I thought I’d left her behind. I thought time, a new name badge, and a different hallway would protect me. But the second I saw her chart, the past ripped straight into the present. The bully from my childhood, lying in my hospital bed, smiling like she never stopped. I braced for impact, but the real shock was still comin… Continues…
I stood there in my scrubs, the responsible adult I’d worked so hard to become, while she tried to drag me back into being that scared, cornered girl. Every shift felt like a test I hadn’t studied for—her soft accusations, the way she twisted kindness into cruelty, always careful, always just out of reach of proof. I kept reminding myself: document, observe, breathe, continue. I wasn’t seventeen anymore, even if my pulse said otherwise.
When she finally lied to my face about reporting me, something in me cracked—but it didn’t break. The doctor’s calm interruption, his quiet confirmation that he’d seen and heard her manipulations, felt like a verdict on the past as much as the present. Watching her daughter’s expression change was the final mirror: this was who Margaret had always been. Walking away, I understood the shift inside me. I couldn’t rewrite high school, but I could reclaim the ending. The power I thought she stole was mine to take back, simply by refusing to hand it over again.





