I had my final interview with a software company for a senior developer role. Everything went well, it screamed “dream job”, until the HR lady smiled and said, “Just one last question.” Imagine my shock when she hit me with, “What would your worst enemy say about you?”
For a moment, I just stared at her. I wasn’t sure if it was a trick or one of those personality curveballs. I laughed awkwardly, hoping she’d move on, but she kept her gaze steady, like she really wanted an answer.
I cleared my throat. “Probably that I don’t let things go. That I hold grudges.”
She nodded, jotting something down. “Interesting.”
And that was it. She thanked me, shook my hand, and said they’d be in touch. I left the building with my brain still spinning from the question. The rest of the interview had gone smoothly—technical tests, architecture questions, cultural fit. Then that.
I tried to brush it off, but it gnawed at me all the way home. Maybe I shouldn’t have been so honest. Maybe I should’ve given a fluff answer like, “I’m a perfectionist!” or “I care too much!” But that wasn’t me.
Two days passed. Then five. Nothing.
I sent a polite follow-up email, just in case.
The reply came on day seven: “Thank you for your time. While we were impressed, we’ve decided to move forward with another candidate.”
I stared at the screen for a long time. I hadn’t wanted a job that badly in years. I’d left my last role after my old team lead—Evan—basically took credit for months of work I’d done and made it look like I was the one holding the team back. It had been a bitter ending.
But this job? This one had felt like a clean slate.
I went back to freelancing. Nothing wrong with that—it paid the bills. Still, I couldn’t shake the feeling that I’d blown my one shot.
Weeks passed. I got an email from a client, Sara, asking if I could help with a legacy system overhaul. It was messy backend work, nothing glamorous, but she was always respectful, paid on time, and let me work on my own terms.
“Sure,” I replied. “Send over the repo.”
The project started quietly. Old code, ancient dependencies, spaghetti logic—my kind of party. But then something weird popped up. There was a private repo linked inside a config file, named E.Freeman_ProjectVault.
I opened it. My jaw dropped.
It was a snapshot of code I’d written a year ago—specifically, part of the work that Evan had claimed as his own. Even the commit messages had my nicknames embedded in them—stuff like “timbo-tweak-db”—a little running joke I used for years.
Apparently, Evan hadn’t just claimed my work—he’d packaged it, repurposed it, and used it across multiple contracts. Including this one.
I called Sara.
“Hey,” I said, trying to keep my voice calm. “This backend—did someone else set this up before?”
She hesitated. “Yeah. Some guy named Evan. Why?”
I explained. As gently as I could, I laid out the plagiarism, the reuse of proprietary code, even the commit trail. She went quiet.
“Are you sure about this?”
“I have receipts,” I said.
Within two hours, I was on a call with Sara, her CTO, and legal. I shared everything. They listened, took notes, asked questions. Then thanked me and promised to “look into it.”
That night, I didn’t sleep. Part of me felt vindicated. But another part of me felt like I’d just stepped into a mess I didn’t want to revisit.
A few days later, Sara messaged me: “We dropped Evan. You were right. And thank you—we owe you big time.”
I shrugged it off, but it still felt like something unfinished. Like I’d stirred up a storm and walked away just as it started to rain.
Then came the twist I never saw coming.
A few weeks after that, I got a call from the software company I’d interviewed with—the one that rejected me. It was a new voice this time. A woman named Beth, the head of engineering.
“Hey, Tim. I know this is out of the blue, but… do you have a few minutes?”
“Sure,” I said cautiously.
“I’ll be straight with you. You were our top candidate. But HR flagged a concern. That final question? The one about enemies?”
I nodded, even though she couldn’t see me.
“Well, turns out, the person who raised that question had a personal relationship with Evan Freeman. Small world, huh?”
My mouth went dry.
“She flagged your answer as a red flag. Said it showed an unwillingness to collaborate. But after recent events”—her voice sharpened—“and some information passed our way by a certain Sara Thompson, we took a second look.”
“You’re saying…?”
“We’d like to bring you on. But under better terms. Senior Engineer II, with a leadership track. We’d also love your input on vetting our contractor relationships, given what came up.”
It took me a second to respond.
“I accept,” I said, barely above a whisper.
The first few weeks at the new job were surreal. People were kind. Meetings were actually productive. And Beth? She was everything a leader should be—sharp, honest, and fiercely protective of her team.
One afternoon, I passed HR in the hallway. The same woman who’d asked the “enemy” question stood at the desk, typing. She looked up, recognized me, and nodded. It wasn’t cold. It wasn’t warm either. Just… neutral.
Later that week, Beth called me into her office.
“I wanted to tell you something,” she said. “The HR manager? She resigned last week. Apparently, this wasn’t the first time she’d let personal bias interfere with decisions. We’re cleaning house.”
I didn’t know what to say. But inside, something unclenched.
Months passed. I settled into the role. Led my first sprint team. Mentored a junior dev named Nadia, who reminded me so much of younger me it was freaky. She had ideas, passion, and a sense of humor that made even refactoring sessions bearable.
One day, she stayed back after our code review.
“Tim,” she said, “can I ask you something?”
“Shoot.”
“What’s the hardest thing you’ve had to let go of in your career?”
I blinked. For a second, I saw myself in that old HR chair, trying to answer that awful question.
I smiled.
“The idea that things should be fair,” I said. “I used to believe hard work always got rewarded. That talent beat politics. But it doesn’t always. Sometimes, you get stepped on. Sometimes, you lose.”
She frowned. “That sounds depressing.”
“It does,” I agreed. “But here’s the twist: If you hang on to your integrity, even when no one’s watching? Eventually, someone will notice. Might take longer. Might be the long road. But it lasts.”
She nodded slowly. “Thanks, Tim.”
I watched her walk off and thought about everything that had brought me here—Evan, the missed opportunity, the twist of fate that pulled it all back around.
Funny how it all hinged on one weird question. A question meant to trap me, but ended up exposing someone else.
Sometimes, being honest—even when it costs you—leads to doors you didn’t know existed.
The job I have now? It’s not just better on paper. It’s better in spirit. A team that values real feedback. A boss who backs her people. Work that feels like it matters.
And the best part? I didn’t have to become someone else to get it. I stayed me—even when it felt like that might be the thing holding me back.
Turns out, it was the thing that set me free.
So, if someone ever asks you what your worst enemy would say about you—don’t sugarcoat it.
Tell them the truth.
The ones worth working with won’t punish you for being real. They’ll reward you for it.
And maybe—just maybe—you’ll get to tell your own story one day, not as the person who got lucky, but as the one who kept showing up.
If this story resonated with you, hit like or share it. Someone out there might need the reminder: be honest, stay sharp, and don’t let bad endings define your path.




