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Iโ€™ve been a nurse for six years now. Long shifts, aching feet, barely enough time to eatโ€”but I love it. Itโ€™s the one place where I feel like I truly matter. Nobody cares what I look like, just that I do my job well.

But today? Today threw me back to a time Iโ€™d rather forget.

I walked into the ER room with my chart, barely glancing at the name. โ€œAlright, letโ€™s see what we gotโ€”โ€ Then I looked up.

Robby Langston.

He was sitting on the bed, wincing as he held his wrist, but when he saw me, his eyes went wide. For a second, I thought maybe he didnโ€™t recognize me. But then he did a quick, awkward glance at my faceโ€”at my noseโ€”and I knew.

Middle school, high schoolโ€ฆ he made my life hell. โ€œBig Becca,โ€ โ€œToucan Sam,โ€ all the creative ways to make a girl hate her own reflection. I spent years wishing I could shrink, disappear, be anyone else. But here I was, standing in scrubs, holding his chart, and he was the one needing me.

โ€œBecca?โ€ His voice was hesitant, almost nervous. โ€œWow, uhโ€ฆ itโ€™s been a while.โ€

I kept my face neutral. โ€œWhat happened to your wrist?โ€

โ€œBasketball injury,โ€ he muttered. โ€œJust a sprain, I think.โ€

I nodded, checking his vitals, doing my job like I would with anyone else. But inside, I was battling old ghosts. I had imagined a moment like this beforeโ€”facing my past, getting some kind of closure. Maybe even some kind of justice.

Then, as I wrapped his wrist, he let out a small, almost embarrassed laugh. โ€œGuess karmaโ€™s funny, huh? You taking care of me after all that.โ€

I met his eyes. For once, he wasnโ€™t the cocky guy from school. Just another patient, just another human.

And then he said something that made my hands pause.

โ€œListenโ€ฆโ€ Robby swallowed hard, shifting on the bed. โ€œI want to say Iโ€™m sorry. For everything I did back then.โ€

I blinked, taken aback. An apology? From the guy who made me dread going to class, who gave me nicknames I still remember in my worst moments? I forced myself to keep my professional composure, setting aside the gauze and grabbing a wrist brace from the supply cart.

โ€œYou donโ€™t have to say anything,โ€ he continued, voice quieter now. โ€œI know I was a jerk, and I canโ€™t fix it. But Iโ€™ve thought about it a lot. Especially when I found out you became a nurse.โ€

He gave a weak chuckle. โ€œI figured if anyone deserved to do something meaningful, it was you.โ€

I focused on Velcro straps and making sure the brace fit correctly. Part of me wanted to tell him exactly how much he hurt meโ€”how I spent weekends hiding in my room, how I tried every ridiculous remedy to โ€˜shrinkโ€™ my nose, how I once begged my mom for surgery I didnโ€™t need. But another part of me, the nurse part of me, the older, maybe wiser part of me, reminded me that I was here to help. Even if it was him.

โ€œWell,โ€ I said finally, testing the brace, โ€œI appreciate that.โ€

There was silence for a moment, thick with everything left unsaid. I caught him watching me like he was waiting for me to unload on him. But I held my tongue. I wasnโ€™t sure I was ready to forgive him just yet, apology or not.

Before I could say anything else, Robby winced and cradled his wrist again. โ€œIs this supposed to hurt this much?โ€ he asked.

I frowned. โ€œLet me take another look.โ€

I checked his pulse, did a quick neurological check, then glanced at his chart. His X-rays werenโ€™t back from Radiology yet, but something about his pale face and the way he gritted his teeth made me wonder if it was more than just a simple sprain.

โ€œWeโ€™ll know more once the doctor reads the scans,โ€ I said, pressing two fingers against his forearm. โ€œDoes it hurt here?โ€

He nodded. โ€œYeah, right there.โ€

โ€œOkay, weโ€™ll keep it wrapped and immobilized. Try to stay calm.โ€

I stepped out into the hallway, my thoughts racing. Knowing how athletic Robby was in high schoolโ€”captain of the basketball team, the guy everyone cheered forโ€”maybe he overdid it or took a bad fall. But I had a nagging feeling there was something else.

As I waited by the nursesโ€™ station for his results, memories flashed through my mind. I remembered the day in tenth grade when Robby and his friends were mocking me in the cafeteria. I spilled my lunch all over my shirt, and they roared with laughter. I ended up in the bathroom, tears streaming down my face, wishing I could vanish.

But here I was. Not hiding. Not vanishing. Standing tall.

And maybe, just maybe, this moment wasnโ€™t about karma. Maybe it was about something bigger.

When Robbyโ€™s results came in, confirming a fracture, I walked back into the room and explained everything calmly. As I helped prep his arm for a cast, he gave me one last look. โ€œI know I canโ€™t undo what I did back then,โ€ he said softly. โ€œBut I hope maybe one day, youโ€™ll believe that Iโ€™m really sorry.โ€

I didnโ€™t respond right away. Instead, I finished securing his cast, then met his gaze. โ€œTake care of that wrist,โ€ I told him.

And with that, I walked away, knowing I had already won something much greater than revengeโ€”the ability to move forward on my own terms.

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