The Scent Of Karma

My coworker got pregnant and became sensitive to smells. Acting like a boss, she demanded we avoid certain foods. Things escalated when she snapped, “Enough with your cheap perfume, or I’ll make you sorry.” I ignored it. A few days later, it turns out she filed a formal HR complaint against me for “creating a toxic work environment.”

At first, I thought she was joking. But the HR rep was dead serious. I was called into a meeting and told that multiple coworkers had “voiced concerns” about my fragrance. Apparently, she rallied two of her office buddies to support her claims. It felt like I was being ambushed over something as silly as perfume.

I tried to explain that I only wear a light vanilla body mist, the same one I’ve used for years. No one had ever complained before. But HR told me to stop wearing any scents altogether, just to keep the peace. I felt humiliated.

From that day on, the atmosphere changed. She strutted around the office like she owned the place, throwing exaggerated glares my way every time I walked past her desk. Her two little sidekicks would giggle behind their screens whenever I entered the room. I kept my head down and did my work, trying not to stir the pot.

But the thing is—I’m not a mean person. I really did try to be understanding at first. Pregnancy is hard, and I get that hormones can do wild things. But when someone weaponizes their condition to bully others, that’s different.

She started nitpicking everything. One morning, I ate an egg sandwich at my desk and she stood up dramatically, fanned her face, and announced, “I can’t breathe! The smell of sulfur is giving me a migraine!” She then stormed off to the break room. HR sent out a mass email later that day requesting everyone avoid “egg-based foods” during office hours.

I wish I were kidding.

Then she started taking longer breaks, disappearing for hours, and dumping her work on others. She claimed she was “too tired” or “nauseous” to finish her tasks. Most of us picked up the slack without complaint, out of empathy. But I started noticing something weird—every time a supervisor passed by, she’d miraculously sit up straight, type something, and look busy.

I tried to focus on my work. I didn’t want to get sucked into the drama. But then one afternoon, something happened that made me realize just how far she was willing to go.

I had brought in a small lavender oil rollerball to help with my anxiety. I didn’t use it near anyone—I went outside, dabbed a tiny bit on my wrist, and came back in. I didn’t even sit near her. Still, two hours later, I got another email from HR. She had reported a “suspicious floral scent” and claimed it made her vomit.

That was the last straw.

I scheduled a meeting with HR to explain everything. I brought screenshots of group chats, emails, even testimonials from coworkers who secretly admitted they were tired of walking on eggshells. HR was hesitant, but they agreed to “monitor the situation.”

A few days later, I came in to find her crying at her desk. She was loud about it—sobbing into tissues, surrounded by her sidekicks who looked more annoyed than concerned. Apparently, her partner had left her. She said, between sniffles, that he “couldn’t handle her moods” and “wasn’t ready to be a father.” Some people felt bad for her. I didn’t know how to feel.

Over the next few weeks, she toned it down. No more tantrums about smells. No more complaints. She started eating lunch alone, stopped dressing up, and just looked…tired. I started to wonder if maybe the stress of everything had finally caught up to her.

Then the twist came.

One afternoon, I stayed late to finish up a report. Most of the office had cleared out. As I was gathering my things, I heard laughter coming from the break room. Curious, I peeked in.

There she was—sipping a soda, eating chicken wings, and laughing with a man I didn’t recognize. He wasn’t from our department. They looked cozy. Really cozy.

Now, I’m not the type to jump to conclusions. But something felt off.

The next day, I mentioned it casually to my desk neighbor, Liam. He raised his eyebrows. “Wait, chicken wings? I thought she was vegan during her pregnancy?”

Apparently, she’d told HR that certain foods—like meat—triggered her nausea, which is why she couldn’t sit near anyone eating them. She even used that excuse to get out of team lunches.

That’s when everything started unraveling.

Over the next few weeks, little details surfaced. The mysterious man? Turned out he was a temp in another department. They were dating. She wasn’t living with her partner anymore—not because he left her, but because she left him. She was never actually as sick as she claimed.

Then came the kicker.

A month later, she was no longer pregnant.

No one knew exactly what happened. She never said if she had a miscarriage or chose something else. She just came in one Monday wearing tight jeans and acting like nothing had changed. People whispered, but no one dared ask.

She expected things to go back to normal.

But they didn’t.

Her allies stopped talking to her. The office manager, who used to cover for her, started giving her the grunt work. HR did a quiet investigation after multiple employees voiced concern over the “egg rule,” the perfume drama, and her absenteeism. And eventually, one Friday afternoon, she was let go.

They said it was for “performance reasons.” But we all knew the truth.

Karma had finally caught up.

The weirdest part? I didn’t feel happy about it.

I thought I’d feel vindicated. But instead, I felt a kind of heavy sadness. Watching her pack up her desk in silence, no one offering to help, made me realize something important.

She wasn’t just mean—she was probably hurting.

Maybe her relationship wasn’t what she made it seem. Maybe she felt trapped. Maybe pretending to be in control gave her a sense of power when everything else in her life was spiraling. I’ll never know. But that moment taught me something.

People lash out in strange ways when they feel powerless.

After she left, the office was quieter. Easier. The egg ban was lifted. I could wear my vanilla mist again. But I never did. It didn’t feel right anymore. I started using unscented lotions and keeping my space minimal. Not because I was afraid—but because I’d grown.

One day, a new hire named Sara joined our team. She was nervous, fresh out of college, and eager to please. I saw her once crying in the bathroom after getting a minor correction from our manager.

I didn’t ignore it.

I asked her to lunch the next day. We talked about nothing important—weather, Netflix, silly TikToks—but she smiled, genuinely, for the first time. That small act, I realized, mattered more than any HR complaint ever could.

Weeks turned into months. Our team became tighter. More kind. We set new unspoken rules—respect each other, talk things out, leave the drama at the door.

And then something unexpected happened.

One evening, as I was walking home, I saw her. My old coworker. She was sitting on a park bench, alone, sipping coffee and staring into space. For a moment, I debated walking past. But something in me said stop.

I approached and said, “Hey.”

She looked up, surprised. “Oh. Hi.”

We talked. Just for a few minutes. She admitted life had been “weird” lately. That she’d made mistakes. That she was working a retail job and trying to “figure things out.”

She didn’t apologize. Not exactly. But she said, “I wasn’t in a good place back then.”

I nodded. “I could tell.”

Then she smiled—a small, tired, genuine smile—and said, “Thanks for not hating me.”

And I didn’t. Not really. Because holding on to hate doesn’t fix anything. It just weighs you down.

As I walked away that night, I felt lighter.

Not because she had suffered.

But because I had chosen to grow.

Life has a funny way of teaching us lessons. Sometimes through conflict. Sometimes through quiet moments in the park. I used to think justice meant someone getting what they deserved. Now, I think it’s more about how we respond—whether we choose bitterness or growth, revenge or understanding.

To anyone reading this: Be kind, even when it’s hard. Speak up when it matters. But never let someone else’s chaos rob you of your peace.

If this story made you feel something—share it. Like it. Maybe someone out there needs to hear it today.