Cinematic 2.39:1. Night. A narrow street in Boyle Heights, Los Angeles — wet asphalt reflecting neon

Prompt

Cinematic 2.39:1. Night. A narrow street in Boyle Heights, Los Angeles — wet asphalt reflecting neon signs in Spanish, a lone streetlamp flickering above a makeshift goal spray-painted onto a brick wall. A teenage boy, maybe 16, Mexico kit under an oversized denim jacket, stands 20 yards out. Around him: nothing. Empty street. Silence except for distant traffic on the freeway. He places the ball. Steps back. The streetlamp flickers — once, twice — and dies. Total darkness for one breath. Then: floodlights slam on from every direction. The wet street is now SoFi Stadium at full roar — 100,000 people on their feet, the boy still in the exact same stance, ball at his feet, same jacket, same worn boots. The stadium materialized around him, not the other way around. He didn't go to the World Cup. The World Cup came to his street. He runs up. Strikes. The ball bends in slow motion — curling, curling — past a diving goalkeeper and into the top corner. Net ripples. Crowd detonates. Cut to black on the peak of the roar. One line appears: "Tu calle. Tu mundial." — Your street. Your World Cup.

@ChillaiKalan__9

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