I was eight when I realized not all monsters hide under the bed. Some sit behind you in class, whispering just loud enough for only you to hear.
Nancy was never the kind of bully who left bruises. Her cruelty was quiet, calculated — the kind that left no evidence but managed to carve deep scars anyway. The teachers adored her. My parents told me to “just ignore it.” But you can’t ignore a mosquito that never stops buzzing, biting.
By high school, I had mastered invisibility. Lunches alone, books as shields, counting down the days until I could finally escape. And I did — college two states away, a new life where Nancy didn’t exist.
Until my brother called.
“Guess what?” Matt’s voice sparkled with excitement. “I’m engaged!”
“That’s amazing!” I beamed, already imagining the dress I’d wear.
“Her name’s Nancy.”
Everything inside me went still.
“Nancy who?”
“You know. From high school. Nancy.”
I did know. Far too well.
“She made my life hell,” I said. “You don’t remember, but I do.”
He hesitated. “That was ages ago. She’s changed. People grow up.”
I wanted to say no. But he was my brother. So I said yes.
The engagement party was held at an upscale restaurant, full of champagne and carefully curated joy. I walked in hoping I’d imagined it all, that maybe she really had changed.
Then I saw her.
Nancy turned, cocktail in hand, and smiled. That same smile I remembered from school — polite on the surface, venom underneath.
“Well,” she said with faux surprise, “you actually came.”
I matched her tone. “Of course. Wouldn’t miss it.”
She scanned me from head to toe. “Still rocking that old haircut? Bold. Retro’s in again, I guess.”
And just like that, the past slipped back into the present.
Throughout the evening, she sprinkled insults like confetti — sweetly delivered, expertly barbed.
<blockquote>“Still single? That must be so freeing!” “You always were… unique.” “Oh, I always said you’d make something of yourself — I just didn’t know what.”</blockquote>
And then, as I turned to leave, she leaned in with a smile only I could see through.
<blockquote>“Still the same little loser,” she whispered. “Almost cute.”</blockquote>
That night, I lay awake in bed, fury pulsing behind my eyes. All those years of therapy, of trying to let it go — undone in one evening.
And then I remembered.
Freshman year. Biology class. Live butterflies. While everyone watched with wonder, Nancy had screamed and fled the room, pale and trembling. Turned out, her biggest fear wasn’t failure or being alone — it was butterflies.
By morning, I had a plan.
I found a specialty company online that delivered live butterflies in decorative boxes. Perfect for weddings. Magical, they said. Unforgettable.
I ordered 200 butterflies, set to arrive at Matt and Nancy’s doorstep the night they returned from their honeymoon. I paid extra for the delivery person to insist the box be opened indoors. Fragile wings, you know.
And just to make it perfect, I had the whole thing filmed.
At the wedding, Nancy glided down the aisle like she was born for the spotlight. She glowed, basked, twirled. She was the star of a show she’d been writing since high school.
“You didn’t bring a gift,” she said to me at the reception, loud enough for nearby guests to hear.
I smiled. “It’s waiting for you at home.”
Her eyes sparkled. “Really? What is it?”
I leaned in. “Something unforgettable.”
That night, they found the box waiting. The delivery woman explained gently: open it inside.
Nancy, delighted, did just that.
And the butterflies rose.
In a flurry of wings and color, they filled the room. For a second, it was beautiful.
Then Nancy screamed.
She shrieked, flailed, sobbed. My brother tried to calm her, but she collapsed in full-blown panic. Her perfect dress, her perfect night — ruined.
The footage was glorious.
The next morning, my phone rang.
Matt didn’t waste time. “What the hell is wrong with you?” he roared. “You traumatized her!”
I sipped my coffee. “She traumatized me for four years. I figured we were just… catching up.”
“That was high school!”
“And last night?” I asked. “Was that high school too?”
Silence.
“She barely slept—”
“I barely survived her,” I cut in. “Every day. For years.”
He started to argue again, but I ended it with a whisper.
<blockquote>“It’s all on video, Matt. Every wing, every scream. I’m sure the internet would love it.”</blockquote>
He hung up.
I never heard from Nancy again. And for the first time in years, I slept through the night.
Some scars don’t fade. But sometimes, you get to choose exactly where to leave the next one.
And that? That was the most unforgettable gift of all.