Attentional orienting in world and mind enables prioritization of sensorial and mnemonic information that we anticipate to become relevant, but events may also prompt re-orienting of attention. While attentional re-orienting is well characterized for external attention, whether and how humans re-orient their attention in mind following expected and unexpected working-memory tests remains elusive. Here, we developed a visual working-memory task in which we varied the reliability of retrocues such that ensuing memory tests called upon memory content that was certain, expected, or unexpected to be tested. We leveraged spatial modulations in EEG-alpha activity and eye-movements to track orienting and re-orienting within the spatial layout of visual working memory following central retrocues and memory tests. Both markers reliably tracked orienting of attention following retrocues and scaled with cue reliability. In addition, we unveil a second stage of attentional deployment following memory tests. When tests were expected (but not certain), attentional deployment was not contingent on prior orienting, suggesting an additional verification (double checking) in memory. When memory tests were unexpected, re-focusing of alternative memory content was prolonged. These findings bring attentional re-orienting to the domain of working memory and underscore the relevance of studying attentional dynamics in memory not only following cues, but also following ensuing memory tests that can invoke a revision or verification of our internal focus.