I’ve been a nurse for six years now, and while the long shifts and aching
feet can be tough, I love it. It’s the one place I feel like I truly matter.
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 holding his wrist, wincing, but when he saw me, his eyes went wide.
Then he glanced at my nose, and I knew—he recognized me. The guy who’d made my life hell in school.
“Becca?” His voice was hesitant. “Wow, uh… it’s been a while.”
I kept my face neutral. “What happened to your wrist?”
“Basketball injury,” he muttered.
I did my job, checking his vitals, all while battling old ghosts.
I had imagined a moment like this—facing my past, getting closure, maybe even justice.
Then, as I wrapped his wrist, he let out a small, awkward laugh.
“Guess karma’s funny, huh? You taking care of me after all that.”
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. “I want to say I’m sorry. For everything I did back then.”
I blinked, taken aback. An apology? From him? I kept my composure as I grabbed a wrist brace.
“You don’t have to say anything,” he said, quieter now. “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 the brace, holding back everything I wanted to say about the years
of pain he caused me. But the nurse in me reminded me I was here to help—no matter who he was.
“Well,” I said finally, “I appreciate that.”
There was a silence, heavy with everything left unsaid. Robby winced, holding his wrist again. “Is this supposed to hurt this much?”
I checked his wrist again. Something wasn’t right. The X-rays weren’t back yet, but his face looked off. We had to wait for the results.
Memories of high school flashed through my mind—the teasing, the mockery.
But I wasn’t hiding anymore. I was standing tall.
When the results came in confirming a fracture, I walked back to his room.
As I helped prep his arm for a cast, he looked at me one last time.
“I know I can’t undo what I did, but I hope maybe one day you’ll believe I’m really sorry.”
I didn’t respond right away. I finished securing his cast, met his gaze, and said, “Take care of that wrist.”
And as I walked away, I realized I had already won something much greater than revenge—the ability to move forward on my own terms.