Chapter 1: Chapter 1 — The Boy From Akwa Ibom
The first thing Sean Cole Nelson learned about dreams was that poor people were allowed to have them...
...but never too loudly.
In Akwa Ibom, dreams were dangerous when they became bigger than reality.
And Sean’s dream was massive.
Football.
Not local football.
Not roadside tournaments where old men shouted tactical advice from plastic chairs while betting on soft drinks.
Not academy trials that ended with broken promises and transportation problems.
Europe.
That was the dream.
The real stadiums.
The roaring crowds.
The Champions League lights.
The money.
The respect.
The feeling of stepping onto grass so perfect it looked unreal.
Sean wanted all of it.
And sometimes that terrified him.
Because boys from streets like his were not supposed to think that far.
"COLE!"
The shout echoed across the dusty field.
Sean ignored it.
The ball rolled toward him quickly, bouncing unevenly across the rough ground.
Three defenders closed him down immediately.
Too slow.
Sean’s eyes sharpened.
His body moved instinctively.
One touch.
A quick feint.
The first defender stumbled.
The second lunged recklessly.
Sean shifted the ball behind his standing leg and spun away smoothly.
The boys around the field exploded.
"Ahhh!"
"That’s dirty!"
"Cole, calm down!"
Sean accelerated instantly.
The dry field cracked slightly beneath his boots as he sprinted toward goal.
Only one defender remained.
Bigger.
Stronger.
Older.
The kind of player that usually relied on intimidation.
The defender smirked confidently.
"You’re not passing me today."
Sean didn’t respond.
He watched the defender’s stance carefully.
Weight distribution.
Foot angle.
Balance.
Then—
He attacked.
Fast.
The defender committed left.
Sean shifted right.
Then immediately dragged the ball back across with the outside of his foot.
The defender lost balance completely.
Sean burst past him.
Now only the goalkeeper remained.
No hesitation.
Sean struck the ball low.
GOAL.
The net shook violently.
The entire roadside field erupted instantly.
"GOALLLLLL!"
"Madness!"
"Cole is too good!"
"No, this boy is cheating!"
Sean slowed his run, breathing heavily.
Sweat rolled down his forehead beneath the harsh afternoon sun.
But inside him...
Everything felt calm.
Football always did that to him.
No matter how noisy life became, football simplified things.
Win your duel.
Find space.
Punish mistakes.
That was all.
Simple.
And maybe that was why he loved it so much.
Because life outside football was never simple.
"You’re still wasting your talent here."
Sean turned toward his closest friend, Tunde, who approached while shaking his head.
Tunde picked up the ball and tossed it toward Sean.
"At this point, even scouts should be finding you."
Sean caught the ball carefully.
"Scouts don’t come here."
"That’s the problem."
Sean remained silent.
Because they both knew the truth.
Talent was everywhere in Nigeria.
Opportunity was not.
Especially not for boys without money.
Without agents.
Without connections.
Without rich parents.
Sean came from a normal family.
His father worked as a civil servant.
His mother worked endlessly to keep the household stable.
Everything in their home depended on careful budgeting and sacrifice.
There was no extra money for elite football camps.
No expensive showcase tournaments.
No European trials.
Only dreams.
And dreams alone rarely changed lives.
"Sean!"
This time the voice came from the roadside.
His younger cousin sprinted toward the field while trying to catch his breath.
"Aunty said you should come home now."
The boys around him laughed instantly.
"Your mother has found you again."
"She always knows where football is involved."
Sean sighed dramatically.
"That woman has football-detection powers."
More laughter followed.
But Sean smiled slightly.
Despite everything, moments like this mattered.
These dusty fields.
These loud afternoons.
These small victories.
Because deep down...
He feared one thing more than failure.
Being forgotten.
The walk home was quiet.
The streets of Akwa Ibom buzzed with normal life around him.
Street vendors shouted prices.
Children chased tires barefoot.
Motorcycles sped recklessly through traffic.
Music blasted from small shops.
The smell of roasted corn and fried plantain drifted through the humid air.
It was home.
Messy.
Loud.
Alive.
Sean adjusted the old backpack hanging from his shoulder.
Inside it sat his most valuable possession:
A pair of worn football boots.
Not expensive.
Not modern.
But precious.
He cleaned them more carefully than some people cleaned their phones.
Because to Sean...
Those boots represented possibility.
Their home stood inside an old government residential area. freewebnøvel.coɱ
The buildings were aging but maintained carefully.
Simple life.
Middle-class survival.
Nothing luxurious.
But dignified.
Sean opened the gate quietly.
Immediately—
"COLE NELSON!"
His mother’s voice exploded from inside the house.
Sean winced.
"Caught already."
He stepped inside carefully.
Mrs Nelson stood near the kitchen entrance holding a cooking spoon like a weapon.
A strict woman.
Sharp eyes.
Sharp tongue.
But beneath all of that—
Love.
The exhausting kind of love only mothers carried.
"You went to that field again."
"Yes, Mum."
"You said you were reading."
"I read this morning."
"You read football."
Sean tried not to laugh.
"That’s still reading."
Mrs Nelson pointed the spoon toward him.
"Don’t start."
Sean finally laughed softly.
And despite herself...
His mother smiled briefly before hiding it again.
"You came home looking like you fought soldiers."
"It was only football."
"That football will not feed you if you fail school."
The words were familiar.
Repeated countless times over the years.
Not because she hated football.
But because she feared disappointment.
Too many Nigerian boys chased football dreams and returned with nothing.
No career.
No education.
No direction.
Parents learned to fear ambition when reality kept crushing it.
The front door opened.
Mr Nelson entered quietly.
Tie loosened slightly.
Shoulders heavy with fatigue.
Government work paid little but drained everything.
Sean respected his father deeply because the man complained very little despite carrying enormous pressure.
Mr Nelson placed his bag down slowly before sitting.
"You trained again?"
"Yes, sir."
Silence followed briefly.
Then his father nodded.
"Good."
Mrs Nelson looked at him sharply.
"Good? That’s all you’ll say?"
Mr Nelson smiled faintly.
"He has talent."
"Talent does not pay bills."
"No," Mr Nelson agreed calmly.
"But talent wasted becomes regret."
The room quieted slightly.
Sean looked at his father carefully.
Because moments like this were rare.
His father usually avoided emotional conversations.
Mr Nelson looked toward Sean again.
"If you truly want football..."
Pause.
"Then become undeniable."
Sean felt those words settle deeply inside him.
Become undeniable.
Not lucky.
Not hopeful.
Undeniable.
That evening changed everything.
At the time, Sean didn’t know it.
He thought it was just another rich-people gathering his parents were forcing him to attend.
Nothing more.
But fate rarely announced itself politely.
"Cole, wear something decent."
Mrs Nelson adjusted his shirt for the third time.
"Mum, I’m not meeting the president."
"You’re meeting important people."
Sean sighed.
The estate they entered looked unreal.
Massive mansions.
Luxury vehicles.
Private security.
Perfect roads.
Even the air somehow felt expensive.
Sean immediately felt out of place.
His clothes were clean.
But not elite.
His shoes were polished.
But old. ƒrēewebnoѵёl.cσm
And suddenly he became painfully aware of class differences.
The people here spoke differently.
Moved differently.
Laughed differently.
This was wealth.
Real wealth.
Not survival money.
Not salary money.
Power money.
Inside the mansion, Sean felt invisible.
Politicians mingled beside businessmen.
Foreign guests spoke in smooth accents.
Expensive watches flashed beneath golden lights.
Everything around him screamed status.
Sean hated how small it made him feel.
So he moved toward the balcony area quietly.
Less noise.
Less pressure.
Then he noticed her.
A girl stood near the railing overlooking the garden.
Beautiful.
Elegant.
Calm.
Her black dress contrasted sharply against the warm lights behind her.
But what caught Sean’s attention wasn’t beauty.
It was discomfort.
Three rich-looking young men surrounded her.
Talking loudly.
Standing too close.
One of them grabbed her wrist lightly.
The girl’s expression changed immediately.
That was enough.
Sean moved before fully thinking.
"Problem?"
The group turned instantly.
The rich boy holding her wrist frowned.
"And who are you?"
Sean’s gaze dropped toward the hand.
"Someone telling you to let go."
The atmosphere changed immediately.
Tension spread.
One of the boys laughed mockingly.
"You know whose house this is?"
"No," Sean answered calmly.
"And I don’t care."
The rich boy stepped forward aggressively.
"You should care."
Before things escalated—
A deeper voice interrupted.
"He should."
Everyone froze.
Sean turned slowly.
A tall older man approached with controlled authority.
Sharp suit.
Cold composure.
The kind of man who didn’t need to raise his voice to dominate a room.
The entire atmosphere shifted around him.
Even the arrogant boys immediately stepped back.
Sean noticed that instantly.
Power.
Real power.
The older man’s gaze moved carefully across the scene before settling on Sean.
"You intervened for my daughter."
Daughter?
Sean glanced toward the girl again.
She looked relieved now.
The older man extended his hand slightly.
"Raymond Bassey."
Sean shook it carefully.
"Sean Cole Nelson."
Raymond studied him quietly.
Not casually.
Carefully.
Analyzing.
Then his eyes lowered toward the football boots hanging from Sean’s backpack.
"Footballer?"
Sean blinked.
"Yes."
"What position?"
"Wing."
"Academy?"
"No academy."
That answer surprised Raymond slightly.
Because athletic posture could not be faked.
And Sean carried himself naturally like a footballer.
Interesting.
Very interesting.
The girl finally spoke.
"Thank you."
Sean looked at her properly for the first time.
And for a brief moment...
Everything slowed.
She was stunning.
But more dangerous than that—
She looked intelligent.
Observant.
The kind of person who noticed details.
"I’m Isabella," she said softly.
Sean nodded once.
"Sean."
A strange silence followed briefly between them.
Not awkward.
Just... noticeable.
Raymond interrupted it.
"You said you don’t belong to any academy?"
"No, sir."
"Would you like to visit one?"
Sean blinked slowly.
"What?"
"Bassey Elite Football Academy."
The name hit instantly.
Sean knew it.
Everybody serious about football knew it.
Bassey Elite Academy had connections to European clubs.
Scouts visited regularly.
Talents got exported abroad.
It wasn’t just an academy.
It was a doorway.
And suddenly—
For the first time in years—
Sean felt destiny moving.
Later that night...
Sean lay on his bed staring at the ceiling.
Sleep refused to come.
Everything replayed repeatedly inside his mind.
The mansion.
Raymond Bassey.
Isabella.
The academy invitation.
It felt unreal.
His room was quiet except for the sound of an old ceiling fan rotating slowly.
Then—
Ding.
Sean sat upright instantly.
A glowing blue screen appeared directly before his eyes.
His heartbeat nearly stopped.
"What the hell...?"
The screen expanded smoothly.
Lines of glowing text appeared one after another.
[FOOTBALL MONARCH SYSTEM ACTIVATED]
[HOST DETECTED: SEAN COLE NELSON]
[INITIALIZING...]
Sean stared in complete shock.
His breathing became uneven.
The screen continued.
[BEGINNING PLAYER ANALYSIS]
Speed: 61
Dribbling: 67
Passing: 55
Vision: 58
Football IQ: 63
Physical Resistance: 49
Composure: 60
Sean touched the air instinctively.
Nothing.
The screen floated unaffected.
Real.
Impossible...
...but real.
Then another notification appeared.
[FIRST OPPORTUNITY DETECTED]
[ELITE FOOTBALL PATH AVAILABLE]
[SYSTEM SYNCHRONIZATION STARTING]
Sean’s pulse accelerated.
A strange feeling spread through his chest.
Not fear.
Not excitement.
Something deeper.
Something darker.
Ambition.
Because suddenly...
The distance between Akwa Ibom and Europe no longer felt impossible.
And somewhere deep inside him—
A terrifying thought appeared.
If this system was real...
Then maybe...
Just maybe...
He was no longer meant to remain ordinary.