The Nursery Camera Didn’t Catch a Dangerous Father—It Caught My Wife Manufacturing One-thuyhien

The tablet light turned my hand blue.

Dust from the pill crusher clung to the drawer lip like chalk. The baby monitor hissed from the shelf. Beside me, Celeste’s breath came short through her nose, one sharp pull after another, and the room smelled of lavender detergent, warm plastic, and the bitter trace of crushed medicine.

The video started without sound.

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03:17 A.M.

Our bedroom appeared first. Moonlight cut a silver bar across the foot of the bed. My body lay flat on the mattress, one arm thrown out, mouth open the way it got after the blue pills dragged me under. Celeste stepped into frame wearing the same cream robe she had on now. In her left hand sat a glass of water. In her right, my missing watch.

She moved with the calm of someone folding laundry.

The watch went onto my wrist. Then she leaned over me, lifted my arm by the elbow, and let it drop. It landed with the dead weight of wet rope. She looked directly into the camera after that. Not a glance. A check.

Another feed opened in the corner of the screen—the hallway outside Lila’s room. At 03:23, Celeste unlocked the nursery door from the outside. At 03:24, she dragged my shoulder through the doorway, my heels scraping the floorboards behind me. At 03:25, she positioned my hand against the crib rail, stepped back, and held up her phone.

The frame froze there.

My fingers hooked through the slats.

Her camera pointed at me.

Outside, gravel cracked under tires.

Celeste reached for the tablet. My arm jerked back on instinct. The chair by the changing table toppled into the wall. Lila flinched in her sleep and made a small sound through her nose, the sound babies make when a dream brushes past them but doesn’t stay.

“Daniel,” Celeste said, and now the quiet had split. “Give me that.”

The front door opened downstairs.

Not a key. Not a knock. A quick shove, shoes across tile, then a woman’s voice carrying up the staircase.

“Daniel?”

Dr. Melissa Greene appeared first in the nursery doorway, dark wool coat still buttoned, rain caught in the ends of her hair. Behind her stood a county deputy with a flashlight clipped to his chest and a folder tucked under one arm. The deputy took in the tipped chair, the open drawer, Celeste’s hands, my face, then the glowing tablet.

Celeste straightened so fast the silk belt on her robe slapped her hip.

“He’s in an episode,” she said. “You need to help me.”

Dr. Greene did not look at her. She looked at the pill crusher. Then at the blue dust on the drawer. Then at me.

“Did you take one tonight?”

My tongue scraped the back of my teeth. “Half. I spat some out.”

The deputy stepped between Celeste and the crib.

“Ma’am, keep your hands where I can see them.”

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