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Chapter 1 - Chapter 1 – The Boy from Dronen

The morning light drifted across the quiet town of Dronen, a small suburb in the heart of Beldora where the streets curled like ribbons between rows of brick houses. Mist lingered over the rooftops, and the smell of damp soil mixed with the faint aroma of burning firewood from chimneys. Inside one of those homes, a young boy named Kellan De Vries sat by the window, his small fingers tracing invisible shapes on the glass as he watched the world outside with an unusual calm.

Kellan was not like most boys his age. Where others shouted, ran, and stumbled through games of make-believe, he preferred silence and observation. His father, Henrik, a logistics manager who often traveled for work, liked to say that Kellan could see things before they happened. His mother, Alena, who had grown up in distant lands before settling in Beldora, believed her son's stillness hid a world of thoughts. She often caught him staring at a ball in the garden, studying it as if it were a mystery waiting to be solved.

By the time he was four, that curiosity had turned into something more. The ball became his constant companion. He would spend hours striking it against the garden wall, over and over, each repetition a small experiment. He tested how it bounced, how it curved, how it rolled on wet grass or dry earth. The neighbors sometimes joked that they could tell the time by the sound of that ball hitting the bricks — a steady rhythm that never seemed to end.

When Kellan joined the local youth club, VV Dronen, his coaches noticed something immediately. He didn't play like the others. He didn't chase after the ball aimlessly or kick it with frustration. Instead, he moved quietly, patiently, reading the game before anyone else could. He knew where to stand, when to pass, when to wait. Even at six, there was a strange sense of purpose in his movements. "That boy," his first coach once told Henrik, "sees the field like a chessboard."

Home life in Dronen was simple but disciplined. Henrik's job kept him away for long stretches, and Alena managed the household with quiet strength. She encouraged Kellan to express himself through football, but she also made sure he learned humility. "If you ever forget where you came from," she told him, "you'll lose what makes you different." Those words stayed with him, carved deep in his mind like the lines on the walls he used to strike the ball against.

Every weekend, the fields near Dronen filled with laughter, shouting, and the crunch of cleats on grass. Parents stood wrapped in scarves, sipping coffee as the young teams battled under the pale sun. Kellan was always the smallest player on the field, his hair catching light like copper threads. But what he lacked in size, he made up for in precision. He could find space where none seemed to exist. His passes cut through defenders like threads pulled taut across the pitch. And when he scored, he rarely celebrated. He just turned back to his position, calm, collected, already thinking about what would come next.

His teammates didn't always understand him. To them, he was quiet to the point of mystery. He didn't join their after-match games or chatter in the locker room. But when they played, they trusted him instinctively. He was the one who could find a pass when everyone else saw chaos. His silence was not shyness — it was focus.

At home, he kept a small notebook beside his bed. Each night, he scribbled notes in uneven handwriting: Control before speed. Always know where the ball will land. Think first, move later. It was a private ritual, one he never showed anyone. Alena would sometimes peek into his room and watch him writing under the dim yellow glow of a bedside lamp. She never interrupted. She understood that her son was building something invisible but powerful — a way of thinking, a philosophy that reached far beyond the simple act of playing football.

By the time he turned eight, whispers about the quiet boy from Dronen began to spread beyond the small town. Scouts who came to watch local matches started asking about him. His composure, vision, and intelligence were rare for a child so young. When his coach told him that a bigger academy had shown interest, Kellan didn't smile or jump in excitement. He simply nodded and said, "Then I need to get better."

On the final day of that season, under soft spring rain, Kellan stood alone on the pitch after everyone had left. The grass shimmered under the droplets, and the world around him felt still. He closed his eyes, imagining the future — larger fields, stronger opponents, brighter lights. Somewhere deep inside, he knew this was only the beginning. The rhythm of the ball against the wall had prepared him for this. The boy from Dronen was ready to take his first step into a much bigger world.

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