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English Short Stories

The Missing Football

The Missing Football

Two young Indian boys facing each other on a football ground, story about honesty and false accusation
Reading Time: 2 minutes

Dhruv’s football went missing on Wednesday. Not just any football — the new one his father had bought him for his birthday, the one with the autograph sticker he’d pressed on so carefully.

He left it by the water tank during practice, same as always. When practice ended, it was gone.

“Someone took it,” he told Coach Sameer, voice tight.

“Or someone moved it,” Coach Sameer said. “Ask around before you decide it’s stolen.”

Dhruv asked around. Nobody had seen it.

That evening, walking past the equipment shed, he saw it. His football. Sitting in Farhan’s bag, the zipper half open, the autograph sticker peeking out.

His stomach went cold, then hot.

Farhan was new to the team this season, quiet, always sitting a little apart from the others at lunch. Dhruv didn’t think twice.

“You took my ball,” he said, loud enough that three other boys turned around.

Farhan went very still. “I didn’t.”

“It’s in your bag! I can see the sticker!”

A small crowd gathered the way crowds do, fast and curious. Farhan’s ears had gone red.

“Show everyone, then,” Dhruv said. “Open the bag.”

Farhan didn’t move. Which, to Dhruv, looked exactly like guilt.

Coach Sameer arrived, frowning, and opened the bag himself. Inside was a football — same brand, same color, but no sticker. A different, almost identical ball.

“That’s not mine,” Dhruv said slowly.

“I told you,” Farhan said, and walked off without looking back, bag clutched tight against his side.

Dhruv felt the whole practice ground go quiet around him.

The next morning, his own football was sitting outside his house, wrapped in a plastic bag, with a small note tucked under the laces.

It rolled into our garden during practice. My little sister found it yesterday and didn’t tell me until last night. Sorry. — Karan

Dhruv read it twice. He thought about Farhan’s red ears, the way he’d clutched his bag walking away, the way the whole ground had gone silent watching him be accused in front of everyone.

He found Farhan before practice, sitting alone, lacing his boots.

“I made a mistake,” Dhruv said. “It wasn’t you. I’m sorry — properly sorry, in front of everyone, not just to you quietly.”

Farhan looked up, surprised. “Okay,” he said, like he hadn’t expected the second part.

At practice, Dhruv told the team what had actually happened. Loud enough for everyone to hear, just like the accusation had been.

Farhan didn’t say much. But he passed Dhruv the ball twice that practice, when he didn’t have to, and Dhruv understood that as the only apology he was owed back.

📄 Free printable worksheet available below.
Complete the learning activities and download it at the end of this lesson.

📖 Story in Brief
Dhruv's new football disappears, and he wrongly accuses his quiet, new teammate Farhan of stealing it after spotting a similar ball in his bag. The real culprit turns out to be someone else entirely, and Dhruv must publicly admit his mistake. Through an honest, public apology, the two boys begin rebuilding trust.
💡 The Lesson Inside
Honesty means admitting a mistake as loudly and publicly as the accusation was made — not just privately, where it's easier.
✨ Words Worth Keeping
Accuse
to say someone has done something wrong, often without full proof
Guilt
the feeling of having done something wrong
Clutched
held tightly, often out of fear or anxiety
Apart
separate or distant from others
Identical
exactly the same in appearance
Tight
firm, anxious, or strained (as in tone or grip)
Equipment
tools or items needed for an activity, like sports gear
Owed
something that is rightfully due to someone
🌱 Phrases to Remember
Asked around
to ask multiple people about something
Went still
stopped moving suddenly, often from shock or fear
Without looking back
to leave without turning around, often hurt or upset
Properly sorry
a sincere, complete apology rather than a half-hearted one
Rebuilding trust
working to restore confidence after it has been broken
📚 Quick Glossary
Coach – an adult who trains and guides a sports team
Practice ground – the field or area where a team trains regularly
Autograph sticker – a sticker with a signature, often of a famous player, placed on sports gear
Equipment shed – a small storage building for sports gear and tools
Zipper – a fastening device used to open and close bags or clothing
🎬 See It in Action
1

She accused her brother of breaking the vase before checking if it was actually him.

2

He clutched his bag tightly, afraid someone would search through it.

3

A proper apology means admitting your mistake as openly as you made the accusation.

🗣️ Say It Right
Accuse – uh
/KYOOZ/
Identical – eye
/DEN-tih-kal/
Equipment – ih
/KWIP-ment/
💬 Reflection Corner
Why did Dhruv assume Farhan had stolen the football so quickly? How do you think Farhan felt when he was accused in front of everyone? Why was it important for Dhruv to apologize publicly, not just privately? Have you ever blamed someone before knowing the full truth? What does Farhan passing the ball twice at the end tell you about him?

🎯 Complete the Story Challenges

🧩 Vocabulary Explorer ✏️ Context Architect Timeline Master ✍️ Creative Novelist
Game 1: Word Match ✨ Reward: +10 XP

Vocabulary Matcher

Match the vocabulary word on the left with its correct meaning on the right.

Accuse
Apart
Guilt
Clutched
to say someone has done something wrong, often without full proof
the feeling of having done something wrong
separate or distant from others
held tightly, often out of fear or anxiety
Free Reading Comprehension Worksheet

Strengthen your English skills with a printable worksheet based on this story.

Vocabulary Practice Reading Comprehension Critical Thinking Writing Skills
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Free for students, parents, teachers and ESL learners.

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Featured Vocabulary
Futile
Pointless; unable to produce a useful result.
Literary Term
Practice ground – the field or area where a team trains regularly
Idiomatic Expression
In real life you might say: We caught the flight with three minutes to spare.
Speech & Pronunciation
Jagannath
Phonetic: say it like: juh-guh-NAHT

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