Short story with vocabulary and quiz

The Break

Rachel’s friends take her away for the weekend to help her get over her recent breakup. Unfortunately, it is not the type of break that she had expected

Short Story: The Break

Rachel pressed her forehead against the cold train window, watching the city fade into the distance. Her friends were chatting happily, but she barely listened. The break up with Tom had left her feeling empty—like someone had pulled the colour out of her world.

“Cheer up,” said Megan brightly. “This weekend away is exactly what you need.”

Rachel forced a smile. “Unless it brings back my boyfriend or my Wi-Fi, I doubt it.”

Her friends laughed, but Rachel didn’t. She couldn’t stop checking her phone. Every time the screen stayed blank, her chest tightened. What if Tom changed his mind? What if he texted and she didn’t see it?

When the taxi dropped them at the countryside cottage, Rachel’s heart sank. The place looked peaceful, almost too peaceful—no traffic, no shops, just silence and the smell of damp grass.

She pulled out her phone immediately. “No signal,” she muttered. She walked in circles, waving it in the air like a magic wand. “Come on, come on
”

Megan stepped forward carefully. “There’s something we should tell you. The cottage doesn’t have Wi-Fi.”

Rachel stopped moving. “What do you mean no Wi-Fi?”

“It’s a digital detox!” said Sarah, trying to sound cheerful. “No phones, no internet—just us, nature, and fresh air.”

Rachel’s eyes went wide. “You dragged me to the middle of nowhere without mentioning that there would be no Wi-Fi?” Her voice rose with every word. “Do you have any idea what’s happening in my life right now? What if someone needs to reach me?”

“Who?” asked Megan softly.

The question hit like a punch. Rachel opened her mouth, then closed it again. She turned away, pretending to unpack her bag before her friends could see her tears.

That first evening was torture. Every few minutes, she picked up her phone and stared at the screen, hoping for a miracle signal bar. When it stayed empty, she felt panic rising. She couldn’t text Tom. She couldn’t scroll. She couldn’t escape.

That night, she lay in bed listening to the quiet. It wasn’t peaceful—it was deafening. Her thoughts rushed in like waves. What if Tom was already with someone else? What if everyone forgot about her? She wanted to scream.

The next morning, she dragged herself out of bed. Her friends were already outside, laughing over breakfast. “Come on,” said Sarah. “We’re going hiking.”

Rachel groaned but followed. The path led through thick woods and over a hill. Her boots were uncomfortable, her legs hurt, and she complained every five minutes.

But then something changed. As she stopped to catch her breath, she noticed the sunlight through the trees, the smell of pine, and a small bird landing on a branch near her. The air was clean and sharp. She closed her eyes and, for the first time, her mind went quiet.

Later, they reached a lake so still it looked like glass. Rachel knelt to touch the water and saw her reflection—tired, yes, but calmer.

That night, sitting by the campfire, she laughed until her stomach hurt. She hadn’t laughed like that in months.

“I hate to admit it,” she said, “but maybe this detox thing actually worked.”

Megan smiled. “Sometimes, you have to lose connection to find yourself again.”

Rachel looked up at the stars—bright, endless, and real.

When she finally turned her phone back on two days later, the screen stayed dark for a moment, then lit up. No new messages. No calls.

And, for the first time, she smiled.

📒 Key vocabulary

  • fade (fade, faded, faded)- to slowly become less clear
  • cheer up (cheer up, cheered up, cheered up) – to start feeling happier
  • blank – empty; showing nothing
  • damp – a little wet or moist
  • muttered (mutter, muttered, muttered) – to speak in a low, complaining voice
  • detox – a time when you stop doing or using something unhealthy
  • dragged (drag, dragged, dragged) – to move someone / something heavy, often without their consent
  • torture – great physical or emotional pain
  • bar (on a phone) – the line that shows the strength of the signal
  • deafening – extremely loud or strong (used for silence that feels too powerful)
  • reflection – the image you see in a mirror or on water

đŸ€” Comprehension quiz

How much of this story did you understand? Test yourself with this easyEnglish quiz!

 

Results

#1. Why did Rachel’s friends take her to the countryside?

#2. How did Rachel feel at the start of the trip?

#3. What was Rachel most worried about when she arrived at the cottage?

#4. What did Rachel’s friends not tell her about the cottage before they arrived?

#5. How did Rachel first react when she learned there was no Wi-Fi?

#6. Why couldn’t Rachel sleep well the first night?

#7. What happened to Rachel during the walk?

#8. What did Rachel see in the lake?

#9. What did Megan mean when she said, “Sometimes, you have to lose connection to find yourself again”?

#10. What happened when Rachel turned on her phone at the end?

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easyEnglish stories are created with AI assistance and reviewed by the easyEnglish team, adding key vocabulary and quizzes to ensure clarity, accuracy, and simplicity for English learners.

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