I walked into a hospital room and came face-to-face with the woman who made my teenage years unbearable. I stayed professional no matter what she said, but on the day she was discharged, she looked at me and told me to quit. What she said next threatened to destroy my life.I froze the second I saw my high school bully’s name on the chart.Margaret.For a moment, I stood outside Room 304 with the clipboard in my hand, trying not to fall apart in the middle of a med-surg floor at 7:12 in the morning.Twenty-five years had passed since high school, but some things don’t leave you.I told myself there was no way it was her.If it was… this shift was about to get a lot harder than I could afford.
Then I walked in.She was sitting up in bed in a pale blue hospital gown, one leg crossed over the other, phone in hand, reading glasses low on her nose.he’d aged, but it was definitely the same Margaret who made my teen years miserable.”Good morning,” I said, because I had done this job for 16 years, and muscle memory is a blessing. “I’m your nurse today. My name is Lena.”She barely glanced up. “Finally. I’ve been waiting forever.”Same biting tone I remembered.And something in me knew that the only way I’d get through this was if she never realized who I was.It should’ve been easy.Back then, Margaret was the kind of girl everyone feared. She ruled the school hallways with her perfect hair, perfect clothes, and perfect life.Meanwhile, I was the girl who kept her eyes down and her books close. My mother cleaned houses. My father left when I was ten. I wore thrift-store sweaters and sensible shoes and got lunch free at school.People like her usually forget people like me.But people like me remember everything.