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Leo and Maya: Integrity – The Broken Vase

Leo and Maya were selling lemonade outside Maya’s house. Business was slow. Leo got bored.

“I’ll be right back,” he said. “I’m going to practice kicking my new soccer ball against your garage door.”

Maya shook her head. “My mom says no soccer near the house. The garage has windows.”

“I’ll be careful,” Leo called over his shoulder.

Thump. Thump. Thump. The ball hit the garage door perfectly. Leo grinned. Then he kicked too hard.

CRASH.

A small basement window was broken. Shards of glass sparkled on the dirt.

Leo froze. His heart pounded. Nobody was outside except him. Maya was still at the lemonade stand. Her mom was inside cooking.

Leo had a choice.

He could run back and say nothing. The wind could have done it. A stray bird. Nobody would know.

Instead, he walked slowly to the lemonade stand. His voice was very small.

“Maya,” he said. “I broke your basement window.”

Maya’s eyes went wide. She ran to look. When she came back, she didn’t yell.

“We have to tell my mom,” she said.

“I know,” Leo whispered.

They went inside together. Maya’s mom was stirring soup. Leo told her everything—the soccer ball, the boredom, the crash. His hands were shaking.

Maya’s mom turned off the stove. She knelt down.

“Leo,” she said, “that window cost money to fix. And you chose to play near the house after Maya told you not to. There will be a consequence. You’ll help me clean up the glass safely, and you’ll do extra chores to pay for the new window.”

Leo nodded. His eyes were wet.

“But,” her mom continued, “you came and told me the truth when you could have hidden it. That takes courage. That’s called integrity. And integrity is more precious than any window.”

She gave him a hug. Leo cried a little. Then he swept up every piece of glass while Maya held the dustpan.

That night, Leo’s mom asked why he was so tired. He told her the whole story again—even though he could have pretended nothing happened.

His mom smiled. “Integrity means you’re the same person in the dark as you are in the light.”

Leo thought about that. He thought about the broken window, and how easy it would have been to lie. But he also thought about how heavy the lie would have felt in his chest forever.

“The truth is lighter,” he said to Maya the next day.

Maya nodded. “Even when it’s harder.”

They shook hands. Partners in integrity.