The 2 A.M. Camera Feed That Changed One Mother’s Safe House Forever-myhoa

My eight-year-old kept telling me her bed felt “too tight.” At 2:00 a.m., the camera finally showed me why.

The first time Emily said it, I was standing at the stove making eggs before school.

The kitchen smelled like butter, toast, and the coffee Daniel had left cooling by the sink before he drove back to the hospital.

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Morning light came through the blinds in narrow strips, landing across the counter, the lunchbox, the stack of school papers I had forgotten to sign.

Emily came in wearing socks with one heel twisted sideways.

Her hair was mashed flat on one side, and there was toothpaste at the corner of her mouth.

She looked like every sleepy eight-year-old in every suburban kitchen before school.

Then she wrapped both arms around my waist and whispered, “Mommy… I didn’t sleep good.”

I stirred the eggs and bent to kiss the top of her head.

“What happened, sweetheart?”

She thought for a second.

Her eyebrows pulled together the way they did when she was trying to explain something from a dream.

“My bed felt smaller.”

I smiled because that was what mothers do first when they want the world to stay normal.

“Smaller? You sleep alone in a bed bigger than mine.”

She shook her head.

“No. I fixed it.”

Then she climbed onto the stool and reached for the orange juice like she had not just placed a strange sentence in the middle of my morning.

I let it go.

Kids say things that sound eerie when they are half-asleep.

They dream about closets breathing and shadows moving and toys changing places.

I knew that.

I also knew Emily.

Emily did not invent fear for attention.

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