
The sun was setting over the quiet soccer pitch. The grass shimmered with a strange perfection, almost as if the world itself had been polished clean. Just hours earlier, the med bed aboard the United States Space Force orbital clinic had finished its work.
Nelly stretched her legs slowly, testing them. She bent down, touched her toes, then jogged a few steps.
โJoeโฆโ she said, half laughing in disbelief. โI feel like Iโm eighteen again.โ
Joe rolled a soccer ball toward her with the inside of his foot.
โThat’s the Tesla tune-up,โ he said with a grin. โFactory reset for the human body.โ
Nelly trapped the ball instinctively and flicked it up with a little juggle. One touch. Two. Three.
She stopped and stared at him.
โHow is this possible?โ
Joe leaned against the goalpost like an old coach watching practice.
โSimple rule,โ he said. โMastery takes ten thousand hours.โ
He pointed toward the field.
โEvery legendโevery musician, every astronaut, every soccer playerโthey all pay the same price.โ
Nelly raised an eyebrow.
โTen thousand hours?โ
Joe nodded.
โAbout three hours a day for ten years. Thatโs the deal.โ
He tapped the side of his head.
โBut now you’ve got something nobody else had.โ
Nelly spun the ball on her finger.
โWhatโs that?โ
Joe gestured upward toward the fading sky where the faint silhouette of the orbital clinic could barely be seen.
โA body that doesn’t break down.โ
Nelly laughed.
โSo what are you saying?โ
Joe walked onto the pitch and took the ball from her feet with a quick steal.
โIโm saying,โ he replied, dribbling past her, โyouโve got time to become dangerous.โ
She chased him immediately, competitive instinct firing.
โOh no you donโt.โ
Joe cut left and right, the ball dancing between his feet.
โTen thousand hours,โ he repeated.
Nelly slid in, stole the ball cleanly, and popped up laughing.
โGood,โ she said, starting a run toward the goal.
โBecause I plan on putting in eleven thousand.โ โฝ






