The Broken Ruler
On Thursday morning, Room 5 was busy with a poster task about local habitats. Paper rustled, chairs scraped softly and rulers clicked against desks as students measured borders for their titles. Lila and Arjun were sharing a table near the window. Arjun was carefully drawing a straight line for the heading on their poster when Lila reached across for the glue stick.
Her elbow caught the edge of his ruler.
It slipped off the desk, landed on the floor and, before either of them could grab it, the leg of Lila’s chair rolled onto it with a sharp snap.
Both children froze.
Arjun picked up the ruler and turned it over in his hands. A piece had broken away near the middle, leaving a jagged crack. His mouth tightened. ‘I needed this for the border,’ he said quietly. ‘The lines won’t match now.’
Lila felt a hot, sinking twist in her stomach. At first she wanted to say, ‘It was an accident,’ and leave it there. But when she saw Arjun looking at the broken ruler and then at the half-finished poster, she realised the problem was not only the ruler. Her mistake had interrupted his work and made the next part harder.
She took a breath. ‘Arjun, I’m really sorry,’ she said. ‘I knocked your ruler off the desk when I reached for the glue stick, and then my chair rolled over it. I can see it’s messed up the border you were measuring. That wasn’t fair on you.’
Arjun looked at her, still disappointed, but listening.
Lila kept going. ‘I should have moved more carefully. You can use my ruler right now, and at lunchtime I’ll go with you to the office and ask if there’s a spare in the stationery tub. If there isn’t, I’ll bring one from home tomorrow.’
The tight look on Arjun’s face softened a little. He did not smile straight away, but he nodded. ‘Okay,’ he said. ‘I just wanted to finish this part before recess.’
Lila handed him her ruler. Then, instead of hovering awkwardly, she held the poster steady while he drew the next line. ‘Tell me if you want me to mark the corners first,’ she said.
‘That would help,’ Arjun replied.
They worked more slowly after that, but the poster began to look neat again. At lunchtime, Lila walked with Arjun to the office. Mrs Blake checked the stationery tub and found a spare ruler with blue numbers along the side.
When they returned, Lila placed it on the table. ‘Here,’ she said. ‘This one is for you.’
Arjun ran his finger along the edge and smiled properly this time. ‘Thanks,’ he said. ‘And thanks for fixing it instead of pretending it didn’t matter.’
Lila let out the breath she had been holding. ‘I’m glad,’ she said.
By the end of the lesson, the border was finished, the title was centred and the broken ruler was no longer the biggest thing on the table.
Check your vocabulary knowledge
- jagged adj.
- rough and uneven, with sharp broken edges
- interrupted v.
- stopped something before it was finished
- disappointed adj.
- sad because something did not go as hoped
- hovering v.
- staying close by without really helping
- stationery n.
- writing and school supplies such as paper and rulers