I wouldn’t consider writing a novel by picking a title and then starting with lines 1–3 with no context. That sounds like either a bizarre writing strategy, or an experiment.
Wouldn’t you kinda need to know what you’re going to write about (like… a lot about it) before having any idea what to write for the first line or two? How can you possibly expect us to write opening lines without having any idea what we’re writing about?
It could be “The spiked ball slammed repeatedly into the body of the fallen knight.” or “Gayle idly gazed at the students grudgingly trudging their way to class”, or anything.
And, even if you were well into writing the novel, I’d say it were a mistake to stop yourself on the first line or two. You may as well just put something down (or not) and work out the rest of it before worry about first lines, if you don’t have any particular idea now. I’d say it’s probably better to worry about strong first lines after knowing the rest of the work. Otherwise you can waste a lot of time with nothing to base the first lines on, eventually come up with clever nice-seeming first lines that you get attached to, but find out after writing the rest that the first lines are no longer appropriate, or that they’ve been messing with your whole novel because you’ve been trying to make them all fit your first lines.