When my brother announced his engagement, I was thrilled, until he told me he was marrying the girl who made my childhood miserable. She thought the past was forgotten, but I had the perfect wedding gift to remind her that some scars don’t fade.
I was eight years old when I first learned that some monsters don’t live under the bed. They sit behind you in class, whispering just loud enough for you to hear.
Nancy wasn’t the kind of bully who pushed or hit. That would have been too obvious. She was smarter than that. She used words like a scalpel, cutting deep but never leaving a mark anyone else could see.
Teachers thought she was an angel. My parents? They told me to ignore her. But ignoring Nancy was like trying to ignore a mosquito buzzing in your ear. She never stopped.
By high school, I had perfected the art of being invisible. I ate lunch alone. I kept my head down. I counted the days until graduation like a prisoner marking time on a cell wall.
Then I left. I moved two states away for college, built a career, and made a life where Nancy didn’t exist. For years, I barely thought about her.
Until my brother called.
“Guess what?” His voice was bright, excited. “I’m engaged!”
“That’s amazing!” I grinned, stretching out on my couch. “Who’s the lucky girl?”
There was a pause. Just a beat too long.
Then he said it.
“Nancy.”
“Wait,” I said slowly, my stomach twisting. “Nancy who?”
“From high school. You know her.”
Oh, I knew her. For a moment, I couldn’t speak. The room felt too small.
“She’s amazing,” my brother continued, oblivious. “We met a couple years ago through mutual friends, and I swear, it was like—instant connection. She’s sweet, she’s funny, she—”
“She bullied me.”
Silence.
“She made my life miserable,” I said, my voice sharp. “You never saw it because she was nice to you. But to me?” I swallowed. “She was awful.”
He hesitated. “I mean… I guess kids can be mean sometimes, but that was forever ago. People change.”
I closed my eyes. Do they?
“Look, I really want you to come to the engagement party,” Matt said, his tone softening. “It would mean a lot to me.”
I should have said no. But I didn’t.
I told myself I was over it. That I was an adult. That people change.
I repeated those words like a mantra as I walked into my brother’s engagement party, trying to ignore the unease creeping up my spine. The restaurant was upscale, filled with warm lighting, clinking glasses, and the hum of polite conversation. My brother spotted me first, grinning as he crossed the room.
“You made it!” He pulled me into a hug, his excitement genuine.
“Of course,” I said, though my stomach churned.
Then I saw her.
Nancy stood by the bar, a champagne glass poised delicately in one hand, looking as polished and perfect as ever. She turned, and the moment her gaze met mine, a slow smile stretched across her face.
“Wow,” she sighed, tilting her head slightly. “You actually showed up.”
Her tone was light, almost teasing, but I knew better.
“I did,” I replied evenly, keeping my voice calm.
She gave me a once-over, her lips twitching like she was holding back laughter. “You always did surprise me.”
I forced a polite smile and walked past her, pretending not to hear the small, amused breath she let out.
But that was just the beginning.
Nancy had perfected the art of the insult disguised as kindness.
“I love that you’re still rocking the same haircut from high school! Not everyone can pull off nostalgia.”
“I heard you’re still single? That’s so freeing, right? No one to check in with, no expectations.”
Each comment was delivered with a bright smile, her voice sugary sweet, just enough plausible deniability to make me look like the overly sensitive one if I reacted. At one point, as the room buzzed with conversation, she leaned in close, her voice low enough that no one else could hear.
“Still the same little loser,” she murmured. “It’s almost cute.”
I stiffened, gripping my drink a little tighter. I wasn’t the girl who shrank under her words anymore.
She hadn’t changed. But I had. And this time, she wasn’t going to get away with it.
I lay awake that night, staring at the ceiling, my mind replaying every cruel thing Nancy had ever done. Every fake smile. Every whispered insult. Every time she had made me feel small. I thought about my brother, laughing along with her, completely unaware of the years of torment she had put me through.
And then, like a bolt of lightning, I remembered something.
Freshman year of high school. Biology class. Our teacher had brought in live butterflies for a lesson on metamorphosis. Most of us had been fascinated, watching the delicate creatures flutter inside their enclosure. But Nancy? She had screamed so loudly the principal came running.
At first, we all thought she was joking. But then she bolted from the room, shaking, her face ghostly pale.
That was the day we all learned Nancy had a deep, irrational fear of butterflies. And some fears don’t fade with age.
By morning, I had a perfect plan.
I did my research. My state allowed the release of native butterflies, and there were companies that specialized in providing them for special occasions like weddings, birthdays, and memorials.
I found one that delivered live butterflies in a beautifully wrapped gift box, meant to create a magical moment when opened. The butterflies would take flight in a gentle, breathtaking display.
I placed my order. Two hundred live butterflies, set to arrive at Nancy and my brother’s home the night they returned from their wedding.
To make sure it played out exactly how I wanted, I paid extra for the delivery person to insist the box be opened indoors, claiming the butterflies were delicate and needed protection from the wind.
And, just for good measure, I arranged for them to film the whole thing.
The wedding was exactly what I expected — all about Nancy. She glowed under the attention, parading through the venue in a designer gown, making sure every eye stayed on her. She played the perfect bride, the perfect hostess, the perfect everything.
“You made it!” she gushed, all smiles and fake warmth. “I was so worried you’d back out at the last minute.”
“Wouldn’t miss it,” I replied smoothly, sipping my champagne.
Throughout the night, she kept up the act. A little comment here, a backhanded compliment there. Then, near the end of the night, she struck.
“So,” she said loudly, gathering attention, “I noticed there’s no gift from you! I know you wouldn’t forget such an important day.”
I smiled, meeting her gaze. “Oh, I didn’t forget,” I said sweetly. “I wanted to give you something special. Something expensive. It’s waiting for you at home.”
Nancy’s eyes lit up, her excitement clear. “Really? What is it?”
I leaned in slightly, lowering my voice just enough to make her lean in, too.
“Something you’ll never forget.”
She beamed, satisfied, and I simply raised my glass.
Later that night, after the reception, Nancy and my brother arrived at their home. Sitting on their doorstep was a beautifully wrapped gift box, just as I had planned. The butterfly handler, a kind older woman, greeted them with a warm smile.
“This is very delicate,” she explained, her voice laced with urgency. “It’s best if you open it indoors so it stays safe.”
Nancy, practically bouncing with excitement, carried the box inside, my brother following close behind. The handler pressed ‘record’ on her phone.
With careful fingers, Nancy lifted the lid.
Two hundred butterflies burst into the air in a flurry of delicate wings. For a brief moment, there was stunned silence. Then, Nancy screamed.
She stumbled backward, her hands flailing wildly as the butterflies swarmed the room. She shrieked, shaking, gasping for breath, trying desperately to escape the harmless creatures fluttering around her.
My brother rushed to her side, bewildered, trying to calm her down, but she was inconsolable. She cried, she shrieked, she sobbed in pure terror, her wedding dress billowing around her in a mess of lace and panic.
The handler filmed everything.
The next morning, my phone rang.
The second I answered, my brother’s furious voice exploded through the speaker.
“What the hell is wrong with you?” he snapped. “You traumatized my wife!”
I yawned, stretching lazily. “Oh, now she’s traumatized? That’s interesting.”
“This isn’t funny!” he barked. “She had a full breakdown! Do you know how long it took me to calm her down? She barely slept! She—”
I cut him off, my voice cool. “And how long do you think I spent crying in high school, Matt? How many nights did I stay up, dreading the next day because of her?”
He fell silent.
“That was high school!” he argued weakly. “You need to let it go!”
I smirked, twirling my phone between my fingers. “Sure. Just like she did, right? Oh, wait. She didn’t.”
More silence.
Then, casually, I dropped the final blow.
“Oh, by the way… the whole thing’s on video. Her, screaming, sobbing, running in circles over a couple of butterflies. Pretty funny, actually. Maybe I’ll send it out. People love wedding fails.”
His breath hitched. “You wouldn’t.”
“Try me.”
That was the last time I ever heard from Nancy. And, for the first time in years, I slept like a baby.