
Wes has always been the nice kid — until one cruel joke at lunch changed everything. Now he has to figure out how to apologize to Ezra, but saying sorry might be the easiest part. This interactive story explores accountability, the weight of words, and the hardest lesson a good kid can learn: that hurting someone doesn't make you a bad person, but what you do next defines who you're becoming.
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As you move through the story and make choices, your DISC personality profile takes shape across four traits:
The Direct Approach
You face problems head-on, even when it's uncomfortable. You believe accountability means looking someone in the eye, owning what you did without excuses, and asking what they need — then accepting whatever answer comes. Your courage isn't about being fearless; it's about doing the hard thing anyway.
The Bridge Builder
You understand that healing happens in community. You know that when a group causes harm, the group should help make it right. Your warmth and ability to connect with others become your greatest tools — not to smooth things over, but to genuinely rebuild trust through inclusion and care.
The Patient Heart
You sit with hard feelings instead of rushing past them. You understand that some wounds need time and space, and that a thoughtful letter can carry truths that spoken words might stumble over. You respect that forgiveness belongs to the person who was hurt, not the person who's sorry.
The Thoughtful Accountant
You believe a real apology requires understanding exactly what you did wrong and why it was wrong. You don't settle for vague regret — you name the behavior, research what genuine accountability looks like, and deliver an apology that's specific, honest, and never makes it about yourself.