Student sample for assessment
Written by a Year 10 student in Alice Springs, Northern Territory, Australia.
The apology came on a Tuesday, three years and four months after the thing that required it. Lena read it on her phone in the school car park, leaning against her car with the engine already running. The message was long. Her brother had written it carefully, she could tell. He had acknowledged what he had done in terms that left nothing ambiguous, and he had not asked for anything in return. It was, by any measurable standard, a good apology. She sat in the car for a while without driving anywhere. The problem, she realised, was not what the message said. The message said everything it needed to. The problem was what she felt when she finished reading it, which was not relief or release but something closer to exhaustion, as though the apology had arrived too late to do the thing it was designed to do. The damage had already been arranged around. She had already learned to live in the shape of it. She drove home. She made dinner. She thought about texting back and found that she did not know what she wanted to say, or whether she wanted to say anything yet. The apology was real. She believed that. But believing it was real and knowing what to do with it were, she was discovering, quite different things. Later that night she sat by the window with a cup of tea and thought about forgiveness — what it was, whether it was a decision or a feeling, whether she was capable of it right now, and what it would mean if she chose not to offer it. She did not arrive at an answer. She was not sure she was supposed to. What she knew, sitting there, was that the apology had changed something. She was not sure it had changed the right thing, or enough, or in the direction she would have chosen. But it had moved something in her that had been still for a very long time, and she did not know yet what that meant.