHT YOU,” she said, mildly, to a midfielder who hadn’t done anything wrong yet but clearly felt she had.
Minute 24: GOAL, Discworld. Errol rose for a corner that should have been comfortably cleared, and simply wasn’t — not through pace or strength, but through the settled inevitability of a dragon who had decided, in advance, that this ball belonged to her. 1-0.
Minute 39: England equalised, briefly and gloriously, a composed finish that had the away end roaring — right up until the assistant referee, an elephant shrew of long standing and no discernible sense of humour, ruled it out. Nobody could say for certain why. Granny Weatherwax hadn’t argued. She hadn’t needed to.
Half-time. Nanny Ogg spent the interval chatting warmly to England’s bench about absolutely nothing relevant, which several of them found more unsettling than any tactical mind games could have managed.
Minute 61: GOAL, Discworld. Death received the ball on the edge of the box, unhurried, and finished with a calm so total that the goalkeeper didn’t dive so much as simply accept it. “IT WAS ALWAYS GOING TO BE THIS ONE,” Death said, to no one in particular, and nobody felt inclined to disagree. 2-0.
Minute 73: England threw everything forward, and for a moment it worked — a flurry of pressure, a goalmouth scramble, the ball loose and begging to be finished. Binky, standing perfectly still in a defensive position nobody remembered assigning her, simply happened to be exactly where it rolled.
Minute 85: GOAL, Discworld. Granny Weatherwax scored the third herself, from distance, without appearing to try especially hard, the way a woman scores a goal she has already decided is happening. 3-0. She did not celebrate. She simply looked, once, toward the England bench, the way weather looks at a picnic it’s about to end.
Full time. 3-0, Discworld.
England’s captain shook every paw with the stunned grace of someone who still couldn’t entirely account for the afternoon. Granny Weatherwax accepted the handshake and said only, “IT WASN’T PERSONAL,” which Death, standing just behind her, confirmed with a single, solemn nod.
Griselda, watching from the touchline, wrote in her notes: “Some results you referee. Some results you simply witness.” She did not elaborate further, and nobody asked her to.
Greta’s line appeared under the glass before the floodlights had finished dimming:
England — out, at last, as it always eventually happens to everyone. Discworld — through, on schedule, and without exception.
https://myrtlelion.substack.com/p/england-vs-discworld