PROLOGUE:-

The air hung heavy with the sting of disappointment, a tangible force pressing down on young Lorenze. His father, a man built more of bone and duty than warmth, loomed over him, his voice a thunderclap in the sparsely furnished hall.

"Disappointment! That's all you bring to this table, Lorenze! Look at your exam results! A mockery they are! While your uncles, shining stars all of them, climb the corporate ladder, you wallow in mediocrity!"

Lorenze, barely sixteen, felt his head sink lower. Shame prickled his skin, hotter than any summer sun. A single tear, a traitor escaping his tightly shut eyes, traced a path down his pale cheek, glistening like a fallen star on the faded blue carpet.

His mother, a woman whose once vibrant green eyes now held the dull ache of unfulfilled dreams, stood on the periphery of the storm. A silent plea flickered in her gaze, a target aimed at both her husband and her son, begging for a ceasefire in this war of expectations.

But the storm raged on.

"And what is this about that girl, Amelia, from school? Is that what's distracting you? Filling your head with frivolous notions instead of building a future?" His father's voice, usually a controlled baritone, now scraped with a raw edge of fury.

Lorenze flinched. Amelia, with her cascading golden hair and smile that could light up a room, was a secret he had guarded fiercely. A secret that now lay exposed, bleeding under his father's harsh gaze.

He dared a glance upwards, his voice barely a whisper when it finally emerged. "It's not frivolous, Father. I… I care about her."

A humorless scoff escaped his father's lips. "Care? You, a boy on the precipice of manhood, understand care? This isn't some playground fancy, Lorenze. This is life, and life demands ambition, not daydreams!"

The younger brother, huddled by the window, a silent observer to the storm brewing within their home, turned ever so slightly. His wide brown eyes, usually filled with a mischievous glint, held a flicker of fear now. He was young, yet he understood the weight of his father's disapproval.

Lorenze, a spark of defiance igniting within the well of shame, lifted his chin a fraction. "I have ambition, Father. Just… not the kind you see." His voice, though small, held a tremor of newfound resolve.

A tense silence descended upon the room. His father's face, a mask of controlled fury moments ago, contorted in surprise. His mother, her breath catching in her throat, held her gaze steady on Lorenze, a flicker of something akin to pride dancing in its depths.

"Explain yourself," his father finally growled, the storm shifting, waiting to see if these were mere empty words or the beginnings of a rebellion.

Lorenze swallowed, his throat suddenly dry. He didn't have the answers yet, only a nascent ambition, a yearning for something beyond the sterile walls of their life. But for the first time, he dared to look his father in the eye, a single tear still clinging to his cheek, a testament to the fight within.

"I… I don't know exactly what it is yet," he stammered, "but I want to make a difference. Not with numbers and charts, but in a way that matters. A way that leaves a mark."

A cold, cruel smile twisted his father's lips. He leaned closer, his voice dropping to a low growl that sent shivers down Lorenze's spine. "A mark, you say? A dreamer's ambition. Let me tell you something, son. Without me, without the world I've built, your grand dreams are nothing but dust in the wind. Your precious 'difference' will land you begging in the streets, with your fancy ideas and empty pockets!"

Lorenze's tear, a glistening testament to the storm within, had dried on his cheek, leaving a salty residue of defiance. His father's words, each syllable a viper's hiss, echoed in the cavernous silence of the hall. "Begging in the streets," he spat, the venom lacing his voice a stark contrast to the quiet desperation in Lorenze's heart.

Lorenze, his jaw clenched tight, met his father's gaze head-on. The boy who once yearned for approval had vanished, replaced by a young man, raw and uncertain, yet resolute. "Maybe," he said, his voice surprisingly steady despite the tremor in his soul, "but at least I'll be making my own way. Even if it means starting from nothing."

The silence that followed stretched on, a suffocating weight pressing down on them all. His mother, her once vibrant green eyes now dull with unshed tears, stood frozen, a silent observer caught in the crossfire. His younger brother, no longer a mere observer but a participant in the emotional maelstrom, emerged from his corner by the window. His wide, brown eyes, usually filled with a mischievous glint, now brimmed with unshed tears that mirrored his mother's.

A flicker of something akin to pain crossed his father's face, a fleeting glimpse of vulnerability beneath the mask of fury. But it was quickly extinguished, replaced by a cold finality. "This house," he began, his voice laced with a steely resolve, "runs on a certain order. There's no room for dreamers here." He paused, his gaze sweeping over Lorenze with a chilling indifference. "If you think you can chase your phantoms on an empty stomach, then the door is right there."

Lorenze's breath hitched. The sting of his father's words was a fresh wound, raw and bleeding. Yet, amidst the pain, a strange sense of liberation, a fragile butterfly taking flight, bloomed within him. He wouldn't be a pawn on their chessboard any longer.

"It's not about handouts," Lorenze stammered, a spark of defiance igniting in his chest. "I want to build something myself, something that matters."

His defiance was met with a thunderous slap that echoed through the hall. Lorenze's head snapped to the side, a ringing filling his ears. Tears welled up in his eyes, blurring his vision. But the defiance refused to die.

"Don't you talk back to me!" his father roared, his face contorted with rage. "You'll do what I say, under this roof, you understand?"

"No," Lorenze choked out, his voice barely a whisper. "I won't."

Another slap, faster, sharper, sent a jolt of pain through Lorenze's cheek. A metallic tang filled his mouth. He tasted blood. Shame burned in his chest, a searing counterpoint to the defiance that flickered like a stubborn flame.

"You think love is more important than success?" his father bellowed, his spittle landing on Lorenze's face. "Love won't put food on the table, boy! It won't get you a decent job! It's a childish fantasy that will leave you on the streets!"

A sob escaped Lorenze's lips, raw and uncontrolled. But even as tears streamed down his face, a new resolve hardened his gaze. He wouldn't let his father break him. He wouldn't let his dreams be extinguished.

"Maybe not," he said, his voice thick with emotion, "but at least I'll know I followed my heart."

A final, bone-crushing slap sent Lorenze stumbling back. The world tilted on its axis. He tasted blood and copper, a metallic tang that mingled with the salty sting of tears. But through the haze of pain and humiliation, a single thought blazed bright: he was done.

He turned towards his mother, searching for a flicker of support, a word of encouragement. But her eyes, filled with a heartbreaking mixture of fear and pride, held no answers. With a choked sob that escaped her trembling lips, she looked away.

His gaze darted to his younger brother, a silent plea hanging in the air. But the boy, overwhelmed by the emotional onslaught, could only offer a tearful smile, a silent vow of unwavering loyalty despite their circumstances.

Lorenze's heart ached with a loneliness he had never known before. He was adrift, cast out into the unknown with nothing but his tattered dreams and a burning desire to prove his father wrong.

He took a step back, a silent farewell. The familiar walls of the house, once a symbol of security, now felt like a suffocating cage. With a final glance at the silent figures, their faces etched with a mixture of emotions, he turned towards the doorway.

As he grasped the cold metal knob, a single tear, glistening like a fallen star, traced a path down his cheek. It wasn't a tear of defeat, but a tear of resolve. He was leaving behind the life they had planned for him, but he was also taking a step towards a future that was his own. The weight of the oak door creaked open, a symbolic representation of a life forever changed. He stepped out, the world a vast unknown waiting to be explored, and with a final, choked sob, he slammed the door shut, leaving behind the echoes of a broken family and the embers of a smoldering dream.