The locker room door clicked shut behind him, muffling the fading echoes of celebration and confusion alike.
Demien walked the narrow hallway alone, a towel draped around his shoulders, matchday gear neat despite the sweat still drying against his skin. Overhead, fluorescent lights buzzed with a constant, sterile hum.
The press conference room waited at the end of the hall — a box of stale air, folding chairs packed too close, bodies even closer.
He didn't slow.
Two media officials stood by the door, murmuring between themselves. They straightened instinctively as he approached, but Demien didn't spare them a glance. No handler. No PR shield. Just him.
As he stepped inside, a dozen heads swiveled. Cameras clicked softly. Reporters shifted in their chairs, notebooks perched, recorders poised on thin plastic tables.
Bright lights flooded the room, too harsh, too clinical. Heat clung to the air, a reminder that outside, Monaco was still bleeding summer.
Demien crossed to the table without breaking stride.Took his seat.Adjusted the mic once with two fingers.
Silence throbbed for a beat too long, before the first question darted out.
"Coach Laurent," an older journalist near the aisle started, voice brisk. "Your reaction to the result?"
Demien leaned back slightly in his chair, fingertips tapping once against the wood before answering.
"A win is a win. Always work to be done."
Professional. Clean. No bait for easy headlines.
Another voice, female this time, closer to the front.
"Thoughts on Morientes' performance today?"
He nodded once, measured.
"Solid. Clinical when it mattered."
Pens scratched against paper. A few low murmurs.
Someone near the back piped up — young, eager.
"And the team's overall fitness?"
"Early days. Building the base," Demien replied, tone clipped, dismissing the soft questions with surgical precision.
The rhythm settled — but only for a heartbeat.
Then the weight shifted.
A sharper voice broke through from the middle rows — a senior journalist, seasoned enough not to waste time.
"Coach," he began, tone edged in polite skepticism, "the team seemed... different today. Was the tactical change planned, or was it a reaction to Lugano's shape?"
Demien tilted his head a fraction.Felt the subtle tightening in the room.Felt the knives being sharpened.
He leaned forward slowly, letting the tension breathe for half a second longer.
"Small adjustments," he said evenly. "Efficiency over tradition."
A ripple ran through the chairs — tiny glances exchanged, pens poised higher now.
The room smelled blood. Or thought it did.
Another question, faster this time.
"Coach, why such radical spacing between midfield and attack?"
Demien blinked once, expression unchanging.
"We control space. Not chase it."
Another hand shot up — aggressive now, sensing momentum.
"Are you abandoning Monaco's traditional identity? The compact blocks, the transition play?"
The hum of the cameras grew louder.
Demien's answer came without hesitation.
"Evolution doesn't abandon. It adapts."
A few more flashes popped. Some reporters scribbled notes furiously; others watched him with narrowed eyes, waiting for cracks.
Another journalist, older, pressed in, voice low and loaded.
"Is this just preseason experimentation... or is this the real direction Monaco's heading?"
Demien paused.
Let the question hang there, vibrating against the walls.
Finally, he said:
"You either lead... or follow."
Not a boast.Not a threat.A simple fact, laid bare.
Murmurs passed between seats now, less guarded.
He caught the flicker of a hand waving impatiently at the edge of the scrum — a younger journalist, barely old enough to shave cleanly, voice cracking with eagerness.
"With respect, coach," the kid blurted, too fast, "Monaco fans... they're worried. They're booing already. They're asking..."He hesitated, then pushed:"What team are we even watching anymore?""Is there a risk you're losing them?"
The question cut sharper than the others.
Not because it was cruel.Because it was honest.
The room froze.
No pens scratched.No keyboards tapped.Only the whine of an overworked ceiling fan filled the gap.
Demien sat back slowly, letting the silence stretch just long enough for discomfort to grow.
His right hand drifted up.Tapped the microphone once, a soft, deliberate pop of sound that snapped every eye tighter onto him.
Then — a faint smile.Not friendly. Not mocking.Just a small, cold curve of the lips that didn't quite reach his eyes.
His voice, when it came, was steady.
"Adapt…"A heartbeat's pause."...or fall behind."
No more.
No justification.No elaboration.
The words dropped into the center of the room like a stone into still water.
A few reporters shifted awkwardly in their chairs.
Cameras flashed again, desperate to catch the faint smile before it slipped away.
Demien pushed his chair back with a low scrape against the floor, the sound slicing through the sudden clatter of renewed typing and whispered conversations.
He stood, adjusted his jacket at the cuffs, and walked out without a single backward glance.
The door clicked shut behind him.
And the war, properly, had begun.