Her Daughter Said the Bed Felt Smaller. The 2:03 A.M. Camera Revealed Why-aurelia

My eight-year-old daughter said every morning that her bed felt “smaller,” and I thought it was just another one of those weird things kids say and then forget.

But when I checked her room’s camera at 2:03 a.m., I understood why she woke up glued to the wall.

And I had to bite my hand to keep from screaming.

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The first time Valerie said it, I was standing over a skillet in our small kitchen, trying to make breakfast with one eye on the stove and the other on the microwave clock.

The room smelled like ham, eggs, burnt butter, and the weak coffee I had forgotten to drink while it was still hot.

The old exhaust fan above the stove rattled in that tired little way it always did when the house was too warm and the windows were still shut.

Valerie sat at the table in her school uniform with her cereal going soft in the bowl.

She had one sock pulled up and one sock rolled around her ankle, because mornings in our house were never as smooth as I promised myself they would be the night before.

“Mom,” she said, rubbing her eye with the heel of her hand, “my bed was really cramped again.”

I did not turn around right away.

I flipped the eggs, checked the toast, and thought about traffic, work, the electric bill, and the school supply list I still had not finished paying off.

“You move around a lot in your sleep, sweetie.”

Valerie frowned.

“No,” she said. “It’s just that at night there’s space, but when I wake up, there isn’t anymore.”

I should have put the spatula down.

I should have pulled out the chair beside her and asked every question I could think of.

But fear does not always arrive wearing a face you recognize.

Sometimes it sounds like a child saying something strange on a Tuesday morning while eggs burn at the edges and your work shirt is still damp from the dryer.

So I treated it like one more odd thing kids say.

I told myself Valerie was tired.

I told myself the room was too hot.

I told myself she had piled too many stuffed animals around her pillow.

That bed was a twin I had bought at Target when she turned seven, after saving receipts in a kitchen drawer and waiting for a sale.

She had picked out the sheets herself.

Tiny pink flowers.

A bunny blanket.

A cloud curtain that made the window look softer than it really was.

Her room was small, but it was hers.

A lilac wall, peeling in one corner.

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