He had been in England for three months now, but he still woke up every morning angry. It wasn’t her fault, and he wasn’t mad at
her, but he was mad at himself. He was mad at the situation. He couldn’t understand why things had to
be the way they were. Why did the tabloids report every time someone took a piss? Why were fans so eager to match him with models, playing the weirdest type of “shipping†game. He wanted a life. He wanted
his own life, back in Moscow, with Mihaela. That was over now. He’d lost that, and here he was in the United Kingdom, miles away from home, demoted to second string again and forced to work his way back up. Well, he would. He would do what it took because he wasn’t dead yet, no matter how much he felt that way on the inside.
He was at the gym now, on a day off from the pitch work. He had run on the treadmill for an hour already, but he really just needed to hit something. He had taken up boxing when he first got to England, as a way of letting off some steam, but he liked it. He liked feeling his fists connect. It was a little safer to box in a ring than knock someone’s teeth out in a street fight. Lev was used to scrapping and street fighting, but he had a reputation to keep up now, and he wasn’t about to lose his job over a drunken bar brawl.
He saw a man over near the ring, someone he’d seen practicing before with someone a little more his own size, but Lev was nothing if not ambitious, and wanted a real challenge. He wanted to go as hard as he could, and he didn’t care if the other guy blacked his eye. In fact, that subtle ache might make him feel like he was back at Durmstrang. He was tired of getting blackout drunk every night to quell the rage. He wanted to release his tension the old-fashioned way.
Fighting, like fucking, was a release for Lev. It always had been, and that was why he was so vocal and combative in his day-to-day life. He liked asking for a fight. If there was no girl to warm his bed, a man to warm his knuckles sounded like the perfect thing.
“Yo.†He said, moving up to the clearly older man. If Lev had any self-preservation left, he would have stopped when he noticed all the tattoos. He nodded at him in greeting. “I’ve seen you in the ring.†He started. “Fight me.†He said, English heavily accented and the word selection not his best. Spar, he meant. Or did he?
@Reed Stricklander