Her Daughter Feared Her Bed. The 2:13 Camera Showed Why-thuyhien

My daughter said her bed was “getting tiny” every night, until I checked the camera at 2:13 and saw my husband walk in with a hidden hospital bracelet.

The first time Emma said it, I almost smiled because it sounded like one of those strange things children say before school.

“Mom… my bed gets tiny at night like somebody is sleeping in it with me.”

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She was standing in the kitchen doorway with her bunny pajamas twisted around her legs and her hair tangled flat on one side.

The butter in the skillet had just started to brown.

The coffee maker clicked behind me.

Outside, the trash truck rumbled down our street, and the little American flag on the porch across from us snapped in the cold morning wind.

It should have felt ordinary.

It did not.

Emma’s eyes were swollen, not in the way they got when she stayed up too late reading under the covers, but in the way a child looks after trying not to cry alone.

I turned the stove down.

“What do you mean, tiny, sweetheart?”

She looked at the floor and rubbed one bare foot over the other.

“I wake up on the edge.”

Emma was eight years old.

She had slept alone since she was four, not because I was trying to prove anything, but because I wanted her room to feel like hers.

Cream-colored walls.

A moon lamp.

White shelves full of picture books.

Stuffed animals lined up across the headboard as if they were guarding her dreams.

The bed was full-size, too big for a little girl when we first bought it.

My husband, Michael, had picked it out himself.

He had stood in the furniture store with his hand on the mattress and said, “So our princess can sleep like a queen.”

That was Michael when people were watching.

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