The music didn’t just stop. It died. In one brutal, gasping second, the whole gym turned on me. Laughter, whispers, eyes burning holes through my
birthmarked face. Then the police walked in. Headed straight for us. For him. For the golden boy who’d asked me to prom. The truth ripped the night open, and every perfect life began to crum… Continues…
They didn’t come for me. They came for the boy everyone worshiped—the one who’d turned the hallway into a runway of cruelty without ever lifting a finger.
As they cuffed him under the glittering prom lights, the room finally saw what I’d always known: their world was built on mirrors and borrowed shine.
The same mouths that had laughed at my face were suddenly trembling, wondering what he’d taken from them, what secrets he’d sold, what lies they’d swallowed because they liked the taste of power.
I walked out alone, but lighter than I’d ever felt. The birthmark was still there, the thrift-store dress still clung to my body,
but something fundamental had shifted. Their approval no longer felt like oxygen; it felt like poison I’d finally stopped drinking. Under the cool night sky, I understood:
survival wasn’t about becoming one of them. It was about outlasting the collapse of everything they pretended to be.