The 2 A.M. Camera Alert That Exposed the Secret in Her Daughter’s Bed-thuyhien

At first, the complaint sounded like something a tired child would say after a restless night.

Emily was eight, still young enough to drag one sock through the kitchen and talk with toothpaste in her mouth, but old enough to know when something felt wrong.

That Tuesday morning, she hugged me around the waist while I stood at the stove, and she said, “Mommy, I slept weird.”

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The kitchen smelled like eggs, toast, and the sweet strawberry shampoo still damp in her hair.

I glanced down and smiled because her voice was thick with sleep and her backpack was hanging off one shoulder.

“What do you mean, baby?”

She looked embarrassed by her own answer.

“My bed felt smaller.”

I laughed because it was easier to laugh.

Emily had a full-size bed at the end of the upstairs hallway, the kind of bed people told me was too big for a child her age.

It had a pale quilt, a row of stuffed animals, and an amber night-light that made the room look warm even in the middle of winter.

I tucked her in every night.

I checked the closet because she liked the door closed all the way.

I read one chapter from her library book, kissed her forehead, and left the bedroom door cracked.

That was our routine.

That was the rule.

It had always made her feel safe.

So when she said the bed felt smaller, I told myself she had kicked the blanket into a knot or slept sideways.

Then she said it again the next morning.

And the next.

By Friday, she was not joking.

“I wake up a lot,” she said while I zipped her jacket.

I asked if she was having nightmares.

She shook her head.

“It feels tight.”

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