When my brother announced his engagement, I smiled and congratulated him — until I saw the photo of his fiancée. Nancy. My childhood tormentor. Behind her sweet smile was the same cruel girl who made my school years hell. She played the perfect angel in front of adults, but behind closed doors, she was a master of whispers and insults. Every day felt like a silent battle with her, and I was always the losing side.
After graduation, I ran from my past, moving to a new city, starting over. For years, I built a life where Nancy’s name was nothing but a distant, ugly memory. But that all shattered when my brother called with the news. “I’m getting married!” he exclaimed. “Her name’s Nancy!” The moment I saw her at the engagement party, that familiar smirk took me straight back to the girl who made my life miserable. Nothing about her had changed — only now, I was trapped in a room full of people.
Then it hit me. I remembered her one weakness, something she had screamed during a school field trip: her fear of butterflies. An idea sparked, and with a bit of planning, I set my plan into motion. I arranged for 200 live butterflies to be delivered to her house right after the wedding. I paid extra to have it filmed, ensuring she couldn’t escape the chaos I was about to unleash. The moment she opened the box, she froze, her panic palpable. Her scream echoed as she crumbled under the pressure of her own fear. It was everything I had hoped for.
My brother was furious when he found out, but I stood firm. “I spent years living under her cruelty,” I said. “This is my closure.” I left him with a warning: I had the video, and I wasn’t afraid to use it if Nancy ever tried to hurt me again. After that, she never spoke to me again. For the first time in my life, I felt free. I hadn’t just gotten revenge — I had taken back my power.