General Hospital Spoilers: Nelle was the one who đđđđ Drew, impersonating Willow on Nina’s orders

Key Takeaways
- GH confirmed through flashbacks that Willow shot Drew, information still unknown to the other characters.
- Willowâs testimony reflected denial driven by fear and self-preservation rather than calculated deception.
- The reveal focused on Willowâs internal struggle instead of a traditional whodunit payoff.
- Parallels emerged between Willow and Nelle, rooted in shared coping instincts, not shared intent.
- The episode framed denial as a slippery path, raising questions about how long Willow can avoid the truth.
Denial as a Survival Skill
Willow (Katelyn MacMullen) didnât take the stand like someone lying to win. She had to try to turn around the mess that Drew (Cameron Mathison) made of things when he was there.
Her testimony bent around the truth instead of confronting it, shaped by fear, love, and a need to stay upright for her children. The words came easily to her, but the facts didnât.
That distinction matters. This wasnât a strategy. It was instinct. Willow wasnât plotting or scheming. She was protecting herself from the weight of what sheâd already done, even as the flashbacks kept nudging the truth into view.
Itâs why the reveal hit harder than a standard whodunit turn. The show wasnât asking us to judge her yet. It was asking us to sit inside her head while it scrambled.
The Nelle Shape of It All
This is where Nelle (Chloe Lanier) enters the conversation, whether Willow wants her to or not. The resemblance isnât in cruelty or intent. Itâs in the reflex. The way reality gets adjusted on the fly when it becomes unbearable.
Nelle used denial as a weapon, especially when confronted about her diabolical actions. Willow uses it as insulation. One sharpened it.

The other hides behind it. Different paths, same muscle memory. Thatâs not a moral comparison. Itâs a psychological one, and the two sisters seem more alike than ever, even though theyâve never met.
The episode let that echo sit without underlining it. No speeches or mirrors were held up to Willow. Just a quiet recognition for long-time viewers whoâve seen this pattern before. Family doesnât always pass down behavior. Sometimes, it passes down coping mechanisms.
And thatâs the danger moving forward. Willow isnât Nelle. But the longer she avoids the truth, the easier it becomes to justify the next lie. The show isnât saying sheâll turn evil. Itâs a warning about how easy it would be to slide into nefarious territory. We already saw that when she stalked Baby Daisy.
But for now, Willow still believes sheâs the exception. History suggests that belief rarely holds for long. (Find out what MacMullen thinks Willowâs opinion of Nelle is.)




