THE GUY WHO BULLIED ME THROUGH HIGH SCHOOL NEEDED MY HELP IN THE ER

I’ve been a nurse for six years now. Long shifts, aching feet, barely enough time to eat—but I love it. It’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 I’d rather forget.

I walked into the ER room with my chart, barely glancing at the name. “Alright, let’s see what we got—” 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 didn’t recognize me. But then he did a quick, awkward glance at my face—at my nose—and I knew.

Middle school, high school… he made my life hell. “Big Becca,” “Toucan Sam,” 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.

“Becca?” His voice was hesitant, almost nervous. “Wow, uh… it’s been a while.”

I kept my face neutral. “What happened to your wrist?”

“Basketball injury,” he muttered. “Just a sprain, I think.”

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 before—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. “Guess karma’s funny, huh? You taking care of me after all that.”

I met his eyes. For once, he wasn’t the cocky guy from school. Just another patient, just another human.

And then he said something that made my hands pause.

“Listen…” Robby swallowed hard, shifting on the bed. “I want to say I’m sorry. For everything I did back then.”

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.

“You don’t have to say anything,” he continued, voice quieter now. “I know I was a jerk, and I can’t fix it. But I’ve thought about it a lot. Especially when I found out you became a nurse.”

He gave a weak chuckle. “I figured if anyone deserved to do something meaningful, it was you.”

I focused on Velcro straps and making sure the brace fit correctly. Part of me wanted to tell him exactly how much he hurt me—how I spent weekends hiding in my room, how I tried every ridiculous remedy to ‘shrink’ my nose, how I once begged my mom for surgery I didn’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.

“Well,” I said finally, testing the brace, “I appreciate that.”

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 wasn’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. “Is this supposed to hurt this much?” he asked.

I frowned. “Let me take another look.”

I checked his pulse, did a quick neurological check, then glanced at his chart. His X-rays weren’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.

“We’ll know more once the doctor reads the scans,” I said, pressing two fingers against his forearm. “Does it hurt here?”

He nodded. “Yeah, right there.”

“Okay, we’ll keep it wrapped and immobilized. Try to stay calm.”

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

As I waited by the nurses’ 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 wasn’t about karma. Maybe it was about something bigger.

When Robby’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. “I know I can’t undo what I did back then,” he said softly. “But I hope maybe one day, you’ll believe that I’m really sorry.”

I didn’t respond right away. Instead, I finished securing his cast, then met his gaze. “Take care of that wrist,” I told him.

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

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