A woman cut in front of twenty people at the DMV and demanded to be seen first. When the clerk refused, the woman collapsed to the floor, wailing and clutching her chest. Paramedics rushed in and loaded her onto a gurney. I was HORRIFIED for her. As they wheeled her past me, she opened one eye, winked, and whispered, “Works every time.”
I froze. My mouth went dry, and I just stared at her as they rolled her out the door. Did she really just fake a heart attack to cut the line at the DMV? The nerve of this woman. Everyone else had been waiting for hours in that suffocating waiting room, and she just played us all. Some people gasped when they overheard her whisper, but most were too shocked to react.
I couldn’t stop thinking about her even after she left. The DMV clerk shook his head and muttered something under his breath about “drama queens.” The rest of us shuffled forward like sheep, still reeling from the bizarre spectacle. I wanted to laugh at the absurdity, but the truth was, I felt angry. How could someone be so shameless?
The rest of my time at the DMV dragged by. I finally got my license renewed, but the image of that woman winking at me stayed burned into my mind. When I got to my car, I sat there for a minute, gripping the steering wheel, trying to shake it off. But deep down, I knew I wouldn’t forget her face.
A week later, I saw her again. I couldn’t believe it. I was at the grocery store, pushing my cart through the produce section, when I spotted her. Same short blond hair, same bright red lipstick, same smug expression. She was standing by the tomatoes, arguing with an older man who had clearly picked the last pack of the organic ones she wanted.
“You don’t understand,” she said, her voice sharp and commanding. “I need those. I have a medical condition that requires me to eat only organic tomatoes. Do you want me to get sick?”
The poor man looked flustered. He tried to protest, but she clutched her stomach dramatically and gasped. “Oh, it’s happening again,” she moaned, sinking against the display like she might faint.
I recognized the act instantly. My blood boiled. Before I even realized what I was doing, I marched over. “Excuse me,” I said, loud enough for a few other shoppers to hear. “She’s faking it. She pulled the same stunt at the DMV last week. Don’t give her those tomatoes.”
Her head snapped toward me. For a split second, panic flashed in her eyes, but then she narrowed them and sneered. “Who even are you? Mind your own business.”
The old man looked between us, confused, but something in my voice must have convinced him. He shook his head and clutched the tomatoes tighter. “Sorry, lady. I was here first.” Then he walked away.
She glared at me like I had ruined her whole day. “You don’t know what you’re talking about,” she hissed. Then, to my shock, she straightened up, tossed her hair, and walked off without another word. No fainting, no wailing. Just pure annoyance.
I thought that was the end of it, but it wasn’t.
Over the next month, I saw her everywhere. At the pharmacy, where she claimed she needed to cut the line because of a “severe allergic reaction” that conveniently vanished when someone called her out. At the post office, where she insisted her package had to be rushed ahead of everyone else’s because it contained “life-saving medication.” At the coffee shop, where she shouted at a barista about needing her drink immediately “for her blood sugar.”
Everywhere she went, she bent the rules, manipulated people, and made scenes to get her way. And everywhere I went, it seemed like I kept bumping into her. It felt like fate was throwing her in my path, daring me to do something.
One afternoon, I was at the library trying to get some work done when I heard a familiar screech from across the room. My stomach sank. Sure enough, it was her again. This time, she was yelling at a young librarian about late fees.
“You don’t understand,” she said dramatically. “My father died, and I was in mourning. You expect me to worry about due dates while I’m grieving?”
The librarian looked uncomfortable. “I’m sorry for your loss, but the system automatically applies late fees. I can’t just erase them.”
Her voice cracked as she clutched her chest again. “Oh God, it’s happening—my grief—it’s making me sick.”
That was it. I couldn’t take it anymore. I stood up and marched across the library. “Your father didn’t die,” I said firmly. “You pulled this same act at the DMV. You’ve been faking illnesses and tragedies all over town to get what you want. People are catching on to you.”
The library went silent. Every head turned toward us. Her mouth opened and closed like a fish. For once, she had no quick comeback. She grabbed her purse and stormed out, her heels clicking angrily against the floor.
I thought I’d never see her again after that. But a few weeks later, I learned the truth in the most unexpected way.
I was walking downtown when I spotted her sitting on a park bench. She wasn’t performing or yelling. She was just sitting there, staring at the ground, looking… small. Defeated. Against my better judgment, I walked over.
She looked up, startled, then sighed. “Of course. You again. My personal stalker.”
I crossed my arms. “You make it easy. You keep scamming people everywhere you go.”
She didn’t snap back this time. Instead, she laughed bitterly. “You think I like doing this? You think I enjoy being… this person?”
That caught me off guard. “Don’t you?” I asked.
She shook her head. “I used to work in sales. I was good at it. Then the company downsized, and I was out. I tried finding another job, but nobody wanted a fifty-year-old woman with no degree. Bills piled up. Rent went up. I started cutting corners, telling little lies to get by. And the thing is… once you start, it’s hard to stop.”
I didn’t know what to say. For the first time, she looked human. Vulnerable.
She looked at me with tired eyes. “You probably think I’m a monster. Maybe I am. But sometimes, lying feels like the only way people will even notice you.”
I sat down beside her. “People notice you, alright. But not in the way you think. They see you as selfish. Manipulative. Don’t you want to be seen as something better?”
She was quiet for a long moment. Then she whispered, “I don’t know how anymore.”
That conversation stuck with me. I left the park thinking I’d never see her again, but two months later, I did. Only this time, it was different.
I was volunteering at a local food drive when she walked in. I almost dropped the box I was carrying. She looked nervous but determined. She didn’t cut the line. She didn’t fake a collapse. She just walked up to the organizer and asked if she could help.
At first, people side-eyed her, but she didn’t seem to notice. She spent the whole day handing out food, carrying boxes, and chatting with families. No drama. No lies. Just work.
When our eyes met, she gave me the smallest smile. Not smug, not sly—just… grateful.
It wasn’t a perfect redemption. I’m sure she had years of bad habits to unlearn. But watching her that day, I realized people can change. Even the ones who seem impossible.
The lesson? You never really know why people act the way they do. Some hide their struggles behind anger, lies, or theatrics. But sometimes, all it takes is one person refusing to play along—and then reminding them they’re capable of more—to start a shift.
If someone in your life is constantly pushing boundaries or making scenes, don’t let them walk all over you. But also, don’t assume they’re beyond saving. Sometimes the most difficult people are the ones who need compassion the most.
And if you ever feel tempted to bend the rules to get ahead, remember this: the attention you get from shortcuts never lasts. The respect you earn from doing the right thing always will.
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